
Gathering of scholars, artists to rethink urban research
Published on: Tue, Jul 15, 2025 Text Size: Dr Tangit (front right) with organiser and participants. Kundasang: Scholars, educators, and artists from across Southeast Asia and beyond convened in the highland town of Kundasang for a five-day regional workshop organised under the Southeast Asia Neighbourhoods Network (Seannet), aimed at deepening connections between academic research, community knowledge, and place-based learning. Jointly organised by Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS) and Universiti Malaya (UM), with support from the Henry Luce Foundation, the workshop ran from July 9 to 13 and brought together participants from more than 20 academic and grassroots institutions.
Advertisement The event is part of Seannet's broader initiative to reshape urban studies by foregrounding everyday life, memory, and resistance within neighbourhoods. The programme was led by Dr Vilashini Somiah, a feminist anthropologist and senior lecturer at UM, who has conducted extensive fieldwork in Kundasang. She was joined by UMS senior lecturer Dr Trixie Tangit, a linguist and anthropologist noted for her work on Indigenous knowledge systems and ethical community-based methodologies. Participants engaged in a range of activities, including site visits to the rural villages of Cinta Mata, Bundu Tuhan, and Kiau Nuluh, as well as collaborative presentations, roundtable discussions, and guided neighbourhood walks. The approach emphasized 'slow research' — a relational and reciprocal methodology grounded in listening, observation, and respectful engagement. 'Kundasang is a repository of Indigenous wisdom, memory, and resistance,' said Dr Tangit. 'This workshop is not just a return to a research site; it is a return to a living archive of knowledge. Neighbourhoods like these challenge us to rethink justice, belonging, and coexistence in Southeast Asia.' Dr Somiah highlighted the significance of the workshop's deliberate and reflective pace. 'We are not rushing through theory or data. We are walking, listening, sharing meals, and participating in ritual. This is research that is relational, reciprocal, and real,' she said. Representatives from institutions such as the University of New South Wales, Leiden University, the National University of Singapore, and the University of the Philippines Diliman were in attendance, alongside grassroots partners like the CRIBS Foundation. The event underscored Seannet's ongoing commitment to community-rooted scholarship and intergenerational dialogue, positioning neighbourhoods not only as sites of academic inquiry but as vibrant spaces of creativity, resistance, and meaning-making within Southeast Asia's evolving urban landscapes. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available.
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'This workshop is not just a return to a research site, it's a return to a living archive of knowledge. We wanted to bring SEANNET here because we believe that neighbourhoods like these hold answers to how we think about justice, belonging, and co-existence in Southeast Asia.' Dr Somiah is widely known for her work on Sabah's Indigenous and migrant communities, and her long engagement with SEANNET includes a 2024 Visiting Fellowship at the London School of Economics' Southeast Asia Centre (LSE SEAC), supported by the Henry Luce Foundation. Her research into rural gendered spaces in Kundasang helped lay the intellectual foundation for the current workshop. Dr Tangit's leadership has been instrumental in shaping the program's intellectual and ethical direction. A passionate advocate for community-based research and Indigenous knowledge systems, Dr Tangit brings both academic rigor and heartfelt commitment to her role. 'This gathering is more than an academic meeting, it's a chance to reconnect with what it means to research with care, with humility, and with attention to the communities who shape the knowledge we produce,' said Dr Tangit. 'By coming together in Kundasang, we're reminded that neighbourhoods are not just sites of study, they are living, breathing spaces of meaning.' SEANNET participants visit Dumowongi, also known as the 'aroma garden,' in Bundu Tuhan. This community space features a variety of aromatic and medicinal plants used in traditional healing, ceremonial practices, and daily life. The visit offered participants insight into the deep relationship between local botanical knowledge, spirituality, and ancestral stewardship of the land. Fourth from the left is Dr Trixie Tangit. The five-day programme included site visits to three rural highland villages; Cinta Mata, Bundu Tuhan and Kiau Nuluh, each known for its unique engagement with land, memory and community activism. Participants from over 20 institutions took part in collaborative presentations, roundtable discussions, and neighbourhood walks. Among the institutions represented were the University of New South Wales (UNSW Sydney), Leiden University (Netherlands), National University of Singapore, University of the Philippines Diliman, Universiti Malaya, and grassroots partners such as the CRIBS Foundation. 'What makes this gathering special is its slowness,' said Dr Somiah. 'We're not rushing through theory or data. We're walking, listening, sharing food, witnessing ritual. This is what research can be relational, reciprocal, real.' 'We're here not to extract knowledge,' added Dr Tangit, 'but to exchange, to honour, and to carry forward what's been shared with us. That, to me, is the essence of this workshop.' Since its inception, SEANNET has built a strong reputation for fostering grounded, community-based scholarship in studying urbanisation across the Southeast Asian region. From Phnom Penh to Surabaya, Yangon to Manila, and Jayapura to Luang Prabang, SEANNET workshops have been hosted in some of Southeast Asia's most historically and culturally complex urban neighbourhoods. These workshops prioritise local voices, lived experiences, and collective memory, offering a powerful counter-narrative to top-down models of urban research. As part of SEANNET 2025's immersion activities, participants joined the Bundu Tuhan community to prepare linopot- a traditional Kadazan-Dusun dish of rice wrapped in leaves. At the centre, Dr Rita Padawangi (with phone) and Dr Vilashini Somiah (in pink) shared stories and laughter over the chopping board, embodying collaborative learning through food and everyday care. This year, the network made its way to Kundasang, Sabah, with three rural highland communities Cinta Mata, Bundu Tuhan, and Kiau Nuluh opening their doors to participants from across the region. The field immersion offered not just knowledge, but presence: a chance to listen, walk, learn, and share space with the people who call these places home. 'Every SEANNET workshop is different, but what ties them together is a shared commitment to listening. Kundasang has gifted us a depth of silence, space, and story that we will carry with us long after we leave,' said Dr Rita Padawangi, SEANNET organiser. In Bundu Tuhan, community members welcomed participants into a full-day immersion that honoured the diversity of voices across age, gender, spirituality, and roles in the village. Stories were shared in the balai adat (customs town hall) by village leaders and adat custodians, while Bundu Tuhan local women and cultural practitioners offered perspectives at the village's communal hall, now officially known as Soguanggo; a name symbolising the power of language, identity and place. 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