CONFERENCE PROGRAM - CRITICAL TOURISM STUDIES ASIA-PACIFIC (CTSAP) Inaugural Conference March 3-6, 2018 Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia Re-Centering Critical Tourism Studies 1
CRITICAL TOURISM STUDIES (CTS) ASIA-PACIFIC INAUGURAL CONFERENCE Conference theme: "Re-Centering Critical Tourism Studies" GADJAH MADA UNIVERSITY, YOGYAKARTA, INDONESIA MARCH 3-6, 2018 DAY 1 Arrival at Adisucipto International Airport, Yogyakarta Transfer: Check in to Hotels Transport airport hotel (15-30 mins) SATURDAY 3- MARCH 2018 OPENING CEREMONY Evening only Shuttle transport offered by Phoenix Hotel / other delegates : own arrangements Check in : Hotel BUS TRANSFER FROM PHOENIX HOTEL ONLY TO VENUE @18.30 / REST : OWN ARRANGEMENTS OPENING CEREMONY : WELCOME DINNER & CULTURAL PERFORMANCE : SATURDAY 3 MARCH - EVENING @ BALAIRUNG UGM DRESS CODE: TOUCH OF BATIK/ SMART CASUAL 19.00 21.30 18.30 Guests staying at Phoenix Hotel meet in Lobby for the shuttle to Balairung, UGM / Delegates staying elsewhere own transport 19.00 19.15 Welcoming Attendees Foyer 19-15 19.25 Cultural Performance (From Regional Office of Tourism of Yogyakarta) Dress code: Smart casual / Touch of Batik Hotel lobby 19.25 19.35 Rector UGM Welcome Address + Officially Open the Conference Prof. Panut Mulyono, D.Eng 19.35 19.40 Video on Religious Harmony in Indonesia 19.40 19.45 Acknowledgements from CTS AP International OC Head Dr. Mark Hampton 19.35-19.40 Video on Wonderful Indonesia 19.40 19.50 Opening Keynote Address: Prof. Dr. I Gde Pitana, M.Si Deputy Minister for International Marketing 19.50 20.00 Group Photo 20.00 21.30 Bali Paradigm video and dinner Britta Boyer Ministry of Tourism of the Republic of Indonesia 2
DAY 2 08.30 09.00 REGISTRATION SUNDAY, 4 MARCH 2018 GRAND PLENARY & WORKSHOP/ PRESENTATIONS @UNIVERSITY CLUB- UGM KEYNOTES SPEECH- GRAND PLENARY (OVERVIEW AND PERSPECTIVES OF ASIA PACIFIC CRITICAL TOURISM ISSUES) 09.00 11.00 KEYNOTE SPEECHES : 11.00 12.00 09.00 09.30 09.30 10.00 10.00 10.30 10.30 11.00 KATHLEEN ADAMS, Loyola University, Chicago, USA TIM EDENSOR Manchester Metropolitan University, UK PLOYSRI PORANANOND Chiang Mai University, Thailand WIENDU NURYANTI Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta 12.00 13.30 LUNCH + NETWORKING PANEL DISCUSSION (with audience participation) MODERATOR: DR. MARK HAMPTON, University of Kent, UK 13.30 16.20 CONCURRENT PAPER SESSIONS 1 & 2 On Gateways and Yellow Brick Roads : Reflections on the Intersections of Tourism, Migration, and Homeland Travel Bidding Farewell to Ethnocentric Tourist Theory Liminality and the play with water in Chiang Mai s Songkran Festival Heritage, Tourism and Millennials: Is It a New Paradigm? 3
CONCURRENT PAPER SESSION 1 Sunday March 4, 13:30 14:50 PANEL 1 PANEL 2 PANEL 3 PANEL 4 PANEL 5 PANEL 6 Room 1 (Bulaksumur Room) Cultural Tourism Moderator: Dwita Hadi Rahmi 1) Formulation and analysis of cultural tourism destination competitiveness index. Wiendu Nuryanti, Ike Janita Dewi, Bambang Sunaryo, M. Dokhi 2) An ethnographic study of multilingual landscape of rural tourist destinations: the case of Kumano Kodo. Kurara Kishi 3) Tourism, Resistance and Cultural Change: The Case of Aitutaki (Cook Islands). Marcus Stephenson Room 2 (Sekip Room) Issues in Indonesian Tourism Moderator: Bambang Soenaryo 1) The Case of Sustainable Tourism Destination Development at Pulesari Village in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Ike Janita Dewi, Restyana Risma Putri 2) Authenticity and Commodification of Ramayana Dance Drama in the Heritage Tourism Context: A comparative study of the Thai Khon and the Javanese Sendratari of Contemporary Thailand and Indonesia. Anak Agung Lindawati Kencana 3) Contradictory expectations: designation and institutional realignment in Bali s World Heritage Site. Wiwik Dharmiasih, Titah Kawitri Resen, Sukma Sushanti Room 3 (Wanagama Room) Tourism & Environment I Moderator: T. Yoyok Wahyu Subroto 1) Opportunities and Challenges of the Karst Tourism Development in Indonesia Cased study in Gunung Sewu Geopark. Agus Suyanto, Eko Haryono 2) How is it related to me? An anthropology of tourism perspective of heritage respresentation in Bada Valley megaliths, Central Sulawesi. Ayu Putri Dewanti 3) For better or for worse? Climate change implications for tourism in southern Sri Lanka. Sarah Tam Room 4 (Nusantara Room) Volunteer Tourism Moderator: Mary Mostafanezhad 1) Voluntouring on Facebook and Instagram: photography and social media in constructing the Third World experience. Harng Luh Sin 2) Reluctant representations: Volunteer tourists, travel photography and social media. Kaylan Schwarz 3) Post-disaster Volunteer Tourism: commodified care and the threat to civil society in Asia. Christopher McMorran Room 5 (Yustisia Room) Negotiating State Politics, Market Economy, and Indigenous Subjectivity: Ethnic/Eco-Tourism Moderator: Yih-Ren Lin 1) Tourist Gaze: Reflections on an Eco-tourism Imagination from The Proposed Maqaw National Park. Yih-Ren Lin 2) Rethinking The Ecotourism at Indigenous Communities: from The Cinsinbu experience to Tayal studies in Taiwan. Ai-Chin Yen 3) Agro-tourism and Indigenous Therapeutic Landscapes: A Case Study from An Indigenous Organic Farm in Northern Taiwan. Umin (Hung-Yu) Ru Room 6 (Grafika Room) Marine & Surf Tourism I Moderator: Jeremy Lemarie 1) Surf tourism for regional revitalization in rural Japan: A study of Ikumi beach. Minami Takechi 2) Study of the Influence on the local community by surf tourism: a case of Tatsugo town, Kagoshima prefecture. Kondo Maki 3) Living with Fukushima s contaminated sea: Life, leisure and tourism in the wake of Disaster. Adam Doering 4
4) Presenting Grandeur of the Past: Visitor Experience at Borobudur Temple. Panggah Ardiyansyah 5) Critical Reflections on Sustainable Cultural Tourism Development in Cambodia: Reframing the role of the scholar in recentering tourism projects. Celia Tuchman Rosta 6) Destination Planning On The Basis Of Tourists Psychographic Profile And Composition. (The case of Dutch tourists as tour package buyers) Emrizal 4) Tourism and The New Path of Social Movement in Southeast Asia: A Critical Study toward The Involvement of Indigenous Groups in Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand into Tourism Development. Nur Nanung Widyanto 5) Learning experience: Seeing through educational travel in higher education students in Eastern Indonesia. Samsudin Arifin Dabamona 5) Women and Tourism Relations in Indonesia Silverio Aji 4) Tourism and environmental subjectivities in the Anthropocene: Observations from Niru Village, Southwest China. Jundan Zhang 5) Wood Girls, Agri-Women & Fisher-enne: women empowering sustainable tourism in rural communities in Japan. Kumi Kato, Yumi Oura, Junko Ueda 4) Voluntourism and the Role of the Host Organization. Divya, Sahasrabuddhe, Joseph Cheer 4) Reconciliation and Collective Interpretation: Tradition as a Dynamic Way for Conflict Resolution in Tourism Resources Management. Daya (Da-Wei) Kuan 4) Towards a political economy of coastal tourism development in South-East Asia. Mark Hampton, Raoul Bianchi 5) Calling All The Sharks: The Use of Indigenous Knowledge in Scuba Diving Tourism. Nurdina Prasetyo Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion 14.50 15.00 Coffee Break and Prepare to Change Rooms 5
CONCURRENT PAPER SESSION 2 Sunday March 4, 15:00 16:20 PANEL 7 PANEL 8 PANEL 9 PANEL 10 PANEL 11 PANEL 12 Room 1 (Bulaksumur Room) Recentering Critical Tourism Studies to the Asia-Pacific Moderator: Stroma Cole Room 2 (Sekip Room) Room 3 (Wanagama Room) Room 4 (Nusantara Room) Tourism Planning & Policy Moderator: Ardhya Nareswari Room 5 (Yustisia Room) Room 6 (Grafika Room) Ethics and Sustainability in Tourism Moderator: Alexander Trupp Transport and Mobilities in Tourism Moderator: Roger Norum Tourism and Environment II Moderator: Deva Fosterharoldas Swasto Marine & Surf Tourism II Moderator: Adam Doering 1) Asianising the Field : Critical Tourism Studies in Asia. Tou Chang Chang 1) An inquiry into employees experiences of sexual harassment by customers in the Cook Islands hospitality industry. Lisa Sadaraka, Heike Schänzel 1) Tourism development in Indonesia: Challenges and opportunities for improving urban public transport systems. Suryani Eka Wijaya 1) Halal Tourism Policy in Indonesia: Key Issues and Challenges. I Made Krisnajaya 1) Locating the Urban in the Rural: A Political Ecology of Agrotourism in Northeastern Thailand. Micah Fisher, Sukanlaya Choenkwan, 1) Meaning of Waves: Engaging and Perceiving the Environment for Mentawaians. Sarani Pakan 2) Re-centring Scholarship for the Changing Tourism Landscape. Hazel Tucker 2) Analysis of corporate responsibility practices in the production of events in Madrid hotels. Jaime Gonzalez Masip, Ana Maria Aceituno Cañadas 2) Could Rural Cycling as Sustainable Mobility Increase Women s Empowerment? Yoko Seto 2) Neighborhood Development Strategy to Empower Local Community for Special Interest Tourism in Urban Kampong Settlement. Paulus Bawole 2) Tarung Taro: The Political Ecology of Eco- Tourism in the Oldest Balinese Village. Agung Wardana, Sukma Arida 2) Surfing Tourism Development in New Zealand: A Kiwi perspective. Nick Towner 3) Colonial Imaginaries and Postcolonial Representations of Travel and Tourism. Uma Kothari 3) Mongers, Inc: Sexual tourism, materialism, pleasure, mongering Louis Bousquet 3) Hospitality and tourist mobility: A case study of Yoron Island in Japan. Koji Kanda 3) Regional Autonomy and Regional Branding. Hamdan Anwari, Fuadi Afif, Revi Agustin Aisyianita 3) Revisiting Bali: Enriching or Degrading, Thirty Years after the Bali Sustainable Development Project Bakti Setiawan & Bruce Mitchell 3) Surf localism and the materiality of common property resources. Jonathan Padwe, Jeremy Lemarie 4) Disciplining Singapore: Food Safety and Tourism. Can-Seng Ooi, 4) The Sustainability Paradox in World Heritage Cities: The Case 4) Transport equity in Bali, Indonesia: Addressing diverging needs 4) Leadership Patterns and Roles in Managing Rural Tourism Attractions in 4) Potential and challenges of tourism-agriculture linkages: experience 4) Distinct but comparable? The surfing development in Taiwan and Hainan. 6
Nicki Tarulevicz of Melaka. Puay Liu Ong of tourists and commuters. Sunniva Sandbukt 5) Western-centrism in internationalised tourism higher education curricula: Perspectives from Vietnam. Maren Viol 5) Developing sustainable tourism based on social entrepreneurship intentions, tourism awareness, and touristic potential. Lucia Kurniawati, Patrick Vivid Adinata, MT Ernawati 5) Large infrastructure development and path dependency in the tourism sector: a case study in Tana Toraja, Indonesia. Yoshi Abe, Tod Jones Yogyakarta, Indonesia: Roles of Social Capital. Popi Irawan 5) Route characteristics of tourists visit through the approach of Kotagede tourism