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Public ForumsSome Key Issues in Religion and Culture in the Asia Pacific in the 21st CenturyThe Bob Hawke Prime Ministerial Centre, together with the Adelaide Asia-Pacific Studies Group, the Australian Research Council’s Asia-Pacific Futures Research Council, hosts of the 2008 Signature Event Conference, Globalising Religions & Cultures in the Asia Pacific, present a series of public forums on some fundamental intersections of religion, ethics and social change in our world and our region. To register, please click here. Forum One, Tuesday December 2, 6.00pm - Proudly supported by the University of AdelaidePlaying God? Genetically Modified Organisms, Miracles and Monsters Australia, Anglophone countries and Europe have long been vexed by the ethical and moral problems thrown up when the modern science of genetic engineering meets the legacy of 2000 years of the Judeo-Christian tradition. However, the future of such technologies may not be in the hands of scientists, theologians and politicians in the West. The GMO future may instead lay in the hands of scientists from the East, particularly the rising science powerhouses of China and India and Asia more generally. These societies have religions, cultures and traditions that are very different so their attitudes to what is permissible and desirable genetic modification are likely to diverge from Western ones in significant ways. Professors Ron Herring of Cornell University and Ann Gold of Syracuse University address the issue of these differences in attitudes and the potential consequences that such differences may imply and how are people in places like India responding to the challenges that genetic modifications pose. They discuss some Asian concepts of what constitutes “natural” and how some religious beliefs may make modifications desirable while others can result in resistance from some groups. Professor Ron Herring is the Director of the Program on Development, Governance and Nature at Cornell University, in Ithaca, New York State. In recent years Prof Herring has published prodigiously on genetic modification and reactions to it, particularly in India. Professor Ann Gold is Director of the South Asia Center, Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs, Syracuse University in Ithaca, New York State and an expert on Indian religious beliefs and Indian attitudes to the environment. Her most recent book is In the Time of Trees and Sorrows: Nature Power and Memory in Rajasthan (with Bhojo Ram Gujar) Duke University Press.
Forum Two Thursday December 4, 6.00pm - Proudly supported by Flinders UniversityReligious Revivals: Challenges and Prospects for Islam at the Grassroots in the Age of Global Media Religious beliefs are a fundamental part of many peoples’ lives and the idea that modernisation through economic development automatically means ever increasing secularisation seems almost out of date at the beginning of the 21st century. There are some indications that in Asia some groups are indeed becoming more secular as modernisation there continues a-pace but at the same time we are also seeing strong religious revivals, often as responses to those same processes of rapid development and change. Globalisation and the affordable and accessible mass media of all sorts in all parts of the world means that for the first time, Islam can also be promoted and reflected around the world in movies, music and popular soap operas. These new influences can both support revivals of Islam by showing its place in the world as well as challenge those forms which evolved unique traditions as a result of their relative isolation from the Middle East for centuries, especially after the advent of European colonialism. Western media, especially in Australia and America, have been very concerned with the rise of fundamentalism but the speakers in this forum are interested in other, equally if not more important forms of Islamic beliefs that are currently rising in popularity amongst some of Australia’s nearest neighbours and beyond. Associate Professor Julia Howell of Griffith University is keenly interested in how modern media is influencing grassroots perceptions of what being a Muslim means to believers around the world, including in places like Australia. Associate Professor Syed Farid Alatas is interested in how the revival of Sufism in Malaysia is resulting in tensions between the old and the new while simultaneously significantly reshaping how ethnic Malays view themselves. Professor Joseph Tamney of the Catholic University of America, is one of America’s foremost academic writers on religion has been researching how modernisation has been handled in Malaysia as its peoples seek to balance religious beliefs and the forces promoting greater individualism and the needs to separate politics and religion in a constitutional democracy. Dr. Syed Farid Alatas is Associate Professor of sociology at the National University of Singapore with an active interest in the forces supporting extremism and the role of Sufism in combating such tendencies. He has published on the teaching of sociology and is researching the connections between the current Muslim revival and Malay identity. Professor Joseph Tamney is Associate Fellow, Life Cycle Institute, at the Catholic University of America and Professor Emeritus of Sociology at Ball State University (USA) and past president of the Association for the Sociology of Religion (2003-4). Professor Tamney has published extensively on Christianity, Buddhism in America, religion in Singapore and China and most recently has been researching religion and state relations in Malaysia. His books include, The Resilience of Christianity in the Modern World, The Struggle Over Singapore’s Soul, and The Resilience of Conservative Religion as well as having contributed to or co-authored many other books, encyclopaedias and articles. Associate Professor Julia Day Howell is a researcher at the Griffith Asia Institute and is interested in the Hindu and Buddhist revivals in Indonesia as well as in new religious movements. More recently Dr Howell has been researching aspects of Islam, particularly Sufism. She has published widely in academic journals and recently published, Sufism and the Modern in Islam (with Martin van Bruinessen) and is currently working on Cosmopolitan Sufis: Pluralism and Piety in Indonesia.
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