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AN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE VIA ZOOM

Resisting Intellectual Imperialism and Epistemic Violence: Towards Autonomous Knowledge Production

9 – 10 November 2024, Philippines

This conference is free and open to the public. Sign up.

Conference Overview

The conference is free and open to the public, but slots are open on a first-come, first-served basis. This conference welcomes presentations that discuss:

    • What are the specific ways in which intellectual imperialism, academic dependency, white supremacy, and global academic power structures impact subalternized academics and knowledge production, and how does this manifest in the knowledge that is being produced?
    • What are the strategies that we can use to resist and dismantle problematic structures
    • How can we ensure that the subaltern can speak and is heard?
    • What specifically would be the characteristics of true epistemic justice and true autonomous knowledge production?
Concept Note

This conference warmly invites thinkers and activists to contribute work that advances our understanding of intellectual imperialism, academic dependency, epistemic violence, and that suggests interventions paving the way to epistemic justice and autonomous knowledge production.

Scholars researching intellectual imperialism and academic dependency have critiqued the structural inequalities of global academia and knowledge production (S. F. Alatas 2003; S. H. Alatas 2000; Guillermo 2023; Patel 2021).

They argue that the metrification of academia and the imposition of university and journal rankings orient all knowledge production towards the Global North, predominantly the US, where most highly ranked universities, journals, and conferences are based (Guillermo 2023). View Full Concept Note.

Day 1: 9 November 2024

Dates and times are GMT + 8 (Philippines). Click on the panel titles to view presentations and abstracts.

 Main Zoom Room
8:30 am – 11:20 am (GMT + 8)

Defining and Reclaiming Academic Autonomy: For who and how should we produce knowledge?
The plenary presentation will be preceded by the welcome remarks and/or opening remarks to be delivered by the organizers, including Dr. Marby Villaceran, Convenor of the Decolonial Studies Program, UP CIDS.

Chair: Caroline M. Schöpf
Discussant: Jose Monfred C. Sy

Conversations
Ramon Guillermo


Reclaiming the University: In Defense of Academic Freedom and Institutional Autonomy
Carl Marc Ramota


Ways to Decolonize the International Studies Curriculum in the Philippines
Nassef Adiong


Conversations
Syed Farid Alatas

9 November 2024
11:30 am – 12:50 pm (GMT + 8)

A1 Philippine Studies: Critiques and Futures
Breakout Room 1 ♦ Chair: Jose Monfred Sy

Pilipiniana as anticolonial (re)theorising from-us-for-us

ALCAZAR III, Antonio Salvador; ALVAREZ, Maria Khristine; MAKALINTAL, Joshua Miguel; PAZ, Andya


The Ilustrado Theorizing ‘Filipinoness’: The Case of Pedro Paterno

Tabiolo, Ericka Jane E.


Slaying the Fathers?: Contemporary Perspectives and Paradigms in Philippine Studies

Moratilla, Noel Christian


Historico-Materialist Decolonization and the Methodological Woes of Filipino Philosophy: A Way Forward

Daduya, Justin Felip D.

A2 Power and Violence
Breakout Room 2
Chair: Tamari Kitossa

Decolonializing violence: structure, power and forced disappearance in Latin America

Arellano, Esteban


Denied knowledges: resistance and mourning in the space of the clandestine grave in Mexico

Martínez, Miguel Angel


Subaltern Perspectives on Armed Conflict, Displacement, and Gender-Based Violence: The Experiences of Internally Displaced People from Zamboanga and Marawi

Veloso, Diana Therese


Colonial Legacies in Paradise: Analyzing Gentrification and Settler Colonialism in Siargao Island, Philippines

Adremesin, Rozene Cerise


The Role of the United Nations in Promoting Stability and Development: Lessons from the Democratic Republic of Congo and Implications for Eswatinin

Diamini Nosipho Nomphumelelo

A3 Racism, Discrimination, and Subalternization
Breakout Room 3
Chair: Rench Supan

Resisting and Cracking Epistemic Racism: academic-activist practices in Colombia

Monica Marcell Romero Sanchez


Neither balangandãs nor creoles: memories of black women’s alleys as hegemonic counter-narratives of museums in Brazil

Flores, Joana


‘Theoretical Brahmins and Empirical Shudras’: The Need for Critical Caste Studies in Indian Academia

