Work was ascribed to five work packages (WPs). WP1 comprised in-depth and systematic literature review of theories on urbanization along the littoral, reading groups, the consolidation of interdisciplinary skills, teaching of a class on heritage and anthropology, and the preparation of a fieldwork plan in consultation with the Supervisor. During WP2, the Fellow carried out a multi-sited ethnographic fieldwork in Malaysia through participant observation and semi-structured, unstructured, and group interviews with different stakeholders, including fishers, coastal residents, activists, and also governmental and corporate stakeholders involved in land reclamation projects. The main case studies were based on Penang Island, but other interviews have been carried out in Kuala Lumpur, Langkawi, and Melaka. Once back from fieldwork, the Fellow analyzed his ethnographic data and prepared submissions of papers disseminating the research findings via WP3 and WP4. During this period the MaReLand website was launched. Various communication, dissemination, and exploitation activities have been managed via WP5. Such activities included presentations at the Czech European Researchers’ Night, a Malaysia-focused event at Children University, the organization of the panel “The Temporalities of Land Reclamation in Maritime Southeast Asia” at ACAS 2024 (Annual Conference of Asian Studies), and consultation with activists in Malaysia and an artist to co-design a booklet in the form of ethnographic visual arts work.
Results of this MSCA have been disseminated via presentations at (1) the workshop “Speculative Climate Urbanism and the Sea: The Inequalities of Building and Living on Water in Southeast Asia” held at the Asia Research Institute, Singapore; (2) at the monthly Anthropology Cluster meetings; and (3) at ACAS 2024, Palacký University Olomouc. Research findings are reported in: (1) an article on contested spatio-temporalities of land reclamation in Penang published in Island Studies Journal; (2) a coauthored article/photo essay on the fishers’ right to stay put along the littoral published in ARIscope; (3) a submitted coauthored article on land reclamation in Melaka; (4) a submitted article on displacement and heritage discourses in a fishing village in Penang; and (5) the forthcoming ethnographic visual arts work which traces the journey of the Penang Tolak Tambak (Penang Rejects Reclamation) alliance between fishers and activists. (6) Another publication appears in the IIAS Newsletter as a kick off communication activity giving visibility to the project during WP1.