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Celebrating 20 years Asia Research Centre Celebrating 20 years ASIA RESEARCH CENTRE

Celebrating 20 years since its inception as a Special Research Centre

The Asia Research Centre at was first established in 1988. Then in 1991, through a nationally competitive process, it became a Special Research Centre of the Australian Research Council (ARC).

As one of only two federally-funded special research centres on Asia in , its brief was to enhance Australia’s understanding of its Asian environment by providing analysis of social, political and economic change in contemporary East and Southeast Asia. In its first nine years of operation (1991 – 1999), central projects considered the impact of the emerging middle classes upon the social, economic and political environments of the Asia-Pacific region, as well as the implications of the currency and financial crises.

Following the cessation of funding by the Australian Research Council, which it received for the maximum period of nine years available to a ‘special centre’, the Asia Research Centre had to develop new strategies to maintain its role as an internationally recognised leader in research on contemporary Asia, and seek alternative sources of income. In line with this, key projects in 2000 examined globalisation as well as national and local systems of governance, and cross-border policy issues including the human impact of animal diseases, environmentally sustainable settlements and reverse migration.

The Asia Research Centre was reconstituted in 2002 as a divisional centre at Murdoch University. Since then its objectives have been to: produce high quality academic research publications for international and domestic audiences; foster the development of high quality research graduates; and contribute constructively to public policy debate and public understanding on issues concerning contemporary Asia. table of contents

The Origins of the Centre 9 Intellectual Innovation and Leadership 13 Research Collaborations 19 Shaping Australia’s Understanding of Asia: Strategies of Public and Policy Engagement 25 Postgraduate Studies at the Asia Research Centre 35 Books 39 Appendices 49 People Events Grants Publications Asia Research Centre Directors and Deputy Directors

• Professor David S G Goodman, Director (1991 – 1993) • Professor Richard Robison, Director (1994 – Jun 2000) • Professor Ian Scott, Director (Aug – Dec 2000) • Professor Jim Warren, Director (2001) • Associate Professor David Brown, Acting Director (Jan – Jun 2002) • Professor Garry Rodan, Director (Jul 2002 – 2010) • Dr Kanishka Jayasuriya, Acting Director (Apr – Dec 2008) • Associate Professor Caroline Hughes, Director (2010 –)

• Professor Richard Robison, Deputy Director (1991 – 1993) • Professor David S G Goodman, Deputy Director (Jan – May 1994) • Associate Professor Tim Wright, Deputy Director (Jun – Dec 1994) • Cisca Spencer, Deputy Director (1995 – 1999) • Dr Sally Sargeson, Deputy Director (Nov – Dec 2000)

2 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Asia Research Centre Board of The International Advisory Panel

Management 2011 • Professor Amitav Acharya, UNESCO Chair in Transnational Challenges and Governance and Chair of the ASEAN Studies • Associate Professor Caroline Hughes – Director Center, School of International Service, American University • Professor Vedi Hadiz • Professor Kevin Hewison, Director, Carolina Asia Centre, • Professor David Hill – Chair University of North Carolina • Dr Jane Hutchison • Professor Jomo K.S., Assistant Secretary-General on Economic • David MacLennan – Western Australian State Director, Development, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade United Nations • Professor Garry Rodan • Professor Lily Kong, Vice-President (University and Global • Associate Professor Malcolm Tull Relations), National University of . • Associate Professor Carol Warren • Professor Tessa Morris-Suzuki, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University • Associate Professor Andrew Webster – Dean, School of Social Sciences and Humanities • Professor Takashi Shiraishi, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo • Professor Lynn T. White, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Politics Department, and East Asian Studies Program, Princeton University

3 Portraits of Contributors totheCentre Painted by Emeritus Professor Richard Robison

Kevin Hewison 2008 Vedi Hadiz 2009

Tim Wright 2009 Self portrait 2011

4 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Krishna Sen 2011 Jane Hutchison 2011

Richard Higgott 2008 Garry Rodan 2011

5 David Hill 2012 Shaun Breslin 2008

Chua Beng Huat 2009 Anna George 2011

6 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Geoffrey Underhill 2008 Shahar Hameiri 2012

7 Foreword

On the 20th anniversary of the Asia Research Centre it is pleasing to celebrate what has been a significant success story for both Murdoch University and the deepening of interest in Australian engagement with its Asian neighbours.

At the time of its inception, the Asia Research Centre, at a university situated away from the corridors of power and in a part of the country that has a distinct relationship with Asia, represented a significant widening and deepening of Australia’s Asia expertise. This bold step has been rewarded by the emergence of a unique and original body of work from the Centre, particularly in the form of the Murdoch School of political economy as well as in the field of social history.

The theoretical innovations of this Murdoch Centre have been widely recognised by international scholars. The distinctive approaches associated with the Centre continue to be applied to new questions arising in the region, and are continually being refined by new generations of Murdoch scholars. This is indicative of the Centre’s continuing success and relevance.

These theoretical innovations have also been significant in policy terms. In its early years Murdoch produced pioneering work on the relationship between business and the state in Asia. This has informed Australian businesses struggling to understand emerging Asian markets and the new Asian consumer. Today, the significance of the resource boom, the rise of , and the Australian government’s aid programs in the region raise new policy challenges. The work of the Centre is crucial in responding to these challenges.

One of the most important achievements of the Centre is its leadership in building international projects and cultivating a network of collaborators located in some of the region’s and indeed the world’s leading universities – University of , National University of Singapore, University of Warwick, Leiden University, University of British Columbia, University of North Carolina. I myself was such a colleague, before coming to Murdoch on a permanent basis as Vice Chancellor.

Many of our collaborators are former PhD students, who remain attached to the Centre because of its rigorous training and collegial research culture. This network of former students constitutes an Asia Research Centre diaspora, which is probably the most significant legacy of the last 20 years.

Professor Richard Higgott BA (CNAA), MSc (Lond), PhD (Birm), FRSA, AcSS Vice Chancellor Murdoch University

8 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years The Origins of TheCentre

9 It remains one of Murdoch University’s significant research Through the 1980s, as the Cold War subsided and the Hawke/ coups that a team of younger researchers was awarded a Special Keating governments established themselves, the view of Research Centre Grant by the Australian Research Council in Asia shifted dramatically to one that recognised the growing 1990. Not only was this the first SRC awarded in the social prosperity of the region and the prospects in this for mutually sciences or humanities but the size of the grant, more than beneficial economic relationships. In particular, the spectacular $6 million over nine years, was unheard of outside the sciences. rise of Northeast Asian industrial exporters indicated a huge Why did such a large and prestigious grant go to a university potential for Australian to ride on the back of this success, that was relatively new and with minimal political influence in primarily as exporters of minerals and energy but also as Canberra where the allocation of competitive research awards exporters of knowledge. This growing view of things was had long been directed towards a few established universities? encapsulated in the Garnaut Report of 1990.

Broadly speaking, there were several main reasons for this Such a transformation in the perception of Asia was reflected success. One was the surge in interest among government policy- in scholarship in the universities. Governments now expected makers for studies about the nature of economic transformation academics to assist in the project of engagement. Different in Asia and what this meant for Australia. This was taking place groups scrambled to offer themselves as holding the keys to precisely at the time a group of younger research scholars explaining the East to the West. The major beneficiaries were at Murdoch were establishing themselves internationally as orthodox economists. Their advice was not so much concerned interpreters of the political economy of Asia and who were with understanding Asia as with establishing in Australia the building strategic new models of research collaboration. economic conditions for engagement. In other words, the ideas Such a conjuncture meant that the Murdoch team was ideally of economic deregulation, privatisation and fiscal austerity that placed to design an application that appealed to government had underpinned the economic and social transformations under interest in deepening the engagement with Asia and the need Thatcher and Reagan were now applied as the key to engaging for larger and more comprehensive research programmes rather with Asia. Economists, especially at the ANU, often working with than smaller, idiosyncratic projects. the World Bank and economic technocrats in Asia, provided the economic models for reform in both Asia and Australia. By stripping itself of protected and inefficient manufacturing The Changing Environment for Research sectors and finding its own competitive advantages elsewhere, it was expected that Australia would find its natural place in the It was critical for the success of the application for funding greater Asian century. by the Murdoch Team that Australia was in the process of a fundamental change in the way it viewed Asia and saw its future However, the process of engagement did not flow seamlessly relations with the region. It is fair to say that governments and from the prescriptions or expectations of economists. It was politicians in the two or three decades following the Second difficult to penetrate Asian markets outside the minerals World War had generally viewed Asia as a region that was and energy sectors or to understand the nature of emerging destabilising and threatening to the interests of Australia and the markets. And the behaviour of governments and business in Western alliance in particular. As the Cold War deepened and the region remained perplexing. Market, democracy and good communist parties rolled to victory in China and Vietnam and governance did not go together as expected by liberal theorists mounted serious political challenges in the , , of the modernisation process. More complex explanations were and , Australia was dragged into increasingly required. Conservative historians and social scientists stepped in bitter diplomatic and military confrontations across the region, to offer cultural and behavioural explanations as the enduring together with its American allies. Research in the universities fed keys to understanding this seeming puzzle. There was room here, into this atmosphere. The Academy became increasingly split nevertheless, for other explanations that focused on explaining between competing ranks of conservative Cold War warriors why market economies could be structured in quite different and more radical scholars who criticised the Western agenda for ways and within different frameworks of governance and politics. supporting social and global inequality and repressive regimes. It was the political economy approach to these questions that was to be the basis of the Murdoch application.

10 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years The Creation of a New Research Capacity in the This strength, focused largely on political economy and Southeast Asia, was given a further dimension as David Political Economy of Asia at Murdoch Goodman, Tim Wright and Beverly Hooper were appointed to In the older universities it was difficult for younger academics to Murdoch. They brought a China capacity to the team; Wright enter the faculty or to flourish outside entrenched traditions of and Hooper as historians of China and Goodman as a political political science, history or economics. There was little room for scientist specialising in the politics of the Chinese Communist a social science that theorised the structural interrelationships Party and of the Party and its leadership in the provinces. of economics, politics and society. And there was little room for Their reputation was backed by a range of international the study of Asia in the disciplines. The advantage of a place publications, including Goodman’s Centre and Province in the like Murdoch in the 1980s and 1990s in the social sciences was People’s Republic of China (1986), Wright’s Coal Mining in China’s that there was plenty of room for diverging views and agendas Economy and Society, 1895 – 1937 (1984) and Hooper’s China and opportunities for younger academics to rise to positions of Stands Up: Ending the Western Presence, 1948-50 (1986). relative seniority quickly. And newer universities like Murdoch There was also expertise in the more concrete problems of and Griffith in particular placed emphasis on the study of Asia building relations in Asia in Schools outside Politics and Asian (as well as on the study of other areas, like environmental Studies. Among these, Don Smart in the School of Education science, hitherto relatively neglected in traditional institutions). brought a background in the increasingly important area of By the mid-1980s, Murdoch had begun to establish itself as a education export. Phil Lewis and Malcolm Tull provided a basis strong centre for political economy with Asia as its central focus. for developing these capacities in the School of Economics. This was first indicated in a concrete way in the 1985 collected However, a critical mass of research expertise and experience volume, Southeast Asia: Essays in the Political Economy of Structural in areas that suited the new Australian priorities was in itself no Change (Routledge). Its contributors included Richard Robison, guarantee of success even where these were backed by serious Richard Higgott, Richard Leaver and a new cohort of academics/ international reputation. No less than any other area of politics, newly graduated or soon to graduate PhDs; Garry Rodan, Kevin the processes through which research grants were allocated Hewison, Carol Warren and Patrick Sullivan. By the end of the were subject to bitter conflicts and were often unpredictable and 1980s, a surge of books and articles confirmed the growing capricious. Nothing was guaranteed. international reputation of this group. These included Richard Robison’s, Indonesia: The Rise of Capital (1986), Kevin Hewison’s Bankers and Bureaucrats: Capital and State in Thailand (1989), and The Politics of Application Garry Rodan’s The Political Economy of Singapore’s Industrialization (1989). Their expertise directly addressed the role played by The call for applications for a Special Research Centre seemed business, governments, social groups, NGOs and international to offer ideal opportunities for the Murdoch team. Whereas banks and development agencies in the complex process of research generally remained an individual in most change. The recent appointment of Krishna Sen and the arrival, universities, the Murdoch team had developed a capacity and soon after, of David Hill, provided a substantial capacity for record for collaborative work. This meant that we were well research on the new media and its influences, especially in placed to mount a larger and more comprehensive application. Southeast Asia.

Richard Robison with Soeharto, former president of Indonesia

11 A second factor was the willingness of researchers in the The application was constructed around three parts. One was Murdoch team to relate research to wider intellectual and focused on policy studies; doing business in Asia, new middle policy concerns rather than doing simple country based studies class markets, educational services, tourism and mass media. in the traditional and highly descriptive style. This provided us A second was aimed at understanding the new middle classes; with scope for an application that addressed the problem of their composition and division into investing, managerial, engagement with Asia. It was also important that we were able salaried elements, their attitudes and values, concepts of to identify a central theme around which a complex application property and individual rights. A third was to examine the could be constructed. This theme was the rise of a middle class politics of the middle classes; could we expect more democratic in Asia and its implications for Australia. Much of the work rule and government by technocrats that was bound by rule of already being done was related broadly to this theme, especially law? Finally, it was intended to develop from these some broader relating to Southeast Asia. theoretical and comparative observations that would influence larger debates about the nature and role of the middle classes. The rising middle classes of Asia were rapidly assuming an almost mythical status, not simply within academia but In this way it was sought to bridge the world of policy and amongst politicians and in the media. Much of it was superficial commercial interest with more reflective academic research. speculation about the benefits that an assumed new liberal and consumer driven society would offer to Australia’s policy-makers It is fair to say that the application was a very clear document and business interests. Whatever the quality of thinking about with strong claims. However, we realised the political nature of the nature of the new middle classes and their significance, the process we were entering. It was important to draw in some by using the new middle classes as the centre-point of our strategic support. We organised some impressive academic application we were sure to strike a resonant chord. heavyweights as referees, including from ANU and from key institutions in UK. We took time to get the WA government behind the bid and were able to include a strong letter of support from the then Acting Premier in the application itself. And we also were able to mobilise support from key persons in the business community that were especially important in the latter stages of the bid. Most important, we made sure we were at least known by the bureaucrats of the Australian Research Council; an important step when we worked out of a university a long way from Canberra and with low visibility in the corridors of power and patronage.

As we expected, we ran into very strong headwinds and, when it became obvious that our application was being taken seriously, some heavyweight lobbying. Normally this may have been fatal. But several factors operated in our favour. Because the awarding a Special Research Centre was such a big deal the process involved a broader range of individuals and (L-R) Del Blakeway, Tamara Dent interests, fragmenting the influence that might usually have been exercised by academic networks and cartels. And it was Administrative Foundations for Research important that the applications were so different. The Murdoch application represented a way into questions about engagements Leadership and unlocking the problems of economic and social change in the region as opposed to more limited historical and cultural The Asia Research Centre’s ambitious research approaches to more esoteric questions. This created a quite and public engagement agenda over two decades difficult dilemma for academics themselves that cut across has necessitated high quality administrative and institutional loyalties. To some extent, we had caught hitherto organisational capacities. Here the Centre has benefited dominant research interests in the Australian academic world greatly from two administrative officers, Del Blakeway napping. (1994 – 2003) and Tamara Dent (2003 –), who have collectively provided outstanding service for 18 consecutive years. This has meant that academic conferences, public lectures and workshops involving politicians and other dignitaries, engagements with community groups, production of Centre publications, and support services for fellows, postgraduates and short-term guests have been provided efficiently and to a high standard. Their support roles to Centre Directors in the management of large research grant funding, and more generally in financial reporting and management, has been no less crucial.

12 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Intellectual Innovation andLeadership

13 Delegates at the Conference on ‘’s New Identities in the 1990s’, September 1993

At both the time of its conception and inception, the Asia The following discussion highlighting intellectual leadership by Research Centre at Murdoch University was intended to have a the Centre is necessarily selective, giving prominence to areas of specific and ambitious research agenda involving an intellectual most sustained and distinctive such roles over the last 20 years. leadership role internationally. The Centre would not simply be a collection of researchers sharing an interest in Asia. Political Economy The successful Australian Research Centre grant application that launched the Centre in 1991 committed to analysing It is through the originality, quality and productivity of its contemporary social, political and economic changes in East and contributions to the political economy analysis of contemporary Southeast Asia and the consequence of this for engagement with Asia that the Asia Research Centre’s intellectual leadership is the region. It was a core premise of the grant application and most widely recognised. Pioneering work on the nature and the projects that followed that these changes in Asia are linked direction of political regimes and states, including analysis of to the transformative effects of unprecedented capitalist and how domestic forces influence the precise form and impact market development in the region. of globalisation in Asia, has earned the Centre a genuinely international reputation. Change to Australia’s north demanded detailed empirical study. However, the Centre would conduct this by attempting Such research has articulated with, or been complemented to advance debate about the frameworks best able to explain by, a wide range of studies focusing on the causes, nature and change in the region and its implications. This would not only implications of conflict associated with the region’s economic include comparative analysis of countries within Asia but also transformation. This includes analysis of conflicts over: political use of these analyses to intervene in wider theoretical debates and economic regimes; environmental resources; media systems; about how to understand the global political economy and what ethnic, religious and national identities; and the security of shapes state policies relating to it. states, communities and individuals.

In keeping with the lofty aims of the Centre, substantive Among the most comprehensive intellectual leadership initiatives individual and collective projects of its own staff and by the Centre was the six-volume New Rich in Asia book series postgraduates would also be supplemented by larger-scale with Routledge between 1995 and 2001. The series investigated international research collaboration initiated and led by Centre the political, social and environmental implications of a researchers. Those research networks are detailed and elaborated burgeoning middle class in Asia. It was unprecedented in terms on elsewhere in this publication, but the focus here is more on of the breadth of enquiry into the relationship between social the intellectual agenda advanced through such collaborations. changes ensuing from rapid capitalist and market development and the institutional directions and possibilities in the region. Naturally, during two decades of staff changes and variability in the resources at the Centre’s disposal, the capacity of the Centre Hitherto, there simply wasn’t anything quite so concerted that to sustain its leadership has been tested. Yet two recurring questioned whether the institutions of liberalism, democracy themes are evident testifying to the durability and importance and rule of law, that historically accompanied capitalist of this role. First, distinctive contributions to the analysis industrialisation in Western Europe and the established of the sources and implications of conflicts associated with democracies, would necessarily be repeated in Asia. In their economic and social transformations have been consolidated different ways, edited volumes on political oppositions, and extended. Second, the research modus operandi of consumption, culture, labour and gender took up this and incorporating leading researchers around the world has not just related questions. been consolidated but also increasingly draws on former Centre PhD students, many of whom have now become distinguished research leaders.

14 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Social Foundations Approach Environmental Politics

The distinctive theoretical contribution of the Centre’s trademark Also within a political economy framework, Centre researchers political economy scholarship has been most visibly sustained have played a leading role in analyses of environmental conflicts and developed over time through dedicated studies into in Asia, with a particular focus on the implications of shifting the nature and significance of capitalism in Asia. In essence, power relations between local, national and global resource this involves an social approach to the analysis of economic governance regimes for such conflicts. The Politics of Environment and political institutions as sites of conflict over the broader in Southeast Asia (1998), edited by Phil Hirsch and Carol Warren, distribution of power in a capitalist society. This approach provided early insights into the volatile tensions emerging among attempts to locate the interests and conflicts driving pressures competing interests over declining natural resources in the for and against institutional reform, leaving open enquiry region, challenging more narrowly framed approaches to the into where regimes might be headed, and why, instead of politics and economics of the region. It analysed processes of presupposing any necessary democratisation. This approach alliance formation, as well as the role of state institutions, media collides with most prevailing orthodoxies, including pluralist and non-government organisations in the complex struggles and neoliberal. surrounding resource allocation.

Included here is Richard Robison’s edited Pathways to Asia: Two Centre-based Australia Research Council projects in the last The Politics of Engagement (Allen & Unwin, 1996) and the decade have drawn together an international team of researchers subsequent three volume series on the foundations of capitalism to examine the range of forces affecting resource use across in East Asia and Southeast Asia (Macmillan), comprising Indonesia’s diverse cultural and ecological landscape. Kanishka Jayasuriya’s edited Law, Capitalism and Power in Asia (1999), Richard Robison et al.’s edited Politics and Markets in First, Community, Environment and Local Governance in Indonesia, the Wake of the Asian Crisis (2000) and Sally Sargeson’s edited edited by Carol Warren and John McCarthy, transcended Collective Goods, Collective Futures in Asia (2002). Three separate the prevailing tendency to focus on narrow institutional editions with Oxford University Press of The Political Economy considerations of how to craft local resource governance of South-East Asia (1997, 2001, 2006), jointly edited by Garry arrangements in order to support economic efficiency, social Rodan, Kevin Hewison and Richard Robison between 1998 and equity and environmental sustainability policy objectives. 2006, have been especially important in cementing the Centre’s Instead, this volume revealed the complexity of resource reputation for advancing a distinctive theoretical approach to security issues affecting local communities and user groups comparative political economy characterised by country-specific as they engage with wider institutional frameworks driven studies centring on the conflict-ridden processes of capitalist by simultaneously decentralising and globalising forces and development. competing economic growth and conservation agendas.

Among the many sole and joint-authored books from Centre Second, in the context of urgent food security and land researchers pivotal to advancing this social foundations political grabbing concerns, Land for the People (2012), edited by Anton economy approach listed in the appendix, Reorganising Power in Lucas and Carol Warren, attempts to place land reform back Indonesia: The Politics of Oligarchy in an Age of Markets (2004) on the policy agenda. It highlights the contradiction between by Richard Robison and Vedi Hadiz is an influential example of global market pressures for the more thorough commodification such scholarship. and privatisation of land, and countervailing approaches to conservation and human rights, which stress the importance of property, community management and local participation for social equity and sustainable development.

Contributors to ‘The Political Economy of South-East Asia: An Introduction’, August 1995

15 ‘The Contest for Asia’ Conference, Hong Kong, December 1995

Labour New Political Economy Directions

Labour has also been an enduring research focus of the Centre, Debate continues with other scholars, and among Centre particularly among its PhDs, where again political economy scholars, to ensure the further intellectual development of largely shapes the scholarly approach. At various times covering political economy. In particular, the social foundations approach China, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia, and has recently generated creative frameworks for understanding Singapore, the research has been distinctive in adopting class relationships between conflicts and alliances of interests on the and not industrial relations approaches to understanding labour one hand and different ideologies and institutions on the other. as a social force. ‘Beyond Hybrid Regimes,’ a special edited collection in 2007 of Focus on the social dynamics of production relations enabled the UK journal Democratization, is of this ilk. It introduced a new analyses of capitalist development and globalisation, as model distinguishing different modes of political participation experienced by Asia’s new working classes, revealing a more focused on understanding the reasons behind contrasting fluid and contested picture than top-down political economy support bases for each mode – within and across regimes in perspectives on Asia’s industrial revolutions generally provided. Southeast Asia. This sheds light on why particular institutions The research also departed from the voluntarism of some emerge or become ascendant, regardless of whether they match international labour studies by stressing the structural and up to liberal democratic expectations or hopes. In contrast with political contingencies of labour activism in the region. much prevailing literature, democratic and non-democratic ideologies and institutions are subjected to equally close In the New Rich volume Organising Labour in Globalising Asia scrutiny. (2001), globalisation and cultural identities were both shown to have mixed affects on labour organising capacities, not least Political economy work in the first 15 years of the Centre among female workers in export factories, widely portrayed helped understand how particular alliances and conflicts shaped then as the archetypal victims of transnational manufacturing. domestic responses to external pressures, including on trade Sally Sargeson wrote powerfully on these issues in her book policy, manufacturing production and finance, and regional on the making of new Chinese working classes, Reworking organisations. Kanishka Jayasuriya also made an important China’s Proletariat (1999). As well, class approaches to labour intervention in linking the changing global political economy politics were important in studies of state formation and regime to new forms of regulatory governance emerging within and dynamics in Vedi Hadiz’s Workers and the State in New Order between states – and new institutional and spatial arenas within Indonesia (1997) and Andrew Brown’s Labour, Politics and the which conflicts over state power are conducted. State in Industralizing Thailand (2004). This insight was most developed in his Reconstituting the Global More recently, Donna Turner’s PhD thesis on state-labour Liberal Order: Legitimacy and Regulation (2005). Recently it has relations in the transition to a knowledge-economy in Malaysia been harnessed and developed by Shahar Hameiri in Regulating interpreted these as efforts by political elites to contain resultant Statehood (2010), analysing state-building initiatives in the Asia- social and political tensions. Several current PhD students are Pacific premised on addressing the security problem of so-called also well advanced in researching migrant labour regimes in failed states. Singapore, employing ethnographic approaches to highlight and explain the forms of everyday production conflicts.

