BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//EuroSEAS 2026//EN X-WR-CALNAME:EuroSEAS 2026 BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:Europe/Madrid X-LIC-LOCATION:Europe/Madrid BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZOFFSETFROM:+0100 TZOFFSETTO:+0200 DTSTART:19700329T020000 RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=3;BYDAY=-1SU END:DAYLIGHT BEGIN:STANDARD TZOFFSETFROM:+0200 TZOFFSETTO:+0100 DTSTART:19701025T030000 RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=10;BYDAY=-1SU END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20260604T082600 UID:euroseas-2026-indigeneity-in-southeast-asia-mobilization-meaning-and-contestation-1 SUMMARY:Indigeneity in Southeast Asia: Mobilization, Meaning, and Contestation (1) LOCATION:Sala de Juntas DESCRIPTION:In Southeast Asia, indigeneity emerges less as an inherited sta tus than as a situated practice shaped by colonial legacies, postcolonial s tate formations, and global rights discourses. From the highlands of northe rn Vietnam and Taiwan to the forests of Borneo and Malaysia, and the island s of the Philippines, Indonesia, and Timor-Leste, claims to indigeneity are entangled with nation-building, development, and environmental governance. Far from a settled category, it functions as a contested and strategic ide ntity, mobilized in struggles over land, resources, language, and cultural recognition.\nThis panel examines how Indigenous communities and their alli es mobilize, translate, and contest global frameworks such as the United Na tions Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) within South -East Asian contexts. Contributors explore the bureaucratic and discursive mechanisms: from education reforms and ancestral domain laws to NGO advocac y and environmental regulation, that shape who can claim to be “Indigenous” and under what terms. They also highlight acts of endurance and creative a daptation, including linguistic revitalization, ritual reinvention, and dig ital activism, through which communities assert continuity and belonging am id renewed imperial and extractive pressures.\nBy bringing together perspec tives from anthropology, Indigenous studies, linguistics, history, and poli tical science, the panel seeks to localize Indigeneity to understand how it s universalizing language of rights, sustainability, and authenticity is re configured in plural and sometimes contradictory ways. How do communities n egotiate global norms like UNDRIP alongside local state ideologies? In what ways do claims to indigeneity intersect with language politics, historical narratives, and resource governance? And how do these processes reshape no tions of citizenship, sovereignty, and belonging? By foregrounding Southeas t Asian cases, the panel seeks to illuminate the dynamic interplay between global frameworks and local realities, and to rethink indigeneity as a poli tical, historical, and discursive practice rather than a fixed identity. URL:https://euroseas2026.org/panels/indigeneity-in-southeast-asia-mobilization-meaning-and-contestation DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260901T100000 DTEND;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260901T113000 END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20260604T082600 UID:euroseas-2026-indigeneity-in-southeast-asia-mobilization-meaning-and-contestation-2 SUMMARY:Indigeneity in Southeast Asia: Mobilization, Meaning, and Contestation (2) LOCATION:Sala de Juntas DESCRIPTION:In Southeast Asia, indigeneity emerges less as an inherited sta tus than as a situated practice shaped by colonial legacies, postcolonial s tate formations, and global rights discourses. From the highlands of northe rn Vietnam and Taiwan to the forests of Borneo and Malaysia, and the island s of the Philippines, Indonesia, and Timor-Leste, claims to indigeneity are entangled with nation-building, development, and environmental governance. Far from a settled category, it functions as a contested and strategic ide ntity, mobilized in struggles over land, resources, language, and cultural recognition.\nThis panel examines how Indigenous communities and their alli es mobilize, translate, and contest global frameworks such as the United Na tions Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) within South -East Asian contexts. Contributors explore the bureaucratic and discursive mechanisms: from education reforms and ancestral domain laws to NGO advocac y and environmental regulation, that shape who can claim to be “Indigenous” and under what terms. They also highlight acts of endurance and creative a daptation, including linguistic revitalization, ritual reinvention, and dig ital activism, through which communities assert continuity and belonging am id renewed imperial and extractive pressures.\nBy bringing together perspec tives from anthropology, Indigenous studies, linguistics, history, and poli tical science, the panel seeks to localize Indigeneity to understand how it s universalizing language of rights, sustainability, and authenticity is re configured in plural and sometimes contradictory ways. How do communities n egotiate global norms like UNDRIP alongside local state ideologies? In what ways do claims to indigeneity intersect with language politics, historical narratives, and resource governance? And how do these processes reshape no tions of citizenship, sovereignty, and belonging? By foregrounding Southeas t Asian cases, the panel seeks to illuminate the dynamic interplay between global frameworks and local realities, and to rethink indigeneity as a poli tical, historical, and discursive practice rather than a fixed identity. URL:https://euroseas2026.org/panels/indigeneity-in-southeast-asia-mobilization-meaning-and-contestation DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260901T120000 DTEND;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260901T133000 END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20260604T082600 UID:euroseas-2026-indigeneity-in-southeast-asia-mobilization-meaning-and-contestation-3 SUMMARY:Indigeneity in Southeast Asia: Mobilization, Meaning, and Contestation (3) LOCATION:Sala de Juntas DESCRIPTION:In Southeast Asia, indigeneity emerges less as an inherited sta tus than as a situated practice shaped by colonial legacies, postcolonial s tate formations, and global rights discourses. From the highlands of northe rn Vietnam and Taiwan to the forests of Borneo and Malaysia, and the island s of the Philippines, Indonesia, and Timor-Leste, claims to indigeneity are entangled with nation-building, development, and environmental governance. Far from a settled category, it functions as a contested and strategic ide ntity, mobilized in struggles over land, resources, language, and cultural recognition.\nThis panel examines how Indigenous communities and their alli es mobilize, translate, and contest global frameworks such as the United Na tions Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) within South -East Asian contexts. Contributors explore the bureaucratic and discursive mechanisms: from education reforms and ancestral domain laws to NGO advocac y and environmental regulation, that shape who can claim to be “Indigenous” and under what terms. They also highlight acts of endurance and creative a daptation, including linguistic revitalization, ritual reinvention, and dig ital activism, through which communities assert continuity and belonging am id renewed imperial and extractive pressures.\nBy bringing together perspec tives from anthropology, Indigenous studies, linguistics, history, and poli tical science, the panel seeks to localize Indigeneity to understand how it s universalizing language of rights, sustainability, and authenticity is re configured in plural and sometimes contradictory ways. How do communities n egotiate global norms like UNDRIP alongside local state ideologies? In what ways do claims to indigeneity intersect with language politics, historical narratives, and resource governance? And how do these processes reshape no tions of citizenship, sovereignty, and belonging? By foregrounding Southeas t Asian cases, the panel seeks to illuminate the dynamic interplay between global frameworks and local realities, and to rethink indigeneity as a poli tical, historical, and discursive practice rather than a fixed identity. URL:https://euroseas2026.org/panels/indigeneity-in-southeast-asia-mobilization-meaning-and-contestation DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260901T150000 DTEND;TZID=Europe/Madrid:20260901T163000 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR