diff --git a/identifiers.tsv b/identifiers.tsv
index 2529f050c91c2d104d43095263e038d064ddc9d4..3d89e0243604de4f78e674d67a687c7610b59bc8 100644
--- a/identifiers.tsv
+++ b/identifiers.tsv
@@ -50,3 +50,11 @@ id	na_id	identifier	context_id	context_pid	canonical_url	ticket	ts_md_fetch	ts_d
 	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0083	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/7551	31373	2022-12-23T152611Z	2022-12-23T153021Z
 	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0084	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/6415	31814	2023-03-15T121220Z	2023-03-15T121244Z
 	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0085	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/7393	32065	2023-05-01T113529Z	2023-05-01T113548Z
+	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0086	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/7947	32556	2023-06-29T114957Z	2023-06-29T115002Z
+	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0087	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/7264	32556	2023-06-29T114519Z	2023-06-29T114535Z
+	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0088	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/7687	32556	2023-06-29T114903Z	2023-06-29T114925Z
+	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0089	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/7561	32556	2023-06-29T114806Z	2023-06-29T114811Z
+	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0090	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/7560	32556	2023-06-29T114622Z	2023-06-29T114639Z
+	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0091	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/8064	32556	2023-06-29T115144Z	2023-06-29T115156Z
+	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0092	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/8077	32556	2023-06-29T115236Z	2023-06-29T115238Z
+	3	10.14764/10.ASEAS-0093	1		https://aseas.univie.ac.at/index.php/aseas/article/view/8078	32556	2023-06-29T115318Z	2023-06-29T115321Z
diff --git a/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0086.xml b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0086.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e9acda9924a054ab09bc4eb450ff75ffa7f06bce
--- /dev/null
+++ b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0086.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,40 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4/metadata.xsd">
+  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.14764/10.ASEAS-0086</identifier>
+  <creators>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Cusripituck, Patoo</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Yamabhai, Jitjayang</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+  </creators>
+  <titles>
+    <title>Mobilizing the (Im)Mobile Museum Through Hybrid Curation: A Story of Hybrid Curation of Cultural Practice During the COVID-19 Pandemic</title>
+  </titles>
+  <publisher>Advances in Southeast Asian Studies</publisher>
+  <publicationYear>2023</publicationYear>
+  <dates>
+    <date dateType="Submitted">2023-03-31</date>
+    <date dateType="Accepted">2023-04-27</date>
+    <date dateType="Updated">2023-06-28</date>
+    <date dateType="Issued">2023-06-28</date>
+  </dates>
+  <language>en</language>
+  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">Article</resourceType>
+  <alternateIdentifiers>
+    <alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="publisherId">14-632-7947</alternateIdentifier>
+  </alternateIdentifiers>
+  <sizes>
+    <size>145-155 Pages</size>
+  </sizes>
+  <rightsList>
+    <rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0">This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.</rights>
+  </rightsList>
+  <descriptions>
+    <description descriptionType="Abstract">
+This narrative research report summarizes the experiences of Vivid Ethnicity, a mobile anthropological museum of the Museum of Cultural Anthropology at Mahidol University, Thailand, during the lockdowns caused by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020-2022. Although Vivid Ethnicity was rendered immobile and forced to stop travelling during the pandemic, it developed a hybrid curatorial method to stay connected and engaged with its audiences and research partners in two ethnic villages in Chiang Mai province. A key lesson of this experience is that hands-on information and communication technologies can help maintain a certain proximity with the audiences and research partners in times of physical absence. We also learned that an empathetic mindset on the part of everyone involved in the project, along with a human-centric design, are crucial components of what we call the hybrid curation of cultural practice.