destination spatial aspects. Ghina Rizqandi, Wiendu Nuryanti, Yoyok Wahyu Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion 16.30 17.45 Film Session: Title: Waiting for John from Nusa Tenggara Timur province, Indonesia. Dina Viktoria Sinlae 5) Assessing Green Practices of Tourism Operators in Newfoundland and Labrador and Costa Rica. Greg Wood 6) Presenting the Forest of Wonder to the World: UNESCO World Heritage Designation Process in Yambaru Area in Okinawa, Japan. Sayaka Sakuma Christophe Guibert, Benjamin Taunay 5) The Italian South Seas: (Im)mobilities, Images and Imaginaries. Guido Carlo Pigliasco Discussion 17.45 Free Evening to explore Yogyakarta restaurant scene 7
DAY 3 08.30 09.00 REGISTRATION MONDAY, 5 MARCH 2018 GRAND PLENARY & CLOSING @UNIVERSITY CLUB- UGM KEYNOTES SPEECH- GRAND PLENARY (OVERVIEW AND PERSPECTIVES OF ASIA PACIFIC CRITICAL TOURISM ISSUES) KEYNOTE SPEECHES : 09.00 10.30 09.00 09.30 STROMA COLE, University of the West of England, UK Empowered or Burdened? Gender and Tourism Development in Indonesia. 09.30 10.00 CHRIS GIBSON, University of Wollongong, Australia Critical tourism studies: achievements, challenges, and prospects 10.00 10.30 REGINA SCHEYVENS Massey University, New Zealand Tourism and the Sustainable Development Goals: Continuing the myth of tourism as a sustainable industry? 10.30 11.30 11.30 13.00 LUNCH + NETWORKING PANEL DISCUSSION (with audience participation) MODERATOR: PROF. IR. WIENDU NURYANTI, PH.D., UGM 13.00 15.50 CONCURRENT PAPER SESSIONS 3 & 4 8
CONCURRENT PAPER SESSION 3 Monday March 5, 13:00 14:20 PANEL 13 PANEL 14 PANEL 15 PANEL 16 PANEL 17 PANEL 18 Room 1 (Bulaksumur Room) Tourism, Terror, Empowerment Moderator: David Sanders 1) Terrorism and tourism since 2009: the ten years journey of tourism recovery in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. Bo Ma, Joseph Cheer 2) Metamorphosis Bunaken, a new image of a tourism destination. Linda Tondobala, George Abraham Kountul 3) Influence of Terrorism on Tourism Industry in Bali: Case Study of Bali Bombing I, 2002. Fatkurrohman Room 2 (Sekip Room) Tourism & Community I Moderator: Bambang Sunaryo 1) The perception of Chinese tourists on responsible Chinese outbound tourism in Laos and Cambodia. Xu Honggang 2) Questioning empowerment in community-based tourism in Bali: Community ownership or individual control? Claudia Dolezal 3) A critical assessment of the role of cultural capital in determining local community based tourism development: A case of Nglanggeran Tourism Village. Rucitarahma Ristiawan Room 3 (Wanagama Room) Spiritual Tourism Moderator: Guido Carlo Pigliasco 1) The Search for Spirituality in Tourism: Toward a Conceptual Framework for Spiritual Tourism. Joseph Cheer 2) Exploring the relationship between a religious sacred site and spiritual tourists: a case study of a Buddhist sacred site, Koyasan in Japan. Kaori Yanata 3) Contending Deep Japan - A spiritual tourism and inbound strategy. Chiho Nishigomi Room 4 (Nusantara Room) Tourism and Politics Moderator: Harng Luh Sin 1) Tourism and the Geopolitical Imaginary: Frontiers of Leisure in the People's Republic of China and Myanmar. Mary Mostafanezhad 2) The biopolitics of Airbnb. Maartje Roelofsen, Claudio Minca 3) Tourism scholarship as geopolitical instrument: A case study of Australian-Chinese academic collaboration. Ian Rowen Room 5 (Yustisia Room) Ethnic & Local Identity in Tourism Moderator: Heddy Shri Ahimsa Putra 1) It is more Peruvian than we think! Recognising the value of native food in the modern Peruvian gastronomic discourse. Sandra Cherro Osorio, Elspeth Frew, Clare Lade, Kim Williams 