16 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Contributors to ‘Organising Labour in Globalising Asia’, New Rich in Asia Book 6, July 1996. From Left: Andrew Brown, Marilyn Rock, Michael Pinches, Vedi Hadiz, Patricia Cahill, Stephen Sherlock, Jane Hutchison and Helen Bradbury (publications officer)

Attendees at the ‘Patterns of Consumption’ conference leading to ‘Consumption in Asia: Lifestyles and Identities’ New Rich in Asia Book 5, September 1996

Guo Zhaoming, Deputy Secretary-General of the Government Office of Hainan Province, David Goodman, and Fu Dabang, Deputy Director, Social and Economic Development Research Centre of Hainan Provincial People’s Government

17 A further political economy innovation has emerged through History recent work conducted by Caroline Hughes, Richard Robison, Jane Hutchison and Ian Wilson on the political economy of Analysing the historical roots of social, political and economic aid. Constituting an original critique of the ‘development change in the Asian region has also been a significant Centre effectiveness’ agenda that currently informs international research agenda. Although this entails diverse foci, many aid policy, Centre research funded by AusAID has led to an historical works reflect the Centre’s fundamental interest in innovative re-conceptualisation of the political dynamics political economy, while social history has also been a major and surrounding donor-recipient relations associated with aid longstanding area of original scholarship. programmes, with profound implications for the ways that donor organisations operate. Tim Wright’s research centred on the political economy and development of China from the pre-1949 to the contemporary Published outputs draw upon case studies from Asia in order period, especially in relation to the 1930s world depression, to develop a new conceptual framework for understanding the labour, coal-mining and regional economies. This includes impact of aid that is applicable across the developing world. his edited book, The Chinese Economy in the Early Twentieth In addition to AusAID, the project has attracted interest from the Century (1992) and his authored Cambridge University Press UK government’s Department for International Development, the book, Coal Mining in China’s Economy and Society, 1895 – 1937, Asia Foundation and the World Bank. which appeared in Chinese translation in 1991, Malcolm Tull has also taken a leadership role since 2006 as principal investigator for the History of Marine Animal Populations Media (HMAP) activities in Southeast Asia and as a member of HMAP’s international Steering Group. HMAP investigates ecosystem Among other areas of sustained leadership is the Centre’s role dynamics, including the role of marine resources in the historical in the analysis of media politics – both in traditional forms and development of human society. The Asia Research Centre is the new technologies. Here the contributions have been theoretically collaborating partner for HMAP’s activities in the region. diverse, but two intellectual themes are nevertheless discernible: first, a concern to identify the coalitions of interests that are Meanwhile, Sandra Wilson has made a range of original involved in varying media reform agendas; second, a focus on contributions to analysing the complex connections between the implications of new media technologies for civil society and politics and society in modern : initially regarding the political organisation. relation between Japanese society and foreign policy in the 1930s; more recently on Japanese nationalism, focusing on Krishna Sen and David Hill were not only among the most how grand national spectacles reflect and shape nationalism, influential and authoritative analysts of the media under such as Emperor Hirohito’s 1928 enthronement and the Tokyo Soeharto’s New Order in Indonesia, notably through their Olympics of 1964 and Expo ‘70 in Osaka. In collaboration with jointly-authored Media, Culture and Politics in Indonesia (2000), colleagues from other institutions, work on the repatriation of but pioneered the detailed analysis of the Internet and its convicted Japanese war criminals from Southeast Asia to Japan political usage during and following the collapse of authoritarian after the Second World War is now underway. Wilson’s work has rule. While much more has since been written on the latter, their not only attracted high numbers of postgraduate students but book The Internet in Indonesia’s New Democracy (2005) helped also, in 2009, drew Janet Borland to the Centre as an Australian ensure subsequent analyses have centred mainly on the factors Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow. influencing how the political usage of a universal technology is shaped by local factors. Finally, through pioneering ethno- and social history research, James Warren has creatively analysed relationships between Centre scholars have also been among the earliest in cautioning the social production of ‘culture’ and changes in ethnicity, against technological determinism regarding the democratising hierarchy and power. This work has ranged across such themes potential of the Internet. This goes as far back as Garry Rodan’s as slavery, ethnicity, and most recently climate and the impact 1998 Political Science Quarterly article on political control and of natural hazards. In each case, a trans-historical and trans- the Internet in Singapore, and most recently Terence Lee’s 2010 cultural perspective links detailed research on the local situation authored book, The Media, Cultural Control and Government in within Southeast Asia to relationships with wider regional and Singapore. global systems. Warren’s scholarship is especially renowned Political economy themes also loom large in the Centre’s for its use of imaginative methodologies to resurrect the voices work on the media, exemplified in international collaboration of ‘little people’ in the historical narrative – be they Chinese resulting in ‘Electronic Media, Markets and Civil Society in East labourers, Japanese prostitutes, Malay ‘pirates’, nomadic fishers and Southeast Asia,’ a special 2003 issue of The Pacific Review. or nameless artisans. Yingchi Chu’s authored book, Chinese Documentaries: From In addition to their academic influence, Warren’s authored books Dogma to Polyphony (2007) also examines the implications of Rickshaw Coolie (latest edition 2003) and Ah Ku and Karayuki-San: market economy for documentaries as a medium through which Prostitution in Singapore, 1870 – 1940 (latest edition 2003), have public concerns and alternative voices can be channelled. inspired major artistic exhibitions, novels, and the formation of museum galleries and displays in Singapore. Iranun and Balangingi: Globalization, Maritime Raiding and the Birth of Ethnicity (2002) was also adapted for the Philippine theatre in 2007.

Warren is currently leading a team of scholars who are part of a global collaborative project to research the impacts of climate- related and other natural hazards on the economy, society and history of Southeast Asia from the 10th century to the present. Leadership is also evident through his attraction and supervision of a sizeable group of postgraduate students who are helping to build up a legacy of expertise in social history and in maritime 18 history in Southeast Asia and beyond. Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Research Collaborations

19 Research networks and collaborations have been critical to the The Asia Research Institute at the National University of Asia Research Centre’s success as they have brought capacity to Singapore has collaborated on other major projects: two ambition, enabling large, comparative projects to be undertaken. workshops on political regimes in Southeast Asia led to a This has been especially important in the second phase of the special issue of Democratization (2007) and another workshop Centre, when it no longer received direct government funding. on developments in the media in Indonesia after the fall of President Suharto produced Politics and the Media in Twenty- Necessarily, this discussion of the Centre’s collaborations First Century Indonesia (2011). Also at the National University focuses on those involving big, strategic projects and collective of Singapore, the Centre on Asia and Globalisation in the Lee publications – edited books and special issues of journals – Kuan Yew School of Public Policy collaborated on a workshop to for which the Centre has a strong reputation. Other, smaller launch the New Modes of Governance flagship project. collaborations are not less important to the work of the Centre; indeed they often flow from and feed into the larger group In terms of the institutional collaborations on current projects, efforts. Simply, they are not recorded here. Politics of Development involves Universitas Gadjah Mada, , whilst the Institute of Developing Economies, Tokyo, is co-sponsoring workshops for the Islam and Political Dissent Institutional collaborations project. The large, continuing projects on the environmental impacts of socio-economic change in Indonesia entail long-term The Centre has partnered on strategic projects with institutions institutional collaborations with the Van Vollenhoven Institute in Asia, Europe and North America. In the late 1990s, it joined of Law at Leiden University, as well as to more specific partner with the Graduate School of International Studies, Yonsei relationships with Wageningen University in The Netherlands University, to hold an international conference on the political and the Australian National University. economy of the Asian financial crisis, with Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis (2000) as the result. Also, the Also in Europe, the Asia Research Centre has linked with the Graduate School co-sponsored the conference from which Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation (CSGR) Collective Goods, Collective Futures (2002) was produced. at Warwick University, in particular enabling the former and current Directors, Richard Higgott and Shaun Breslin, to bring The Southeast Asia Research Centre (SEARC) at City University their political economy expertise to a number of large projects. of Hong Kong co-sponsored a large Political Regimes and The Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus University, The Hague, Governance project conference, from which followed two has also partnered in the Politics of Development project. special issues of Critical Asian Studies (2004) and Neoliberalism In Australia, the EU-funded Innovative Universities European and Conflict in Asia after 9/11 (2006). SEARC and the Centre Union Centre network in Australia co-sponsored a workshop in also contributed to a workshop the Faculty of Arts and Social 2009 that will result in Autonomy and Ethnic Conflict in South Sciences and Asia Research Institute at the National University and South-East Asia (forthcoming in 2012). Finally, earlier the of Singapore ran and resulted in Empire and Neoliberalism in University of Wollongong collaborated with the Centre over Port Asia (2006). When Kevin Hewison ended his time as Director of Privatisation: The Asia-Pacific Experience (2008). SEARC, the Centre was able to collaborate with the Carolina Asia Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he was appointed Director the Carolina Asia Center. Individuals

The Centre for Comparative Public Management and Social In association with these institutional collaborations, a good Policy, City University of Hong Kong, partnered with the Centre number of individuals have participated in and or helped to on Governance and Public Sector Reform in Asia: Paradigm shifts lead large Asia Research Centre projects. Here are mentioned or business as usual? (2003). At the University of Hong Kong, those who have been multiple and long-term contributors – and the Centre for Civil Society and Governance collaborated on a friends – of the Centre. study of statutory bodies in Hong Kong and Singapore that was published as a special issue of Public Organization Review (2006). K.S. Jomo was an important voice in the Centre’s analysis of Finally, the Centre joined the Department of Public and Social the Asian financial crisis. He has also been a valued key-note Administration, City University of Hong Kong, and the University speaker and is a member of the International Advisory Panel. of Macau in running two workshops, with Gaming, Governance Currently, he holds the prestigious position of Assistant Secretary- and Public Policy in Macao (2011) the result. General on Economic Development for the United Nations.

(L-R): K.S Jomo, Chua Beng Chuat, Frederic Deyo

20 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Richard Higgott left Murdoch University before the Centre was More recently, Helen Nesadurai contributed two chapters to established. However, he has remained a frequent collaborator – Asian Regional Governance (2004) and to the special issues particularly with Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis of Australian Journal of International Affairs (2009) and Third (2000) and special issue of Critical Asian Studies (2004) – and World Quarterly (2010) on regionalism. Wil Hout contributed a was also an International Advisory Panel member, prior to being chapter on development assistance to Neoliberalism and Conflict appointed Vice-Chancellor of Murdoch University. Similarly, in Asia after 9/11 (2006) and co-edited Governance and the Shaun Breslin has contributed to Politics and Markets in the Wake Depoliticisation of Development (2009) with Richard Robison. of the Asian Crisis (2000), the special issue of Critical Asian Studies He is currently co-authoring a book on the political economy of (2004), as well as one of The Political Economy of Southeast Asia aid effectiveness with Fellows of the Centre. editions.

Chua Beng Huat has been a mainstay of number of Asia The Murdoch Diaspora Research Centre projects. He edited Consumption in Asia (2000) and contributed chapters to Pathways to Asia (1996), Culture and Four of the Centre’s key collaborators have been Murdoch Privilege in Capitalist Asia (1999), Law, Capitalism and Power in East University staff for a period. In this group, Kevin Hewison and Asia (1999), Collective Goods, Collective Futures (2002), and the Kanishka Jayasuriya stand out for their leadership on the political special issue of Democratization (2007). Khoo Boo Teik is another economy analysis of contemporary Asia. mainstay of the Centre. He has written for Law, Capitalism and One of the Centre’s founding grant awardees, Kevin has helped Power in Asia (1999), Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian to lead on Southeast Asia in the 1990s, all editions of The Political Crisis (2000), Empire and Neoliberalism in Asia (2006) and two Economy of Southeast Asia, the special issue of Critical Asian editions of The Political Economy of Southeast Asia. Currently, he is Studies (2004) and Neoliberalism and Conflict in Asia after 9/11 a collaborator on the Islam and Political Dissent project. (2006). He has also contributed to Empire and Neoliberalism in There are other multiple collaborators. For example, Linda Asia (2006) and the Democratization (2007) special issue. Weiss contributed her expertise on comparative government- As the Director of SEARC and subsequently the Carolina Asia business relations to chapters to Pathways to Asia: The Politics Center, he has provided the Centre with important institutional of Engagement (1996) and Politics and Markets in the Wake of links in East Asia and North America. the Asian Crisis (2000). James Cotton wrote on for Kanishka Jayasuriya’s associations with the Centre have been Singapore Changes Guard (1993) and The New Rich in Asia (1995) many and various, most recently he was Principle Senior while Hyuk-Rae Kim co-edited Politics and Markets in the Wake of Research Fellow from 2005 to 2010. With respect to large the Asian Crisis (2000) and wrote for Collective Goods, Collective Centre projects, he has edited or co-edited Law, Capitalism and Futures (2002). Michael Pinches had chapters on the Philippines Power in Asia (1999), Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian in two of The New Rich series volumes and edited a third, Crisis (2000), Asian Regional Governance (2004) and special issues Culture and Privilege in Capitalist Asia (1999), himself. Melanie of Australian Journal of International Affairs (2009) and Third Beresford and Frederic Deyo contributed to all three editions of World Quarterly (2010) on regionalism. Among his many other The Political Economy of Southeast Asia. Melanie also wrote the collaborations, he has contributed to two editions of The Political Vietnam chapter for Southeast Asia in the 1990s. Nicola Phillips Economy of Southeast Asia and the special issues of Critical Asian contributed to the special issue of Third World Quarterly (2010) Studies (2004) and Democratization (2007) on regionalism.

Ian Scott and Mark Beeson

21 Other key former Murdoch University staffers are Krishna Sen As well as co-editing Organising Labour in Globalising Asia and Ian Scott. Krishna was with Asia Research Centre when it (2001), Andrew Brown contributed on Thailand to the started, co-editing Gender and Power in Affluent Asia (1998) and, Democratization special issue (2007). John McCarthy has worked after her departure, several more Centre publications: Political on environmental governance projects with Carol Warren, Regimes and the Media in Asia (2008) and Politics and the Media in co-producing a chapter in Collective Goods, Collective Futures in Twenty-First Century Indonesia: Decade of Democracy (2011). Asia (2002), editing with her Community, Environment and Local She has also served on the Centre’s International Advisory Board Governance in Indonesia (2008). Sidney Adams wrote for Collective for many years. Goods, Collective Futures in Asia (2002). Finally, Toby Carroll contributed a chapter to Governance and the Depoliticisation of Ian Scott was the Centre’s Director for a short time. With respect Development (2009) and has co-written journal articles and to large projects, Ian co-edited Governance and Public Sector op-ed pieces with Shahar Hameiri. Reform in Asia (2002), Governance and Public Sector Reform in Asia (2003), a special issue of Public Organization Review (2006), and Gaming, Governance and Public Policy in Macao (2011). Visitors

Former PhD students are mentioned in a separate chapter. Some collaborators have spent substantial periods at the Centre In addition to their sole-authored books, they have contributed to take up a fellowship to complete or initiate book projects or in various ways subsequently to strategic projects. Sally Sargeson to conduct study leave. In the first category, noted journalists, edited Collective Goods, Collective Futures in Asia (2002) and Adam Schwartz and Paul Handley completed books, as did Chua brought her expertise on China to chapters in Organising Labour Beng Huat, Khoo Boo Teik and Max Lane. Jim Glassman also in Globalizing Asia (2001) and Neoliberalism and Conflict in Asia visited the Centre in 2009 and wrote on the war on terror for after 9/11 (2006). Mark Beeson co-edited Politics and Markets in the third edition of The Political Economy of Southeast Asia (2006). the Wake of the Asian Crisis (2000), and has written for Collective Goods, Collective Futures in Asia (2002), Governance and Public External collaborations Sector Reform in Asia (2003), Neoliberalism and Conflict In Asia After 9/11 (2006), two editions of The Political Economy of Finally, Centre Fellows have collaborations which draw them into Southeast Asia and the special issue of Third World Quarterly the large projects of other universities and institutes, involving (2010). major research grants. Sandra Wilson, for example, currently holds an Australia Research Council Discovery Grant that is Andrew Rosser has contributed to Law, Capitalism and Power in administered through Monash University. Also, Jim Warren Asia (1999), Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis is part of a global network of collaboration working on The (2000), Governance and Public Sector Reform in Asia (2003), Asian Indian Ocean World: The Making of the First Global Economy in Regional Governance (2004), two editions of The Political Economy the Context of Human –Environment Interaction. This is led by of Southeast Asia and the special issues of Australian Journal of Professor Gwyn Campbell anchored at the Indian Ocean World International Affairs (2009) and Third World Quarterly (2010) on Centre, McGill University. regionalism.

Gareth Evans with Adam Schwarz, author of A Nation in Waiting, which was largely written during Adam’s time as a Visiting Fellow at the Asia Research Centre

22 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years (L-R): Garry Rodan, Vedi Hadiz, Shahar Hameiri and Janet Borland

Grants Among the grants secured by Asia Research Centre fellows are the highly prestigious and competitive Australian Professorial The Asia Research Centre’s reputation was established at a time Fellowship of Professor Garry Rodan, one of only three such in which it was funded as a Special Research Centre of the fellowships ever awarded to a political scientist, and Professor Australian Research Council. In 1990 the Murdoch University Vedi Hadiz’s Future Fellowship. Professor Hadiz’s fellowship was applicants received $6.6 million over nine years to set up the one of only three awarded in public policy and political science Asia Research Centre – the first ARC Special Research Centre in 2009 and the only one in the top tier of professorial-level ever established in the social sciences and humanities. The size applicants. Professor David Hill received in 2009 a National of the grant was at the time unheard of outside the sciences Teaching Fellowship from the Australian Teaching and Learning and the story of how it came to be is told in the first chapter Council – one of only three for that year – to formulate a of this volume. In the 1990s the Asia Research Centre was also strategic plan for the Government concerning the promotion awarded grants from the Japan Foundation, the Australia-Korea of learning and teaching in Australian Foundation, and an ARC Special Initiatives Grant to examine the universities. The Asia Research Centre is also currently home implications of the fall of Soeharto for Australia’s foreign policy. to an Australian Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow, Shahar Hameiri. Hameiri’s fellowship was distinctive in the 2011 round The Centre was also the recipient of several commercial grants in being the only award in political science and public policy in in that period, totalling over $2.2 million. Notable examples which the postdoctoral fellow was the team leader, rather than include: Agribusiness Opportunities in Indonesia, projects funded working in the context of a team of more senior researchers. by the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation Janet Borland, a former Australian Research Council Postdoctoral of Australia in 1995-96, $214,621; ILSAC Indonesian Legal Fellow at the Centre, has recently been appointed as Research Visits Program, AusAID, $60,000 awarded in conjunction with Assistant Professor at the University of Hong Kong. The Faculty of Law & The Asian Law Centre at the University of Melbourne, the Australia Indonesia Business Council and While the Asia Research Centre has been very successful at Mallesons Stephen Jacques, Solicitors; Western Australian attracting external grants it is important to recognise that Department of Commerce and Trade, a consolidated grant of providing consistent research leadership requires core internal $300,000 awarded in 1998 and 1999 for research projects funding. This is necessary to perform a variety of functions such and two major conferences dealing with the judicial and legal as: exploring innovative approaches that can form the basis of systems in Asia, the Asian currency crisis, accountancy regimes funding applications; bringing together networks of researchers and comparative management systems in Asia; the Channar regularly to maintain institutional and intellectual connections Fund provided a grant of $150,000 in 1998/99 for a study of and relations; disseminating the results of completed work at the changing policy directions in the Chinese Steel industry and major conferences attended by the leading scholars in the field the implications for Australian iron ore exporters. internationally; and developing early career researchers to a point where they are competitive in contests for government Since the expiry of Special Research Centre funding in 1999, funding. the Centre’s scholarly innovations have continued to earn the recognition of the national and international community of Such support has not always been available to the Asia Research scholars through rigorous peer assessment of project funding Centre since the expiry of the Special Research Centre funding, applications. As detailed in the list of external research grants but when investment was made the returns were considerable. in the appendices, Asia Research Centre researchers have For example, in 2007 then Murdoch University Vice-Chancellor since 1999 secured over $4 million for 17 different Discovery John Yovich gave the Asia Research Centre $250,000 to launch a Project grants and a further $400,000 in Linkage grants from new flagship program of research – New Modes of Governance the Australian Research Council. Considering that the kind in Asia. Projects linked to the New Modes of Governance of research typically conducted by Centre scholars does not program have since been awarded $2,749,311 of Category 1 require investment in expensive lab equipment or specialised grant funding – the most prestigious and competitive category infrastructure this represents a very substantial return on the in Australia of grant funding available, which includes schemes earlier investment of the Australian Research Council. managed by the Australian Research Council and the Australian Agency for International Development’s Australian Development Research Awards.

23 Philip Bowring, Ian Thynne and Emily Lau

Participants in the workshop on Rule of Law in East Asia

24 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Shaping Australia’s Understanding ofAsia: Strategies of Public and Policy Engagement

25 Richard Robison with then Foreign Minister Gareth Evans and Cisca Spencer

“The philosophers have only interpreted the world in Established with federal funding as a special centre of the various ways: the point, however, is to change it.” Australian Research Council, and subsequently supported Karl Marx, The German Ideology. primarily through external project funding from the Australian Research Council and internal grants from Murdoch University, the Asia Research Centre has from the outset been acutely Managing the connection between theory and policy has long conscious of its responsibilities to the Australian taxpayer. been a vexed issue for the social sciences. Most contemporary As ethical researchers, we are also aware of our responsibilities social scientists are both accustomed and sensitive to accusations to the people we encounter in Asia in the course of our of ivory-tower navel-gazing: we accept that the point is to investigations. Consequently, the Centre aims to combine a change the world. But for social scientists, conceptual clarity theoretically driven agenda of pure research with the production is the precondition for understanding social phenomena. of outputs that will interest policy makers in Australia and the Only once theoretical frameworks have been mapped out can region and the public as a whole. breakthroughs occur which can prompt policy innovation. This can be a difficult message to convey to a non-academic audience. Furthermore, the policy implications of theoretically Understanding Australia’s Place in the World grounded research cannot be specified in advance, and may turn In 1991, Asia was in the midst of a dramatic economic out to be unwelcome, on grounds of ideology or expense, to transformation that constituted a challenge and an opportunity policy makers. for Australian government and business, then mired in deep recession at home. As the Asia Research Centre’s first annual report stated: “The challenge for Australia in the coming decades is to ensure that we secure a place in an increasingly important Asia-Pacific region culturally and politically, as well as in trade and investment.” The Asia Research Centre was established as a Special Centre of the Australian Research Council in 1991 in a policy climate where better understanding of the rapid changes taking place in Asia was a central government and private sector concern.

During its first nine years of operation with federal funding, the Asia Research Centre contained a dedicated Business Unit, and it convened an Advisory Council, later renamed the Centre Board, which consisted primarily of representatives from the business community, to ensure that links between the Centre’s research agenda and the Western Australian business community were strong. The Business Unit was directed by Cisca Spencer, who came to the Centre following a career in the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The Annual Report in 1995 stipulated, “The Centre does not regard the process of engagement with Asia purely as an economic exercise in ‘cracking the Asian Vinay Bhargava, Acting Vice President, External Affairs and UN Affairs, and market’ but as something much deeper and going to the heart Lester Dally, Senior Advisor, External Affairs, World Bank, with Garry Rodan, of Australia’s own evolving identity and sense of its place in 2003 the world.” 26 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years A range of methods were used to communicate findings to interlocutors in government and the private sector. The Asia Research Centre held various series of public lectures and seminars, including a monthly Business with Asia lunchtime seminar, held in the boardroom of Perth legal firm Parker and Parker; a series of business breakfasts sponsored by the WA Chamber of Commerce; and a series of Asia Forums in collaboration with law firm Mallesons Stephen Jaques. Findings were also published via the quarterly newsletter AsiaView, and the Centre’s Asia Papers and Policy Papers series.

The Centre organised a series of business conferences, sponsored and attended by private firms, on different aspects of trade with Asia. Topics included Singapore, Taiwan, Vietnam, Indonesia, Hainan Island, Hong Kong after reunification with China, and opportunities for the food export industry in Asia. By 1997, the Centre’s strong track record of research and expertise on political economy in Indonesia put the Centre in a key position to inform interpretations of the Asian Financial Crisis. In 1997, the Centre organised a roundtable discussion on the implications of the crisis for a delegation of EU parliamentarians visiting Australia. Subsequently, the Centre held a business conference on the Professor James Warren Asian Financial Crisis entitled From Miracle to Meltdown… And Back Again. In 1998, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer gave a public lecture on the implications of the crisis at an event hosted Recovering Lost Voices from Asian by the Asia Research Centre. History

Alongside promoting its findings within the business community, During the 1990s, Asia Research Centre fellow James the Asia Research Centre also informed and facilitated media Warren’s work on the history of poor labourers in and cultural products and events as part of a wider effort to Southeast Asia led to a range of artistic productions inform the public at large. The Centre acted as a meeting which brought the stories he documents in his trilogy ground for journalists from Australia and Asia, through a visiting of people’s histories vividly to life. Professor Warren’s journalist programme that brought in reporters such as Michael books uncovered the lost stories of migrant Chinese Byrnes, Asia correspondent for the Financial Review, and Far rickshaw coolies and Japanese sex workers in Singapore Eastern Economic Review journalist Adam Schwarz. Other visitors between 1870 and 1940, based upon records from the from the press included another former Far Eastern Economic Singapore Coroner’s court. Due to their almost invisible Review journalist, Paul Handley, and Robinson Pangaribuan from position on the margins of Singaporean society, few Prospek newspaper in . Nani Wijaya from the Jawa Pos memories of these migrant workers remain; however, network of papers in Indonesia and Harry Bhaskara from The the violence to which they were subject entailed that Jakarta Post also spent periods of time in the Centre. extensive evidence of their lives was captured in the A conference on Reporting Asia in 1995 brought together Coroner’s records of the time, which included not only Asia-based correspondents from the South China Morning the findings of inquests, but evidence presented at Post, New Straits Times, Republika, Jawa Pos, Australian, Sydney them, including witness statements, suicide notes and Morning Herald, Financial Review, , and the Bangkok other poignant documents. Manager. Other research on Asian history inspired theatre performances, produced by avant garde artists in Asia. Following publication of the trilogy, one of Singapore’s leading avant garde directors, Ong Keng Sen, produced The 1990s were an exciting period of growth in economic major productions of music, dance and drama based relations between Australia and Asia, and the Asia Research upon these histories. The first, entitled Broken Birds – an Centre was able to contribute significantly to this trajectory. Epic Longing, re-enacted the lives of Japanese prostitutes In 1996, for example, the Director and Deputy Director of in Singapore, while the second, Workhorse Afloat, the Centre were invited to a closed workshop organised by juxtaposed the history of Chinese rickshaw coolies in senior staff of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries with connection with the preparation of a White Paper on foreign and the current experience of South Asian migrant workers trade policy. The following year the Centre was commissioned to in Singapore. Both productions used Professor Warren’s write the WA Government’s submission to a federal government histories to engage the wider Singaporean public in enquiry into Australia’s relations with ASEAN. Another major exploration of identity and morality as this has been research stream examined the demand among the emerging transfigured by forces of colonialism, development middle class in Asia for Australian higher education. The Centre’s and globalization in Singapore. Subsequently, another second Director, Professor Richard Robison, was appointed to of Professor Warren’s books, Iranun and Balangingi: the Australian government’s Foreign Affairs Advisory Council Globalization, Maritime Raiding and the Birth of Ethnicity, and to its Aid Advisory Council in 1998. In 1997, the Asia was dramatized by the Punta Cruz Cultural Collective Research Centre’s contribution was recognised when the Centre in the Philippines. The play, entitled Tawag Sa Bantayan, was short-listed for an award by International Business Asia for its portrayed historical events leading to the construction of contribution to Australian-Asian business links. the Punta Cruz watchtower, in response to maritime raids from the southern seas.

27 Advocating for Standards in International Education

When the Asia Research Centre was established in the They warned of the risks to academic quality and integrity early 1990s, the newly introduced Federal Government and of the poor reputation that Australia was developing (Dawkins) Reforms in Higher Education had encouraged the in some Asian countries as some Australian private colleges Australian Universities to recruit ‘full fee-paying international and universities pursued students with exaggerated students’ as a means of generating academic jobs and advertising and promises. export income for Australia. As a result, the Universities were seeking better information on likely ‘recruitment markets’ Through published policy reports, conferences and and opportunities in Asia. An Asia Research Centre team, interaction with Commonwealth Education officials, comprising Associate Professor Don Smart and Research Don and Grace had a significant influence in shaping Assistant Grace Ang, undertook a series of studies travelling Federal Education Minister, Kim Beazley’s so-called to Hong Kong and Singapore to analyse those countries’ ‘Internationalisation of Australian Education’ policy. higher education systems and their substantial surplus This policy was designed to encourage Australian demand for education. This resulted in a series of policy educational institutions to adopt policies which placed reports which were greatly appreciated by the newly- more emphasis on the diplomatic and academic benefits emerging ‘International Education Marketing’ Divisions in of international education and avoided the excesses of an the universities. Their research also received widespread exclusive focus on ‘export income’. coverage and public interest through publication in media In particular, Smart and Ang argued that the Australian such as The Australian’s Higher Education Supplement and Government should adopt a British Council-type model The Bulletin Magazine. and Beazley did this by establishing the Australian At that time the International Development Program of the Education Centres (AECs). While Smart and Ang’s policy Australian Universities (IDP) ran annual conferences on advocacy contributed to the emergence of the AECs – and ‘marketing education’ and Don and Grace were regularly a consequent reduction in the unhealthy dependancy invited to present their research. Don and Grace soon began of universities on the commercially-oriented IDP – they warning over-enthusiastic ‘marketers’ about the dangers continued to criticise the failure of the Commonwealth to inherent in pursuing international enrolments ‘at any price’. fully-fund the AECs. As a result, the AECs never achieved their full diplomatic and cultural potential to serve Australian international education more holistically.