Subramanian, Srutheesh


Readings on slavery decoloniality interior dimensions of knowledge of Poikayil Appchan: an organic intellectual in Kerala

Dr. BIJULAL MV

9 November 2024
1:00 pm – 2:20 pm (GMT + 8)

B1: Interrogating the Power Relations of Knowledge Production
Breakout Room 1
Chair: Caroline M. Schöpf
Discussant: Nathan Lo

Epistemic Extraction: The Role of Puerto Rican Historians in U.S. Academia’s Knowledge Appropriation

Jeremy Rivera Torres


Breaking Barriers: Understanding the Intimidation and Exclusivity of Research Conferences

Lulu, Fahadz


Breaking the Paywall: Advocating for Not-for-Profit Open Access in Academic Publishing

Espinosa, Allen


Translation as Autonomization: Notes on Decolonizing Translation

Talaue-Arogo, Antonette

B2: Gender and Epistemic Justice
Breakout Room 2
Chair: Athena Charanne Presto

Coloniality of Gender and the Procedural Forensic Production of Victimhood: Towards a Decolonial Practice of Creative Writing

Hosmillo, B.B.P.


Framing Marxist Standpoint Theory in Understanding Feminist Standpoint Theory

Castillo, Joven Albert


This Barbie is Trivialized: Epistemic Injustices Undermining Film Fangirls’ Epistemic Agency

Garcia, Rochelle Anne Bless B. & Marcaida, Pearl Darlene A.


Decolonizing Gender: Kasarian sa Pilipinas

Kaur, Mandeep B.


Making Noise: Dissonance and Disorder in Feminist Arab Art

Shirine Saad

B3: Knowledge, Narrative, and Coloniality
Breakout Room 3
Chair: Wendell Glenn Cagape

Assembling the Dissimilar: A Glissantian Approach to Poetry at Sites of Intervention

Wilfredo R. Santiago-Hernández


Decolonizing Historical Narratives Through Forms of Orality: Anticolonial Resistance in Rosario Cruz-Lucero’s Feast and Famine: Stories of Negros

Virador-Cagayan, Farah Aimee


Surfacing women writers and advocates in American colonial-era periodicals as resistance to epistemic violence in colonial masculinist constructions of Cebuano media histories

Tabada, Ma. Theresa Angelina Q.


Stranger Queens and Local Heroes: Reflecting the Knowledge of Placemaking and Ethnic Relations in Colonial Java

Widiatmo, Danny


Museums in Malaysia: A Revisit

Ahmad Kamal, Hariz

9 November 2024
2:30 pm – 3:50 pm (GMT + 8)

C1: Re-thinking the Coloniality of Knowledge
Breakout Room 1
Chair: TBD

South-South dialogues: A conversation between ‘coloniality of knowledge’ and the ‘Alatas School of Autonomous Knowledge’

Ab Razak, Muneerah


Unmasking Intellectual Imperialism and Academic Dependency: A Tale to Tell with special Reference to India

Bhadra Bula


Coloniality of Power? Marcos’s Tadhana Project and the Ambivalence of Decolonial Critique

Rommel A. Curaming


Rewriting the Past to Enlarge the Present: A Call for a Transnational History of Sociology

Dufoix, Stéphane

C2: Critical Readings in Decolonial Literatures
Breakout Room 2
Chair: Glen Christian “Cian” Tacasa

Better Living Through Xeroxography: Its Functionality as a Space for Transgressive Literary Works

Catapang, Samantha Marie


Fiction and the Popular Nation:Re-Examining the Necessary Fictions in Philippine Literature Education

Dabalos, Joycel Vincent


The Last Chapter of The Wretched of the Earth: Epistemic and Incarnated Revolt in Fanon’s Psychiatric Work

Cordero-Pedrosa, Carlos


The Emergence of the Literary in Elaine Castillo’s ‘How to Read Now: Essays’

Martin, Maria Gabriela


Panimulang Tala sa Panitikan ng Anarkismo sa Pilipinas (Preliminary Notes on Anarchist Literature in the Philippines)

Ornopia, Ricky

C3: Activist Responses to Intellectual Imperialism
Breakout Room 3
Chair: Hosmillo, B.B.P.

