Beneath the Killing Fields of Cambodia

Sophal Ear

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2010 OFF in Oslo
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Sophal Ear is a survivor of the Cambodian genocide, a development economist, and a political scientist with a special focus on Southeast Asia. Ear explains his family’s history, as they were forced to move to the countryside once the Khmer Rouge took power and re-ordered society in pursuit of the agrarian utopia that they promised the Cambodian people. 

About the Speaker

Sophal Ear

Sophal

Ear

Political scientist, economist, and survivor of the Cambodian genocide

Sophal Ear is a survivor of the Cambodian genocide, a development economist, and a political scientist with a special focus on Southeast Asia. When he was an infant, his mother escaped the brutal Khmer Rouge and fled to Vietnam with her five children. They moved to France in 1978 and then to the United States. Ear entered UC Berkeley at age 16; he continued his education at Princeton, where he received his master’s degree. In 1997, he became a consultant for the World Bank, where he examined welfare policy in Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia. From 2002 to 2003, he served as an assistant resident representative for the United Nations Development Programme in East Timor. His experience provided the foundation for his dissertation exploring aid dependence and governance while earning a Ph.D. from Berkeley. Ear is a tenured Associate Professor and former Senior Associate Dean in the Thunderbird School of Global Management at Arizona State University.

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