The then Australian Leader of the Opposition the Hon. Kim Beazley, joined by (from left) Centre Director Richard Robison, Garry Rodan, and Sir Charles Court, Chairman of the Centre’s Advisory Council, October 1996

28 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years New Directions: Consultancy vs. Policy-Relevant Consultancy work differs from policy-relevant research in that it is provided for the benefit of a single consumer, rather than Research published to advance the body of knowledge more widely. When federal funding expired in 1999, the Asia Research Furthermore, consultancy work generally entails providing Centre went through a period of restructuring. The Centre had answers to a specified set of questions, whereas policy-relevant conducted a series of high profile consultancies for institutions research begins with theoretical work that generates new such as the Australian Agency for International Development; questions. Diversion of time and resources into consultancy the Channar Fund – a joint initiative established by the Chinese work represented a potential threat to the Centre’s ability to government and WA iron ore producers; the Australian continue to push the frontiers of knowledge with respect to Asia. Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR) and the Consequently, different constituencies of the Centre advocated Department of Agriculture, Forests and Fisheries. It was hoped for different emphases between consultancy and research, and that consultancy work could provide profits that would subsidise this proved difficult to manage. Many of the business members academic research, and for several years a successful consultancy of the management board had little understanding of research, operation was run by the Centre’s senior project manager, and pushed for the Centre to become more attuned to the Gitte Heij. immediate needs of business for practical knowledge – a version, in effect, of Austrade. On the other hand, some within However, the marriage of consultancy and academic research the university resented business-oriented work, regarding it as a proved a difficult one. diversion from the Centre’s academic mission.

Jane Hutchison, Caroline Hughes, Ian Wilson, Richard Robison, Wil Hout and Aris Arief Mundayat at ‘The Elephant in the Room: Development Policy and the Problem of Politics’ conference

Understanding the Politics of Development

A team from the Asia Research Centre won a competitive grant from AusAID in 2008 to study the problems faced by aid agencies attempting designing governance reform programmes in Asia. Using the Centre’s political economy approach the team partnered with Professor Wil Hout from the Institute of Social Studies in the Hague and a team led by Dr Aris Mundayat from Universitas Gadjah Mada in Yogyakarta to study four different governance reform projects in , the Philippines and Indonesia. The findings showed that the failure of contemporary development models to properly explain the reasons why actors oppose or support programmes of governance reform prevented the design of effective reform strategies. The team concluded that reform programmes need to better understand the extent to which development is not a public good; rather it is an intensely political process which generates often desperate struggles over distributions of power and resources. Understanding the appetite for reform requires an analysis of actors’ tactical interests in the course of this struggle, as well as the conditions under which interests are formed and change. The team delivered the findings in workshops in , Jakarta and the Philippines as well as in Fremantle, and attendees included representatives from AusAID, the World Bank, the Danish International Development Agency, the Swedish International Development Agency, non-governmental organisations, and private consulting firms. Jane Hutchison and Caroline Hughes also delivered a well-received research seminar at AusAID in Canberra. A book and several journal articles are also under way.

29 A further problem arose from resource constraints once federal New Millennium, New Agenda funding was no longer available to subsidise consultancy work. In the 1990s, the Centre had already learned that attracting Since 2003, changing relations between Australia and the region consultancies could be time-consuming. The 1996 Annual have brought new issues onto the policy agenda. Three of these Report commented on the resources expended in pursuit of are now core to the Centre’s research agenda. The first is the consultancy contracts: “For academic institutions to attract this Millennium campaign to halve poverty by 2015, an agenda work successfully, resources similar to business development which has prompted a change in aid policies and a bipartisan units in companies are needed – opportunities need to be commitment, albeit fragile, in Australia to increase absolute spotted and pursued, contacts developed with those that might quantities of aid, most of which is spent in the Asia-Pacific commission work, and bids and tenders written – which requires region. The second is the issue of security and counterterrorism time and effort.” in Southeast Asia, which emerged as a question of urgent concern following the Bali bombings of 2002. More broadly, Once federal funding lapsed after 1999, the Centre found intensifying processes of globalisation have brought new security it increasingly difficult to sustain this kind of activity. While threats, such as the spread of infectious diseases, which require consultancies generated an average profit margin of 10 per new modes of transnational governance. The third issue is cent, they required significant upfront investment in conducting the impact of the environmental pressures on livelihoods and research that sometimes would not be paid for until two years ecosystems in Asia. Centre researchers continue to take seriously later. The budget of the Centre as part of a publicly funded the policy implications of their work, and seek to disseminate the university was not well geared to this kind of income stream. results of research projects related to these three core issues to a Consequently, the decision was taken in 2003 to refocus wider audience whenever possible. the energies of the Centre on our core function of academic research.

Collaboration with the Department of Professor Stuart Harris Department of International Relations, Research School of Foreign Affairs and Trade in WA Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University and Since 2003, the Centre has been privileged to have former head of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. a close relationship with the Department of Foreign Professor Samuel Makinda Affairs and Trade’s WA office. This is facilitated by the Chair for Security, Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism Studies, fact that consecutive Directors of the WA office have Murdoch University. Member, Australian Foreign Minister’s been willing to take a seat on the Asia Research Centre National Consultative Committee for International Security Board of Management and in that role have contributed Issues and member, Council for Security and Cooperation in constructively to discussions over the unfolding role and the Asia-Pacific. focus of the Centre. Our DFAT Board members included: China’s Rise: Force for Regional Stability or Regional Friction? Sally Mansfield from 2005 – 2007, Philip Allars from 2007 – 2009 and David Maclennan from 2009 – 2011. Public Symposium – 4th August, 2006

This relationship has also allowed us to run joint events with Professor Yukiko Fukagawa and Associate Professor DFAT, including public lectures and round table discussions, Ann Capling graciously hosted by DFAT at their conference room in Japan-Australia Free Trade Agreement: How likely and who Perth’s Exchange Square. The list of collaborations includes benefits? the following highlights: With assistance from a 2006 Australia-Japan Year of Exchange Grass-roots Support grant. Roundtable – 13th March, 2006 Dr Ellen Frost Public Seminar 11th December, 2006 Visiting Fellow at the Institute for International Economics, Professor Rosemary Foot Adjunct Research Fellow at the National Defence University’s University of Oxford, U.K Institute of National Strategic Studies in the . The Rise of China: Implications for Regional Security

Public Seminar 28th March, 2008 Ambassador Lalit Mansingh Republic of The Rise of India and the Implications for Regional Stability

Public Seminar 7th November, 2008 Professor C. Raja Mohan Nanyang Technological University, Singapore India – U.S. Strategic Partnership After Bush

Public Seminar 10th August, 2010 Professor Vedi Hadiz Australian Research Council Future Fellow, Asia Research Centre Rosemary Foot with Phillip Allars, former State Director, Department of Islamic Politics and Indonesian Democracy Foreign Affairs and Trade

30 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Heightened interest in issues of aid and development has led to Ian Wilson has conducted policy work through the Australia closer collaboration with international aid agencies, including Indonesia Governance Research Partnership and in connection multilateral, bilateral and non-governmental donors. A major with AusAID’s Developmental Leadership programme. Professor project led by Professor Richard Robison attracted $289,000 David Hill is currently advising the Australian government on a from the Australian Agency for International Development national strategy for training Australians in Indonesian language. (AusAID) via their Australian Development Research Awards competition. Associate Professor Carol Warren is currently Through these and other activities, the Asia Research Centre leading an Australian Research Council-funded project on social remains a valuable public resource, conducting research, capital and natural resource management in Indonesia. producing reports and engaging policy makers and the public The project has led to collaborations with international aid to promote Australia’s understanding of Asia and its positive donors, including the World Bank and AusAID, as well as with a relations with governments and people in the region. number of Indonesian non-governmental organisations.

The Centre has also partnered with World Vision, the International Women’s Development Agency and AusAID in staging One Just World public forums, which were held twice a year in Perth from 2009 – 2011 as a means to stimulate interest in and understanding of Australia’s overseas aid programme, amongst the Australian public. The forums took the form of presentations by academics and aid practitioners followed by discussion and question and answer sessions from the audience. Topics included “Is Urban Poverty the New Threat to the World’s Poor?”; “Australia the Peace Builder: Ending Conflict in our Region: What Can Australia Do?”; and “The Big Win Win: Corporate Responsibility and the World’s Poor.”

Thematic focus on governance, security and the environment are reflected in the topics of public seminars given by fellows of the Centre and by our visitors from other universities across Australia, Asia and the world. These seminars have been held regularly Rizal Ramli, Indonesian politician with Aristides Katoppo, senior Indonesian throughout the year, either on campus or at the Western newspaper editor Australia offices of the Department for Foreign Affairs and Trade in the centre of Perth. Since 2003, more than 50 such seminars have been held. Speakers have included Brendan Nelson, Federal Minister for Defence; Lalit Mansingh, Indian Ambassador; Scott Guggenheim of the AusAID-Indonesia partnership program; I Ketut Erawan, Executive Director of the Institute for Peace and Democracy in Bali; and Doug Porter of the World Bank.

The Centre also maintains its policy brief and working paper series, which are published on the Centre’s website. Recent policy briefs have included a discussion of transnational accountability mechanisms; evaluations of new policies for improving the effectiveness of international aid; and a commentary on new security threats in Indonesia. Centre members have also regularly contributed think pieces to national and international newspapers. Outlets for this work have included The Australian, Makinda and Stuart Harris with Sally Mansfield, former State Director, The West Australian, the Financial Review, The Age, the Bangkok Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Post, the Jakarta Post, Kompas, the Asian Wall Street Journal, the International Herald Tribune, and La Monde.

Researchers in the Centre also continue to contribute to the policy agendas of aid agencies, governments and international NGOs through their individual research and through community service. In 2011, Jane Hutchison was elected chair of the board of Oxfam Australia, following several years of service as a Board member. The position means that Jane will also have a seat on the board of Oxfam International, and consequently will be a driving force in determining Oxfam’s response to the development challenges of the new millennium and the new Millennium Agenda. Caroline Hughes has conducted research on post-conflict reconstruction in Cambodia sponsored by the Department for International Development and the Swedish International Development Agency, and has also worked for many years as an external advisor to the Cambodian Development Resource Institute, a Phnom Penh thinktank, Sam Makinda with then US Consul-General Robin McClellan, Ellen Frost, Garry helping to mentor and develop a research team focusing on Rodan and Stuart Harris at the roundtable on ‘China’s Rise: Force for Regional Stability or Regional Friction?’ investigating modes of governance in post-conflict Cambodia. 31 Japan and Public Engagement on Foreign Affairs

The Asia Research Centre has enjoyed good relations with a wide range of Consulate-Generals in Perth, especially that of Japan. In particular, the terms of Consul-General Mr Hiroyuki Ariyoshi and his Deputy, Dr Yuichi Inouye overlapped with the 50th anniversary of the Australia-Japan Friendship Treaty in 2006. This precipitated close cooperation with the Centre to produce the Japan’s Role in Asia public seminar series and other joint activities over the next two years through external funding avenues.

Six high-profile Japanese speakers were part of this series, including: former Japanese diplomat and Tokai University Professor, Yasuji Ishagaki; Professor Keichi Tsunekawa, University of Tokyo; National Graduate Institute for Public Policy Studies’ Professor Takashi Shiraishi, who is also and a member of the Asia Research Centre International Advisory Panel; the President of the National Defence Academy of Japan, Dr Makato Iokibe; and Tokyo University Professor and former Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Deputy Permanent Representative of Japan to the United Nations, Shinichi Kitaoka.

A public symposium also held, in conjunction with the Western Australian State Office of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, on the proposed Japan-Australia Free Trade Agreement. This involved presentations by Waseda ProfessorDavid Hill University’s Professor Yukiko Fukagawa, who also worked on the Japan-Korea-Free Trade Agreement on behalf of Developing an Indonesian Language the Japanese government, and one of Australia’s foremost trade system analysts, Associate-Professor Ann Capling of Strategy for Australian Universities Melbourne University. In 2009, Professor David Hill received an Australian This concentrated and focused agenda of meetings attracted Learning and Teaching Fellowship to fund a review of a wide range of non-academic participants, including the state of Indonesian language learning and teaching members of business and community groups, and public in Australian universities and policy recommendations. servants. The award was made in a context where Indonesian had recently been classified as a “nationally strategic language” for Australia, but where enrolments in Indonesian programmes at university level had fallen by around 40 per cent over the previous decade.

In the course of the review, Professor Hill visited all universities with Indonesian language programmes to consult with Indonesian language teachers, and to develop proposals for reversing the decline in student interest. A colloquium of Indonesian language teachers was also held at Murdoch, and was attended by staff from across Australia, and by the Indonesian ambassador, Mr Primo Alui Joelianto, who is an honorary professor of Murdoch University.

Professor Hill is a Board Member of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Australia-Indonesia Institute, and in that capacity had the opportunity to report about the colloquium discussion to senior Indonesian government officials, including the vice-president, during an Institute Board visit to Indonesia. Professor Hill presented the strategy paper for Indonesian in Australian Universities to the Australian government at a public event co-hosted by the Australia-Indonesia Professor Yasuji Ishigaki Business Council in Canberra in February 2012.

32 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Yuichi Inouye, Deputy Consul of Japan in Perth, Yukiko Fukagawa and Ann Capling with Garry Rodan at the ‘Japan-Australia Free Trade Agreement: How likely and who benefits?’ roundtable

Dr Makato Iokibe Professor Takashi Shiraishi

33 Richard Robison with Hong Kong Legislative Councillor Christine Loh and Murdoch University Chancellor

Sir Charles Court with David Goodman, 1993

H.E. Ms Susan Boyd, former Australian Ambassador to Vietnam (centre), with Richard Robison, Pro Vice-Chancellor of Murdoch University Andrew Glenn (left), and Research Fellow Gitte Heij

34 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Postgraduate Studies atthe Asia Research Centre

35 The postgraduate programme has been at the heart of the While it is common for research students to complain of Asia Research Centre’s activities from the beginning. From the isolation, at the Asia Research Centre this has rarely been the Centre’s inception, much effort was exerted to develop a high case. The Centre is an intellectual community of staff and quality programme that would attract the best students working students, where ideas are shared and debated regularly, both on Asia. In the early years, there was particular emphasis on formally and informally. Students’ offices are in the same recruiting potential students from the Asian region, and students corridor as those of the Director and many of the senior fellows, from Indonesia, China, and South Korea were among our earliest and doors for the most part remain open. The Centre’s library PhD students and graduates. has hosted many lively lunchtime gatherings, providing staff and students the opportunity to learn about each other’s research In fact, the Asia Research Centre invested heavily and concretely interests in an informal environment, or just to share a laugh. in establishing a strong postgraduate programme. A scheme was More formally, the Asia Research Centre has a successful and developed, for example, to offer ‘top-up’ funds for students on well-attended postgraduate seminar series, with every student the basis of their performance and progress. For a number of required to present their work to fellow students and academic years, revenues from consultancies were used to offer full Asia staff at least three times throughout their candidature. Research Centre scholarships, which were distinct from those offered through the Australian Research Council or Murdoch University. The Centre also offered supplementary funds for its Publications by Asia Research Centre students to undertake field research or present at international PhD candidates conferences. An academic culture distinct to the Asia Research Centre has Quite remarkably, considering that the Centre is no longer also developed from the commencement of the postgraduate directly funded by the Commonwealth Government as it programme. PhD students have been encouraged to be closely was in the 1991 to 1999 period, the PhD programme has involved in core Asia Research Centre projects, as well as expose never been stronger. The current postgraduate programme their work to wider audiences. is truly multinational, with students coming from Indonesia, Singapore, Taiwan, , the Philippines, the Netherlands, Over the years, Asia Research Centre postgraduate students have, Switzerland, Belgium, Germany, Italy, and Australia. Many within during their candidature, contributed 40 journal articles in peer- the Centre’s current cohort of 25 PhD candidates are recipients reviewed journals and 16 book chapters. This is an impressive of highly competitive PhD scholarships such as the Australian figure considering that the vast majority of these publications are Leadership Awards and Australian Development Scholarships independently authored outputs of the students’ own research, of the Australian Agency for International Development; the as co-authoring of research papers by students and supervisors is Endeavour Awards of the Australian Department of Education, less common in the social sciences and humanities. Mark Beeson Employment and Workplace Relations; and the Indonesian for example, had seven articles published before completing Government’s DIKTI scholarships, a scheme designed to train his doctorate in 1996. Shahar Hameiri published six sole and up Indonesian university lecturers. Two of the Centre’s current co-authored articles and had three more accepted during his PhD candidates – Jodie Goodman and Vanessa Jaiteh – have candidature, while Loh Kah Seng authored four articles and one been awarded prestigious grants to support their PhD research: book chapter. the 2010 Prime Minister’s Australia Asia Endeavour Awards and the 2011 Prime Minister’s Australia Asia Outgoing Postgraduate Given the Centre’s strong research culture, it is no wonder that Award, respectively. in some cases, PhD candidates led collaborative research efforts, involving prominent scholars from the Asia Research Centre and But the PhD experience at the Asia Research Centre has always elsewhere. For example, Jane Hutchison and Andrew Brown been about a lot more than top-notch scholarly training and co-edited Organising Labour in Globalising Asia (Routledge, 2001), completion rates. Indeed, postgraduate students are and have part of the Asia Research Centre’s flagship New Rich in Asia book always been important members of the Asia Research Centre series. The book was described by a reviewer at the academic community, both socially and intellectually. journal Antipode as a ‘bold and vibrant’ intervention in the literature on labour in Asia. In another example, Vedi Hadiz co-edited a book The Politics of Economic Development in Indonesia, published by Routledge, while a PhD student. Shahar Hameiri co-edited with Kanishka Jayasuriya a special issue of the Australian Journal of International Affairs, ‘Risk, Regulation and New Modes of Regional Governance in the Asia- Pacific’, published in 2009.

The quality of the doctoral research conducted by Asia Research Centre postgraduate students is reflected in the high proportion of completed theses later revised and converted into books published by leading academic presses. Of 32 PhD graduates, 22 have so far had their PhD thesis published as a scholarly book, thereby enhancing the competitiveness of their authors in the job market at an early stage of their careers. It is likely that more will do so in the future, as some graduates have only completed their studies very recently.

Mr Colin Walter, DEEWR, presents the Endeavour Award to Jodie Goodman

36 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Toby Carroll, for example, is currently Senior Research Fellow at the Centre on Asia and Globalisation, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore. Loh Kah Seng secured a postdoctoral fellowship with the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at Kyoto University. Tan Teng-Phee is the Head of Research at the Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall in Singapore.

Centre alumni have also been recipients of some of the most prominent research grants currently on offer. Two graduates – Vedi Hadiz and Andrew Rosser – have been awarded the highly prestigious Australian Research Council Future Fellowship. The Future Fellowship, a scheme designed to attract to Australia or retain stellar mid-career researchers, provides full funding, including salary and research costs, for four years. Closing the Jasmin Sungkar, Andrew Rosser, Usmanto Ngo, Vedi Hadiz, You-il Lee (front) circle, the awarding of the Future Fellowship to Vedi Hadiz saw him return to the Asia Research Centre and Murdoch University in 2010 as a Professor of Asian Societies and Politics, after a Many of these books have become influential contributions in decade-long stint at the National University of Singapore. their respective fields, generating glowing reviews. To give but a Shahar Hameiri was awarded the Australian Research Council handful of examples: Shahar Hameiri’s Regulating Statehood was Australian Postdoctoral Fellowship – a three-year fully funded described in the Journal of Peace Research, one of the highest- research fellowship. impact journals in political science, as a ‘little masterpiece’. Significantly, one of the many positive effects of the Asia Andrew Rosser’s book, The Politics of Economic Liberalisation in Research Centre’s collegial ethos and strongly supported PhD Indonesia, was described in the leading Dutch journal Bijdragen programme is that Centre PhD students tend to feel a genuine tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde as ‘an excellent introduction to sense of connection to the Asia Research Centre and its activities understanding policy-making in the current “reformasi” era.’ even after graduation. This is reflected in the frequency and The research design of John McCarthy’s The Fourth Circle, extensiveness of collaboration between former PhD students and published by the prestigious Stanford University Press, was Asia Research Centre fellows, some of which is mentioned in the described as ‘exemplary’ by a Pacific Affairs reviewer. Oceans of chapter on networks and collaboration in this volume. Crime by Carolin Liss was praised by a reviewer in the Australian Journal of Maritime and Ocean Affairs as ‘wide ranging, with Other alumni work as senior officials in foreign government deep analysis of the issues.’ Sally Sargeson’s Reworking China’s departments, or have carved out a niche in the world of Proletariat was lauded as an ‘engaging and clear-headed account’ consultancy and in civil society organisations. Jay Ram in International Labor and Working Class History. A reviewer in The Adhikari, for example, has recently completed a PhD thesis on Pacific Review, the leading journal dedicated to politics in Asia, environmental security and rural livelihoods in his home-country argued that in Competing Capitalisms Mark Beeson ‘has drawn , and is now back in the Nepalese public service, working conclusions and developed a theory which is profound in the in the senior role of Under-Secretary (Technical) in the Ministry era of globalised capitalism.’ Vedi Hadiz’s Workers and the State of the Environment. in New Order Indonesia was described as ‘the seminal work on organised labour during the New Order period’ in Labour and Twenty years on, the Asia Research Centre continues to attract Management in Development. some of the best PhD students around the world working on social, economic, political and cultural change in Asia. The strength of the PhD programme is a testament to the Careers post-PhD Centre’s enduring reputation and dynamism. Many of the alumni of the Asia Research Centre’s postgraduate programme have gone on to successful and quite varied careers. The majority has pursued academic careers, and some of the earlier alumni are now established as professors or associate professors in a number of universities, becoming research leaders in their respective fields. For example, one of the Centre’s earliest graduates, Mark Beeson, has held appointments in the universities of Griffith, Queensland, York (UK), Birmingham (where was also the head of department), and Western Australia – as a full professor at the last three-mentioned institutions. In that time he has become one of the leading scholars of Asian regionalism and security, authoring or co-authoring four books and editing or co-editing a further seven books.

The academic careers of several of our formers students have also brought them to some of the top universities in Asia.

Sid Adams, Toby Carroll, Carolin Liss and Henry Chen, with Kanishka Jayasuriya

37 Dr Loh Kah Seng Former Asia Research Centre PhD Dr Jane Hutchison candidate, now a postdoctoral fellow Senior Lecturer in Politics and Fellow in Kyoto University’s Center for of the Asia Research Centre, Murdoch Southeast Asian Studies University

It was the small things that made the difference. Having I was doing a PhD on labour and globalisation in the come from a different intellectual background, what made Philippines when the Centre first kicked off. My initial the Asia Research Centre such a formative experience was involvement was in a workshop that debated definitions the collegial ethos. From having lunch with the professors to of middle classes, in preparation for the first volume in informal drop-ins to explore ideas and research, my Centre the New Rich series. There were famous ‘names’ from the mates and I learnt to believe that our scholarship mattered. United States, but their tight definitions were at odds with As a historian working on Singapore, I came to appreciate the task of analysing Asia’s capitalist development processes. the links between past and present; between history, Later, we discussed the direction of the rest of the New Rich economics and politics; and between Singapore and the rest series at a workshop on Rottnest Island. With Andrew Brown, of Asia. I was asked to edit the final volume on labour with other Centre PhD students contributing.

Dr Jay Ram Adhikari Under-Secretary (Technical) in Winthrop Professor Mark Beeson the Ministry of the Environment, University of Western Australia Government of Nepal

Doing a PhD and then getting a post-doctoral position For a postgraduate student, the Asia Research Centre provides a at the Asia Research Centre was quite literally a life- favourable environment to interact and share knowledge among changing experience. Not only did it give me the time postgraduates and also with senior researchers. to try and develop a publication profile, but it also gave The most impressive part of Asia Research Centre is that I was me an invaluable introduction to academic culture and able to attend seminars delivered by world renowned scholars practice more generally. Without this sort of encouraging in their field. The physical facility, financial grants for field environment, I simply wouldn’t have had an academic research and conferences, and the caring supervision from career. I am and shall always be extremely grateful. dedicated academics are unique and unparalleled. My tenure Long may it continue to offer others the same opportunity! as PhD scholar has greatly helped me in gaining the skills and knowledge to contribute successfully to the work of the Government of Nepal.

I was extremely fortunate to have completed my PhD at the Asia Research Centre. Having a strong collection of academic staff and PhD students working on different aspects of Southeast Asia’s political economy and with the resources and profile Associate Professor Andrew necessary to lead international research collaborations, hold Rosser academic conferences, and participate in policy-oriented Australian Research Council Future consultancies, it provided an excellent environment in which to Fellow, University of begin an academic career. Asia Research Centre staff consistently published work in major international outlets and sought to engage in academic and policy debates. In this respect, it had a research culture that prepared me well for my subsequent career. With a focus on international publication and an understanding of the research-policy nexus, both of which I developed at the Asia Research Centre, I have been able to compete successfully for research grants, contribute to major policy initiatives, and been invited to contribute to international research projects.

38 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Books

39 These books were published whilst the authors were Fellows at the Centre. They do not represent an author’s entire body of work, but rather the Centre’s.

Armstrong, Robert Comparative Perceptions of Business Ethics, Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia,Canberra, Australian National University, 1992 (with A Milner, Y Sugimoto, C Coppel, AD Habir and BW Stening).

Beeson, Mark Competing Capitalisms: Australia, Japan and Economic Competition in Asia-Pacific, London, Macmillan, 1999.

Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis, London, Routledge, 1999 (co-editor with K Jayasuriya, R Robison & HR Kim).

Bourchier, David Indonesian Politics and Society: A Reader, London, Routledge, 2003 (co-editor with V Hadiz).

Boyd, James Japanese-Mongolian Relations, 1873 – 1945: Faith, Race and Strategy, Folkestone, Kent, Global Oriental, 2011.

Brown, David Contemporary Nationalism: Civic, Ethnocultural and Multicultural Politics, London, Routledge, 2000.

Brewer, Carolyn Shamanism, Catholicism and Gender Relations in Colonial Philippines, New York and London, Ashgate, 2004.

Byrnes, Michael Australia and the Asia Game, Sydney, Allen and Unwin, 1994.