Pangayaw: Decolonizing Resistance Anarchism in the Philippines

Bas Umali


On Intellectual imperialism and academic bastardization of the truth

De Vega, Jose Mario


Metanoetics para sa Propesyon ng Pananampalataya: Alingaw-ngaw ng anarkistang umiibig sa katotohanan at nagmamahal sa karunungan mula sa pampublikong silid-aralan.
[Metanoetics for the Profession of Faith: Truth-loving, wisdom-loving anarchists’ ruminations from the public classroom.]

Glen Tee Jay A. Jarito


Experiencing parachute science knowledge in neocolonial period

Thakur Ashoke


Intellectual imperialism and epistemic oppression as a barrier for a progress

Amadoul Kabirou Issa Y Diallo

Main Zoom Room
9 November 2024
4:00 pm – 6:00 pm (GMT + 8)

Epistemic Power
Chair and Discussant: Frances Cruz

The Relevance of Anti-Colonial Social Theory

Sujata Patel


The White Man’s Cause: Tracing epistemic violence in the trafficking in persons discourse

Archill Capistrano


Making Brown Heritage, Or, the American Capture of the Postcolonial Intellectual

Charlie Veric

9 November 2024
6:10 pm – 7:50 pm (GMT + 8)

D1.1: Education and Language
Breakout Room1
Chair: Stéphane Dufoix

Colonized Knowledge or a Parrot’s Tale? Rabindranath on Colonized Knowledge Production

Bhadra, Bula


Epistemic Exclusion as the Colonial Logic of “Correct” English in the American Imperial Imaginary

Manalastas, Nicko Enrique L.

D1.2: Producing Autonomous Knowledges
Breakout Room 1 (7 pm)
Chair: Stéphane Dufoix
Discussant: Karen A. Calderon

Anti-Authoritarian Spaces and Decolonization in the Philippines: The Etniko Bandido Experience

De Vera, Crisanto


Building Autonomous Knowledge through Community-based Institutions

Hakim, Luqman


A conversation about guidelines for conference organization for privileged scholars

Caroline M. Schöpf


Pilipiniana as Anticolonial (re)theorising from-us-for-us

ALCAZAR III, Antonio Salvador; ALVAREZ, Maria Khristine; MAKALINTAL, Joshua Miguel; PAZ, Andya

D2: From the Archipelago to the River to the Sea: Amplifying Solidarity Between the Philippines, Bangsamoro, and Palestine
Breakout Room 2
Chair: Shari S. Mansul

This is a panel discussion featuring:

    • Abdul-Aziz Lazaro
    • Mahadia Soria Franji
    • Huda
    • Khalid Bashier
    • Lance Dayrit
    • Al-Frazier Ahalul (Tentative)
    • Jennifer Kleskie
D3: Decolonizing the Classroom
Breakout Room 3
Chair and Discussant: Rozene Adremesin

Beyond the Western Canon: Teacher Practices and Student Perspectives in Diverse Mathematical Traditions

Canonigo, Allan


Niche-Making in Intersectional Spaces: Narratives of a Mathematics Teacher Union Activist

Amoto, Jeena A.


Nowhere to Go but UP: Nowhere to Go but UP: Aspiring for Capital and Social Mobility in the Meritocracy of University of the Philippines College Admission Process

Alejandria, Leila

9 November 2024
8:00 pm (GMT + 8)

Decolonization by and for the Global South

This discussion will be chaired by Bula Bhadra and held at the Main Zoom room.

Networking session and free discussion

This will be held in Breakout Room 1

Day 2: 10 November 2024

Dates and times are GMT + 8 (Philippines). Click on the panel titles to view presentations and abstracts.

Main Zoom Room
10 November 2024
8:00 am – 8:50 am (GMT + 8)

Palestine: A Plenary Spotlight Session

Discovering a Palestinian Indigeneity: Challenging Intellectual Imperialism through Palestinian Counterstorying

Bernardita M. Yunis Varas


Discussion on Palestine

Main Zoom Room
10 November 2024
9:00 am – 11:20 am (GMT + 8)

Towards and Beyond Epistemic Decolonization

Chair: Rosa O’Connor Acevedo

Decolonization, Empire, and Epistemicide: Beyond Conceptual Colonization – Towards Collaborative Autonomy

Biko Agozino


Desplazamiento de sentidos, una vía para desmontar la episteme moderno-colonial-imperial (Displacement of meanings, a way to dismantle the modern-colonial-imperial episteme)

