Updated on 2025/03/12

写真a

 
KAGAWA, Megumi
 
Affiliation
Faculty of Social Sciences, School of Social Sciences
Job title
Associate Professor(non-tenure-track)

Committee Memberships

  • 2024.04
    -
    2025.03

    The International Studies Association  Committee Member for PEACE Best Female Scholar Book Award

Professional Memberships

  • 2024.07
    -
    Now

    The Japan Association of International Relations

  • 2023.12
    -
    Now

    The American Political Science Association

  • 2020.04
    -
    Now

    Conflict Research Society

  • 2018.03
    -
    Now

    International Studies Association

Research Areas

  • International relations   Conflict Analysis and Resolution

Research Interests

  • Conflict Analysis and Resolution, Peacebuilding

 

Papers

  • Uneven Peace Infiltration: Two Case Studies of Rebel-Led Community Peace Initiatives in the Bangsamoro

    Megumi Kagawa

    Confronting Peace: Local Peacebuilding in the Wake of a National Peace Agreement     309 - 337  2021.12  [Refereed]  [Invited]

    Authorship:Lead author, Last author, Corresponding author

  • A Typology of Mid-Space Local Bridge-Builders

    Yuji Uesugi, Megumi Kagawa

    Hybrid Peacebuilding in Asia     37 - 60  2019.07  [Refereed]  [Invited]

    Authorship:Last author, Corresponding author

  • Roles of Rebel Gatekeepers in Mid-Space Peacebuilding: A Case Study of Bangsamoro

    Megumi Kagawa

    Hybrid Peacebuilding in Asia     61 - 87  2019.07  [Refereed]  [Invited]

    Authorship:Lead author, Last author, Corresponding author

Presentations

  • Civil Adoptability of Transitional Power-Sharing in Elite Pluralism

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    The American Political Science Association 

    Presentation date: 2024.09

    Event date:
    2024.09
     
     
  • Agonistic Pluralism in Rebel Peacebuilding: A Case Study of the Transitional Bangsamoro in the Southern Philippines

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    International Studies Association 

    Presentation date: 2024.04

    Event date:
    2024.04
     
     
  • Transforming the perspective of rebels into the stability of peace: A case study of Bangsamoro, the Philippines

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    Tha annual conferene, International Studies Association 

    Presentation date: 2022.03

  • Transforming Rebel Security Mechanisms in Post-Secessionist Peace Agreements: A Case Study of Bangsamoro, the Southern Philippines

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    Tha annual conferene, International Studies Association 

    Presentation date: 2021.04

  • Uneven Peace Infiltration: Two Case Studies of Rebel-Led Community Peace Initiatives in Bangsamoro, the Philippines

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    Tha annual conferene, International Studies Association 

    Presentation date: 2021.04

  • Learning from Global Democratic Challenges and Innovations Mini-Conference II: Adopting and Adapting Power-Sharing Settlements

    Neophytos Loizides, Edward Morgan-Jones, Laura Sudulich, Kamaran Palani, Cera Murtagh, Megumi Kagawa, Allison McCulloch  [Invited]

    The American Political Science Association 

    Presentation date: 2024.09

    Event date:
    2024.09
     
     
  • Confronting Peace

    Megumi Kagawa, Christer Mitchell, Landon E. Hancock, Susan H. Allen, Cécile Mouly, and more  [Invited]

    Tha annual conferene, International Studies Association 

    Presentation date: 2021.04

  • The Multiplicity of Violence and Divided Political Perceptions by the Extrajudicial Killing: Why President Duterte could be popular in Muslim Mindanao

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    Philippine Political Science Association 

    Presentation date: 2017.05

  • The Dynamism between War on Terror and Intrastate Conflict: A Contest between IR and Conflict Resolution Theory

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    Presentation date: 2016.10

  • Why Hybridity to Resolve Conflict in Muslim Community? Case Studies of Barangay Alliance Justice and Agama Courts over Land Disputes in Mindanao

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    Philippine Political Science Association 

    Presentation date: 2013.04

  • Bangsamoro Peacebuilding: Possibilities of Hybrid Mechanisms

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    Presentation date: 2011.11