Cao, Ky The Changing Capital Markets of East Asia, London, Routledge, 1995 (editor).

Chalmers, Ian The Politics of Economic Development in Indonesia: Contending Perspectives, London, Routledge, 1997 (with V Hadiz).

Chengsi, Zheng Copyright Law in China, Beijing, Sydney, CCH International, 1991 (with M Pendleton).

Chu, Yingchi Hong Kong Cinema: Coloniser, Motherland and Self, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2003.

Chinese Documentaries: From Dogma to Polyphony, London, Routledge, 2007.

Chua, Beng-Huat Consumption in Asia: Lifestyles and Identities, London, Routledge, 2000 (editor).

Ganguly, Rajat Ethnic Conflict, Vols. I – IV, London, Sage, 2009.

Understanding Ethnic Conflict, 4th edition, New York, Pearson Longman, 2010 (with R Taras).

40 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Gillis, E. Kay Singapore Civil Society and British Power, Singapore, Talisman, 2005.

Goodman, David SG China in the 1990s: Crisis Management and Beyond, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1991 (with G Segal).

China and the West: Ideas and Activists, Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1991 (editor).

China’s Quiet Revolution: New Interactions Between State and Society, Melbourne, Longman Cheshire, 1994 (co-editor with B Hooper).

China Deconstructs: Politics, Trade and Regionalism, Routledge, 1994 (with G Segal).

The New Rich in Asia: Mobile Phones, McDonalds and Middle-class Revolution, London, Routledge, 1995 (co-editor with R Robison).

Gore, Lance Market Communism: The Institutional Foundation of China’s Post- Mao Hyper-Growth, Hong Kong, Oxford University Press, 1998.

Hadiz, Vedi Translation of The Indonesian State Secretariat 1945 – 1993 by Robinson Pangaribuan, Perth, Asia Research Centre, Murdoch University, 1995.

The Politics of Economic Development in Indonesia: Contending Perspectives, London, Routledge, 1997 (with I Chalmers).

Workers and the State in New Order Indonesia, London, Routledge, 1997.

Indonesian Politics and Society: A Reader, London, Routledge, 2003 (co-editor with D Bourchier).

Reorganizing Power in Indonesia: The Politics of Oligarchy in an Age of Markets, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2004 (with R Robison).

Localising Power in Post-Authoritarian Indonesia: A Southeast Asia Perspective, Stanford, CA, Stanford University Press, 2010.

Hameiri, Shahar Regulating Statehood: State Building and the Transformation of the Global Order, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

David Bourchier and Vedi Hadiz

41 Hewison, Kevin Rural Water Supply and Sanitation in the Lao PDR: A Framework for a New Decade, UNICEF, 1991 (co-editor with G Jackson).

Southeast Asia in the 1990s: Authoritarianism, Democracy and Capitalism, Sydney, Allen and Unwin, 1993, (co-editor with R Robison and G Rodan).

Hill, Christopher Survival and Change: Three Generations of Balinese Painters, Canberra, Pandanus Books, 2006.

Hill, David Quartering: The Story of a Marriage in Indonesia During the Eighties, by Ruth Havelaar, Centre of Southeast Asian Studies Monograph 24, Clayton, Monash University Press, 1991 (editor). Translated into Dutch by E van Dijk and published as Inkwartiering,De Geus, Breda, 1992.

Media, Culture and Politics in Indonesia, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 2000 (with K Sen). Translated into Indonesian by S Syah and published as Media, Budaya dan Politik di Indonesia, Jakarta, ISAI & PT Media Lintas Inti Nusantara, 2001.

The Internet in Indonesia’s New Democracy, London and New York, Routledge, 2005 (with K Sen).

Journalism and Politics in Indonesia: A Critical Biography of Mochtar Lubis (1922 – 2004) as Editor and Author, London, Routledge, 2009.

Politics and the Media in Twenty-First Century Indonesia: Decade of Democracy, London and New York, Routledge, 2011 (co-editor with K Sen).

Hirsch, Philip The Politics of Environment in Southeast Asia: Resources and Resistance, London, Routledge, 1998 (co-editor with C Warren).

Hooper, Beverly China’s Quiet Revolution: New Interactions Between State and Society, Melbourne, Longman Cheshire, 1994, (co-editor with DSG Goodman).

Hutchison, Jane Organising Labour in Globalising Asia, London and New York, Routledge, 2001 (co-editor with A Brown).

Hughes, Caroline Dependent Communities: Aid and Politics in Cambodia and , Ithaca, Cornell Southeast Asia Publications, 2009.

Cambodia’s Economic Transformation, Copenhagen, Nordic Institute of Asian Studies Press, 2011 (co-editor with K Un).

Jayasuriya, Kanishka Law, Capitalism and Power in Asia: The Rule of Law and Legal Institutions, London, Routledge, 1998 (editor).

Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis, London, Routledge, 1999 (co-editor with M Beeson, R Robison & HR Kim).

Asian Regional Governance: Crisis and Change, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2004 (editor).

Governing the Asia Pacific: Beyond New Regionalism, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004 (editor).

42 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Reconstituting the Global Liberal Order: Legitimacy and Regulation, London, Routledge, 2005,

Statecraft, Welfare and the Politics of Inclusion, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2006.

Lane, Max Bangsa Yang Belum Selesai – Indonesia Sebelum dan Sesudah Suharto, Jakarta, Reform Institute, 2007.

Lee, Terence Political Regimes and the Media in Asia, London, Routledge, 2008 (co-editor with K Sen).

The Media, Cultural Control and Government in Singapore, London, Routledge, 2010.

Voting in Change: Politics of Singapore’s 2011 General , Singapore, Ethos Books, 2011 (co-editor with KYL Tan).

Makinda, Samuel The African Union: Challenges of Globalization, Security and Governance, London, Routledge, 2008 (with FW Okumu).

McCarthy, John The Fourth Circle: A Political Ecology of ’s Rainforest Frontier, Stanford, CA, Stanford University Press, 2006.

Pangaribuan, Robinson The Indonesian State Secretariat 1945 – 1993, Perth, Asia Research Centre, Murdoch University, 1995.

Pinches, Michael Culture and Privilege in Capitalist Asia, London, Routledge, 1999 (editor).

George Hicks

George Hicks is the author and editor of 13 books, including the path-breaking sole-authored 1995 The Comfort Women about the experiences of over 100,000 women in Asia sexually exploited during Japanese occupation. The book has since been translated into Japanese, Chinese, Korean and French. From the mid- 1990s George has maintained a close interest in the work of the Centre and made and timely financial donations enabling major projects to proceed.

43 Asian Capitalisms Edited by Richard Robison

At the beginning of the twenty-first century capitalism stands triumphant. Yet it has not been the liberal model of free markets, democratic politics, and the rule of law and citizenship that has enjoyed general ascendancy. Within Asia, a range of dirigiste, predatory and authoritarian systems have emerged under the general rubric of Asian capitalism. In this series we seek to explain the political, ideological and social bases of this phenomenon, and to analyse the collision of these systems with the power of global economic markets and highly mobile capital, and their confrontation with emerging domestic, social and political interests. In the context of the Asian financial crisis we ask whether we are witnessing the end of Asian capitalism. Is Asia caught in an inexorable metamorphosis towards liberal capitalism? And what factors are driving the processes of transformation?

Law, Capitalism and Power in Asia: The Rule of Law and Legal Institutions Kanishka Jayasuriya (ed.) Routledge, 1999 Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis Richard Robison, Mark Beeson, Kanishka Jayasuriya and Hyuk-Rae Kim (eds), Routledge, 2000 Collective Goods, Collective Futures in Asia Sally Sargeson (ed.), Routledge, 2002

44 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Robison, Richard Rodan, Garry Southeast Asia in the 1990s: Authoritarianism, Democracy and The Political Economy of Singapore’s Industrialization: National Capitalism, Sydney, Allen and Unwin, 1993, (co-editor with State and International Capital, New York, St Martin’s Press, 1989. K Hewison and G Rodan). Translated into Japanese by KT Tamura, San’ichi Press, Tokyo, 1992. The New Rich in Asia: Mobile Phones, McDonalds and Middle- class Revolution, London, Routledge, 1995 (co-editor with DSG Singapore Changes Guard: Social, Political and Economic Directions Goodman). in the 1990s, Melbourne, Longman Cheshire, 1993 (editor).

Pathways to Asia: The Politics of Engagement, Sydney, Allen and Southeast Asia in the 1990s: Authoritarianism, Democracy and Unwin, 1996 (editor). Capitalism, Sydney, Allen and Unwin, 1993, (co-editor with R Robison and K Hewison). The Political Economy of Southeast Asia: An Introduction, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1997 (co-editor with Political Oppositions in Industrialising Asia, London, Routledge, K Hewison and G Rodan). 1996 (editor).

Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis, London, The Political Economy of Southeast Asia: An Introduction, Routledge, 1999 (co-editor with M Beeson, K Jayasuriya & Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1997 (co-editor with HR Kim). K Hewison and R Robison).

The Political Economy of South-East Asia: Conflict, Crises, and Singapore, International Library of Social Change in Asia-Pacific Change, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 2001 (co-editor Series, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2001 (editor). with K Hewison and G Rodan). The Political Economy of South-East Asia: Conflict, Crises, and Reorganising Power in Indonesia: The Politics of Oligarchy in an Age Change, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 2001 (co-editor of Markets, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2004 (with V Hadiz). with K Hewison and R Robison).

Neoliberal Revolution: Forging the Market State, London, Palgrave, Transparency and Authoritarian Rule in Southeast Asia: Singapore 2006. and Malaysia, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2004. Paperback edition published in 2005. The Political Economy of South-East Asia: Markets, Power and Contestation, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 2006 Neoliberalism and Conflict in Asia After 9/11, London, Routledge, (co-editor with K Hewison and G Rodan). 2006 (co-editor with K Hewison).

Governance and the Anti-Politics of Development, London and New The Political Economy of South-East Asia: Markets, Power and York, Routledge, 2008 (co-editor with W Hout). Contestation, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 2006 (co-editor with K Hewison and R Robison). Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Politics, London, Routledge, 2011 (editor).

The Political Economy of South-East Asia Edited by Garry Rodan, Kevin Hewison and Richard Robison

Oxford University Press commissioned Garry Rodan, Kevin Hewison and Richard Robison of the Asia Research Centre to produce the first edition of The Political Economy of South-East Asia in 1997. This has since been followed by two further editions, in 2001 and 2006.

The Political Economy of South-East Asia: An Introduction, 1997 The Political Economy of South-East Asia: Conflicts, Crises, and Change, 2001 The Political Economy of South-East Asia: Markets, Power and Contestation, 2006

45 Sargeson, Sally Reworking China’s Proletariat, London, Macmillan, 1999.

Collective Goods, Collective Futures in Asia, London, Routledge, 2002 (editor).

Schwarz, Adam A Nation in Waiting, Indonesia in the 1990s, Sydney, Allen and Unwin, 1994.

Scott, Ian Institutional Change and the Political Transition in Hong Kong, Basingstoke, Macmillan, 1998 (editor).

Governance and Public Sector Reform in Asia: Paradigm Shifts or Business as Usual? London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2003 (co-editor with ABL Cheung).

Public Administration in Hong Kong: Regime Change and its Impact on the Public Sector, Singapore, Marshall Cavendish, 2005.

Gaming, Governance and Public Policy in Macao, Hong Kong, Hong Kong University Press, 2011 (co-editor with N Lam).

Sen, Krishna Gender and Power in Affluent Asia, London, Routledge, 1998 (co-editor with M Stivens).

Media, Culture and Politics in Indonesia, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 2000 (with D Hill).

Tanji, Miyume Myth, Protest and Struggle in Okinawa, London, Routledge, 2006.

Taylor, Ranald Technical Progress and Economic Growth: An Empirical Case Study of Malaysia, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 2007.

Tan, Kevin YL Voting in Change: Politics of Singapore’s 2011 General Election, Singapore, Ethos Books, 2011 (co-editor with T Lee).

Tower, Greg, International Accounting Standard Setting: Rationale, Process and Institutions, ASCPA International Accounting Module, 4th edition, Melbourne, Australian CPAs, 2002 (editor).

Michael Pinches and Sally Sargeson, Editors of Culture and Privilege in Capitalist Asia and Collective Goods, Collective Futures in Asia respectively

46 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Tull, Malcolm Port Privatisation: The Asia-Pacific Experience, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 2008 (co-editor with J Reveley).

Warren, Carol Adat & Dinas: Balinese Communities in the Indonesian State, Singapore, Oxford University Press, 1993.

The Politics of Environment in Southeast Asia: Resources and Resistance, London, Routledge, 1998 (co-editor with P Hirsch).

Community, Environment and Local Governance in Indonesia: Locating the Commonweal, London, Routledge, 2009 (co-editor with J McCarthy).

Warren, James Ah Ku and Karayuki-San: Prostitution and Singapore Society (1870- 1940), Singapore, Singapore University Press, 1993. Translated into Japanese and published by H Daigaku, Tokyo, 2010.

Iranun and Balangingi: Globalization, Maritime Raiding and the Birth of Ethnicity, Singapore edition: Singapore, Singapore University Press, 2002. Philippines edition: Quezon City, New Day Publishers, 2002. Adapted to a multi-media documentary-drama dance production for the theatre in Visayan and English, Tawag Sa Bantayan, Punta by Punta Cruz Cultural Collective, Bohol, Philippines, 2008.

Pirates, Prostitutes and Pullers: Explorations in the Ethno-and Social History of Southeast Asia, Australian edition: Perth, University of Western Australia Press, 2008. Philippines edition: Quezon City, New Day Publishers, 2009.

Wilson, Sandra The Russo-Japanese War in Cultural Perspective, Macmillan, 1999 (co-editor with D Wells).

The Manchurian Crisis and Japanese Society, 1931-33, Routledge, 2002.

Nation and Nationalism in Japan, Routledge, 2002 (editor).

Interpreting Occupied Japan: The Diary of an Australian Soldier, 1945-1946, by Basil Archer, Victoria Park, Hesperian Press, 2009 (editor).

Worthington, Ross Governance in Singapore, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2002.

Wright, Tim Coal Mining in China’s Economy and Society, 1895-1937, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1984. Translated into Chinese by D Changqing and published as 1895-1937 Zhongguo jingji he shehui zhong de meikuang ye, Beijing, Dongfang chuban she, 1991).

The Chinese Economy in the Early Twentieth Century: Recent Chinese Studies, London, Macmillan, 1992 (editor).

Yanrui Wu Productive Performance in Chinese Enterprises: An Empirical Study, London, Macmillan, 1995.

China’s Consumer Revolution: The Emerging Patterns of Wealth and Expenditure, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 1999.

47 The New Rich in Asia Series

The New Rich in Asia series examines the economic, social and political construction of the ‘new rich’ in the countries and territories of East and Southeast Asia, as well as their impact internationally. From a western perspective the rise of the emergent business and professional class may seem very familiar. However, it is far from clear that those newly enriched by the processes of modernisation in East and Southeast Asia are readily comparable with the middle classes of the West. For example, civil and human rights seem to play a different role in social, political and economic change, and the State is clearly more central as an agent of economic development.

Organising Labour in Globalising Asia Jane Hutchison and Andrew Brown (eds), Routledge, 2001 Consumption in Asia: Lifestyles and Identities Chua Beng-Huat (ed.) , Routledge, 2000 Culture and Privilege in Capitalist Asia Michael Pinches (ed.), Routledge, 1999 Gender and Power in Affluent Asia Krishna Sen and Maila Stivens (eds) , Routledge, 1998 Political Oppositions in Industrialising Asia Garry Rodan (ed.), Routledge, 1996 The New Rich in Asia: Mobile Phones, McDonalds and middle- class revolution Richard Robinson launching the New Rich in Asia book series at the Richard Robison and David S G Goodman (eds) Federal Parliament in Canberra Routledge, 1995

48 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Appendices

49 Fellows Sandra Wilson Ian Wilson Sidney Adams Tim Wright Greg Bankoff Yanrui Wu Mark Beeson Feng Zhang Janet Borland Zhang Jian David Bourchier James Boyd Visiting Fellows Carolyn Brewer Andrew Brown George Aditjondro David Brown Mukul Asher Ky Cao Harry Bhaskara Michael Byrne Toby Carroll Kanishka Jayasuriya, Fellow, Visiting Fellow and Ian Chalmers Feng Chongyi Associate Kenneth Chern Jou-juo Chu Joseph Christensen Chua Beng Huat Yingchi Chu Paul Handley Rajat Ganguly Kazuhiro Harada David Goodman Dieter Heribert Lance Gore Khoo Boo Teik Kevin Hewison Adam Schwarz David Hill Mangadar Situmorang Beverley Hooper Tsukasa Takamine Caroline Hughes Zhang Jian Jane Hutchison Tamara Jacka Associates of the Asia Kanishka Jayasuriya Research Centre Jeff Kenworthy Amitav Acharya Radha Krishnan George Aditjondro, Indonesian Activist and Mark Berger Visiting Fellow at the Asia Research Centre, 1995 Jun Kimura Shaun Breslin Robert Lambert Michael Byrne You-il Lee Anita Chan Terence Lee Chua Beng Huat Philip Lewis James Cotton Carolin (Line) Liss Christopher Findlay Sam Makinda Cherian George Gary Meyers Lance Gore Takeshi Moriyama Paul Handley Allen Nash Richard Higgott Michael Pendleton Philip Hirsch Richard Robison Khoo Boo Teik Garry Rodan Robert Lambert Sally Sargeson Richard Leaver Paul Handley, Author of The King Never Smiles, Ian Scott Andrew MacIntyre which emanated from Paul’s time as a Visiting Krishna Sen Fellow at the Asia Research Centre, 1996 Zaharom Nain Don Smart Helen Nesadurai Miyume Tanji Michael Pinches Jeannette Taylor Nathan Quimpo Ranald Taylor Adam Schwarz Herb Thompson Stephen Sherlock Malcolm Tull Noel Tracy Carol Warren Jonathan Unger James Warren Linda Weiss Ross Worthington 50 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Zhang Jian, Yanrui Wu, Robert Roche and Kanishka Jayasuriya, 1996

Shaun Breslin, Ian Taylor and Wil Hout

Terence Lee and James Warren

51 Asia Research Centre Board of Management 1999 Professor Richard Robison, Director 1991 Cisca Spencer, Deputy Director Professor David S G Goodman, Director Del Blakeway Professor Richard Robison, Deputy Director Jane Hutchison Dr Beverley Hooper Professor Ian Scott Associate Professor Don Smart Associate Professor Don Smart Cisca Spencer 2000 1992 – 1993 Professor Richard Robison, Director (Jan – Jun) Professor David S G Goodman, Director Professor Ian Scott, Director (Aug – Dec) Professor Richard Robison, Deputy Director Dr Sally Sargeson, Deputy Director (Nov – Dec) Dr Kevin Hewison Del Blakeway Cisca Spencer Gitte Heij

1994 2001

Professor Richard Robison, Director Professor Jim Warren, Director Professor David S G Goodman, Deputy Director (Jan – May) Del Blakeway Associate Professor Tim Wright , Deputy Director (Jun – Dec) Dr Sally Sargeson Dr Kevin Hewison (Jan – Jun) Dr David Brown Associate Professor Don Smart (Jul – Dec) Cisca Spencer 2002 Associate Professor David Brown, Acting Director (Jan – Jun) 1995 – 1996 Professor Garry Rodan, Director (Jul) Professor Richard Robison, Director Professor David Hill Cisca Spencer, Deputy Director Ms Jane Hutchison Del Blakeway Professor Gary Meyers Professor Andrew Glenn Associate Professor Malcolm Tull Dr Garry Rodan Associate Professor Carol Warren Associate Professor Don Smart 2003 – 2004 1997 Professor Garry Rodan, Director Professor Richard Robison, Director Associate Professor David Brown Cisca Spencer, Deputy Director Professor David Hill Del Blakeway, Executive Officer Ms Jane Hutchison Professor Andrew Glenn Professor Gary Meyers Jane Hutchison (Jul – Dec) Associate Professor Malcolm Tull Associate Professor Garry Rodan (Jan – Jun) Associate Professor Carol Warren Professor Ian Scott (Jul – Dec) Associate Professor Don Smart 2005 – 2006 Bruce Sutherland (Jul – Dec) Professor Garry Rodan, Director Associate Professor David Brown 1998 Professor David Hill Professor Richard Robison, Director Dr Jane Hutchison Cisca Spencer, Deputy Director Ms Sally Mansfield – Western Australian State Director, Del Blakeway Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Professor Andrew Glenn (Jan – Jun) Professor Gary Meyers Jane Hutchison Professor Vijay Mishra Associate Professor Kateryna Longley (Jul – Dec) Associate Professor Malcolm Tull Professor Ian Scott Associate Professor Carol Warren Associate Professor Don Smart

52 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years 2007 International Advisory Panel Professor Garry Rodan, Director Mr Phillip Allars, Western Australian State Director, 2002 – 2010 Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Professor Kevin Hewison, Director, Southeast Asia Research Associate Professor David Brown Centre, City University of Hong Kong (2002 – 2004); Director Professor David Hill Carolina Asia Centre, University of North Carolina (2005 –) Dr Jane Hutchison Professor Richard Higgott, Director, Centre for the Study Professor Vijay Mishra of Globalisation and Regionalisation(2002 – 2006); Pro Vice Associate Professor Malcolm Tull Chancellor Research (2007 – 2011), both University of Warwick Associate Professor Carol Warren Professor Jomo K.S., Faculty of Economics and Administration, University of Malaya (2002 – 2004); U.N. Assistant Secretary- 2008 General on Economic Development (2005 –) Professor Garry Rodan, Director (Jan – Mar) Professor Tessa Morris-Suzuki, Research School of Pacific and Dr Kanishka Jayasuriya, Acting Director (Apr – Dec) Asian Studies, Australian National University Mr Phillip Allars, Western Australian State Director, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Professor Anthony Reid, Director, Center for Southeast Asian Associate Professor David Brown Studies, University of California, Los Angeles and Director, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore (2002 – Professor David Hill 2008) Dr Jane Hutchison Professor Vijay Mishra Professor Lily Kong, Director, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore (2008 – 2010) Associate Professor Malcolm Tull Associate Professor Carol Warren Professor Krishna Sen, Department of Media & Information, Curtin University of Technology (2002 – 2008). 2009 Professor Lynn T. White, Woodrow Wilson School of Public Professor Garry Rodan, Director and International Affairs, and East Asian Studies Program, Mr Phillip Allars, Western Australian State Director, Princeton University Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Professor David Hill Current Associate Professor Caroline Hughes Professor Amitav Acharya, UNESCO Chair in Transnational Dr Jane Hutchison Challenges and Governance and Chair of the ASEAN Studies Center, School of International Service, American University Professor Vijay Mishra Associate Professor Malcolm Tull Professor Kevin Hewison, Director, Carolina Asia Centre, Associate Professor Carol Warren University of North Carolina Professor Jomo K.S., Assistant Secretary-General on Economic 2010 Development, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Associate Professor Caroline Hughes, Director United Nations Professor David Hill Professor Tessa Morris-Suzuki, Research School of Pacific and Dr Jane Hutchison Asian Studies, Australian National University David MacLennan, Western Australian State Director, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Professor Lily Kong, National University of Singapore. Professor Garry Rodan Professor Takashi Shiraishi, President, National Graduate Associate Professor Malcolm Tull Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo; President, Institute of Associate Professor Carol Warren Developing Economies-JETRO; and Non-Standing Executive Member, CSTP, Cabinet Office (since 2011). 2011 Professor Lynn T. White, Woodrow Wilson School of Public & Associate Professor Caroline Hughes, Director International Affairs, Politics Department, and East Asian Studies Professor Vedi Hadiz (Nov – Dec) Program, Princeton University. Professor David Hill Dr Jane Hutchison David MacLennan, Western Australian State Director, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Professor Garry Rodan Associate Professor Malcolm Tull Associate Professor Carol Warren Professor Andrew Webster, Dean, School of Social Sciences and Humanities 53 Postgraduate Completions Sidney Adams – ‘Collective Action and a Disappearing Resource: the Politics of the Southern Bluefin Tuna Industry’, (PhDs unless otherwise indicated) 2003 (supervised by R Robison). Des Alwi (M Phil) – ‘Indonesia’s New Economic Policies and Tsukasa Takamine – ‘Engagement: A Foreign Policy Analysis of Non-oil Export to the EC Beyond the 1990s’, 1993 Japan’s Official Development Assistance to China, 1979 – 2002’, (supervised by R Robison). 2003 (supervised by S Wilson). Mark Beeson – ‘Neo-liberalism and Australia’s Economic Jane Hutchison – ‘Export Opportunities: Women Workers Relationship with Japan: Policy Paradigms in a Global Political Organising In The Philippine’, 2004 (supervised by G Rodan Economy’, 1996 (supervised by G Rodan). and H Thompson). Vedi Hadiz – ‘Contradictions of Corporatism: Workers and the Miyume Tanji – ‘Politics of Protest on the Floating Fortress: State in the New Order Indonesia’, 1996 Post-War Social Movements in Okinawa’, 2004 (supervised by R Robison). (supervised by G Rodan). Sally Sargeson – ‘Class Matters: An Ethnography of Class, Work Jae Hyon Lee – ‘UMNO Factionalism and the Politics of and Identity Construction Among Non-tenured Workers in a Malaysian National Identity’, 2005 (supervised by D Brown). Hangzhou Suburb’, 1996 (supervised by T Wright). Chen Ta-Yuan (Henry) – ‘Taiwanese Offshore (Distant Water) Jocelyn Grace, – ‘Health development and Sasak women: Fisheries in Southeast Asia, 1937 – 1977’, 2006 a political and practical analysis of medical intervention in rural (supervised by J Warren and M Tull). East Lombok, Indonesia’, 1997 (supervised by C Warren). Narrelle Morris – ‘Destructive Discourse: “Japan-bashing” in You-il Lee – ‘Korean Foreign Investment in Southeast Asia in the the United States, Australia and Japan in the 1980s and 1990s’, Late Twentieth Century’, 1997 (supervised by R Robison). 2006 (supervised by S Wilson). David Widihandoyo – ‘The Making of a Precarious Bourgeoisie: Kathleen Turner – ‘Identity and the State: A Study of State and the Transformation of Domestic Bourgeoisie in Communal Conflict in Ambon, Indonesia’, 2006 Indonesia’, 1998 (supervised by R Robison and D Hill). (supervised by D Brown). Mark Cloney (MA) – ‘Australia’s Economic Integration with Asia: Toby Carroll – ‘The Politics of the World Bank’s Socio- Government Policy 1983-96’, 1999 (supervised by G Rodan). institutional Neoliberalism’, 2007 Gaynor Dawson – ‘Women and Work in an Indonesian (supervised by G Rodan and K Jayasuriya). Transmigration Settlement: Keeping the Rice in the Pot’, 1999 Kurt Stenross – ‘The Seafarers and Maritime Entrepreneurs of (supervised by C Warren and B Thiele). Madura, Indonesia: History, Culture, and their Role in the Java Jian Zhang – ‘Government and Market: A Case Study of the Sea Timber Trade ’, 2007 (supervised by J Warren and Political Economy of the Post-Mao Economic Development in C Warren). Xihu District, China’, 1999 (supervised by T Wright). Donna Turner – ‘Shaping Labour in Malaysia’s Shift to the Yingchi Chu – ‘Coloniser, Motherland and Self in Hong Kong Knowledge Economy’, 2007 (supervised by G Rodan). Cinema’, 2000 (supervised by T Wright, S Donald and K Sen). James Boyd – ‘In Pursuit of an Obsession: Japanese Interest in Andrew Rosser – ‘Creating Markets: The Politics of Economic Mongolia, 1878 –1945’, 2008 (supervised by S Wilson). Liberalisation in Indonesia since the Mid-1980s’, 2000 Carolin Liss – ‘Piracy – Crime on the High Seas in Southeast (supervised by R Robison). Asia’, 2008 (supervised by J Warren). SheiIa Oakley – ‘Labour Relations with Chinese Characteristics: Kah Seng Loh – ‘The 1961 Kampong Bukit Ho Swee Fire and The Development and Resolution of Labour Disputes in Post- the Making of Modern Singapore’, 2008 Reform China’, 2001. (supervised by T Wright). (supervised by J Warren). John McCarthy – ‘Environmental Policy in Indonesia’, 2001 Shahar Hameiri – ‘State Building or State Transformation? (supervised by C Warren). Risk Management at the Fringes of the Global Order’, 2009 Yasmin Sungkar – ‘Industrial Policy: Path of Industrialisation in (supervised by G Rodan and K Jayasuriya). Indonesia’, 2001 (supervised by R Robison). Jay Ram Adhikari – ‘Political conflicts, environmental security Andrew Brown – ‘Industrial Workers, Political Space and the and rural livelihood linkages in Nepal’, 2011 State in Thailand’, 2002 (supervised by G Rodan). (supervised by C Warren).