Karina Ochoa Muñoz


Intellectual imperialism at the secondary school level: Jamaican textbooks and the coloniality of knowledge

Moji Anderson


Unveiling Epistemic-Affective Injustices: Towards Pathways of Decolonial Feminist Horizon

Puja Ghosh

10 November 2024
11:30 am – 12:50 pm (GMT + 8)

E1 Reimagining the University: Decolonizing Knowledge, Autonomy, and Purpose in Higher Education
Breakout Room 1
Chair: Keb Licayan

Colonial Obfuscation and Epistemic Rebellion: Problematizing Neoliberal Universities as Gatekeepers of Knowledge and Resistance

Parker, Charlie and Teng, Daranee T.


West African Epistemological Knowledge Productions and Contributions to Afrodiasporic Studies

Alex Kévin Ouessou Idrissou


Habermas and Maritain on the ‘Idea of the University’: A Reevaluation

Ocon, Joshua Jose


Autotheory and Autoethnography in Academic Zines

Cervantes, Carl Lorenz


Education and Policy Development: the Question of Decolonizing Academia

Aldosari, Noof

E2 LGBTQ+ Perspectives on Epistemic Violence
Breakout Room 2
Chair: Meel Valencia
Discussant: John Andrew G. Evangelista

Epistemic Paralysis and the SOGIESC Model: Postcolonial Resistance in Gender Theory

De Castro, Karen


Catching Up with the West: Manifestations of Violence through Homodevelopmentalism in the Philippines

Chanjueco, Hamilcar Jr. B. MAGVC


Epistemic Violence Within the SOGIESC Model

Taningco, Abi


Decolonizing and queering research engagements: The praxis of the ethic of care in Filipino queer ageing research

Muyargas, Moniq


Dismantling Epistemic Sexism within Philosophy: Where Does Feminist Philosophy Stand?

Amul, Agatha

E3 Decolonizing Health, Well-being, and Spirituality
Breakout Room 3
Chair: Victor John Loquias

Towards the Healing of Epistemic Injustice: Lessons from the Advocacy for Hilot

Calipayan, Louanne Mae


Epistemic Virtue: Analyzing the Negative Effect of Epistemic Injustice to the Healthcare System for Indigenous Peoples in the Philippines

Alonzo, John Raymund S.


Beyond Epistemic Violence: Exploring Marginal Young People’s Relational Well-being in the Global South

Basu, Chandni


Tibetan Buddhism and feminism in an in-between space: The rise of the non-western voice

Dr. Sharin Shajahan


Codifying Decolonial Theory in Religious and Values Education: Developing Contextualized Teaching Strategies in the Philippines through Gaspar’s Discourses on Pinoy Spirituality

Simeon, Andylyn M.


‘Charismatic Discourse in the Chinese Christian Academic Context of Hong Kong: In Search of the Epistemological Paradigm of ‘Global Pentecostal Studies’

Ng, Christian Nathen

Main Zoom Room
10 November 2024
1:00 pm – 2:20 pm (GMT + 8)

Teaching Towards Epistemic Justice: An Interdisciplinary Roundtable on Pedagogy against Intellectual Imperialism

Chair: Glen ‘Cian’ Tacasa

Francisco Jayme Paolo Guiang
Department of History, University of the Philippines Diliman

Jose Monfred C. Sy
Department of Filipino and Philippine Literature, University of the Philippines Diliman

Noreen H. Sapalo
Department of Anthropology, University of the Philippines Diliman

Deidre R. Morales
Department of Filipino and Philippine Literature, University of the Philippines Diliman

Eric Loyd P. Hilario
Department of Mathematics, University of the Philippines Integrated School

10 November 2024
2:30 pm – 3:50 pm (GMT + 8)

F1 Decolonizing Minds and Spaces: Indigenous Identity, Knowledge, and Autonomy in the Philippines
Breakout Room 1
Chair: Keb Licayan

Indigenous Knowledge in the Philippines: Resisting Displacement, Epistemic Violence, and Advocating for Autonomous Cultural Preservation

Canzon, Yrein


Can the IP Speak?: Documenting the challenges of decolonizing the colonized thought among the Subanen Evangelicals

Cagape, Wendell Glenn


Epistemic injustice, militarization, and the closure of Lumad schools in Mindanao: Towards a transgressive pedagogy

Jerry D. Imbong


The Role of Non-Governmental Organizations in Advancing Peace Education in Selected Barangays in Zamboanga del Sur: A Case Study

Simbajon – Bucayon, Darlyn


Minority under Muslim Government: The Case of Christians and Indigenous Peoples (IPs) in the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao

Abdullah, Asmin P., Solaiman, Aisah P., and Adan, Gurhan A.