+</description>
+    <description descriptionType="SeriesInformation">Advances in Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 16 No. 1 (2023): The COVID-19 Pandemic, (Im)Mobilities, and Migration in Southeast Asia</description>
+  </descriptions>
+</resource>
diff --git a/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0087.xml b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0087.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..95b0e884947a515b105276bb11a1c3b22b2f14fb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0087.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4/metadata.xsd">
+  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.14764/10.ASEAS-0087</identifier>
+  <creators>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Lacap, Jean Paolo</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+  </creators>
+  <titles>
+    <title>Yaoi Media Consumption and Travel Motivation: Evidence From Filipino Viewers of Thai Boys’ Love Series</title>
+  </titles>
+  <publisher>Advances in Southeast Asian Studies</publisher>
+  <publicationYear>2023</publicationYear>
+  <dates>
+    <date dateType="Submitted">2022-04-11</date>
+    <date dateType="Accepted">2023-04-09</date>
+    <date dateType="Updated">2023-06-28</date>
+    <date dateType="Issued">2023-06-28</date>
+  </dates>
+  <language>en</language>
+  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">Article</resourceType>
+  <alternateIdentifiers>
+    <alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="publisherId">14-632-7264</alternateIdentifier>
+  </alternateIdentifiers>
+  <sizes>
+    <size>121-143 Pages</size>
+  </sizes>
+  <rightsList>
+    <rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0">This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.</rights>
+  </rightsList>
+  <descriptions>
+    <description descriptionType="Abstract">
+The Thai yaoi culture is getting a lot of attention in several parts of the world. Numerous Thai boy’s love (BL) series are a huge hit in Thailand and other countries. Despite the notable success of Thai yaoi and BL culture, there is less attention given to this topic in past studies and literature. Moreover, no study has investigated how yaoi culture may affect travel motivation. Hence, the present study examines the effect of yaoi media consumption on travel motivation of Filipino viewers of Thai boys’ love series. A prediction approach was employed, and partial least squares (PLS) path modelling was used to measure the hypothesized relationships. The study reveals that all dimensions of cultural proximity significantly affect Thai yaoi media consumption, and Thai yaoi media consumption was found to have an influence on emotional involvement and travel motivation. Emotional involvement was also found to significantly affect travel motivation, and, at the same time, act as a mediator between Thai yaoi media consumption and travel motivation. The current research offers novel theoretical insights about media consumption and its relation to travel motivation in the context of Thai pop-cultural boys’ love series.
+</description>
+    <description descriptionType="SeriesInformation">Advances in Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 16 No. 1 (2023): The COVID-19 Pandemic, (Im)Mobilities, and Migration in Southeast Asia</description>
+  </descriptions>
+</resource>
diff --git a/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0088.xml b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0088.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..c2c7ec1c5f9bad0664a45d488b9b377ad2461aa6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0088.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,40 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4/metadata.xsd">
+  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.14764/10.ASEAS-0088</identifier>
+  <creators>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Abd Jalil, Aslam</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Hoffstaedter, Gerhard</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+  </creators>
+  <titles>
+    <title>The Effects of COVID-19 on Refugees in Peninsular Malaysia: Surveillance, Securitization, and Eviction</title>
+  </titles>
+  <publisher>Advances in Southeast Asian Studies</publisher>
+  <publicationYear>2023</publicationYear>
+  <dates>
+    <date dateType="Submitted">2022-11-27</date>
+    <date dateType="Accepted">2023-03-05</date>
+    <date dateType="Updated">2023-06-28</date>
+    <date dateType="Issued">2023-06-28</date>
+  </dates>
+  <language>en</language>
+  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">Article</resourceType>
+  <alternateIdentifiers>
+    <alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="publisherId">14-632-7687</alternateIdentifier>
+  </alternateIdentifiers>
+  <sizes>
+    <size>79-99 Pages</size>
+  </sizes>
+  <rightsList>
+    <rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0">This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.</rights>
+  </rightsList>
+  <descriptions>
+    <description descriptionType="Abstract">
+This paper focuses on the largest group of refugees in Malaysia, the Rohingya. Many Rohingya have made Malaysia their home over recent years, even though they have no official legal status in the country. Refugees more broadly are often tolerated as workers but treated as undocumented migrants by the law. When Covid-19 was detected in Malaysia, the government followed a strategy of suppression with targeted lockdowns in areas of Covid-19 outbreaks. As most refugees are forced to work to survive, they hold important front-line jobs. As a result, they were exposed to Covid-19 at higher rates of infection than Malaysians. In this paper we trace the way the Malaysian government, Malaysian people and refugees encountered Covid-19 and how refugees especially became the subject of enhanced securitization and surveillance based on prejudice. We show how the state enacted securitization first on the borders, before it inverted this process and focused on domestic border work, wherein neighborhoods, mosques and markets became central places of immigration control and exclusion for refugees. Based on data collected during ethnographic fieldwork in peninsular Malaysia between 2020 and 2021, we argue that the securitization of refugees and migrant workers, their surveillance and even expulsion and eviction demonstrates continued and heightened scapegoating of refugees and migrants for all Malaysia’s ills. These actions reinforced the stigma and stereotype of refugees being legally undocumented and therefore outside of and too often unwelcome in the Malaysian body politic.