Kay Gillis – ‘The Rise and Fall of Civil Society in Singapore Teng-Phee Tan – ‘A Social History of New Villages in Post-war 1819-2001’, 2002 (supervised by G Rodan). Malaya/Malaysia’, 2011 (supervised by J Warren).

Ranald Taylor – ‘Learning by Doing: International trade and Economic Growth – An Empirical Case Study of Malaysia’, 2002 (supervised by R Petridis).

54 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Conferences and Workshops

1991

Emerging Social Forces in Asia 5 – 8 September, Esplanade Hotel, Fremantle Coordinator: Professor Richard Robison

Political and Economic Watersheds in Industrial Singapore: The Next Stage of Development 3 – 4 December, Esplanade Hotel, Fremantle Coordinator: Dr Garry Rodan

Integration with a Nearby NIC: Singapore and Australia Richard Court, then Premier of Western Australia with Richard Robison 5 December, Esplanade Hotel, Fremantle Coordinator: Dr Garry Rodan Workshop on the Environment 7 August, Esplanade Hotel, Fremantle 1992 Feeding the Tigers: Food Export Opportunities in Asia Towards the Year 2000: Socio-Economic Trends and 18 August, Orchard Hotel, Perth Consequences in China 29 – 30 January Taiwan’s New Identities in the 1990s Coordinators: Professor David S G Goodman and Dr Beverley Hooper 21 – 22 September, Trade Winds Hotel, Fremantle Coordinator: Professor David S G Goodman The Future of Vietnam: Economic Opportunities for Australia 1994 11 March Two-Way Street: Business Opportunities with Taiwan Coordinator: Cisca Spencer 11 April, Parmelia Hilton Hotel, Perth Doing Business in Indonesia Coordinator: Cisca Spencer 11 August Opened by the Hon. Richard Court, MLA, Premier of Western Coordinator: Professor Richard Robison and Cisca Spencer Australia

The New Korean State: Post-democratisation Politics and China’s Hainan Province: Economic Development and Policy Investment Environment 28 – 30 September, Joint Asia Research Centre Murdoch/ANU, 9 – 14 May, Haikou, Hainan Northeast Asia Programme/Monash Asia Institute Coordinator: Professor David S. G. Goodman Coordinator: Dr James Cotton (Northeast Asia Programme, Australian Political Oppositions in East & Southeast Asia National University) 2 September, Sunny’s Shining on the Swan, East Fremantle Coordinator: Dr Garry Rodan 1993

Workshop on Social and Political Change – Activism, the Locating Power: Democracy, Opposition and Participation Individual and the State: the Political Culture of Change in Thailand 9 – 10 February, Esplanade Hotel, Fremantle 6 – 7 October, Sunny’s Shining on the Swan, East Fremantle Coordinator: Dr Kevin Hewison Workshop on the ‘New Rich’ Series 5 – 7 April, Rottnest Island Looking North: Reassessing the Framework and Unravelling the Myths Indonesia: Paradigms for the Future 18 – 19 November, Trade Winds Hotel, East Fremantle 22 – 23 July, Trade Winds Hotel, Fremantle Coordinator: Professor Richard Robison Coordinator: Professor Richard Robison 1995

Sex and Power in Affluent Asia 13 February, Trade Winds Hotel, East Fremantle Coordinator: Dr Krishna Sen

Reporting Asia 12 June, Esplanade Hotel Coordinator: Cisca Spencer

Cultural Construction of Asia’s New Rich 10 July, Trade Winds Hotel, East Fremantle Coordinator: Dr Michael Pinches

An Introduction to the Political Economy of Southeast Asia 18 August, Trade Winds Hotel, East Fremantle Coordinator: Dr Garry Rodan Wang Gungwu and Jomo KS at the ‘Contest for Asia’ Conference, Hong Kong, December 1995 The Contest for Asia 4 – 5 December, University of Hong Kong Coordinator: Professor Richard Robison 55 1996 2000

Futures: The Political Transition in Hong Kong Workshop – Course for Centre for Democratic Institutions 29 April, Esplanade Hotel, Fremantle • Indonesia: Transition to Publicly Accountable Coordinator: Professor Ian Scott Broadcasting June, Murdoch University and ABC Sydney and Perth The New Working Class: Labour and Social Change in Coordinator: Associate Professor Krishna Sen, a joint project of Industrialising Asia the Asia Research Centre, the School of Media, Communications 4 – 5 July, Trade Winds Hotel, Fremantle and Culture, Murdoch University and the Australian Broadcasting Coordinators: Jane Hutchinson, Murdoch University and Andrew Corporation Brown, University of New England

Patterns of Consumption of Asia’s New Rich 2003 9 – 10 September, Trade Winds Hotel, Fremantle Globalisation, Conflict and Political Regimes in East and Coordinator: Associate Professor Chua Beng-Huat Southeast Asia 15 – 16 August, Fremantle Hong Kong after 1997: Business as Usual? Co-hosted by the Southeast Asia Research Centre (SEARC) of the City 9 October, Perth Parmelia Hilton University of Hong Kong Coordinator: Cisca Spencer 2004 Legal Institutions and the Rule of Law in East Asia 8 – 9 November, Trade Winds Hotel, Fremantle The Post-Cold War Order and Domestic Conflict in Asia Coordinator: Dr Kanishka Jayasuriya 29 – 30 July, Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore 1997 A conference of the Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore jointly supported by the Asia Research Centre of Murdoch Round Table on Asia for visiting delegation from the University, Southeast Asia Research Centre of City University of Hong European Parliament Kong and the Asia Research Institute of the National University of November, Murdoch University Singapore Coordinator: Cisca Spencer Empire, Media and Political Regimes in Southeast Asia 1998 26 – 27 August, Murdoch University Co-convenor: Dr Terence Lee From Miracle to meltdown: the End of Asian Capitalism? August, Fremantle Statutory Bodies in Hong Kong and Singapore: Autonomy A collaborative venture with the Graduate School of International and Integration Studies at Yonsei University 15 December, Murdoch University Co-convenors: Professor Ian Scott and Professor Ian Thynne From Miracle to Meltdown… and Back Again? Jointly conducted with the Centre for Civil Society and Governance, 19 August, Kings Park Function Centre University of Hong Kong Held in collaboration with the Department of Commerce and Trade 2005 1999 Engaging Australian in Asia Pacific Development Shaping Common Future: Case Studies of Collective Goods, August, Murdoch University Collective Actions in East and Southeast Asia Centre Participants included: Dr Jane Hutchinson, Dr Kanishka 7 – 9 October, Perth Jayasuriya, Associate-Professor Vedi Hadiz and postgraduate student Convened by Dr Sally Sargeson in collaboration with Yonsei Toby Carroll. University

Workshops – Courses for Centre for Democratic Institutions 2006 • Indonesian Broadcasters Roundtable – China’s Rise: Force for Regional Stability or Coordinated by Associate Professor Krishna Sen, School of Regional Friction? Media, Communications and Culture, the Asia Research Centre 13 March, Exchange Plaza, Perth city and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation Convened by the Asia Research Centre in collaboration with the US Consulate in Perth, the West Australian Newspaper and the Western • Thai National Assembly Australian Office of the Department of Foreign Affairs October Coordinated by Janice Dudley, lecturer Department of Politics Japan-Australia Free Trade Agreement: How likely and and International Studies, the Asia Research Centre and the who benefits? Western Australian Parliament 4 August, Exchange Plaza, Perth city Convened by the Asia Research Centre with assistance from a 2006 Australia-Japan Year of Exchange Grass-roots Support grant

Port Privatisation: The Asia Pacific Experience 17 July, Murdoch University

Mediating Transition to Post-Authoritarian Indonesia 9 – 10 October

56 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years ‘Mediating Transition To Post-Authoritarian Indonesia’ workshop participants

Participants at ‘Statutory Bodies and Government-Linked Companies in Hong Kong and Singapore’ workshop

Participants at ‘The History of Marine Animal Populations in Asia:Towards a Regional Synthesis’ conference

57 Contestation or Regulation? A New Politics in Southeast 2010 Asia Studying “spaces of non-existence”: Methodological 19 – 20 December concerns A joint workshop with Asia Research Institute, National University of 22 – 23 March Singapore Convenors: Dr Ian Wilson, Asia Research Centre; Dr Barak Kalir, 2008 University of Amsterdam and Mr Luky Djani, Indonesia Corruption Watch One Just World Forum – Beyond Charity: Incorporating Human Rights into Development One Just World Forum – Australia the Peace Builder. Post 21 August, Fremantle Town Hall Conflict Issues in our Region: What can Australia Do? In partnership with AusAID, World Vision Australia and the 9 June, State Library of Western Australia International Women’s Development Agency In partnership with AusAID, World Vision Australia and the International Women’s Development Agency 2009 ‘Macao’s Casino Capitalism: Gaming, Governance and Cambodia’s Economic Transformation Public Policy’ Workshop 5 – 7 January, Phnom Penh, Cambodia 17 – 18 June, Murdoch University Convenor: Professor Ian Scott, Asia Research Centre The History of Marine Animal Populations in Asia-Towards a Regional Synthesis ‘Indigenous Peoples and Natural Resource Management : 11 February, Murdoch University Towards New Forms of Governance’ 26 – 28 July, Denpasar New Modes of Governance and Security Challenges in the Convenor: Associate Professor Carol Warren, Asia Research Centre Asia-Pacific and Professor Gerard Persoon, Leiden University 12 – 13 February, Murdoch University One Just World Forum – The Big Win Win: Corporate Southeast Asian Exiles Social Responsibility and the World’s Poor 17 – 18 March, Australian National University 14 September, State Library of Western Australia Conveners: Professor David Hill, Asia Research Centre and Dr Ana Dragojlovic, ANU ‘The Elephant in the Room: Development Policy and the Problem of Politics’ One Just World Forum – Growing Cities, Growing Slums? 12 – 13 December Is Urban Poverty the New Threat to the World’s Poor? Convenor: Professor Richard Robison, Asia Research Centre 28 April, Hyatt Regency Hotel, Perth 2011 Achieving Sustainable Demand for Governance 17 – 18 June, Yogyakarta, Indonesia Islamic Politics and Political Dissent 11 – 13 August, Murdoch University Gaming, Governance and Public Policy in Macau Convenor: Professor Vedi Hadiz in cooperation with Dr Khoo Boo 3 – 4 December, University of Macau Teik – IDE Japan

The 4th Japanese History Workshop Australia 30 November – 2 December, Murdoch University Convenor: Dr Takeshi Moriyama, Asia Research Centre

‘Studying “spaces of non-existence”: Methodological concerns’ workshop participants

58 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years ‘New Modes of Governance and Security Challenges in the Asia-Pacific’ Conference participants

Workshop on ‘Gaming, Governance and Public Policy in Macau’ participants in Macau

Participants at ‘Macao’s Casino Capitalism: Gaming, Governance and Public Policy’ Workshop

59 Richard Robison , Major-General , Palang Dharma Party, Thailand with Vice Chancellor Peter Boyce, 1992

Seminars Political and economic Watersheds in Industrial Singapore Garry Rodan Since being established, the Centre has held seminars to allow visiting scholars, Centre Fellows and work groups to present Comparing Post-1987 South Korea Radicalism with the research in progress. They are listed for each year in the order in Radicalism of the 1970s: Continuity or Change? which they were presented. Sohn Hak-Kyu, Sogang University, Seoul, South Korea

The Indonesian Print Media 1991 David Hill Defining the Middle Classes: the Weberian Orthodoxy Richard Robison Ethnicity, Religion, Class and Nationalism in East and Southeast Asia Defining the Middle Classes: Problems for Marxist Theory John Clammer, Sophia University, Tokyo, Japan Garry Rodan Intellectual Property Laws of East and Southeast Asia Understanding the Interrelationship between Gender and Michael Pendleton Emerging Middle Classes Beverley Hooper The Social Sciences and the Construction of a National Discourse: the Case of Southeast Asia Understanding the Formation of a Working Class: The Pacific Raul Petierra, University of New South Wales Experience Herb Thompson The New Rich in China? David Goodman Competing Explanations of Emergence of a Bourgeoisie Geoff Reeves, Curtin University Professional Labour Markets in Singapore Philip Lewis Problems of Analysing and Conceptualising the Middle Classes: Indonesia Housing and Consumption in China David Hill Chen Shuping, People’s University of China, Beijing

The making of the Philippine Working Class: Social Class and 1992 Social Identity within a Section of Manila’s Organized Working China’s Long March into the Future Class Barbara Krug, University of Saarland, Germany Robert Lambert, University of Western Australia The Politics of Small Business in Singapore Problems of Analysing and Conceptualising the Middle Classes: Ian Chalmers the Philippines Michael Pinches, University of Western Australia Changing Executive-Legislative Relations in Hong Kong Shui-Hing Lo Against the State/Media: the Formation of Collective Identity during the March Student Movement in Taiwan Vietnam: An Emerging Industrial Power? – Issues and Trends in a Kuan-hsing Chen, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan Changing Political-Economic Environment Jan Annerstedt, Roskilde University, Denmark

60 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Australia’s Business and Political Dealings with Asia Trade Unionism under the State in Contemporary Indonesia: Michael Byrnes Prospects and Political Implications of the Struggle for Free Trade Unions Thai Unions in the 1990’s Rob Lambert Andrew Brown Singapore and Malaysian Perceptions of International Marketing Singapore: An Ordinary Capitalist Nation Ethics and the Relationship of Culture: A Case Study Chua Beng Huat, National University of Singapore Robert Armstrong

The Reform of State Industry in China: Causes, Consequences, Private Television in Indonesia Interpretation Krishna Sen Thomas Rawaski, University of Pittsburgh 1993 Vietnam’s Future: Economic Opportunities for Australia Cisca Spencer The Middle Class and the Emerging Political Culture in Indonesia Ian Chalmers On the Situation in Thailand and Recent Developments in Bangkok The Taiwan Election 1992 Major-General Chamlong Srimuang, Palang Dharma Party, Jou-juo Chu Thailand China’s New Regionalism: Socio ¬Economic Change and Political The Economic Climate for Joint Ventures in Malaysia Prospects Leslie O’Brien David Goodman

Structure of ROK Wool Processing Industry: Strategic Implications Young Turks of Business: The Development of Regional Business for Australia in Thailand Allen Nash Kevin Hewison, Maniemai Thongyou and Khon Kaen

Sequences of Privatisation and Structural Adjustment Indonesian Tax Law: Recent Policies Henry Bienen, Princeton University, USA Gitte Heij

How Does Indonesia Train its Journalists? Analysis of the Presidential Election and New Cabinet in Patrick Cornish Indonesia Adam Schwarz Ready for the ‘Next Lap’ James Minchin, Australian Author Political Culture, Ideology and Democracy in Late Leninist China: People’s Congresses Current Developments in Indonesia Barrett McCormick, Australian National University Abdurrahman Wahid, Nahdatul Ulama, Indonesia Professional Labour Market in Malaysia Becoming a NIC: The Middle Class in Thailand Philip Lewis Kevin Hewison Southeast Asia as a Portfolio Investment Indonesian Fishing in the Australian Fishing Zone Ky Cao Bruce Campbell and Vicki Wilson Hangzhou: A Year of Change The Collective Sector in China David Goodman David SG Goodman Possible Distance Education Opportunities: Cambodia Cisca Spencer

Singapore: Towards a Non-Liberal Communitarian Democracy Chua Beng Huat

The Progress of Poverty under the Reforms Carl Riskin, Colombia University of New York

The Growth Triangle: What Future for the Singapore State? James Parsonage

Why Regions Matter: The Changing Fit Between Economic and Security Relations in Eastern Asia/Asia Pacific Paul Evans, University of Toronto, York, Ontario

Environmental Politics in Southeast Asia Philip Hirsch, University of Sydney

Foreign Banks in China Joe Zhang, University of Canberra

Richard Robison with Abdurrahman Wahid, former president of Indonesia

61 Prospects for Australian Seafood Exports: A Case Study of the A Preliminary Investigation into the Relationship between Taiwanese Market Business Investment Strategy and Environmental Regulation in Malcolm Tull Southeast Asia David Annandale Enhancing Australia’s Full-fee Paying Overseas Student Policy: Analysing our Competitors and Identifying Strategies for the 1995 Hong Kong Market Don Smart and Grace Ang Political Opposition in Taiwan Shelley Riggor, Davidson College, North Carolina Economic Liberalisation: The Nationalist Dream vs. Rationalism in the Auto Industry in Indonesia Political Economy of Forestry, Logging and Timber Industries in Ian Chalmers Southeast Asia/Pacific Region Herb Thompson Women and Consumerism in Post-Mao China Beverley Hooper, University of Western Australia Japan-China Relations: Prospects to the Year 2000 Greg Austin, Australian National University The Peasantry and the CCP Feng Chongyi Ideas, Identity and the Evolution of Regional Policy Coordination in the Asia Pacific The Politics of Australia’s Economic Integration with Asia Richard Higgott, Manchester University Richard Robison and Garry Rodan Changing Consumer Tastes in China Environment and Politics in the Regional Press Yanrui Wu Carol Warren Political Oppositions in South and Southeast Asia Oppositional Politics in Singapore Garry Rodan Garry Rodan Prospects for Enhancing Australia’s Student Recruitment in 1994 Taiwan Don Smart Capital Markets and Development in Asia Ky Cao The Emerging Oligarchy in Indonesia: Will they Survive the Post- Suharto Era? Thailand in Transition George Aditjondro, Visiting Fellow, Satya Wacana Prawase Wasi, Mahidol University, Bangkok Internationalising Education: Building Educational Links between Capital Markets in Indonesia Australia and Indonesia Gitte Heij Moegiadi, Indonesian Embassy, Canberra

Taiwan’s Role in the International Community Social Security Systems in Southeast Asia: Are They Sustainable? Francias Lee, Representative, Taipei Economic and Cultural Mukul G Asher, National University of Singapore Office Does Economic Growth Lead to Democratisation? Background to the documentary film Below the Wind and other Amitav Acharya, York University Adventures John Darling Functional Representation and the Legislature in Hong Kong Ian Scott and Anthony Sayers Professional Labour Markets in Thailand Phil Lewis Nuclear Nightmares: East Asia and the Bomb Andrew Mack, Australian National University Environmentalism and Emerging Social Forces in Thailand Philip Hirsch Labour and Post-Fordist Industrialisation in Southeast Asia Fred Deyo, State University of New York Vietnamese Tax and Investment Law Gitte Heij Rents, Capital Accumulation Jomo K.S., University of Malaya Asian Cities and their Global Context Peter Newman, Director, Institute for Science and Technology China’s New Industrial Policy policy David Evans, University of Sussex

Lee Iacocca and Sino-Thai Strategic Culture The Competition for Corporate Regional Headquarters Craig Reynolds, RSPacS, Australian National University Simon Avenell

The Regional Integration of Australian Manufacturing: Select Reconstructing Ethnic Politics in Southeast Asia Case Studies David Brown Rob Lambert Looking North: The Politics of Engagement with Asia Formal and Informal Political Opposition to Authoritarian Rule in Richard Robison East and Southeast Asia Garry Rodan

62 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years David Hill and Krishna Sen Garry Rodan with author and journalist Willy Wo-Lap Lam, 1996

Indonesia: Cultures in Resistance and Change – Exploring the Issues David Hill and Krishna Sen

The Policy of Price Reform in the Chinese Coal Industry Tim Wright

Cultural Constructions of Asia’s New Rich Michael Pinches

1996

Corporatism and the Production of Law in East Asia Kanishka Jayasuriya M Ramesh Indonesian Politics after Soeharto Richard Robison

The Expanding Role of the People’s Liberation Army and its Influence on China-Taiwan Relations Post-Fordism in the Proton Car Company in Malaysia? Willy Wo-Lap Lam, China Editor, South China Morning Post Rajah Rasiah, IKMAS, University Kebangsaan, Malaysia

Australian Direct Investment in Indonesia: Time for Evaluation Social Security, Health and Education in ASEAN: Past Gitte Heij Performance and Future Directions M Ramesh, University of New England Vietnam: Has the Bubble Burst? H E Ms Susan Boyd, Ambassador of Australia, Hanoi Southeast Asia Between Global Neoliberal Discipline and Local Quests for Welfare Professional Labour Markets in Taiwan Johannes Schmidt, Aalborg University Phil Lewis Sharing Socialism: Divvying Out China’s Public Enterprises Human Rights and International Relations: Essentialism All the Sally Sargeson and Zhang Jian Way Down Tim Dunne, University of Wales The Automobile in Chinese Cities Jeff Kenworthy Sustainable Development in the Mekong Basin Cisca Spencer Factory Regimes: Asia Labour Standards and Corporate Restructuring Who Gets What? The Politics of Infrastructure Privatisation in Rob Lambert, University of Western Australia Southeast Asia Paul Handley Trends in the Internationalisation of Australian Education Don Smart The Health Care Sector in China Yanrui Wu Organising Labour, Globalising Asia: A Draft Introduction Jane Hutchison Transnational Activities in ASEAN and the Changing Shape of the State The Competition for Corporate Regional Headquarters Chua Beng Huat Simon Avenell

State and Labour in New Order Indonesia Singapore Country Study: Outbound Tourism Vedi Hadiz Rajasundram Sathiendrakumar

63 Special Seminars Asian Think Tanks and Policy Research: A Comparative Perspective The Politics of Judicial Institutions in Singapore Diane Stone, University of Warwick Francis Seow, former Solicitor General of Singapore The Rise and Fall of the Asian Century The Minefields of Singapore’s Opposition Politics “ Chris Lingle, Case Western Reserve University Francis Seow, former Solicitor General of Singapore Quest for Democracy: Intellectuals and the State in The Indochinese in Australia 1975 – 1995: Some Facts for Mrs Contemporary China Hanson Ka-Ho Mok, City University of Hong Kong Nancy Viviani, Agribusiness in Sumatra 1997 Cisca Spencer

Self-Determination in East Timor: Implications for the Region Organising Labour in Globalising Asia Jose Ramos-Horta, 1996 Nobel Peace Laureate Jane Hutchison

Administrative Reform in China Developing the Nation-State: Implications from the Globalising John Burns, University of Hong Kong of Singapore David Brown International Press Reporting on Asia Garry Rodan Clientelism, Corruption and Development in Southeast Asia Andrew MacIntyre, University of California Wiring the Warung or Global Gateway? The Internet in Indonesia David Hill and Krishna Sen Towards a Comparative Regionalism: The EU and APEC in Comparative Perspective The Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies Survey of Recent Kanishka Jayasuriya and Mark Beeson Developments, April 1997 Ross McLeod, Australian National University Law and Development in Southeast Asia 1990 – 1996: Evaluation of Legislation Industry Policy and Australia’s Fast Ferry Industry Gitte Heij Mark Beeson The ASEAN Factor in Vietnam’s Second Doi Moi Decade Professional Labour Markets in the Philippines Bill Neilson, University of Victoria Phil Lewis The Emerging Health Care Market in Taiwan The Regional Integration of Australian Manufacturing: An Yanrui Wu, Lecturer, University of Western Australia Analysis of the Whitegoods Industry Rob Lambert, University of Western Australia Globalisation and Economic Policy Steven Bell, University of Tasmania The Reallocation of Nation-State Sovereignty in the Era of Globalisation Political Currents in Post-l965 Indonesia: A Work in Progress Sergio Ortino, University of Florence David Bourchier

From Miracle to Meltdown: The Political and Economic Implications of the Crisis in East Asia Mark Beeson

Andrew MacIntyre with Marzuki Darusman and Djisman Simandjuntak

64 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years 1998

China’s Strategic Thinking and Policy Towards the South China Sea Shee Poon Kim, Visiting Research Fellow, Seoul National University, Korea

Market Development in China Lance Gore

From the Development to the Regulatory State in Post-Crisis East Asia Kanishka Jayasuriya

The Limits of Feminist intervention: AWARE and the PAP Lenore Lyons-Lee, University of Wollongong Former Singapore Solicitor-General and subsequent detainee Francis Seow with Kanishka Jayasuriya Taiwan’s China Problem: A Policy Proposal Lynn White, Princeton University; Editor, World Politics

Agricultural Mechanisation, Rural Industry and Early 1970s Reforms near Shanghai Lynn White, Princeton University; Editor, World Politics

Professional Labour Markets in Hong Kong Phil Lewis

Reshaping Indonesia’s Political Future: Agendas for Reform after Soeharto David Bourchier, and Yanti Muchtar

From Hegemons to Hedge Funds: Australia and the Changing International Order Mark Beeson

Social Security Systems in Southeast Asia: Are They Sustainable? Mukul Asher, National University of Singapore

Agribusiness Opportunities in Kalimantan and Sulawesi Cisca Spencer

A Developmental Theory of Constitutionalism: The Chinese Case Robert Benewick, University of Sussex

Fostering Social Cohesion on Australian Campuses Jose Ramos Horta, 1996 Nobel Peace Laureate Don Smart, Simone Volet, and Grace Ang

Ideological Constructions of Collective Goods in Asian Capitalisms Sally Sargeson

Indonesia – Latest Developments Richard Robison

Southeast Asia’s Economic Crisis: Implications for Tax Systems and Reform Strategies Gitte Heij

