Events & Workshops

Events & Workshops

Past Events

29Jan2026seminar
Sociology & Anthropology Seminar Series 2026

Dislocations of Queerness in Post-Liberal Times

29th January 2026 | 3PM SGT
Sociology Seminar Room AS1 #02-12

Andreas Streinzer is a tenure track professor in economic anthropology at the University of Vienna, Austria. His research explores how economic practices, governance, and social reproduction intersect with questions of queerness, inequality, and crisis. His work examines how queer and trans lives are shaped by shifting political and economic orders, focusing on themes such as dislocation, kinship, and resilience. With extensive ethnographic fieldwork in Europe, particularly in Greece, he investigates debt, austerity, and solidarity economies. Streinzer’s interdisciplinary approach bridges economic and queer anthropology, offering critical insights into governance, extraction, and the politics of everyday life.

28Jan2026seminar
Joint Seminar

Eating and Being Eaten

28th January 2026 | 4PM SGT
AS8 #04-04

In this talk, Dr Chao will draw on her recently published book, Land of Famished Beings: West Papuan Theories of Hunger (Duke University Press, 2025) to examine how Indigenous Marind communities experience, conceptualize, and critique the condition of hunger in lowland West Papua—a place where industrial plantation expansion and settler-colonial violence are radically reconfiguring food-based ecologies, socialities, and identities. Instead of seeing hunger as an individual, biophysical state defined purely in nutritional, quantitative, or human terms, Dr Chao will uncover how hunger traverses variably situated humans, animals, plants, institutions, infrastructures, spirits, and sorcerers. When approached through the lens of Indigenous Marind philosophies, practices, and protocols, hunger reveals itself to be a multiple, more-than-human, and morally imbued modality of being—one whose effects are no less culturally crafted or contested than food and eating. In centering Indigenous theories of hunger, the talk invites us to rethink the relationship between the environment, food, and nourishment in an age of self-consuming capitalist growth.

22Jan2026seminar
Sociology & Anthropology Seminar Series 2026

Interdisciplinarity in Transition: The Formation and Transformation of the Committee on Human Development, 1930s-1950s

22nd January 2026 | 3PM SGT
Sociology Seminar Room AS1 #02-12

Liping Wang is Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Education at Peking University. She received her Ph.D. degree in Sociology at the University of Chicago. Her research interests include comparative historical sociology, sociology of education and social theory. She has published articles in American Journal of Sociology, Theory and Society, Comparative Studies in Society and History, Journal of World History, among others. Her book The Imperial Creation of Ethnicity: Chinese Politics and the Ethnic Turn in Inner Mongolian Politics, 1900-1930 was published by Brill in 2022.

29Oct2025Seminar
Joint Seminar

Emancipated Minor Utopias, Permaculture, and Pedagogies of Hope - Decolonizing Timor-Leste’s School Curriculum

29th October 2025 | 3PM SGT
AS8 #06-46

Thomas Stodulka is Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Münster. His research and teaching lie at the intersections of psychological anthropology, affect and emotion studies, inequality and marginalization, permaculture, and multimodal and engaged ethnography. He has conducted long-term fieldwork in Indonesia and Timor-Leste and co-developed international research projects on social belonging, stigma, mental health, interdisciplinary methodologies, coming of age, and ecological sustainability and decolonial learning.

5Sep2025Seminar
Sociology & Anthropology Seminar Series 2025

Reimagining Development:
Bold Directions Towards a Thriving World

5th September 2025 | 4PM SGT
Sociology Seminar Room AS1 #02-12

Peter Sutoris is Associate Professor in Climate and Development at the Sustainability Research Institute, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, having been formerly affiliated with Department of Education, University of York and the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at SOAS University of London. He holds a BA in History from Dartmouth College and a PhD in Anthropology of Education from Cambridge University, where he was a Gates Scholar. He is the author of Visions of Development (OUP, 2016), (MIT Press, 2022) and Reimagining Development (OUP, 2025, with Uma Pradhan).

His current research focuses on imagination of the future, participatory visioning methods, and activist pedagogies of change.