+</description>
+    <description descriptionType="SeriesInformation">Advances in Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 16 No. 1 (2023): The COVID-19 Pandemic, (Im)Mobilities, and Migration in Southeast Asia</description>
+  </descriptions>
+</resource>
diff --git a/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0089.xml b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0089.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..668d2c29a3ca308ee3b17cb6ed72ae80ba28719d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0089.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4/metadata.xsd">
+  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.14764/10.ASEAS-0089</identifier>
+  <creators>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Prabaningtyas, Raden Ajeng Rizka Fiani</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Pudjiastuti, Tri Nuke </creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Alami, Athiqah Nur </creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Farhana, Faudzan</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Arfan</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+  </creators>
+  <titles>
+    <title>Access to Education for Refugee Children in Indonesia During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Challenges and Adaptation Strategies</title>
+  </titles>
+  <publisher>Advances in Southeast Asian Studies</publisher>
+  <publicationYear>2023</publicationYear>
+  <dates>
+    <date dateType="Submitted">2022-09-13</date>
+    <date dateType="Accepted">2023-03-05</date>
+    <date dateType="Updated">2023-06-28</date>
+    <date dateType="Issued">2023-06-28</date>
+  </dates>
+  <language>en</language>
+  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">Article</resourceType>
+  <alternateIdentifiers>
+    <alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="publisherId">14-632-7561</alternateIdentifier>
+  </alternateIdentifiers>
+  <sizes>
+    <size>39-61 Pages</size>
+  </sizes>
+  <rightsList>
+    <rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0">This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.</rights>
+  </rightsList>
+  <descriptions>
+    <description descriptionType="Abstract">
+The protracted refugee situation in Indonesia during the COVID-19 pandemic has increased refugee children's vulnerability due to the non-fulfillment of their fundamental rights, including the right to education. Drawing on data collected through interviews and observation of refugee children during fieldwork in the cities of Batam and Makassar, this paper aims to investigate how and why their access to education has changed during the pandemic. This study finds that, shortly before the pandemic, the Indonesian government provided access to education for refugee children through the issuance of the Circular Letter from the Secretary General of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research and Technology Number 752553/A.A4/HK/2019 dated on 10 July 2019. However, the pandemic complicated the accessibility of education for refugee children suggested by the Circular Letter due to lockdown policy and mobility restrictions. The complication is apparent in four aspects of accessibility, namely: access to information, activities in the learning process, environmental support, and the motivation of refugee children. Notwithstanding, this study also finds that the pandemic has induced developments of adaptation strategies through the adoption of online learning among refugee communities to enable wider access to education for refugee children. Therefore, the pandemic may have revealed the urgency for a more rights-based policy on refugee treatment in Indonesia.