Thai Migration in Malaysia: Processes of Adaptation and Accommodation Khadijah Haji Muhamed, Universiti Malaya

The Search for a Quantitative Measurement of Values Steve Cornish-Ward, and Hume Winzar, Murdoch University

Korean Crisis: Political and Economic Implications for Australia You-il Lee, Curtin University

Media Censorship and Market Development in Asia Garry Rodan

Problems of Political Opposition in Singapore Dr Chee Soon Juan, leader of the Singapore Democratic Party Chee Soon Juan, Monash Asia Institute; Secretary-General, Singapore Democratic Party 65 (L-R): David Goodman, Max Lane, Hugh White, Pasuk Phongpaichit

The Dynamics of Democratisation in Indonesia: Comfortable? Relaxed?: The Meanings, Origins and Implications A Comparative Perspective of ‘The Howard Doctrine’ Olle Tornquist, University of Oslo Richard Leaver, Flinders University

1999 2000

Reconfiguring Politics in Singapore Hong Kong’s Environmental Situation and Concerns; Joint Hong James Gomez, Senior Researcher, Friedrich Naumann Kong-Guangdong Anti-Pollution Plans; The Scope for Further Foundation, Singapore Environmental Research on Hong Kong Ms Lily Yam, Secretary for Food and Environment in the Hong The Japanese Response to the Asian Financial Crisis: Signs of Kong Special Administrative Region Government Regional Leadership Glenn Hook, University of Sheffield B2C: Modelling Critical Mass for E-Commerce in Hong Kong John Ure, University of Hong Kong Neo-liberal Globalisation and New Constitutionalism Stephen Gill, York University Cyber Resistance and the Reformasi Movement in Malaysia Abdul Rahim Ghouse, Official Representative of the Free Anwar ASEAN Scenarios, as presented to UBS Bank Campaign Cisca Spencer 2001 Indonesia: Why Everyone Else has got it Wrong Richard Robison Globalisation and Cultural Change: Challenges and Opportunities for East Asia Political Economy of East Asian Central Bank lndependence Chris Lingle, ESEADE at Universidad Francisco Marroquín in Kanishka Jayasuriya Guatemala

Developments in Asian Fiscal Systems in the Context of the Asian Steering the State in the Information Age: E-Government in Crisis Britain Gitte Heij Ian Holliday, City University of Hong Kong

The Politics of Welfare Provision in Rural China Hong Kong in the New Millennium: Challenges and Jian Zhang Opportunities Jenny Wallis, Director of the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Class, Consumption and the Economic Crisis in the Philippines Office in Sydney Michael Pinches, University of Western Australia

Cleansing the Body Politic: Reform in Malaysia 2002 Khoo Boo Teik A Tale of Two Centuries: The Globalisation of Maritime Raiding and Piracy in Southeast Asia at the end of the Eighteenth and The Impact of the Asian Crisis on the Education Export Sector in Twentieth Centuries Western Australia James Warren Don Smart Globalisation and the (Re)Construction of Nation States: Labour and Oppositional Politics in Indonesia after Soeharto An Explanation of Ethnic Conflict Vedi Hadiz David Brown Does Business Need a Free Press in Asia? Reappropriating Colonial Categories, Fashioning Contemporary Garry Rodan Identities: Integrating Subnational and Transnational Loyalties in China’s Responses to May 1998 Anti-Chinese Riots in Indonesia Decentralising Indonesia Shee Poon Kim, Visiting Fellow Greg Acciaioli

The Political Logic of State Sector Reforms in Two Chinese Why I Rejected Reebok: Fighting Multinationals and The IMF in Provinces: Economic Productivity versus Political Control Indonesia Chris McNally Dita Sari, Indonesian Trade Union Leader

66 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years (L-R): Norani Othman, Paul Evans, Paul Hutchcroft, Dorothy Solinger

Security and Sovereignty in the Asia-Pacific Region 2004 Sam Makinda ‘Conflict, Security and Political Regimes in Asia’ Seminar Series Responding to the HIV/AIDS Epidemics in Vietnam – Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics: The Public, the Private Jocelyn Grace and the International Shaun Breslin, University of Warwick Paranoia as Political Discourse. Violent Conflicts and Rumour Politics in Eastern Indonesia Asia and the Age of Fear: Regional Order after 9/11 Nils Bubandt, Aarhus University, Denmark Amitav Acharya, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Human Resource Management in China Losing Faith: Asian crises and Australian Security since 1997, Shelda Debowski Hugh White, Director, Australian Strategic Policy Institute, Canberra Globalisation, Economic Governance and Poverty: Comparing Malaysia and South Korea Citizenship, Rights, Class and Identity in Post-Bubble Asia Jeffrey Henderson, University of Manchester John Clammer, Sophia University

Socio-Economic Reform and Poverty Alleviation in Vietnam Thailand under Thaksin: Another Malaysia? During the 1990s Pasuk Phongpaichit, Chulalongkorn University Mai Hoang Pham Losing the Democratic Moment: Counter Terrorism in Southeast Hopetown, China: Residential Segregation, the State and the Asia Making of an Urban Middle Class David Wright-Neville, Monash University Luigi Tomba, RSPAS, Australian National University Emerging Forms of Capitalism in Asia 2003 M. Ramesh, University of Sydney

Men and Masculinities in Indonesian Media Political Islam and Women’s Rights: Southeast Asia and the Marshall Clark, University Of Tasmania Middle East Norani Othman, Deputy Director, IKMAS, Universiti Structuring Local Identity: Nation, Province and Country Kebangsaan Malaysia David Goodman, University of Technology, Sydney Political Impacts of the ‘War on Terror’ in Indonesia Accounting Models and Reporting Expectations: Evidence from Sidney Jones, Southeast Asia Project Director, International the Indian Sub-Continent Crisis Group, Jakarta Greg Tower 2005 Privatisation of Rural Enterprises in China: Processes and Outcomes ‘Conflict, Security and Political Regimes in Asia’ Seminar Series – Paul Bowles, University of Northern British Columbia, Canada The Social and Political Aspects of the Tsunami on Aceh Edward Aspinall, University of Sydney Indonesian Politics after the 2004 elections: Crisis of the Political Elite, Bankruptcy of ‘Civil Society’ and Disorganization at the Taking Group Cultural Rights Seriously: Multiculturalism in Grassroots Singapore Max Lane, CAPSTRANS, University of Wollongong Chua Beng Huat, National University of Singapore

Outsider/Insider – The Painful Journey of Becoming Indonesian A Conservative restoration of Asia-Pacific Security? David Reeve, University of New South Wales Paul Evans, University of Columbia

India’s to the Indian Ocean Strong Demands and Weak Institutions: Addressing the Raja Mohan, Strategic Affairs Editor, The Hindu Democratic Deficit in the Philippines Paul Hutchcroft, University of Wisconsin-Madison, visiting The ‘Para-militarization’ of Indonesian Political Culture National University of Singapore Ian Wilson

67 (L-R): Vedi Hadiz, Vivienne Wee, Nathan Quimpo, Bryan Turner

From Mahathir to Abdullah: What Does it Mean for Malaysia? The Indonesian National Games of 1951 and 1953: Sport, Khoo Boo Teik, Universiti Sains Malaysia Politics and Ethnicity in Early post-revolutionary Indonesia Colin Brown, Media, Society and Culture, Curtin University Globalisation and Job Loss in China: Comparing Protest and Welfare Effects with France and Mexico Potential Impacts of Management Measures on Indonesian Dorothy Solinger, University of California Irvine Artisanal Shark and Ray Fishers Malcolm Tull Global Economy, Local Conflict: Indonesia after Soeharto Vedi Hadiz, National University of Singapore Citizens and States in Asia: The Dynamic of Religion and Politics in State Formation Living with Leviathan: Australia, Asia, and American Hegemony Bryan Turner, National University of Singapore Mark Beeson, 2006 Resource Politics and Competing Ethno-Nationalisms in Asia Vivienne Wee, City University of Hong Kong Insurgency: Motivation, Capability and Opportunity Structure Rajat Ganguly, University of East Anglia, UK Vigilantes, Violent Entrepreneurs and the Privatization of Security in Indonesia The Political Economy of State Building in Timor Leste Ian Wilson Andrew Rosser, Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, UK Transnationalisation of Chinese Civil Society: Implications for Democratisation International Terror, Illegal Fishing and Papua: Issues and Jie Chen, Political Science and International Relations, UWA Implications for the Indonesian – Australian Relationship Aloysius L. Madja, Indonesian Consul in Perth Typhoon: Climate, History and Society in the Philippines: Some Initial Thoughts Bush and US Foreign Policy in Asia: Implications for the Region James Warren Robert G Sutter, with the US Consulate in Perth

Recent Animal and Human Disease Events in Asia and the From Coercion to Collaboration: Participatory Forest Management Relationship with Culture, Systems of Livestock Production and in Indonesia the Environment Kazuhiro Harada, Visiting Fellow John Edwards Nine Years in Changi Contractualism and Transnational Welfare Governance Michael Fernandez, Singapore Kanishka Jayasuriya Ethnic Conflict, Islamist Insurgency and the Peace Process in Audio Scandals and their Actors: Crimes, Gaffes and Sensations Mindanao, Southern Philippines Involving Sound Media in Recent Indonesian History Nathan Quimpo, University of Amsterdam Bernard Arps, Visiting Fellow, Leiden University Regional Instability and Australian Responses Advanced Asian Health Systems in Comparison The Honourable Brendan Nelson, Federal Minister for Robin Gauld, Visiting Fellow Defence

Gestural Politics: Civil Society in ‘New’ Singapore Liberal Markets, Illiberal Governance Terence Lee Richard Robison, Institute of Social Studies, The Hague, The Netherlands Intellectual Property Law and the Protection of Indigenous Traditional Knowledge in Bio-Resources Radically Rethinking How We Motivate Public Servants Gary Meyers James Perry, Indiana University

Engineering the Soul: Market Anxieties and China’s New Experts Japan’s Role in Asia Seminar Series: Gary Sigley, Asian Studies, UWA Dependent Nationalism in Contemporary Japan and Its Implications for the Regional Order in the Asia Pacific Keiichi Tsunekawa, University of Tokyo

68 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years (L-R): The Hon Brendan Nelson, Liutenant General John Sanderson, Chaiwat Satha-Anand, Tim Huxley

Japan’s Strategic Vision for Asia and its Partnership with Australia 2008 Yasuji Ishigaki, Tokai University Law School India – U.S. Strategic Partnership after Bush Reflections on East Asia Community Building C. Raja Mohan, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Takashi Shiraishi, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, In conjunction with Australian Government Department of Tok yo Foreign Affairs and Trade, Department of Defence and the Security, Terrorism and Counterterrorism Studies program at 2007 Murdoch University, held at DFAT Offices

The Rise of China: Implications for Regional Security Australian International Thought and Asia, Then and Now Rosemary Foot, University of Oxford, U.K James Cotton, University of New South Wales at the Australian Defence Force Academy, Canberra The Shifting Centre of Global Power: Australia’s Emerging In conjunction with Australian Government Department of Relationships in Asia and the South Pacific Defence and the Security, Terrorism and Counterterrorism Lieutenant General John Sanderson, Special Adviser to the Studies program at Murdoch University Government of Western Australia on Indigenous Affair Money and Banks, Finance and the State: An Investigation into Untying the Gordian Knot? The Difficulties in Solving Violence in the Role of the State in Japanese Finance, 1868 – 2008 Southern Thailand Simon James Bytheway, Nihon University and Adjunct Fellow, Chaiwat Satha-Anand, Thammasat University, Bangkok Curtin University

Security in East Asia in the Turbulent Post-Cold War Period Trading places? China, the United States and the evolution of the Makoto Iokibe, President of the National Defence Academy of international political economy Japan Mark Beeson,

Forming the Bioterrorism “Bandwagon”: Implications for the An Arms Race in the Region? Southeast Asian Defence Policies, BioSciences and Disarmament Military Spending and Weapons Procurement Susan Wright, University of Michigan Tim Huxley, Executive Director, The International Institute for Strategic Studies – Asia, Singapore Democracy with Thai Characteristics? Social Movements, In conjunction with Australian Government Department of Nationalism, and the Coup of 2006 Defence and the Security, Terrorism and Counterterrorism Jim Glassman, University of British Columbia Studies program at Murdoch University Japan and Security Problems in East Asia Shinichi Kitaoka, Tokyo University, former Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Deputy Permanent Representative of Japan to the United Nations

The Fight Against Discrimination and Legal Mobilisation of Minority Groups in Japan Ms Georgina Stevens

The Politics of New Approaches to Institutionalising Markets: The World Bank and Water Privatisation in the Philippines Toby Carroll

Taiwanese Offshore (Distant Water) Fisheries in Southeast Asia, 1936 – 1977 Henry Chen

(Re)Locating Conflictual State-labour relations: The case of Malaya(sia) Donna Turner Grace Tan, Senator Alan Eggleston, Rosemary Foot

69 The Rise of India and the Implications for Regional Stability Islamic Politics and Indonesian Democracy Ambassador Lalit Mansingh, Republic of India Vedi Hadiz, Australian Research Council Future Fellow, Asia In conjunction with Australian Government Department of Research Centre Foreign Affairs and Trade and the Australia-India Council, held at DFAT Offices. The Renewal of China’s Authoritarianism through Public Deliberation 2009 Baogang He, Chair in International Studies, Deakin University

Counterinsurgency Doctrine and Asian Realities Discourses of Discomfort: Research and Dialogue on Solomon Adam Roberts, Centre for International Studies, Oxford Islands’ Growth Futures University, Oxford Doug Porter, The World Bank

State Building Interventions and the Elusive Search for State 2011 Capacity Shahar Hameiri Orangutans and the boundaries of humankind: from the 17th century to the 21st China: Democratising One Party Rule? Robert Cribb, Australian National University Shaun Breslin, Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation, Warwick University Singapore’s Forthcoming Elections: Prospects for Change James Gomez, Monash University Political Engineering and Ethnic Politics in the Asia-Pacific Ben Reilly, Director, Centre for Democratic Institutions, Revisiting rural places: Pathways to poverty and prosperity in Australian National University Southeast Asia Jonathan Rigg, University of Durham, UK Thai-Style Democracy: Royalists and the Struggle for Thailand’s Constitution State Transformation and the Rescaling of Security: Kevin Hewison, Director, Carolina Asia Centre, University of Understanding the Politics of Non-Traditional Security North Carolina Shahar Hameiri

Old Wine in a New Bottle? The new Najib Administration Scope of Intellectual Property Patents: Recent Developments in James Chin, Monash University, Malaysia the US and Australia Indicate that a Fundamental Reassessment of the Governance of IPRs May be Underway? Gaming, Governance and Public Policy in the New Macao Adjunct Professor Anna George Ian Scott Development, Globalization, and Islamic Finance in World Order and EU Regionalism: Beyond New Constitutionalism Contemporary Indonesia Gerard Strange, University of Lincoln, UK Thomas Pepinsky, Cornell University

Development and Village Governance in Indonesia U.S. Foreign Policy and Ongoing U.S. Engagement in the Asia Scott Guggenheim, AusAID-Indonesia partnership Program Pacific: Strategic and Economic Outlook Daniel Twining, German Marshall Fund of the United States Sites of Learning: Reconstructing New Primary Schools for the Imperial Capital of Japan, 1923 – 1930 Mud Spray: The Conflict between Humans and Elephants in Asia Janet Borland Raj Ramanathapiallai, Gettysburg College, Pennsylvania, USA

2010 From Casino Protectionism to the Economy of Law: Transformations in the Illicit Economies of the Indonesian Police: The Provinces Elect Governments, Bangkok Overthrows Them: 1981 – 2007 Urbanity, Class, and Post-Democracy in Thailand Jacqui Baker, Centre for Transnational Crime Prevention, Jim Glassman, University of British Columbia University of Wollongong

New Modes of Governance in Asia in Times of Global Crisis The Maritime Culture of Madura, Indonesia I Ketut Putra Erawan, Executive Director, Institute for Peace Kurt Stenross and Democracy, Udayana University Japan’s soft power as a global trouble-shooter: aspirations and Changing Dynamics in Economic Security in Southeast Asia conceptual implications Richard Stubbs, MacMaster University, Ontario Heng Yee Kuang, Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy

China’s Trade Patterns and Policies Trade integration in Asia and the drawbacks of preferential Andrew Wang, Zhejiang Gongshang University, China and agreements Visiting Research Fellow, Murdoch Business School Heribert Dieter, German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Berlin Inequality and Class War: Considering the Political Economy of Thailand’s Uprising Kevin Hewison, Director, Carolina Asia Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA

70 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Grants • 2009 National Teaching Fellowship, Australian Learning and Teaching Council 2010 Professor David Hill 2010 – 2011,$350,000. • Australian Research Council Discovery Project and Australian Professorial Fellowship, • Australia Netherlands Research Collaboration Professor Garry Rodan Associate Professor Carol Warren Representation and Political Regimes in Southeast Asia ‘Indigenous peoples and natural resource management: Towards 2010 – 2014, $613, 182 new forms of governance’ workshop 2010, €14,058 • Australian Research Council Future Fellowship Professor Vedi Hadiz • Australia Netherlands Research Collaboration State, Class and Islamic Populism: Indonesia in Comparative Dr Ian Wilson Perspective Studying ‘spaces of non-existence’: Methodological concerns 2010 – 2013, $891,200 2010, $31,240

• Australian Research Council Linkage Grant 2008 Professor James Warren Southeast Asia’s global economy, climate and the impact of • Australian Research Council Discovery Project natural hazards from the 10th to 21st centuries Garry Rodan and Caroline Hughes 2011 – 2013, $400,275 The Politics of Accountability Reform in Southeast Asia (with W Van Duivenvoorde, Li Tana, A G Paterson, G 2009 – 2011, $153,000 Campbell, A J Reid) • Australian Research Council Discovery Project Postdoctoral • Australian Research Council Discovery Project and Australian Fellowship Postdoctoral Fellowship Janet Borland Dr Shahar Hameiri Sites of Learning, Spaces of State: Reconstructed Primary Schools Securitisation and the governance of non-traditional security in and Small Parks in Tokyo, 1923 – 1945 Southeast Asia and the Southwest Pacific 2009 – 2011, $276,414 2011 – 2013, $305,000 • Australian Development Research Awards / AusAID (with L Jones) Richard Robison, Ian Wilson, Caroline Hughes, Jane Hutchison 2009 Achieving Sustainable Demand for Governance Addressing • AusAID Political Dimensions of Change Dr Ian Wilson 2009 – 2010, $289,400 The Politics of Free Public Services in Decentralised Indonesia (with Mohtar Mas’oed, Aris Arif Mundayat, Nicolaas Warouw, 2010 – 2011, $22,500 Wil Hout)

• Japan Foundation Grant Program for Intellectual Exchange • Australia Indonesia Governance Research Partnership Conferences Ian Wilson, Luky Djani Professor Sandra Wilson Governing Favours: An investigation of accountability Reading Older Forms of Japanese mechanisms in local government budget allocation in Indonesia 2010 – 2011, $20,000 2009, $61,545 (with B. Trefalt) (with Teten Masduki)

• Department of Defence Samuel Makinda Emerging Security Threats in the Asia-Pacific’ Public Lecture Series 2008 – 2009, $15,014

• Asia-Pacific Futures Research Network and Southeast Asia Node of the Asia-Pacific Futures Research Network David Hill ‘Southeast Asian Exiles: crossing cultural, political and religious borders’ workshop 2009, $9,409

• Swedish International Development Agency, Post Conflict Reconstruction Project, University of Gothenburg, Sweden Caroline Hughes The Political Economy of Security Sector Reform in Cambodia 2008 – 2009, US$12,000. ‘Southeast Asian Exiles: Crossing cultural, political and religious borders’ workshop participants

71 • Department for International Development, UK, • ARC Asia Pacific Futures Research Network Caroline Hughes David Hill ‘Cambodia’s Economic Transformation’ workshop Mediating Transition to Post-Authoritarian Indonesia Workshop 2009, US$25,000 $10,000 (with Kheang Un) • Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore 2007 David Hill Mediating Transition to Post-Authoritarian Indonesia Workshop • Australian Research Council Discovery Project SGD$ 8,000 Carol Warren Social Capital, Natural Resources and Local Governance in 2005 Indonesia 2008 – 2010, $420,086 • Australian Research Council Discovery Project (with JF McCarthy, GL Acciaioli, AE Lucas, J Schiller, L Visser). David Hill Secular Modernisers in the Indonesian media: A biography of • Australian Research Council Discovery Project Mochtar Lubis (1922 – 2004) David Hill 2006 – 2008, $75,000 Indonesia in exile: The Indonesian Left abroad during the late Cold War • Australian Research Council Discovery Project 2008 – 2010, $72,651 James Warren Captivity Remembered: Slavery, Islam and Identity Formation in • Australia Indonesia Governance Research Partnership the Sulu Zone, 1768 – 1898 Ian Wilson and Richard Robison 2006 – 2008, $121,000 Evaluating models for the effective governance of the informal security sector in Indonesia in the context of broader state • International Centre of Excellence in Asia-Pacific Studies building processes (ICEAPS) 2008, $64,250 Carol Warren Articulating Science and Social Science Research Methods for • Department of Defence Coastal Resource Management in Indonesia Sam Makinda 2006, $10,000 ‘Emerging Security Threats in the Asia-Pacific’ Public Lecture Series 2004 $9,598 • Australian Research Council Discovery Project • Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Yingchi Chu Garry Rodan The Democratisation of Documentary Cinema in China ‘Untying the Gordian Knot? The Difficulties in Solving Violence in 2005 – 2006 $75,088 Southern Thailand’ Public Lecture • Australian Research Council Discovery Project $4,590 Garry Rodan and Kanishka Jayasuriya • 2006 Japan – Australia Year of Exchange Grassroots Support Contestation or Regulation – New Politics in Southeast Asia Program (administered by the Consulate General of Japan in 2005 – 2006 $75,000 Perth) (with Vedi Hadiz; Kevin Hewison; Chua Beng Huat. Garry Rodan Collaboration with Asia Research Institute, National University ‘Japan’s Role in Asia: New Dynamics, New Directions’ Lecture of Singapore and Southeast Asia Research Centre, City Series University of Hong Kong.) $7,500 • Southeast Asian-based benefactor • History of Marine Animal Populations (HMAP) Research Leadership Application Support Malcolm Tull, Project Leader SE Asia 2006, $50,000. 2008, Additional US$20,000

2006

• History of Marine Animal Populations (HMAP), Malcolm Tull, Project Leader SE Asia USD$35,000.

• 2006 Australia – Japan Year of Exchange Grass-roots Support, Garry Rodan ‘Japan’s Role in Asia: New Dynamics, New Directions’ Public Lecture Series, $17,500.

• 2006 Australia – Japan Year of Exchange Grass-roots Support, Garry Rodan ‘Japan – Australia Free Trade Agreement: How likely and who benefits?’ Symposium, ‘Contestation or Regulation? New Politics in Southeast Asia’ workshop $5,000. participants

72 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years • US Institute for Peace Special Issues of Journals David Brown and Ian Wilson An Investigation Of Gang Violence In Post-Soeharto Indonesia 1992 2005 – 2006, US$44,690. The Pacific Review, vol. 5, no. 4, ‘The New Rich in Asia’, D Goodman and R Robison (eds). 2003 1996 • Singapore-based philanthropist Garry Rodan The Pacific Review, vol. 9, no. 3, ‘Politics and economics in the Political Regimes and Governance in East and Southeast Asia: twenty-first century: Is there an Asian model?’, R Robison (ed.). Problems and Prospects 2003 – 2005, $230,000 2003 The Pacific Review, vol. 16, no. 4, ‘Electronic media, markets and • Fulbright New Century Scholar Fellowship civil dociety in East and Southeast Asia’, G Rodan (ed.). David Brown ‘National Identity Strategies: An Analysis of the impact of 2004 Government National Identity Strategies on Ethnic Conflict’ $41,500 Critical Asian Studies, vol. 36, no. 3 – 4, ‘Markets In transition: Conflict, political regimes and the “War on Terror” in East and 2001 Southeast Asia’, G Rodan and K Hewison (eds).

• Carol Warren, Greg Acciaioli, John McCarthy 2005 ‘Locating the Commonweal: Community, Environment and Local Governance Regimes in Indonesia’. Journal of Development Studies, vol. 41, no. 2, ‘East Asia and the 2002 – 2004, $370,638 trials of neoliberalism’, K Hewison and R Robison (eds).

• David Hill, Japanese Studies, vol. 25, no. 1, ‘Modern Japanese History’, ‘Media in a Post-Authoritarian State: Crisis and Democratisation S Wilson (ed.). in Indonesia’ 2002 – 2004, $206,286 2007 (with Krishna Sen) Democratization, vol. 14, no. 5, ‘Beyond hybrid regimes’, G Rodan and K Jayasuriya (eds). 1998 • Jim Warren 2008 ‘Typhoon; Climate, History and Society in the Philippines’ Inside Indonesia, vol. 92, ‘Crime and criminality’, I Wilson (ed.). 1999 – 2001, $117,000

• Garry Rodan 2009 ‘Market Development and Media Censorship: The International Australian Journal of International Affairs, vol. 63, no. 3, ‘Risk, Press and Electronic Business Information Services in Asia’ regulation and new modes of regional governance in the Asia- 1999 – 2000, $56,000 Pacific’, S Hameiri and K Jayasuriya (eds).

1997 2010

• David Hill, Krishna Sen Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs, vol. 44, no. 1, ‘New Modes of Communication and Citizenship: The Internet in ‘Indonesian exiles: Crossing cultural, political and religious Indonesia’ borders’, D Hill, A Dragojlovic and C Macknight (eds). 1998 – 2000, $97,000 2011 • Ian Scott ‘Bureaucratic Capacity Environmental Turbulence; A study of the International Relations, vol. 25, no. 3, ‘Risk, risk management and Post 1997 Hong Kong Public Service’ international relations’, S Hameiri and FP Kühn (eds). 1998 – 2000, $102,554 Japanese Studies, Vol. 31, no. 2, ‘After the Trials – Repatriation and Release of Japanese War Criminals, 1946 – 1958’, S Wilson (ed.). 73 Book Chapters Chalmers, Ian ‘Indonesia 1990: Democratization and social forces’ in Ang, Grace S Siddique and N C Yuen (eds), Southeast Asian Affairs, ‘The impact of the Asian meltdown on Western Australian Singapore, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1991. educational institutions’, in D Davis and A Olsen (eds), International Education: The Professional Edge, Sydney, IDP Chu, Jou-juo Education Australia, 1999 (with D Smart). ‘Taiwan: A fragmented “middle” class in the making’, in R Robison and D Goodman (eds), The New Rich in Asia: Mobile Beeson, Mark phones, McDonalds and Middle-class Revolution, London, ‘Capital offence’, in E Aspinall, H Feith and G van Klinken (eds), Routledge, 1995. The Last Days of President Suharto, Clayton, Monash Asia Institute, 1999. ‘Taiwan: A new regional centre in the making’, in K Cao (ed.), The Changing Capital Markets of East Asia, London, Routledge, Brewer, Carolyn 1995. ‘Contact and “morals”’, in C Gaerlan, (ed.), Feminist Studies Chu, Yingchi Reader, Manila, St Scholastica, 2005. ‘The consumption of cinema in contemporary China’ in Brown, Andrew S Donald, M Keane and Y Hong (eds), Media in China: ‘Locating working-class’, in K Hewison (ed.), Political Change in Consumption, Contest and Crisis, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2002. Thailand: Democracy and Participation, London, Routledge, 1997. ‘Children, media and the public sphere in Chinese Australia’, in ‘Organising labour in globalising Asia: An introduction’, in G Rawnsley and M Rawnsley (eds), Political Communications in J Hutchison and A Brown (eds), Organising Labour in Globalising Greater China: The Construction and Reflection of Identity, London, Asia, London, Routledge, 2001 (with J Hutchison). RoutledgeCurzon, 2003 (with SH Donald and A Witcomb).

