International Training Workshop on Demographic Analysis with Applications to Aging, Health, and Education, hosted by the College of Population Studies, Chulalongkorn University.

Demographic Analysis

Applications are now open for the 2026 Training Workshop on Demographic Analysis with Applications to Aging, Health, and Education, to be held at Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, 2–25 November 2026.

The course includes a new module on Generative AI for demographic research. Deadline: 22 June 2026.

For further information, please see the attached brochure or visit https://cps.chula.ac.th/cps2022/.

Final_Brochure_Training_Workshop_Jun2026.pdf

 

Obituary

Yasuhiko Saito (1955–2026)

saitoIt is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of Professor Yasuhiko Saito, Research Project Professor at the College of Economics, Nihon University, and former member of the APA Council (2016–18).

Born in 1955, Professor Saito was a distinguished scholar whose academic journey began at Nihon University, where he graduated from the Department of Economics in 1979. He later moved to the United States to pursue further studies, earning his Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Southern California (USC) in 1993. He began his research career at USC under the mentorship of demographer Eileen Crimmins and economist Richard Easterlin.  In 1995, he returned to his alma mater in Tokyo, where he dedicated over two decades to research and teaching.

Professor Saito was a leading figure in demography, gerontology, and population health. His work focused on active and healthy life expectancy, centenarian research, and the social determinants of health among older populations in both developed and developing countries. He promoted data collection for the study of ageing and health in Asian countries. He led a six-wave national longitudinal survey on ageing and health in Japan—the Nihon University Japanese Longitudinal Study of Ageing—which remains a cornerstone of gerontological research. He also worked on a five-country comparative study of centenarians (5-COOP), involving Denmark, France, Japan, Sweden, and Switzerland.

Professor Saito was also affiliated with Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore, where he contributed to research on ageing and health, particularly through longitudinal studies. At the time of his death, he was serving as Senior Research Fellow and Senior Advisor to the President on Population Ageing at the Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia (ERIA) and was overseeing the conduct of a groundbreaking longitudinal survey on ageing and health in the Philippines and Viet Nam.

Professor Saito’s research contributed significantly to advancing population studies in Japan, Asia, and globally, with an emphasis on improving population health and standardizing the measurement of healthy life expectancy. He was an internationally recognized scholar who dedicated himself to advancing and standardizing the healthy life expectancy calculation methods, including the Sullivan method, IMaCh, and SPACE. He collaborated closely with the REVES international network as one of its most experienced and longest-serving members, helping to improve how the world understands the quality of life in ageing societies. In 1997, he hosted and organized the annual REVES meeting at Nihon University in Tokyo. He also led the Asia-REVES subnetwork in the 1990s, actively promoting the use of healthy life expectancy across the region. In recent years, he established a workshop dedicated to these methods of healthy life expectancy, held prior to the network's annual meeting.

Professor Saito had an extensive network across regions and institutions. He served as a council member of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population (IUSSP) from 2005 to 2009 and as an executive committee member of the International Social Science Council (ISSC), representing IUSSP, from 2010 to 2018. He was also a member of the 4th Council of the Asian Population Association from 2016 to 2018.

Beyond his technical achievements, Professor Saito was deeply committed to the growth of the academic community. He was a passionate mentor who dedicated himself to developing the capacity of young researchers throughout the Asia-Pacific region. He served as a crucial academic bridge between Japan and the international community, leaving behind a wealth of knowledge and a generation of scholars inspired by his dedication.

Professor Saito is survived by his wife, Tomoko Saito, and their only child, Kazuki.

(Written by Reiko Hayashi, Chi-Tsun Chiu and Grace Cruz)

🌍 Scientific Group 3 Webinar Announcement

The Scientific Group 3: Climate Mobility, Migrants, and Health of the Asian Population Association (APA) is pleased to announce an upcoming online seminar.

Beyond Remittances: Temporary Migration and the Wellbeing of Migrant Workers and Households, Evidence from Timor-Leste (Part of APA’s “Dialogues on Asia’s Demographic Future” Series)

The Asian Population Association (APA), through its Scientific Group 3: Climate Mobility, Migrants, and Health, is pleased to invite you to this upcoming webinar examining the broader implications of temporary labour migration beyond remittance flows.

While temporary migration is often promoted as a pathway to development, its wider impacts on economic security, health, skills, and post-return wellbeing remain insufficiently explored. Drawing on evidence from Timor-Leste, this webinar provides new insights into how migration shapes the lives of migrant workers and their households.

Speaker

Prof. Udoy Saikia
Research Higher Degree Coordinator
College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Flinders University, Australia

Date: 8 May 2026

Time

  • India Time (IST): 10:00–11:00
  • Bangkok Time (ICT): 11:30–12:30
  • Adelaide Time: 14:00–15:00

Platform

Zoom: https://zoom.us/j/99279622075?pwd=Q10Nvfh0kynYafWsKb9kbmkwhbpjfQ.1
Meeting ID: 992 7962 2075
Passcode: 945122

We warmly invite scholars, researchers, students, and practitioners to join this important discussion.

Webinar 08MAY2026 Prof Udoy Saikia

🌍 APA Webinar | Scientific Group 3: Climate Mobility, Migrants & Health

🌍 APA Webinar | Scientific Group 3: Climate Mobility, Migrants & Health

Flooding and climate-related disasters are increasingly shaping migration patterns and urban change. But how do these environmental pressures interact with processes such as gentrification?

Join us for an insightful webinar:

Flooding and Gentrification: A Barometer of Climate Migration?

🎤 Speaker
Prof. Darren Smith
Professor of Geography, Loughborough University, UK

📅 Date: Monday, 23 March 2026
Time: 16:00–17:00 ICT | 09:00–10:00 UTC
💻 Platform: Zoom

🔗 Join the webinar:
https://zoom.us/j/96497620558?pwd=FBXYz6o8Ccta6bAQOhwid7glLe3QJW.1

Meeting ID: 964 9762 0558
Passcode: 364715

In this seminar, Prof. Smith will discuss how repeated flooding events in the Calder Valley (North England) have influenced patterns of investment, displacement, and migration. Drawing on longitudinal research since the mid-1990s, the talk explores how climate risks may disrupt or reshape gentrification processes and contribute to debates on climate migration.

📣 We warmly invite researchers, students, and practitioners interested in climate mobility, migration, and urban change to join us.

🔴 Recording Now Available: Climate-Related Health Vulnerabilities and Access Barriers among Migrant Populations

Webinar Replay
Climate-Related Health Vulnerabilities and Access Barriers among Migrant Populations

🎥 Watch the recording:
https://youtu.be/dSwFW3e0_XY

In this webinar, Assoc. Prof. Ruttiya Bhula-or (College of Population Studies, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand) examines climate-related health vulnerabilities and access barriers faced by migrant populations, highlighting key challenges and policy implications.

📅 Organized by the Asian Population Association (APA)
📧 Contact: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.