+</description>
+    <description descriptionType="SeriesInformation">Advances in Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 16 No. 1 (2023): The COVID-19 Pandemic, (Im)Mobilities, and Migration in Southeast Asia</description>
+  </descriptions>
+</resource>
diff --git a/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0090.xml b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0090.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..70c63cf978251ea88cffe9482f4190451243abc5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0090.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4/metadata.xsd">
+  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.14764/10.ASEAS-0090</identifier>
+  <creators>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Jaehn, Miriam</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+  </creators>
+  <titles>
+    <title>Coup, Conflict, and the Covid-19 Pandemic: Burmese Peoples Moving in Times of Isolation</title>
+  </titles>
+  <publisher>Advances in Southeast Asian Studies</publisher>
+  <publicationYear>2023</publicationYear>
+  <dates>
+    <date dateType="Submitted">2022-09-12</date>
+    <date dateType="Accepted">2023-04-02</date>
+    <date dateType="Updated">2023-06-28</date>
+    <date dateType="Issued">2023-06-28</date>
+  </dates>
+  <language>en</language>
+  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">Article</resourceType>
+  <alternateIdentifiers>
+    <alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="publisherId">14-632-7560</alternateIdentifier>
+  </alternateIdentifiers>
+  <sizes>
+    <size>63-78 Pages</size>
+  </sizes>
+  <rightsList>
+    <rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0">This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.</rights>
+  </rightsList>
+  <descriptions>
+    <description descriptionType="Abstract">
+This paper focuses on the political crises shaping Burmese1 peoples’ im-mobilities during the COVID-19 pandemic. As governments around the world urged people to stay at home to be protected from infection and transmission, throughout 2021 many Burmese people protested the military coup of 1 February and fled Myanmar for safety. I problematize these movements of the Burmese peoples through the complex interplay between the triple C of (ethnic) conflict, COVID-19, and coup. I contend that, in Myanmar, adhering to COVID-19 measures emphasizing (self-)isolation and immobility was impossible as they served the military to suppress peoples’ critique and protests regarding the government’s coup and its mismanagement of the COVID-19 pandemic. As such, Burmese peoples’ physical movements and political mobilisation were necessitated to fight against an ensuing political disempowerment of the people. In other words, the unfolding of the COVID-19 pandemic in correlation with long-standing ‘ethnic’ conflicts and a military coup required the Burmese peoples to carefully contest an internationally propagated so-called ‘new norm’ of self-isolation at home and other social distancing measures, which bore the risk of suppression and of renewing political isolation experienced since the country’s first military government.
+</description>
+    <description descriptionType="SeriesInformation">Advances in Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 16 No. 1 (2023): The COVID-19 Pandemic, (Im)Mobilities, and Migration in Southeast Asia</description>
+  </descriptions>
+</resource>
diff --git a/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0091.xml b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0091.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..1d7962858cffe03a3b972fc4983242710e9a4d91
--- /dev/null
+++ b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0091.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,37 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4/metadata.xsd">
+  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.14764/10.ASEAS-0091</identifier>
+  <creators>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Datta, Amrita</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+  </creators>
+  <titles>
+    <title>Book Review: Ullah, AKM. A., &amp; Chattoraj, D. (2022). COVID-19 Pandemic and the Migrant Population in Southeast Asia: Vaccine, Diplomacy and Disparity</title>
+  </titles>
+  <publisher>Advances in Southeast Asian Studies</publisher>
+  <publicationYear>2023</publicationYear>
+  <dates>
+    <date dateType="Submitted">2023-06-19</date>
+    <date dateType="Accepted">2023-06-19</date>
+    <date dateType="Updated">2023-06-28</date>
+    <date dateType="Issued">2023-06-28</date>
+  </dates>
+  <language>en</language>
+  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">Article</resourceType>
+  <alternateIdentifiers>
+    <alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="publisherId">14-632-8064</alternateIdentifier>
+  </alternateIdentifiers>
+  <sizes>
+    <size>171-174 Pages</size>
+  </sizes>
+  <rightsList>
+    <rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0">This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.</rights>
+  </rightsList>
+  <descriptions>
+    <description descriptionType="Abstract">
+- 
+</description>
+    <description descriptionType="SeriesInformation">Advances in Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 16 No. 1 (2023): The COVID-19 Pandemic, (Im)Mobilities, and Migration in Southeast Asia</description>
+  </descriptions>
+</resource>