‘After the Kader fire: Labour organising for health and safety ‘Legal report: Citizenship education through a television standards in Thailand’, in J Hutchison and A Brown (eds), documentary’, in V Fong and R Murphy (eds), Chinese Organising Labour in Globalising Asia, London, Routledge, 2001. Citizenship: Views from the Margins, London, Routledge, 2006.

Brown, David ‘The emergence of polyphony in Chinese television documentaries’, in K Sen and T Lee (eds), Political Regimes and ‘Democracy and nationalism: Civic, ethnocultural and the Media in Asia, London, Routledge, 2008. multicultural politics under patrimonial rule’ in S Henders (ed.), Democratization and Identity Conflicts: Political Transitions and Ganguly, Rajat Cultural Difference in East and Southeast Asia, Lexington, 2004. ‘Democracy and ethnic conflict’, in S Ganguly, L Diamond and ‘Why independence? Instrumental and ideological dimensions MF Plattner (eds), The State of India’s Democracy, Baltimore, John of nationalism’ in E Tiryakian (ed.), Ethnicity, Ethnic Conflict, Hopkins University Press, 2007. Peace Processes: Comparative Perspectives, Whitby, ON, de Sitter ‘Conflicts in South Asia: Kashmir and ’, in VK Fouskas Publications, 2005. (ed.), The Politics of Conflict, London, Routledge, 2007. ‘Contending nationalisms in Southeast Asia’, in G Delanty and ‘The South Asian security scenario in 2008 – 09’, South Asia K Kumar (eds), The Sage Handbook of Nations and Nationalism, 2009, 6th edition, London, Routledge, 2008. London, Sage, 2006. ‘South Asian security in 2011’, in J O’Brien (ed.), South Asia ‘Ethnic conflict and civic nationalism: A model’, in JL Peacock, 2011, London, Routledge, 2010. PM Thornton and PB Inman (eds), Identity Matters: Ethnic and Sectarian Conflict, New York, Berghan Books, 2007. Goodman, David SG

‘Regionalist federalism: A critique of ethno-national federalism’, ‘Internal change in China’ in S Harris and J Cotton (eds), The End in B He, B Galligan and T Inoguchi (eds), Federalism in Asia, of the Cold War in Northeast Asia, Melbourne, Longman Cheshire, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 2007. 1991.

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74 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years ‘The PLA in Guangdong Province: Warlordism and localism’, Hameiri, Shahar in RH Yang, JC Hu, PKH Yu and AND Yang (eds) Chinese ‘A reality check for the critique of the liberal peace’, in Regionalism: The Security Dimension, Boulder, CO, Westview Press, S Campbell, D Chandler and M Sabaratnam (eds), A Liberal 1994. Peace? The Problems and Practices of Peacebuilding, London, Zed Books, 2011. ‘The politics of regionalism: Economic development, conflict and negotiation’, in D Goodman and G Segal (eds), China ‘Regulatory regionalism in Asia’, in M Beeson and R Stubbs Deconstructs: Politics, Trade and Regionalism, London, Routledge, (eds), Routledge Handbook of Asian Regionalism, London and New 1994. York, Routledge, 2011 (with K Jayasuriya).

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Dr Zacarias Albano da Costa, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste

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‘The emergence of the middle classes in Southeast Asia and the ‘Class transformations and political tensions in Singapore’s Indonesian case’, in JD Schmidt et al. (eds), Social Change in development’, in R Robison and DSG Goodman (eds), The Southeast Asia, Harlow, Addison Wesley Longman, 1997. New Rich in Asia: Mobile Phones, McDonalds and Middle-class Revolution, London, Routledge, 1995. ‘From fragility to unity’, in IF Sulaiman, GH Sofyan and SL Smith (eds), Bridging the Arafura Sea: Australia – Indonesia ‘Elections without representation: The Singapore experience Relations in Prosperity and Adversity, Canberra, National Centre for under the PAP’, in RH Taylor (ed.), The Politics of Elections in Development Studies, 1998. Southeast Asia, Cambridge, Woodrow Wilson Centre Press and Cambridge University Press, 1996. ‘Indonesia after Soeharto: More of the same, descent into chaos, or a shift to reform’, in G Forrester and RJ May (eds), The Fall of ‘State-society relations and political opposition in Singapore’, in Soeharto, Bathurst, Crawford House Publishing, 1998. G Rodan (ed.), Political Oppositions in Industrialising Asia, London, Routledge, 1996. ‘A slow metamorphosis to liberal markets’, in E Aspinall, H Feith & G van Klinken (eds), The Last Days of President ‘Theorising political opposition in East and Southeast Asia’, in Suharto, Clayton, Monash Asia Institute, 1999. G Rodan (ed.), Political Oppositions in Industrialising Asia, London, Routledge, 1996. ‘A suspect pedigree’, in E Aspinall, H Feith & G van Klinken (eds), The Last Days of President Suharto, Clayton, Monash Asia ‘A “clash of cultures” or the convergence of political ideology?’, Institute, 1999. in R Robison (ed.), Pathways to Asia: The Politics of Engagement, St Leonards, Allen & Unwin, 1996 (with K Hewison). ‘What sort of democracy? Predatory and neo-liberal agendas in Indonesia’, in C Kinnvall and K Johnsön (eds), Globalization and ‘The ebb and flow of civil society and the decline of the left Democratization in Asia, London, Routledge, 2002. in Southeast Asia’, in G Rodan (ed.), Political Oppositions in Industrialising Asia, London, Routledge, 1996 (with K Hewison). ‘Surviving the meltdown: Liberal reform and political oligarchy in Indonesia’, in R Robison, M Beeson, K Jayasuriya & H Kim ‘Singapore: Economic diversification and social divisions’, in (eds), Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis, London, G Rodan, K Hewison and R Robison (eds), The Political Economy Routledge, 1999 (with A Rosser). of South-East Asia: An Introduction, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1997. 79 ‘Singapore: Information lockdown, business as usual’, in ‘Consultative authoritarianism and regime change analysis: L Williams and R Rich (eds), Losing Control: Implications of the Singapore case’, in R Robison (ed.), Routledge in Asia, Canberra, Asia Pacific Press, 2000. Handbook on Southeast Asian Politics, London, Routledge, 2011.

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‘The prospects for civil society and political space in Southeast ‘Political accountability and human rights in Singapore’, in Asia’ in A Acharya, BM Frolic and R Stubbs (eds), Democracy, T Davis and B Galligan (eds), Human Rights in Asia, London, Civil Society and Human Rights in Asia, Toronto, Joint Centre for Edward Elgar, 2011. Asia Pacific Studies, 2001. Sargeson, Sally ‘Authoritarian rule and transparency reform: Malaysia and ‘Building for the future family’, in A McClaren (ed.), Chinese Singapore after the crisis’, in L Tomba (ed.), East Asian Capitalism: Women and Work, London, Curzon, 2002. Conflicts, Growth and Crisis, Milano, Fondazione Giangiacomo Feltrinelli, 2002. Scott, Ian ‘The public service in transition: Sustaining administrative ‘Westminster in Singapore: Now you see it, now you don’t’, in capacity and political neutrality’, in R Ash et al (eds), Hong Kong H Patapan, J Wanna and P Weller (eds), Westminster Legacies: in Transition, London, Macmillan, 2000. Democracy and Responsible Government in Asia and the Pacific, Sydney, University of New South Wales Press, 2005. ‘Administrative ethics in a Chinese society: The case of Hong Kong’, in T Cooper (ed.), Handbook of Administrative Ethics, 2nd ‘Transplanting the neoliberal state in Southeast Asia’ in edition, New York, Marcel Dekker, 2000 (with T Lui). R Boyd and T Ngo (eds), Asian States: Beyond the Developmental Perspective, London, Routledge, 2005 (with R Robison and ‘Governance and public sector reforms in Asia: Paradigms, K Hewison). paradoxes and dilemmas’, in ABL Cheung and I Scott (eds), Governance and Public Sector Reform in Asia: Paradigm Shifts or ‘Neoliberal globalization, conflict and security: New life Business as Usual? London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2003 (with ABL for authoritarianism in Asia?’ in VR Hadiz (ed.), Empire and Cheung). Neoliberalism in Asia, London, Routledge, 2006 (with K Hewison). ‘International agencies and public sector reform in post-crisis ‘Theorising markets in South-East Asia: Power and contestation’, Asia’, in ABL Cheung and I Scott (eds), Governance and Public in G Rodan, K Hewison and R Robison (eds), The Political Sector Reform in Asia: Paradigm Shifts or Business as Usual? Economy of South-East Asia: Markets, Power and Contestation, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2003. Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 2006 (with K Hewison and R Robison). ‘Social stability and economic growth’, in N Lam and I Scott (eds), Gaming Governance and Public Policy in Macao, Hong Kong, ‘Singapore: Globalisation, the state, and politics’ in G Rodan, Hong Kong University Press, 2011. K Hewison and R Robison (eds), The Political Economy of South- East Asia: Markets, Power and Contestation, Melbourne, Oxford ‘Gaming, governance and public policy: Constraints and University Press, 2006. opportunities’, in N Lam and I Scott (eds), Gaming, Governance and Public Policy in Macao, Hong Kong, Hong Kong University ‘Neoliberalism and transparency: Political versus economic Press, 2011 (with N Lam). liberalism’ in R Robison (ed.), The Neoliberal Revolution: Forging the Market State, London, Palgrave, 2006. ‘Hong Kong’s independent commission against corruption: The evolving model’, in A Graycar and R Smith (eds), Handbook ‘Singapore “Exceptionalism”? Authoritarian rule and state on Global Research and Practice in Corruption, Cheltenham, transformation’, in J Wong and E Friedman (eds), Political Edward Elgar, 2011. Transitions in Dominant Party Systems: Learning to Lose, London, Routledge, 2008. Sen, Krishna

‘Political regimes in Southeast Asia and the war on terror’ in ‘Repression and resistance: Interpretations of the feminine in D Grenfell and P James (eds), Rethinking Insecurity, War and Indonesian cinema’, in V Hooker (ed.), Culture and Society in New Violence: Beyond Savage Globalization? London, Routledge, 2008. Order Indonesia: 1965 – 1990, Kuala Lumpur, Oxford University Press, 1993. ‘Goh’s consensus politics of authoritarian rule’, in B Welsh, J Chin, A Mahizhan and TT How (eds), Impressions of the Goh Chok ‘Public service broadcasting in a ‘global era’ in (?)Santosa (ed.) Tong Years in Singapore, Singapore, Singapore University Press, Broadcasting in Asia, Jakarta: Alliance of Independent Journalists, 2009. 1997.

‘Progress and limits in regional cooperation: Australia and ‘Public service broadcast in a global era’ in T Piper (ed.), Open Southeast Asia,’ in J Cotton and J Ravenhill (eds), Middle Power Skies: The Challenges of Broadcasting in Asia, Jakarta, Institut Studi Dreaming: Australia in World Affairs 2006 – 2010, Melbourne, Arus Informasi-International Federation of Journalists, Jakarta, Oxford University Press, 2011. 1997.

‘Hybrid regimes: A social foundation approach’, in J Haynes (ed.), Routledge Handbook on Democratization, London, Routledge, 2011 (with K Jayasuriya).

80 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Smart, Don ‘Membangkitkan hak ulayat: Pemetaan partisipatif, kedaulatan ‘The political economy of entrepreneurial culture in higher masyarakat adat dan peranan mediatornya pada Era Reformasi’ education: Policies toward foreign students in Australia and the in A Lounela and Y Zakaria (eds), Hak Tanah di Era Reformasi, United States’, in K Kempner and WG Tierney (eds), The Social Jogjakarta, Antropologi Indonesia and INSIST Press, 2002. Role of Higher Education: Comparative Perspectives, New York and ‘Balinese Adat in discourse and practise’, in D Henley and London, Garland, 1996 (with G Rhoades). J Davidson (eds), The Revival of Tradition in Indonesian Politics, ‘Strategies for internationalising higher education: Some London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2007. suggestions for consideration’, in M Berrell & K Kachar (eds), ‘Madé Lebah: Reminiscences from “Jaman Setengah Bali” (Half- Internationalising Malaysian Higher Education: Towards Vision 2020, Bali Times)’, in R Waterson (ed.), Southeast Asian Lives: Personal Kuala Lumpur, YPM Publications, 1998. Narratives and Historical Experience, Athens, OH and Singapore, ‘Marketing strategies for recruiting international students: Ohio University Press and Singapore University Press, 2007. Some suggestions for Malaysia’, in M Berrell & K Kachar (eds), ‘Kapital sosial di Bali: Sinergi dan tantangan’, in IBG Yudha Internationalising Malaysian Higher Education: Towards Vision 2020, Triguna (ed.), 2008 Kebudayaan dan Modal Budaya Bali dalam Kuala Lumpur, YPM Publications, 1998. Teropong Lokal, Nasional, Global, Widya Dharma, 2008. ‘The impact of the Asian meltdown on Western Australian ‘Customary regimes and collective goods in the changing educational institutions’, in D Davis and A Olsen (eds), political constellation of Indonesia’, in S Sargeson, (ed.), Shaping International Education: The Professional Edge, Sydney, IDP Common Futures: Case Studies of Collective Goods, Collective Education Australia, 1999 (with G Ang). Actions in East and Southeast Asia, London, Routledge, 2001 Tanji, Miyume (with J McCarthy).

‘The dynamic trajectory of the post-reversion “Okinawa ‘Communities, environments and local governance in reform Struggle”: Constitution, environment and gender’, in R Siddle era Indonesia’, in C Warren and J McCarthy (eds), Community, and G Hook (eds), Japan and Okinawa: Structure and Subjectivity, Environment and Local Governance in Indonesia: Locating the London and New York, RoutledgeCurzon, 2002. Commonweal, London, Routledge, 2009 (with J McCarthy).

Tull, Malcolm ‘Locating the Commonweal’, in C Warren and J McCarthy (eds), ‘Resource use and environmental management in Japan, 1890 Community, Environment and Local Governance in Indonesia: – 1990’, in JR McNeill (ed.), Environmental History of the Pacific Locating the Commonweal, London, Routledge, 2009 (with and the Pacific Rim, Aldershot Hampshire, Ashgate Publishing, J McCarthy). 2001 (with AR Krishnan). ‘Off the market? Elusive links in community-based sustainable ‘Port privatisation in Asia’, in H Gerstenberger & U Welke development initiatives in Bali’, in C Warren and J McCarthy (eds), Seefahrt im Zeichen der Globalisierung, Münster, Westf. (eds), Community, Environment and Local Governance in Indonesia: Dampfboot, 2002. Locating the Commonweal, London, Routledge, 2009.

‘Port cities and international trade’, in JJ McCusker (ed.), History ‘Adat dalam praktek dan wacana orang Bali: Memposisikan of World Trade since 1450, Farmington Hills, MI, Macmillan prinsip kewargaan dan kebersamaan’, in D Henley, J Davidson Reference USA, 2005. and S Moniaga (eds), Adat dalam Politik Indonesia, Leiden, KITLV and Yayasan Obor, 2010. ‘Australia and New Zealand trade’, in JJ McCusker (ed.), History of World Trade since 1450, Farmington Hills, MI, Macmillan Warren, James Reference USA, 2005. ‘The structure of slavery in the Sulu Zone in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries’, in G Campbell (ed.), The Structure of ‘The environmental impact of ports: An Australian case study’, Slavery in the Indian Ocean Africa and Asia, London, Frank Cass, in T Bergholm, LR Fischer and E Tonizzi (eds), Making Global 2004. and Local Connections: Historical Perspectives on Ports, St. John’s Newfoundland, International Maritime Economic History ‘The global economy and the Sulu Zone: Connections, Association, 2007. commodities, and culture’, in B Klein and G Mackenthun (eds), Sea Changes: Historicizing the Oceans, London, Routledge, 2004. ‘Privatisation postponed: Convergence and divergence in Australian and New Zealand port reform’, in M Tull and ‘Who were the Balangingi Samal? Slave raiding and J Reveley (eds), Port Privatisation: The Asia-Pacific Experience, ethnogenesis in nineteenth century Sulu’, in C Keyes (ed.), Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 2008 (with J Reveley). On the Margins of Asia: Diversity in Asian States, Ann Arbor, MI, Association for Asian Studies, 2006. Warren, Carol ‘Adat and dinas: Village and state in contemporary Bali’, in ‘A tale of two centuries: The globalization of maritime raiding H Geertz (ed.), Society and State in Bali: Historical, Textual and and piracy in Southeast Asia at the end of the eighteenth and Anthropological Approaches, Leiden, KITLV, 1991. twentieth centuries’, in P Boomgaard (ed.), A World of Water: Rain, Rivers and Seas in Southeast Asian Histories, Leiden, KITLV ‘The GWK monument dispute: Environment and culture in Press, 2007. Bali’, in S Walty and B Wenno (eds), Environment and Change in Indonesia: Essays in Honour of Albert Lehmann, Zurich, Reugger ‘The Iranun and Balangingi slaving voyage: Middle passages in Verlag, 1995. the Sulu Zone’, in E Christopher, C Pybus and M Rediker (eds), Many Middle Passages, Berkeley, University of California Press, 2007.

81 ‘Scientific superman: Fr. Jose Algue, Jesuit meteorology and the ‘Securing prosperity and serving the nation: Japanese farmers Philippines under American rule, 1897 – 1924’, in A McCoy and and Manchuria, 1931 – 33’, in A Waswo and N Yoshiaki (eds), F Scarano (eds), Colonial Crucible: Transitions and Transformations Farmers and Village Life in Twentieth-century Japan, London, in American Empire, Madison, WI, University of Wisconsin Press, RoutledgeCurzon, 2003. 2009. ‘Rekishi kenkyu no danso o kakyo suru mono: Nihon ‘The Sulu Zone: Commerce and the evolution of a multi-ethnic shokuminchi (1931 – 45) kenkyu no shin kenchi’ [Bridging the polity, 1768 – 1898’, in G Wade (ed.), Southeast Asia and China gaps: new views of Japanese colonialism, 1931 – 45] in Nenpo (17th – 18th Century), Vol. 3, London, RoutledgeCurzon, 2009. Nihon gendaishi henshu iinkai (ed.), ‘Teikoku’ to Shokuminchi: ‘Dai Nippon Teikoku’ Hokai 60 Nen (Nenpo: Nihon gendaishi, dai ‘Singapore history through the looking glass: Reflections on 10 go), Tokyo: Gendaishiryo shuppan, 2005. museums, memory, history and the arts’, in The Past in the Present: Histories in the Making, Singapore, National Heritage ‘Showa kyoko to Mansho nogyo imin’, in Y. Nishida and A. Board, 2009. Waswo (eds), 20 seiki Nihon no nomin to noson, Tokyo daigaku shuppankai, 2006. ‘The port of Jolo: International trade and slave raiding’, in J Kleinen and M Osseweijer (eds), Pirates, Ports and Coasts in Asia, ‘Reading Basil Archer’s Diary’, in Basil Archer, ed. S. Wilson, Singapore, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2010. Interpreting Occupied Japan, 2009.

Wilson, Ian Zhang, Jian ‘As long as it’s Halal: Islamic preman in Jakarta’ in G Fealy and ‘Property rights reform in rural industry’, in Y Wu and Q Ye S White (eds), Expressing Islam: Islamic Life and Politics in (eds), China’s Reform and Economic Growth, Canberra, Asia Pacific Indonesia, Singapore, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2008. Press, 1999.

‘The rise and fall of political gangsters in Indonesian democracy’, in E Aspinall and M Meitzner (eds), Problems of Democratisation in Indonesia: Elections, Institutions and Society, Singapore, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2010.

‘Reconfiguring rackets: racket regimes, protection and the state in post-New Order Jakarta’, in E Aspinall and G van Klinken (eds), The State and Illegality in Indonesia, Leiden, KITLV Press, 2011.

‘The biggest cock: territoriality, invulnerability and honour amongst Jakarta’s gangsters’, in M Ford, L Lyons (eds), Men and Masculinities in Southeast Asia, London, Routledge, 2011.

‘Testing the boundaries of the state: gangs, militias, vigilantes and violent entrepreneurs in Southeast Asia’, in R Robison (ed), Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Politics, London, Routledge, 2011.

Wilson, Sandra ‘Angry Young Men and the Japanese State: Nagano Prefecture, 1930 – 33’, in E. Tipton (ed.), Society and the State in Interwar Japan, Routledge, 1997.

‘The Comintern and the Japanese Communist Party’, in T. Rees and A.Thorpe (eds), International Communism and the Communist International 1919 – 1943, Manchester University Press, 1998.

‘The Russo-Japanese War and Japan: Politics, National Identity and Historical Memory’, in D. Wells and S. Wilson (eds), The Russo-Japanese War in Cultural Perspective, Macmillan, 1999.

‘Introduction’, in The Russo-Japanese War in Cultural Perspective (with D Wells).

‘The Past in the Present: War in Narratives of Modernity in Japan in the 1920s and 1930s’, in E. Tipton and J. Clark (eds), Being Modern in Japan, University of Hawaii Press, 2000.

‘Rethinking Nation and Nationalism in Japan’, in S. Wilson (ed.), Nation and Nationalism in Japan, RoutledgeCurzon, 2002.

82 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Scholarly Journal Articles ‘US hegemony and Southeast Asia: The impact of, and limits to, US power and influence’, Critical Asian Studies, vol. 36, no. 3, Ang, Grace 2004. ‘Exporting education’, Institute of Public Affairs Review, vol. 46, Berger, Mark no. 1, 1993 (with D Smart). ’A new East-West synthesis?: APEC and competing narratives ‘The internationalisation of Australian higher education’, of regional integration in the post-cold war Asia-Pacific’, International Higher Education, no. 6, 1996 (with D Smart). Alternatives: Social Transformation and Humane Governance, vol. 23, no. 1, 1998. ‘Culturally mixed groups on international campuses: An opportunity for inter-cultural learning’, Higher Education Research ’Lineages of liberalism and miracles of modernisation: The and Development, vol. 17, no. 1, 1998 (with S Volet). World Bank, the East Asian trajectory and the international development debate’, Third World Quarterly, vol. 19, no. 3, Armstrong, Robert 1998 (with M Beeson). ’An empirical investigation of international marketing ethics: Problems encountered by Australian firms’, Journal of Business ’APEC and its enemies: The failure of the new regionalism in the Ethics, no. 11, 1992. Asia-Pacific’, Third World Quarterly, vol. 20, no. 5, 1999.

Bankoff, Greg ’Bringing history back in: The making and unmaking of the East Asian miracle’, Politik und Gesellschaft (International Politics & ’Redefining criminality: gambling and financial expediency in Society), no. 5, 1999. the Colonial Philippines, 1764-1898’, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, September 1991. Birch, David

’Deportation and the prison colony of San Ramon, 1870 – ’Talking politics: Radio Singapore’, Continuum: The Australian 1898’, Philippine Studies, vol. 39, no. 4, 1991. Journal of Media and Culture, vol. 6, no. 1, 1992.

Beeson, Mark Bourchier, David ’Australia, APEC, and the politics of regional economic ’lndonesianising Indonesia: Conservative indigenism in an age of integration’, Asia Pacific Business Review, vol. 1, no. 2, 1995. globalisation’, Social Semiotics, vol. 8, no. 2/3, 1998.

’Asia’s disparate political economics and the prospects Borland, Janet for transnational “convergence”’, Asian Journal of Public ‘Makeshift schools and education in the ruins of Tokyo, 1923’, Administration, vol. 18, no. 2, 1996. Japanese Studies, vol. 29, no. 1, 2009.

’Who pays the ferryman? Industry policy and shipbuilding in Boyd, James Australia’, Australian Journal of Political Science, vol. 32, no. 3, ‘“A very quiet, outspoken, pleasant gentleman (sic)”: The United 1997. States military attaché’s reports on Baron von Ungern-Sternberg, March 1921’, Inner Asia, 12, 2010. ’Bilateral economic relations in a global political economy: Australia and Japan’, Competition & Change, no. 2, 1997. ‘Horse power: The Japanese army, Mongolia and the horse, 1927-42’, Japan Forum, vol. 21, no. 1/2, March-June 2010. ’Australian-based agribusiness and Asia: The political economy of regional food production’, Journal of Asian Business, vol. 13, ‘“This stalwart fellow of five lands and two seas …”: The Life of no. 4, 1997 (with M Cloney). Fukushima Yasumasa’, War & Society, vol. 30, no. 3, October 2011. ’Indonesia, the East Asian crisis and the commodification of the nation-state’, New Political Economy, vol. 3, no. 3, 1998. ‘Japanese cultural diplomacy in action: The Zenrin Kyokai in Inner Mongolia, 1933-45’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, vol. 41, ’Labour and the politics of structural adjustment in Australia and no. 2, May 2011. Indonesia’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, vol. 28, no. 3, 1998 (with V Hadiz). Brown, Andrew

’Lineages of liberalism and miracles of modernisation: The ’Labour and unions in an industrialising Thailand’, Journal of World Bank, the East Asian trajectory and the international Contemporary Asia, vol. 24, no. 4, 1994 (with K Hewison). development debate’, Third World Quarterly, vol. 19, no. 3, Brown, David 1998 (with M Berger). ’Singapore and the myth of the liberalizing middle class’ ’Neoliberalism as a political rationality: Australian public policy The Pacific Review, vol. 7, no. 1, 1994 (with DM Jones). since the 1980s’, Journal of Sociology, vol. 34, no. 3, 1998 (with A Firth). ‘Why independence? The instrumental and ideological dimensions of nationalism’, International Journal of Comparative ’The political rationalities of regionalism: APEC and the EU in Sociology, vol. 45, no. 3-4, 2004. comparative perspective’, The Pacific Review, vol. 11, no. 3, 1998 (with K Jayasuriya). ‘Ethnicized violence in Indonesia: Where criminals and fanatics meet’, Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, vol. 13, no. 3, 2007 ’The end of the miracle? Japan and the East Asian crisis’, Political (with I Wilson). Science, vol. 50, no. 2, 1999. ‘The ethnic majority: Benign or malign’, Nations and ’Reshaping regional institutions: APEC and the IMF in East Asia’, Nationalism, vol. 14, no. 4, 2008. The Pacific Review, vol. 12, no. 1, 1999. 83 Carroll, Toby ‘Why development requires less nuance and more class: a response to Patrick Kilby’, Australian Journal of International Affairs, vol. 61, no. 3, 2007 (with S Hameiri).