2) (Re)placing the Terengganu Peranakan Chinese As Mek Awangâ : Contesting Heritage Tourism and the Commodification of Peranakan Identities. Hong Chuang Loo, Giok Hun Pue, Puay Liu Ong 3) "Not Primitive Enough": Tourist Narratives and Jinuo Futures on China's Southwestern Borders. Madeleine Colvin Room 6 (Grafika Room) Issues in Indonesian Tourism II Moderator: Syam Rachma Marcilia 1) Developing Halal Tourism In Aceh: Potential and Challenges. Heriani, M Baiquni, Joko Wiyono 2) Pemberdayaan Masyarakat melalui Desa Wisata (Community Empowerment in Tourism Village) Ahmad Ma ruf 3) Determinants of Domestic Tourists Who Travelling for Vacation or Recreation in Java Island of Indonesia: A Quantitative Assessment through Multilevel Binary Logistic Regression, Mohammad Dokhi 9
4) Analyzing the Regional Strategic for Spatial Planning in Tourism Planning Approach for Regional Economic Growth of Undeveloped Regency: Case Study of North Kayong Regency, Indonesia. Imanuddin 5) Solesolevaki as Social Capital: A Tale of a Village, Two Tribes, and a Resort in Fiji, Apisalome Movono 4) Excuse or blessing? Critical analysis on Propoor tourism strategy implementation in Hainan, China. Liu Jun 5) A Critical Look into the Livelihood Sustainability of Return Migrants in Labuan Bajo, Indonesia - an Emerging Destination. Aldi Herindra Lasso, Titi Susilowati Prabawa 4) Lifestyle -Migration: Searching for the Good Life. Agnete Gundersen 5) Marketing Heritage: A Foundation for Sustainable Heritage as Pilgrimage Destination, the Case of Ganjuran Church, Bantul, Indonesia. Handayani Rahayuningsih, Fahmi Prihantoro 4) A Food Fight from Fabulous Food 1Malaysia to CitraRasa. Deborah Che, Mohd Hairi Jalis 5) Contesting significations of Chinese tourism: Confucian tradition or cultural politics? Man Tat Cheng 4) Tourism and the indigenous Batek: marginalization or adaptation? Keng Hang Fan, NG Sai Leung 5) Tourism, Souvenirs and Sustainable Development in Melanesia. Alexander Trupp Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion 14.20 14.35 Coffee Break and Prepare to Change Rooms 4) Evaluation Research Of Agro-tourism Zulfa Hidayati 5) Potential Swamp Forest as Educational Tourism Support based on Conservation of Sumatran Elephan (Elephan Maximus Sumatranus). Indra Gumay Febryano, Rusita Jamal, Slamet Budi Yuwono 6) Public Participation Against Tourism In Kampung Tamansari Yogyakarta. Elisabeth Sagala 10
CONCURRENT PAPER SESSION 4 Monday March 5, 14:35 15:55 PANEL 19 PANEL 20 PANEL 21 PANEL 22 PANEL 23 PANEL 24 Room 1 (Bulaksumur Room) Film in Tourism Moderator: Joseph Cheer Film in Tourism featuring Britta Boyer and Jessica Sherry and Charlie Hill- Smith Room 2 (Sekip Room) Tourism and Community II Moderator: Bakti Setiawan 1) Impacts of solar eclipse tours on local communities: the case of Babul in Kalimantan. Riho Obara 2) Interrogating the value proposition of a heritage tourism niche in the Marshall Islands. Lynn Beckles 3) Community participation in archaeotourism development at Karangan village, East Kutai Regency, and East Kalimantan Province. Hery Sigit Cahyadi 4) Local Tourism in Sumba: Redeeming Modernism? Thressia Andriati Octaviani Dading Room 3 (Wanagama Room) Tourism & Heritage Moderator: Diananta Pramita 1) Enhancing Community- Based Heritage Tourism and it's Impacts in Trowulan, Mojokerto, Indonesia. Christy Widyawati 2) Donggala, weaving the heritage for present and future. Zubair Butudoka, Zulkifly Pagesa (Donggala Heritage) 3) Reinforcing the philosophical functions and values on the development of Sasirangan textiles. Annida Luthfiana 4) Reviewing Heritage Tourism Stakeholders: A Case