F2 Decolonizing the Classroom
Breakout Room 2
Chair: Antonette Talaue-Arogo

The American Primary Education Curriculum as a Medium of Modelling a Civilization in the Philippine Islands

Cataquian, Kim


Textual Recognition as a Mode of Recognitive Pedagogy in James O’Brien, S.J.

Loquias, Victor John


Resisting Objectification in Education through the Community of Inquiry

Abog, Keisha Christle A.


A Systematic Review and Meta-Synthesis of Indigenous Filipino Values in Educational Leadership

Digo, Gerry S.


Knowledge Born from Struggle Insights into Learning and Resilience in Post-Conflict Syria

Alabdullah Muna

F3 Knowledge and Power
Breakout Room 3
Chair: Andya Paz

‘‘Yaƙin ƙwaƙwalwai’’ or Coloniality as Seen by the President of an Islamic Association in Niger

Hamissou Rhissa Achaffert


Theory at Fore, Politics in Command: Advancing the mass line in knowledge production to wage revolution against Imperialism

Valdez, Fives


Concretizing Epistemic Injustice: Reflections on Knowledge and Power from Women, People of Color, and the Poor

Moreno, Juan Miguel


Epistemic Colonialism in the study of Oriental scientific heritage

Syeed, Sabreen


Internationalisation de l’enseignement supérieur et dépendance académique des Suds (Internationalization of higher education and academic dependence of the South)

Mamadou Yéro BALDE

Main Zoom Room
10 November 2024
4:00 pm – 6:00 pm (GMT + 8)

Re-thinking Knowledge Production from the Margins

Chair: Bijulal M.V.
Discussant: Nassef Adiong

Decolonizing is the only option in 2024: Reflection-Action of a Peace Educator

Fatima Sajjad


Thinking about Critical Knowledge Production

Sanal Mohan


Re-Integrating Knowledges Fractured by Colonialism: A Call for Sululogy

Nelson Dino

10 November 2024
6:10 pm – 7:40 pm (GMT + 8)

G1 Islamic Perspectives on Epistemic Justice
Breakout Room 1
Chair: Shari S. Mansul

Ikhtilaf and Ethical Epistemology: Taha Abderrahmane’s Islamic Decolonial Ethics of Epistemic Plurality

G. Idrissi, Achraf


Decolonizing Islamic Studies, Reclaiming Epistemic Sovereignty: Taha Abdurrahman and M. Amin Abdullah in Conversation

Damanhuri


Countering Epistemic Violence by Reviving the Islamic Scientific Tradition: The Experience of CIPSI (Center for Islamic Philosophical Studies and Information) Indonesia

Nuruddin Al Akbar


Alternative Modernity

Tarik ElFalih


Qasaysayan: Maka Islam na Hulagway tungo sa Makabayang Saysay ng Kapayapaan
[Narrative: An Islamic Approach to a Patriotic Narrative of Peace]

Andres Paul Mark


A Nation’s Struggle with Faith: Consuming Yeñi Ilm-i Kelâm as a Modern Turkish Anticolonial Movement Using Nišitani Keiji’s Notions of Crypto-Nihilism and the Logic of Sókù

Jeandale M. Lazaro (‘Abdul-‘Aziz Lazaro)

G2 Neoliberalism and Knowledge Production
Breakout Room 2
Chair: Patricia Ruth P. Jasmin

Pera-perahan: The Neoliberal Trap of Conditional Cash Transfers in the Philippines

Guinto, Arienne Therese


Speech for Sale: Neoliberal Market Logics and Practices of Filipino Speaking Subjects in the Philippines

Serquiña, Oscar Jr.