diff --git a/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0092.xml b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0092.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..c092dbd79f45b089de04176b4ddf7d7f67f86bb0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0092.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,40 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4/metadata.xsd">
+  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.14764/10.ASEAS-0092</identifier>
+  <creators>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Missbach, Antje</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Stange, Gunnar</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+  </creators>
+  <titles>
+    <title>The COVID-19 Pandemic, (Im)Mobilities, and Migration in Southeast Asia</title>
+  </titles>
+  <publisher>Advances in Southeast Asian Studies</publisher>
+  <publicationYear>2023</publicationYear>
+  <dates>
+    <date dateType="Submitted">2023-06-25</date>
+    <date dateType="Accepted">2023-06-25</date>
+    <date dateType="Updated">2023-06-28</date>
+    <date dateType="Issued">2023-06-28</date>
+  </dates>
+  <language>en</language>
+  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">Article</resourceType>
+  <alternateIdentifiers>
+    <alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="publisherId">14-632-8077</alternateIdentifier>
+  </alternateIdentifiers>
+  <sizes>
+    <size>1-16 Pages</size>
+  </sizes>
+  <rightsList>
+    <rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0">This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.</rights>
+  </rightsList>
+  <descriptions>
+    <description descriptionType="Abstract">
+-
+</description>
+    <description descriptionType="SeriesInformation">Advances in Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 16 No. 1 (2023): The COVID-19 Pandemic, (Im)Mobilities, and Migration in Southeast Asia</description>
+  </descriptions>
+</resource>
diff --git a/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0093.xml b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0093.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..bdee24c542b641d3876f707ec5b53c9b3caa7c32
--- /dev/null
+++ b/metadata/10.ASEAS/10.ASEAS-0093.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,54 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4/metadata.xsd">
+  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.14764/10.ASEAS-0093</identifier>
+  <creators>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Stange, Gunnar</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Pagogna, Raffaella</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Sterly, Harald</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Sakdapolrak, Patrick</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Borderon, Marion</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Schraven, Benjamin</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+    <creator>
+      <creatorName>Serraglio, Diogo Andreola</creatorName>
+    </creator>
+  </creators>
+  <titles>
+    <title>Impeded Migration as Adaptation: COVID-19 and Its Implications for Translocal Strategies of Environmental Risk Management</title>
+  </titles>
+  <publisher>Advances in Southeast Asian Studies</publisher>
+  <publicationYear>2023</publicationYear>
+  <dates>
+    <date dateType="Submitted">2023-06-25</date>
+    <date dateType="Accepted">2023-06-25</date>
+    <date dateType="Updated">2023-06-28</date>
+    <date dateType="Issued">2023-06-28</date>
+  </dates>
+  <language>en</language>
+  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Text">Article</resourceType>
+  <alternateIdentifiers>
+    <alternateIdentifier alternateIdentifierType="publisherId">14-632-8078</alternateIdentifier>
+  </alternateIdentifiers>
+  <sizes>
+    <size>157-169 Pages</size>
+  </sizes>
+  <rightsList>
+    <rights rightsURI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0">This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.</rights>
+  </rightsList>
+  <descriptions>
+    <description descriptionType="Abstract">In the debates over environmental impacts on migration, migration as adaptation has been acknowledged as a potential risk management strategy based on risk spreading and mutual insurance of people living spatially apart: migrants and family members that are left behind stay connected through a combination of financial and social remittances, joint decision-making and mutual commitment. Conceptualizing migration as adaptation through the lens of translocal livelihood systems enables us to identify the differentiated vulnerabilities of households and communities. COVID-19 and the restrictions on public life and mobility imposed by governments worldwide constituted a complex set of challenges for translocal systems and strategies, especially in the Global South. Focusing on examples, we highlight two points: first, the COVID-19 crisis shows the limits of migration and translocal livelihoods for coping with, and adapting to, climate and environmental risks. Second, as these restrictions hit on a systemic level and affect places of destination as well as origin, the crisis reveals specific vulnerabilities of the translocal livelihood systems themselves. Based on the translocal livelihoods approach, we formulate insights and recommendations for policies that move beyond the narrow, short-term focus on the support of migrant populations alone and address the longer-term root causes of the vulnerabilities in translocal livelihoods systems.
+</description>
+    <description descriptionType="SeriesInformation">Advances in Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 16 No. 1 (2023): The COVID-19 Pandemic, (Im)Mobilities, and Migration in Southeast Asia</description>
+  </descriptions>
+</resource>