Study based on the Emergence of Heritage Room 4 (Nusantara Room) Tourism and Social Transformation Moderator: Marcus Stephenson 1) The Transformative Experiences of Asian Working Holiday Makers in Australia. Garth Lean, Brittany Wilcockson 2) Vacation or Obli-cation: (Re)producing the Happy Family in a Home-Away- From-Home. Yinn Shan Cheong 3) Selfi(e)shness and Truthiness: The geopolitical mediation of mobile place imaginaries. Roger Norum 4) Possibility of interactive effects on women s empowerment and sustainable tourism Room 5 (Yustisia Room) Dark and Disaster Tourism Moderator: Christopher McMorran 1) Role and Challenges of Tourism in Disaster Reconstruction. Reconceptualizing Dark Tourism through the Case of the Mt. Merapi eruption, Indonesia. Hikaru Kenchu 2) The Role of Tourism in Post-Disaster Response and Recovery: The Case of Vanuatu in the Aftermath of Tropical Cyclone Pam in 2015. Andreas Neef 3) Torturing Criminals and Shooting Cyborgs and Zombies: The Dark Past, Present and Future of Societies and their Theme Parks. Chin-Ee Ong 4) From Dark Tourism to Disaster resilience: Narratives of Tourism in Post-Disaster Japan. Room 6 (Grafika Room) Imagining Tourism Landscapes Moderator: Claudia Dolezal 1) Analysis of Sumba Tourism Marketing Strategy. Florentina Narwastu 2) I'm there, therefore I am: Spatial experience and cultural enactment through tourism. Wiwik Sushartami, Lintang Arum Ndalu 3) Physical or Virtual Trails? Preserving, Celebrating and Sharing Tangible and Intangible Heritage. Gail Vander Stoep 4) Anime Tourism: What Lagrange: The Flower of Rin-ne has brought to and created in the 11
5) What matters in rural tourism: between expectations and realities, Devi Roza Kausar, Henky Hermantoro Trails Community Groups in Indonesia. Teguh Amor Patria, Gail A. Vander Stoep 5) How can tourism contribute in enhancing the intangible cultural heritage of local community? The Case Study of Date Palm Festival, Siwa Oasis. Mina Kamal Asham Shafiek development. Minako Okada 5) School closures and community redevelopment in rural Japan: Succession and creation of cultural capital in Makuni, Wakayama. Shuhei Tamura Flavia Fluco, Anna Martini 5) I Don t Want Westerners : Consuming Culture through Intercultural Sex, in the Age of Tinder Tourism. Donna James, Garth Lean virtual world and the rural community in Kamogawa. Yuki Ohsawa 5) Australian images of Thailand as a backpacking destination: Comparative perspectives from visitors and non-visitors. Supattra Sroypetch, Rod Caldicott Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion Discussion 15.55 16.40 GRAND PLENARY PANEL (Selected speakers final observations, conclusion and audience discussion) CLOSING CEREMONY CLOSING SPEECH 16.40 17.15 - Dr. Ir. Dwita Hadi Rahmi, M.A - Edi Setijono, ST., MM - Dr. Mark Hampton 17.15 17.30 CERTIFICATE DISTRIBUTION 17.30 19.00 DINNER AT UC, UGM DAY 4 03.00 TUESDAY, 6 MARCH 2018 OPTIONAL POST CONFERENCE TOUR: SUNRISE AT BOROBUDUR TOUR BUSES PICKUP DELEGATES AT PHOENIX HOTEL For all delegates who have signed up (regardless of where you are staying). Otherwise arrange own transport to Manohara Hotel, Borobudur 03.30 04.30 TRANSFER FROM PHOENIX HOTEL TO BOROBUDUR TEMPLE 04.45 06.45 SUNRISE TOUR AT BOROBUDUR TEMPLE (By Previous Registration Only) 07.30 08.30 TRANSFER FROM BOROBUDUR TO PHOENIX HOTEL CHECK OUT AND DEPARTURE CHECK OUT HOTELS BY 12.00 NOON AND DEPARTURE (individual transfer arrangements) 12
The Doctoral Program in Architecture and Planning, Department of Architecture and Planning, Faculty of Engineering, Universitas Gadjah Mada wishes to sincerely thank the following sponsors : 13