The construction of a libertarian-liberal epistemology by theorists of left-wing thought Frankfurt School, Paris School: The representation of the collective imagination in the face of the great world market

SEGUIN Marie-Christine


Bonja: cultural heritage production processes and the appropriation of the place on the Island of Bom

Passos, Antônio Marcos de Oliveira


Quantitative Criticalism in Interpersonal Communication: Reconciling Decolonial Knowledge-Building and Empirical Theory-Testing in Interpersonal Communication Research of the Global South

Cruz, Karl Lewis

G3 Beyond Eurocentric Theory
Breakout Room 3
Chair: Bula Bhadra

Emancipating Emancipatory Theory

Garcia, Bryan Patrick


The Ends of Theory

Santos, Marvin Charles


The Monotypisation of Sociological Knowledge Production: A Research on Turkish Academics

Altay, Sefa


Engaging the ‘Us’: Exploring Plural Identity through Community Cinema

Sofía Solís Salazar y Begonya Saez Tajafuerce


Inter-Ethnolinguistic Group Stereotypes in the Tarlac State University

Baquing, Jeanette M.

Main Zoom Room
10 November 2024
7:50 pm – 8:30 pm (GMT + 8)

Plenary Panel: Reparations

This plenary panel will feature the presentation, “Genuine Assets Reform: Demanding Reparations from the West/Global North” by Phoebe Sanchez, University of the Philippines Cebu.

The panel will be chaired and discussed by Justin Daduya.

Networking Session and Free Discussion (8:40 pm)

This succeeds Plenary Panel 4 and starts at 8:40 pm.

Reminders: Presenters

Presentation Guidelines

  • Please prepare to speak for ca. 12-13 minutes.
  • You may share your Powerpoint from your end, no need to send it to us.
  • You may submit recorded videos.
    • Please submit a link to the upload (e.g., in Google drive or dropbox).
    • Please send in a new email (not responding to a thread) with the subject “Presentation recording” and the title of your session.
    • Please do it half a day before your session, since the organizers have to inform your session chair.
    • Please also try to join the session and have the link ready.

Zoom Guidelines/Reminders

  • Presenters must have a registered zoom account and must log into this account. Otherwise it’s not possible to join the conference. Apologies, but these are university-wide settings that we cannot change.)

Others

  • Certificates of presentation will be sent via email.



Reminders: Panel Chairs

Guidelines for Panel Chairs

    Please introduce the presenters briefly

    • Please timekeep: Presenters are asked to speak about 12-13 minutes, but you can determine the exact time depending on the number of sessions.
    • Please leave about 20 minutes for Q&A. Remind the speakers how much time they have left (5 min, 3 min, 1 min). Presenters on full screen will neither see the chat nor your camera; we recommend waiting for a time when they’re transitioning between slides, briefly unmuting and telling them how much time they have left.
    • If a discussant is listed, please ask the discussant to share their thoughts for ca. 5 minutes
      Take Q&A.
    • You can extend the session by a maximum of 8 minutes, after that, people will need to get ready for the next session. (If you’re the last session of the day, please extend freely).
    • We don’t have the logistics to present certificates of presentation to speakers during the conference, please thank them for their talk and assure them their certificates will be emailed to them.
    Slot Availability

    The conference is free and open to the public, but Zoom slots are available on a first-come, first-served basis.

    Organizers

    This conference is a project of the Decolonial Studies Program (DSP), Center for Integrative and Development Studies, University of the Philippines. UP CIDS is the policy research unit of the university. 

    The Decolonial Studies Program (DSP) was established in 2019 to interrogate coloniality and the ongoing effects of colonialism in the Global South. The program examines how neocolonial relationships with the Global North continue to shape institutions and lives in areas like resource allocation, trade, and culture, hindering the Global South’s potential for liberation. Visit the DSP’s website and download FREE publications.

    The DSP is one of the 16 Research Programs of UP CIDS, the policy research unit of the University of the Philippines.

    Taking lead on this project is Dr. Caroline Schöpf, Research Fellow of the DSP, who acknowledges the support of the Department of Sociology, University of the Philippines Diliman, for the conference.  

    The following are co-organizing this conference alongside Dr. Schöpf: 

      • Rosa O’Connor-Acevedo (University of Oregon, US)
      • Francisco Jayme Guiang (University of the Philippines Diliman / Chinese University of Hong Kong)
      • Bijulal Mecheril (Mahatma Gandhi University, India)
      • Monfred Sy (University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines)
      • Fatima Sajjad (University of Management and Technology, Pakistan)
      • Cian Tacasa (University of the Philippines Diliman, Philippines)
      • Korey Tillman (Northwestern University, US)