13 Mar
Sociology & Anthropology Seminar Series 2025

Factors contributing to childlessness among older men in rural China: A life course analysis of narrative life stories within a structural context

13th March 2025 | 3PM SGT
Sociology Seminar Room AS1 #02-12

Wenqian Xu is a Postdoctoral Researcher in the Department of Health Sciences at Lund University. He holds a PhD in Ageing and Social Change from Linköping University (2021). From 2021 to 2023, he worked as a full-time consultant on healthy ageing at the World Health Organization Regional Office for the Western Pacific. Currently, he is leading a research project on Ageing without Children, funded by the Swedish Research Council. His research interests include ageism, age-friendly environments, childless ageing, and social gerontechnology.

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Sociology & Anthropology Seminar Series 2025

War-Making as Worldmaking: Kenya, the United States, and the War on Terror

14th January 2025 | 3PM SGT
Sociology Seminar Room AS1 #02-12

Samar Al-Bulushi is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, lrvine. Her book, War-Making as Worldmaking: Kenya, the United States, and the War on Terror, was published by Stanfard University Press in November 2024. She is a non-resident fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and has published in a variety of public outlets on topics ranging from the international Criminal Court to the militarization of U.S policy in Africa.

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The 7th ACSAS International Conference

South Asia in Asia: Challenges and Possibilities

22-23 November 2024
AS7, Shaw Foundation Building
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Sociology & Anthropology Seminar Series 2024

Cultivating Landlessness in Brazil: Temporalities of transformation in the Landless Workers Movement

29th August 2024 | 3PM SGT
Department Seminar Room AS1 #02-12

Alex Ungprateeb Flynn is Associate Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. Alex’s research explores social movements and the prefigurative potential of artistic practice, prompting the theorization of the production of knowledge, temporality and utopia, and social and aesthetic dimensions of form. He is the co-author of "Taking Form, Making Worlds” (University of Texas Press, 2022) and "Pathways to Utopia: Time and Transformation in the Landless Workers Movement of Brazil” (forthcoming with Indiana University Press).

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Sociology & Anthropology Seminar Series 2024

The Map in the Machine and the Global Transformation of the Auto Industry

4th September 2024 | 4PM SGT
Sociology Seminar Room AS1 #02-12

Luis Felipe Alvarez León is Associate Professor of Geography at Dartmouth College. His work focuses on the political economy of geospatial data, media, and technologies. Among other projects, he is currently researching the geographies of electric and autonomous vehicles, and the changing political economy of the new satellite ecosystem. He is the author of The Map in the Machine: Charting the Spatial Architecture of Digital Capitalism (University of California Press, 2024).

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Sociology & Anthropology Seminar Series 2024

Transnational Mobility, Kinship and Aspiration for the Good Life in Rural Central Vietnam

15th August 2024 | 3PM SGT
Sociology Seminar Room AS1 #02-12

Minh T.N. Nguyen is Professor of Social Anthropology at Bielefeld University. Her research focuses on labour and work, care and welfare, migration and mobility in Vietnam, China and Southeast Asia and more generally in the Global South. She is the author of Vietnam’s Socialist Servants: Domesticity, Gender, Class and Identity (Routledge, 2014) and Waste and Wealth: An Ethnography of Labour, Value and Morality in a Vietnamese Recycling Economy (Oxford University Press, 2018). Her works are also published by journals such as American Ethnologist, Development and Change, Economy and Society, Economic Anthropology, and HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory

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Anthropology Masterclass

Anthropology – and why the world needs more of it

Dr Tom-Ozden-Schilling is a Presidential Young Professor with the Department of Sociology and Anthropology.  His research includes the study of technology and expertise, for example, in the context of environmental conflicts and venture capitalism.  His teaching includes anthropological theories and issues in science and technology.

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Sociology Masterclass

Putting Sociology to work

Dr Emily Chua is an anthropologist working at the intersections of digital technology, media, capital and authoritarian state politics in Singapore and China. She has written ethnographies of newsmaking in the ‘post-truth’ contemporary, election rallies as ‘post-political’ performances, and most recently, the way our remakings of economics, finance and money are in turn remaking us.

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Socio X Anthro-Duction - a Taster Class for Students by Students Karimi Zara Nayab Ahmed (Sociology, 2023) & Lok Yee Ling (Sociology, 2023)

Come immerse yourself in a fun and interactive Sociology & Anthropology class. Better still, as it is a class run by students, for students like you! Zara Ahmed and Lok Yee Ling are graduating this year – but not before sharing their passion for Sociology and Anthropology. Get a taste of what they have learnt – and feel so passionate about. Hear their experiences as students. Who knows what tips you might take away from this one of a kind Soci X Anthro-Duction.