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Anthropology professor Miriam Stark appointed new CSEAS director

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Miriam Stark, professor of Anthropology, has been appointed Center for Southeast Asian Studies (CSEAS) director effective August 2018 through 2022. She will lead more than 50 affiliated faculty members distributed in 21 different departments, making CSEAS the largest concentration of Southeast Asian specialists in the country.

“I am confident that with her enthusiasm, dedication and can-do attitude she will successfully lead the center through the next four years. I look forward to continue working with the center under her leadership,” said Kirstin Pauka, current CSEAS director and professor in the UH Mānoa Department of Theatre and Dance.

CSEAS is one of only eight U.S. Department of Education National Resource Centers for the study of Southeast Asian in the U.S. As part of UH Mānoa, CSEAS serves as the coordinating body for Southeast Asian studies throughout the university and oversees more than 100 language and area studies courses, with particular focus in the social sciences and humanities.

Stark’s Cambodian research program, begun in the mid-1990s in collaboration with the East-West Center, represents the longest-running U.S.-based archaeological program in the Kingdom of Cambodia. She co-directed the Lower Mekong Archaeological from 1996-2009, began ongoing work through the Greater Angkor project in 2010, and on the Khmer Production and Exchange Project in 2014.  Her international collaborative research programs blend teaching with field-based archaeological research on political economy, state formation and urbanism.

Stark, who joined the Colllege’s Department of Anthropology in 1995 as a Southeast Asian archaeologist, received her bachelor’s degree from the University of Michigan (1984), and her master’s and doctoral degrees from the University of Arizona (MA, 1987; PhD, 1993). A past editor of Asian Perspectives, the leading archaeological journal devoted to the prehistory of Asia and the Pacific region, Stark’s archaeological and ethnographic field experience involves field-based research in several locations of North America (Midwest, sub-Arctic, American Southwest), the Near East (Israel and Turkey), and in Southeast Asia (Philippines, Thailand, Cambodia). She has worked in Southeast Asia for more than three decades.

About CSEAS

CSEAS maintains educational linkages to university programs in Thailand, Viet Nam, the Philippines, East Timor, Cambodia, Malaysia, Singapore, and Indonesia, as well as specialized faculties in Europe. The center also facilitates individualized study programs specific to students’ needs. These in-country experiences provide students with valuable opportunities to conduct research and/or pursue advanced language study.


Miriam Stark
Miriam Stark