  • The Peace Process in Nepal: Why do the local people feel 'unchanged'

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    Presentation date: 2010.10

  • The Trend of the Main Supporters for SSR in Post Conflict: A Voice from Practitioner for Transitional Security and Peacebuilding

    Megumi Kagawa  [Invited]

    Presentation date: 2008.10

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Research Projects

  • A Study of Hybridity and Adaptation of Traditional and Modern Institutions in Conflict Resolution in Asia

    JSPS  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B)

    Project Year :

    2023.04
    -
    2027.03
     

    Yuji Uesugi, Masanobu Horie, Megumi Kagawa, Maori Miyazawa

  • Citizen Inclusion in Power-Sharing Settlements

    JSPS  Open Research Area for the Social Sciences

    Project Year :

    2022.10
    -
    2025.09
     

    Keiichi Kubo, Tomonori Yoshizaki, Dahlia Simangan, Megumi Kagawa, Yun Jung Yang

 

Syllabus

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Academic Activities

  • Toward the Hybrid Peacebuilding

    Other

    2020.10
    -
     
  • Touching Islam's Heartstrings in Tawi-Tawi

    Academic research

    2018.04
    -
     
  • The Sabah Situation

    Other

    Asia Peacebuilding Initiatives  

    2013.04
    -
     
  • The Holistic Approach to SSR Support: One UN

    Academic research

    2012.12
    -
     

Internal Special Research Projects

  • Hybrid-ability of Peacebuilding in Plural Personal Status Law and Culture of Violence: Cases of the Bangsamoro, the southern Philippines

    2024  

     View Summary

        In this research, I explored the potential social capacity to manage community conflict for peacebuilding, focusing on the frameworks and procedural elements of Indigenous social customs or norms.  The role of the ‘hybrid-ness’ of peacebuilding in a post-Jihadist movement was observed empirically.       With my findings, I argue that Bangsamoro’s struggles for self-determination and ancestral domain shape gradationally hybridized peace (GHP) with their Islamic principles. Hybridity reflects how people relate to each other and their macro-micro-social relationships. The first macro aspect is colonial history, the second aspect is Islamic legal culture, the third aspect is (Islamic) rebellion, and the fourth micro aspect is customary.  The gradations of hybridity toward peace pathways depend on social relationships based on their social networks.  Ordinary people are experts in identifying genuine trust in everyday peace, which generates positive hope in any dispute resolution mechanisms.  They probe the hope through mediators or rulers' social behaviours and norms in their social relationships.     Therefore, the dispute resolution mechanism (DRM) can demonstrate the social relationship and the social network by analyzing each party’s norms and social behaviours in the post-conflict transitional society. The first step is to analyze the social relationships and social networks of both conflicting parties and mediators. The second step is to explore the hybridity and gradation of their elements of norms in peace, such as the definition of peace, community, and laws or community rules. Whether conflicting parties find ‘hope’ in the DRM or not can be illustrated by their trust in mediators. The formula of trust is based on how conflicting parties evaluate the social behaviours of mediators or rulers. This reflects the level of gradation.         This case study focused on Muslim society, demonstrating hybridity centred on Islamic principles. However, researchers argue that previously colonized societies are legally and culturally plural. Further, prolonged rebellions develop some governance mechanisms. This GHP formula can be applied to other prolonged conflict-affected societies by analyzing their social network and social relationships with their gatekeepers or regional rulers who directly shape their daily lives.     With this regard, I presented this argument in “Gradationally Hybridized Peace for Guiding Inclusive Peace Pathway: A Case Study of Customary, Islamic and Modern Mechanisms in the Bangsamoro, the Philippines (in English),” at the 2024 Annual Conference of the Japan Association of International Relations in Sapporo, Japan. 

  • Indigenousness and Hybrid-ability in Peacebuilding: Cased of the Bangsamoro, the Philippines 

    2023  

     View Summary

    2023年9月12日にConflict Research Society(ロンドン、キングカレッジ大学)で、学会発表の予定だったが、家族に急病者がでたため急遽欠席。2024年4月7日に、The International Studies Association(サンフランシスコ)での学会発表を予定している。