‘Good governance and security: The limits of Australia’s new aid programme’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, vol. 37, no. 4, 2007 (with S Hameiri).

Chalmers, Ian ’International and regional integration: the political economy of the electronics industry in ASEAN’, ASEAN Economic Bulletin, vol. 8, no. 1, 1991.

Chu, Jou-Juo ’Political liberalisation and the rise of Taiwanese labour Goenawan Mohamad, founder and editor of Tempo, with Ian Chalmers radicalism’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, vol. 23, no. 2, April 1993.

Chok, Stephanie Hadiz, Vedi ‘Tourism as a tool for poverty alleviation: A critical analysis of ‘Economic deregulation in Indonesia’, Canadian Journal of “pro-poor tourism” and implications for sustainability’, Current Development Studies, June 1993 (with R Robison). Issues in Tourism, vol. 10, no. 2-3, 2007 (with C Warren and J Macbeth). ‘Gerakan buruh dalam sejarah politik Indonesia’, Prisma, no. 10, 1994. Chu, Yingchi ‘The new Chinese citizen and CETV’, Critical Asian Studies, ‘Buruh dalam penataan politik awal orde baru’, Prisma, no. 7, vol. 39, no. 2, 2007. 1996.

Cloney, Mark ‘Ekonomi politik “kepentingan nasional”’, Prisma, vol. XXVI, ’Australian-based agribusiness and Asia: The political economy no. 5, 1997. of regional food production’, Journal of Asian Business, vol. 13, ‘Labour and the politics of structural adjustment in Australia and no. 4, 1997 (with M Beeson). Indonesia’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, vol. 28, no. 3, 1998 Dawson, Gaynor (with M Beeson).

‘The development planning for women: The case of the ‘Reformasi total? Labour after Soeharto’, Indonesia, no. 66, Indonesian transmigration program’, Women’s Studies October 1998. International Forum, vol. 17, no. 1, 1994. ‘Theoretical and comparative considerations: Labour and the Ganguly, Rajat politics of industrialisation’, Masyarakat Indonesia (Indonesian ‘The fire within: Naxalite insurgency violence in India’, Small Institute of Sciences), vol. XXIV, no. 1, 1998. Wars and Insurgencies, vol. 18, no. 2, 2007 (with P Ahuja). ‘Globalization, labour and the state: The case of Indonesia’, Goodman, David S G Asia Pacific Business Review, Spring/Summer, no. 3-4, [also ’Reforming China: Foreign contacts, foreign values?’, The Pacific published in C Rowley and J Benson (eds), Globalization and Review, vol. 5, no. 1, 1992. Labour in the Asia Pacific Region, London, Frank Cass, 2000].

’China: The state and capitalist revolution’, The Pacific Review, ‘Retrieving the past for the future? Indonesia and the New Order vol. 5, no. 4, 1992. legacy’, Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science, vol. 28, no. 2, 2000. ’The PLA and regionalism: Guangdong province’, The Pacific Review, vol. 7, no. 1, 1994. ‘Indonesian local party politics: A site of resistance to neo-liberal reform’, Critical Asian Studies, vol. 36, no. 4, 2004. ’The definitive Deng: Biography, memoirs, speeches and writings’, The Pacific Review, vol. 7, no. 2, 1994. ‘The faces of Islamic politics’, Kyoto Review of Southeast Asia, e-journal, January 2011. ’Jin Ji Lu Yu in the Sino-Japanese War: The border region and the border region government’, The China Quarterly, no. 140, 1994. ’Indonesian political Islam: Capitalist development and the legacies of the Cold War’, Journal of Current Southeast Asian ’Transformations in the Chinese state: Historical perspectives on Affairs, vol. 30, no. 1, 2011. reform’, Journal of the Oriental Society of Australia, vol. 26, 1994. ‘No Turkish delight’: The impasse of Indonesian Islamic party ’Collectives and connectives, capitalism and corporatism: politics’, Indonesia, vol. 92, October 2011. Structural change in China’, The Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, vol. 11, no. 1, March 1995. ‘Approaching Islam and politics from political economy: A comparative study of Indonesia and Malaysia’, The Pacific Review, vol. 24, no. 4, 2011 (with BT Khoo).

84 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Hameiri, Shahar ’A history of sexually transmitted diseases in Thailand: Politics, ‘Failed state or a failed paradigm? State capacity and the policy and control’, Genitourinary Medicine, no. 69, 1993 (with limits of institutionalism’, Journal of International Relations and S Bamber and P Underwood). Development, vol. 10, no. 2, 2007. ’Labour and unions in an industrialising Thailand’, Journal of ‘The trouble with RAMSI: Reexamining the roots of conflict in Contemporary Asia, vol. 24, no. 4, 1994 (with A Brown). Solomon Islands’, The Contemporary Pacific, vol. 19, no. 2, 2007. Hill, David ‘Why development requires less nuance and more class: a ’The press in a squeeze: Operating hazards in the Indonesian response to Patrick Kilby’, Australian Journal of International print media’, Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science (National Affairs, vol. 61, no. 3, 2007 (with T Carroll). University of Singapore), vol. 20, no. 2, 1992.

‘Good governance and security: The limits of Australia’s new aid ’Annotated translation and introduction of ‘The Factory’, by Nh programme’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, vol. 37, no. 4, 2007 Dini, Indonesia, no. 55, April 1993. (with T Carroll). ‘Wiring the warung or global gateways: The internet in ‘Risk management, neoliberalism and the securitisation of the Indonesia’, Indonesia, no. 63, 1997 (with K Sen). Australian aid program’, Australian Journal of International Affairs, vol. 62, no. 3, 2008. ‘Netizens in combat: Conflict on the internet in Indonesia’, Asian Studies Review, vol. 26, no. 2, June 2002, (with K Sen). ‘Governing disorder: The Australian Federal Police and Australia’s new regional frontier’, The Pacific Review, vol. 22, no. 5, 2009. ‘East Timor and the internet: Global political leverage in/on Indonesia’, Indonesia, no. 73, April 2002. ‘The region within: RAMSI, the Pacific Plan and new modes of governance in the South Pacific’, Australian Journal of International ‘Plotting public participation on Indonesia’s internet’, South East Affairs, vol. 63, no. 3, 2009. Asia Research, School of Oriental and African Studies, vol. 11, no. 3, November 2003. ‘Beyond methodological nationalism, but where to for the study of regional governance?’, Australian Journal of International Affairs, ‘Communication for a new democracy: Indonesia’s first on-line vol. 63, no. 3, 2009. elections’, The Pacific Review, vol. 16, no. 4, 2003.

‘Capacity and its fallacies: International state building as state ‘Ethics and institutions in biographical writing on Indonesian transformation’, Millennium: Journal of International Studies, subjects’, Life Writing, vol. 4, no. 2, 2007. vol. 38, no. 1, 2009. ‘Biography within the Indonesian context: An introduction to ‘State building or crisis management? A critical analysis of the four papers’, Life Writing, vol. 4, no. 2, 2007. social and political implications of the regional assistance mission ‘Manoeuvres in Manado: Media and politics in regional to Solomon Islands’, Third World Quarterly, vol. 30, no. 1, 2009. Indonesia’, South East Asia Research, vol. 15, no. 1, 2007. ‘Risk, risk management and international relations’, International ‘In the shadow of other lives: Reflections on Dan Lev and writing Relations, vol. 25, no. 3, 2011 (with FP Kühn). biography’, RIMA (Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs), ‘State transformation, territorial politics and the management of vol. 42, no. 2, 2008. transnational risk’, International Relations, vol. 25, no. 3, 2011. ‘Knowing Indonesia from afar: Indonesian exiles and Australian ‘Regulatory regionalism and the dynamics of territorial politics: academics’, RIMA (Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs), The case of the Asia-Pacific region’, Political Studies, vol. 59, vol. 43, no. 1, 2009. no. 1, 2011 (with K Jayasuriya). ‘Indonesia’s exiled Left as the Cold War thaws’, RIMA (Review of Heij, Gitte Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs), vol. 44, no. 1, 2010.

’Costs of compliance: The taxpayer’s hidden tax burden’, Asia ‘Indonesian exiles: Crossing cultural, political and religious Pacific Tax Bulletin, 1995. borders: Introduction’, RIMA (Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs), vol. 44, no. 1, 2010 (with A Dragojlovic). ’Indonesia’, Asia-Pacific Tax Bulletin, vol. 4, no. 8/9, 1998. ‘The teaching of Indonesian in Australian universities: Some ’Southeast Asia, economic crisis: Implications for tax systems’, brief comments on the past and present’, Indonesia Gengo To Bulletin for International Fiscal Documentation, vol. 53, no. 1, Bunka (Indonesia: Bahasa dan Budaya), Jurnal Himpunan Pengkaji 1999 (with MG Asher). Indonesia Seluruh Jepang, No. 17, Kyoto, 2011. Hewison, Kevin Hirsch, Philip ’Communication: Reply to Professor Malcolm Falkus’, Journal of ’Where are the roots of Thai Environmentalism?’, TE Quarterly Contemporary Asia, vol. 22, no. 3, 1992. Environmental Journal, vol. 2, no. 2, 1994. ’Liberal corporatism and the return of pluralism in Thai political studies’, Asian Studies Review, vol. 16, no. 2, 1992.

’Thailand: On becoming a NIC’, The Pacific Review, vol. 5, no. 4, 1992.

85 Hooper, Beverly ’What are the causes and consequences of the Asian Crisis?’ ’Chinese youth: The nineties generation’, Current History, no. 90, Journal of Commerce and Industry, January, 2000. September 1991. ‘Governing the Asia Pacific: Beyond New Regionalism – an ‘Women, consumerism and the state in contemporary China’, introduction’, Third World Quarterly, vol. 24, no. 2, 2003. Asian Studies Review, vol. 17, no. 3, 1994. ‘Embedded mercantilism and open regionalism: The crisis of a ‘From Mao to Madonna: Sources on contemporary Chinese regional political project’, Third World Quarterly, vol. 24, no. 2, culture’, South East Asian Journal of Social Science, vol. 22, 1994. 2003.

Hughes, Caroline ‘The anti-politics of good governance: From global social policy to a global populism?’ Critical Asian Studies, vol. 36, no. 4, 2004 ‘Cambodia in 2007: Development and dispossession’, Asian (with K Hewison). Survey, vol. 48, no. 1, 2008. ‘The new regulatory state and relational capacity’, Policy and ‘Cambodia in 2008: Consolidation in the midst of crisis’, Asian Politics, vol. 32, no. 4, 2004. Survey, vol. 49, no. 1, 2009. ‘Beyond institutional fetishism: From the developmental to the ‘The politics of knowledge: Ethnicity, capacity and return in post- regulatory state’, New Political Economy, vol. 10, no. 3, 2005. conflict reconstruction policy’, Review of International Studies, vol. 37, no. 4, 2011. ‘New trajectories for political regimes in Southeast Asia’, Democratization, vol. 14, no. 5, 2007 (with G Rodan). ‘Soldiers, monks, borders: Violence and contestation along borderlines in the Greater Mekong Subregion’, Journal of ‘Beyond hybrid regimes: More participation, less contestation Contemporary Asia, vol. 41, no. 2, 2011. in Southeast Asia’, Democratization, vol. 14, no. 5, 2007 (with G Rodan). Awarded the Frank Cass Prize for the best article in ‘Development effectiveness and the politics of commitment’, Democratization published in 2007. Third World Quarterly, vol. 33, no. 1, 2012 (with J Hutchison). ‘The technocratic politics of administrative participation: Case Hutchison, Jane studies of Singapore and Vietnam’, Democratization, vol. 14, ‘Women and the Philippine garments export industry’, Journal no. 5, 2007 (with G Rodan). Contemporary Asia, vol. 22, no. 4, 1992. ‘Regulatory regionalism in the Asia-Pacific: Drivers, instruments ‘The “disallowed” political participation of Manila’s urban poor’, and actors’, Australian Journal of International Affairs, vol. 63, Democratization, vol. 14, no. 5, 2007. no. 3, 2009.

‘Land titling and poverty reduction in Southeast Asia: Realizing ‘The politics of Asian engagement: Ideas, institutions and markets or realizing rights?’, Australian Journal of International academics’, Australian Journal of Politics and History, vol. 55, Affairs, vol. 62, no. 3, 2008. no. 3, 2009 (with M Beeson).

‘Development effectiveness and the politics of commitment’, ‘Capitalist development, regime transitions and new forms of Third World Quarterly, vol. 33, no. 1, 2012 (with C Hughes). authoritarianism in Asia’, The Pacific Review, vol. 22, no. 1, 2009 (with G Rodan). Jayasuriya, Kanishka ‘Legalism and social control in Singapore’, Southeast Asian Khoo, Boo Teik Research, vol. 4, no. 1, 1996. ’The Malaysian general election of 29 November 1999’, Australian Journal of Political Science, vol. 35, no. 2, 2000. ‘Franz Neumann on the rule of law and capitalism: The East Asian case’, Journal of Asia Pacific Economy, vol. 2, no. 3, 1997. ‘Approaching Islam and politics from political economy: A comparative study of Indonesia and Malaysia’, The Pacific ‘The political rationalities of regionalism: APEC and the EU in Review, vol. 24, no. 4, 2011 (with V Hadiz). comparative perspective’, The Pacific Review, vol. 11, no. 3, 1998 (with M Beeson). Lambert, Rob

‘Understanding ‘Asian Values’ as a form of reactionary ‘International labour standards: Challenging globalisation modernization’, Contemporary Politics, vol. 4, no. 1, 1998. ideology’, The Pacific Review, vol. 8, no. 4, 1995.

‘Globalization, law and the transformation of sovereignty: Lee, You-il The emergence of global regulatory governance’, Indiana Journal ‘Korean direct Investment in Southeast Asia’, Journal of of Global Legal Studies, vol. 6, no. 2, 1999. Contemporary Asia, no. 25, vol. 2, 1995 (with YH Shin).

’Authoritarian legalism and the rule of law in East Asia’, Lewis, Phil Australian Journal of Asian Law, vol. 1, no. 2, 1999. ‘Temporary movements of professional labour in East and South East Asia’, Asia Pacific Journal of Economics and Business, ’Capability, freedom and the new social democracy’, Political December 1997. Quarterly, vol. 71, no. 3, 2000. ‘Developing Australia’s globalisation strategies in South ’The rule of law and governance in the East Asian state’, East Asia: The role of business education’, Asian Academy of Australian Journal of Asian Law, vol. 1, no. 2, 2000. Management Journal, vol. 2, no. 1, 1997.

86 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years ‘Singapore students in Australia: The implications for Singapore’, Lo, Shiu-hing Singapore Economic Review, vol. 42, no. 2, 1999 (with J Tan). ‘The politics of cooptation in Hong Kong: A study of the basic law drafting process’, Asian Journal of Public Administration, Lee, Terence vol. 14, no. 1, 1992. ‘Auto-regulating new media’, Australian Journal of Communication, vol. 28, no. 1, 2001. ‘Civil service reform in Macao’, Issues and Studies, vol. 28, no. 4, 1992. ‘The state of civil society in Singapore’, Media Development (UK), vol. XLVIII, no. 3, 2001. Loh, Kah Seng ‘Beyond rubber prices: Negotiating the Great Depression in ‘The politics of civil society in Singapore’, Asian Studies Review, Singapore’, South East Asia Research, vol. 14, no. 1, 2006. vol. 26, no. 1, March 2002. ‘Records and voices of social history: The case of the Great ‘The politics of internet policy and (auto-)regulation in Depression in Singapore’, Southeast Asian Studies (Tonan Ajia Singapore’, Media International Australia Incorporating Culture and Kenkyu), Kyoto University, vol. 44, no. 1, 2006. Policy, vol. 101, November, 2002. ‘New winds in economic history: A look at writings on the Great ‘Mediating and mass communicating 911’, Asia Pacific Media Depression in Southeast Asia’, Crossroads, vol. 17, no. 2, 2006. Educator, vol. 14, December 2003 (with C Giles). ‘“Our lives are bad but our luck is good”: A social history of ‘Internet use in Singapore: Politics and policy implications’, leprosy in Singapore’, Social History of Medicine, vol. 21, no. 2, Media International Australia Incorporating Culture and Policy, 2008. vol. 107, May 2003. Makinda, Samuel ‘Creative shifts and directions: Cultural policy in Singapore’, International Journal of Cultural Policy, vol. 10, no. 3, 2004. ‘Following post-national signs: The trail of human rights’, Futures, vol. 37, no. 9, 2005. ‘The economics and politics of creativity in Singapore’, Australian Journal of Communication, vol. 31, no. 2, 2004 (with ‘Security in international society’, Australian Journal of Political D Lim). Science, vol. 40, no. 2, 2005.

‘The “new” Singapore: Mediating culture and creativity’, ‘Rigour, gate keeping and security: A debate with Bellamy and Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, vol. 18, no. 2, McDonald’, Australian Journal of Political Science, vol. 40, no. 3, June 2004 (with P Leo). 2005.

‘Discursive realities: Global media and September 11th’, McCarthy, John Australian Journal of Communication, vol. 31, no. 1, 2004 ‘The changing regime: Forest property and Reformasi in (with C Giles). Indonesia’, Development and Change, vol. 31, no. 1, 2000.

‘Popularising policy: (Re)forming culture and the nation in ‘Changing to gray: decentralization and the emergence of Singapore’, Asia Pacific Journal of Arts and Cultural Management, volatile socio-legal configurations in central Kalimantan, vol. 2, no. 1, June 2004. Indonesia’, World Development, vol. 32, no. 7, 2004.

‘Gestural politics: Civil society in “new” Singapore’, Sojourn: ’Between Adat and state: Institutional arrangements on Sumatra’s Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia, October 2005. forest frontier’, Human Ecology, vol. 33, no. 1, 2005.

‘Internet control and auto-regulation in Singapore’, Surveillance Moriyama, Takeshi & Society, vol. 3, no. 1, Spring 2005. ‘Communicating provincials: The correspondence network of Suzuki Bokushi (1770-1842)’, Japanese Studies, vol. 29, no. 1, ‘Creativity and cultural globalisation in suburbia: Mediating the 2009. Perth-Singapore “network”’, Australian Journal of Communication, vol. 33, no. 2-3, 2006. ‘Unhappiness in retirement: “Isho” of Suzuki Bokushi (1770- 1842), a rural elite commoner’, Early Modern Japan, vol. 18, ‘Towards a “new equilibrium”: The economics and politics of the 2010. creative industries in Singapore’, The Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies, vol. 24, no. 2, 2007. Rezasyah, Teuku

‘Blogospheric pressures in Singapore: Internet discourses and the ‘The changing attitude of Australia and Indonesia towards APEC’, 2006 general election’, Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Indonesian Quarterly, vol. XXII, no. 4, 1995. Studies, vol. 23, no. 6, 2009 (with C Kan). ‘Changing the guards in Indonesian foreign policy making: ‘Pending crises: Crisis journalism and SARS in Australia’, Asia- From Cold War into post Cold War configuration’, The Indonesian Pacific Media Educator, December 2010, (with J Bottomley). Quarterly, vol. XXIII, no., 3, Third Quarter, 1995.

Liss, Carolin ‘The long path towards APEC: Where do Indonesia, Australia and Japan stand?’, The Indonesian Quarterly, vol. XXIV, no. 2, 1996. ‘Southeast Asia’s maritime security dilemma: State or market?’, Japan Focus, 8 June 2007 ‘Uncovering Australian foreign policy making: The prevalence of a dominant bureaucracy’, The Indonesian Quarterly, vol. XXIV, ‘The role of private security companies in securing the Malacca no. 4, 1996. Straits’, Maritime Studies, vol. 157, November/December 2007.

87 Robison, Richard ‘The technocratic politics of administrative participation: Case ‘Indonesia: An autonomous domain of power?’ The Pacific studies of Singapore and Vietnam’, Democratization, vol. 14, Review, vol. 5, no. 4, 1992. no. 5, 2007 (with K Jayasuriya).

‘The new rich in Asia: Affluence, mobility and power’, The Pacific ‘New modes of political participation and Singapore’s nominated Review, vol. 5, no. 4, 1992 (with DSG Goodman). members of parliament’, Government and Opposition, vol. 44, no. 4, 2009. ‘Economic deregulation in Indonesia’, Canadian Journal of Development Studies, June 1993 (with V Hadiz). ‘Capitalist development, regime transitions and new forms of authoritarianism in Asia’, The Pacific Review, vol. 22, no. 1, 2009 ‘Contesting reform: Indonesia’s New Order and the IMF’, World (with Kanishka Jayasuriya). Development, vol. 26, no. 8, 1998 (with A Rosser). ‘Accountability and authoritarianism: Human rights in Malaysia ‘Neo-liberalism and the future world: Markets and the end of and Singapore’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, vol. 39, no. 2, politics’, Critical Asian Studies, vol. 36, no. 3, 2004. 2009.

Rodan, Garry Rosser, Andrew ‘Singapore: Emerging tensions in the “dictatorship of the middle ‘Contesting reform: Indonesia’s New Order and the IMF’, World class”’, The Pacific Review, vol. 5, no. 4, 1992. Development, vol. 26, no. 8, 1998 (with R Robison).

‘Singapore’s leadership transition: Erosion or refinement of Sargeson, Sally authoritarian rule?’, Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, vol. 24, ‘Reassessing the role of the local state: A case study of local no. 1, 1992. government interventions in property rights reform in a Hangzhou district’, China Journal, no. 42, 1999 (with J Zhang). ‘Asian values debate’, The Asia-Pacific Magazine, no. 3, 1996. ‘Shaping common futures: The provision of collective goods in ‘Civil society and other political responsibilities in Southeast East and Southeast Asia’, Asia Journal of Commerce and Industry, Asia’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, vol. 27, no. 2, 1997. vol. 1, 2000. ‘Singapore in 1996: Extended election fever’, Asian Survey, ‘“Subduing the rural house-building craze”: Attitudes toward vol. XXXVII, no. 2, 1997. housing construction and land use controls in four Zhejiang ‘The internet and political control in Singapore’, Political Science villages’, China Quarterly, No. 172, 2002. Quarterly, vol. 113, no. 1, 1998. ‘Full circle? Rural land rights reform in globalizing China’, Critical ‘Asia and the international press: The political significance of Asian Studies, vol. 36, no. 4, 2004. expanding markets’, Democratization, vol. 5, no. 2, 1998. Scott, Ian ‘Singapore in 1997: Living with the neighbours’, Asian Survey, ‘The disarticulation of Hong Kong’s post-handover political vol. 38, no. 2, 1998. system’, The China Journal, no. 43, 2000.

‘Asian crisis, transparency and the international media in ‘Education reform and policy implementation in Hong Kong’, Singapore’, The Pacific Review, vol. 13, no. 2, 2000. Journal of Education Policy, vol. 18, no. 1, 2003 (with P Morris).

‘Do markets need transparency? The pivotal cases of Singapore ‘Organizations in the public sector in Hong Kong’, Public and Malaysia’, New Political Economy, vol. 7, no. 1, 2002. Organization Review, vol. 3, no. 3, 2003.

‘Embracing electronic media but suppressing civil society: ‘The government and statutory bodies in Hong Kong: Authoritarian consolidation in Singapore’, The Pacific Review, Centralization and autonomy’, Public Organization Review, vol. 6, vol. 16, no. 4, 2003. no. 3, 2006.

‘Closing the circle? Globalization, conflict, and political regimes’, ‘Legitimacy, governance and public policy in post-handover Critical Asian Studies, vol. 36, no. 3, 2004 (with K Hewison). Hong Kong’, Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration, vol. 29, no. 1, 2007. ‘International capital, Singapore’s state companies, and security’, Critical Asian Studies, vol. 36, no. 3, 2004. ‘Managing integrity: The regulation of post public employment in Britain and Hong Kong’, Public Organization Review, vol. 8, ‘Singapore in 2004: Long-awaited leadership transition’, Asian no. 4, 2008. Survey, vol. 45, no. 1, 2005. Sen, Krishna ‘Singapore in 2005: Vision of a “vibrant and cosmopolitan” city- ‘Politics of melodrama in Indonesian cinema’, East-West Film state without political pluralism’, Asian Survey, vol. 46, Journal, vol. 5, no. 1, January 1991. no. 1, 2006. ‘Si Boy looked at Johnny: Indonesian screen at the turn of the ‘New trajectories for political regimes in Southeast Asia’, decade’, Continuum, vol. 4, no. 2, 1991. Democratization, vol. 14, no. 5, 2007 (with K Jayasuriya). ‘Changing horizons of television in Indonesia’, Southeast Asian ‘Beyond hybrid regimes: More participation, less contestation in Journal of Social Sciences, vol. 22, 1994. Southeast Asia’, Democratization, vol. 14, no. 5, 2007 (with K Jayasuriya). Awarded the Frank Cass Prize for the best article in ‘An Indonesian film called Psimitif’, Anthropology Today (Royal Democratization published in 2007. Anthropological Institute of Great Britain), vol. 10, no. 4, 1994.

88 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years ‘Wiring the warung or global gateways: The internet in Tsukasa, Takamine Indonesia’, Indonesia, no. 63, 1997 (with D Hill). ‘Domestic determinants of Japan’s China aid policy: The changing balance of foreign policymaking power’, Japanese Smart, Don Studies, Vol. 22, No. 2, September 2002. ‘Exporting education’, Institute of Public Affairs Review, vol. 46, no. 1, 1993 (with G Ang). Tull, Malcolm ‘Introduction to the special issue on the pearling industry’, The ‘Careful or the export bubble might burst’, Directions in Great Circle, October 1994. Education, vol. 5, no. 15, 1996. ‘Resource use and environmental management in Japan 1890- ‘The internationalisation of Australian higher education’, 1990’, Australian Economic History Review, September 1994 International Higher Education, no. 6, 1996 (with G Ang). (with AR Krishnan). Tanji, Miyume ‘The performance of Western Australian ports’, Ocean Economics ‘The Unai method: The expansion of women-only groups in Review of China, vol. 2, no. 1, June 2008 (with F Affleck). the community of protest against violence and militarism in Okinawa’, Intersections: Gender, History and Culture in the Asian ‘Restricting fishing: A socio-economic impact assessment of Context, 13, August 2006. artisanal shark and ray fishing In Cilacap’, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, vol. 44, no. 2, August 2008 (with S Vieira). Taylor, Jeannette ‘A higher education perspective of linking performance Turner, Kathleen indicators to extrinsic rewards: An empirical analysis’, Journal of ‘Utopian visions and kinship divisions: Ideological perceptions of Public Affairs Education, vol. 9, no. 1, 2003. ethnic conflict in Ambon’, Harvard Asia Quarterly, Spring 2002.

‘Performance indicators in academia: An x-efficiency approach?’ ‘Myths and moral authority in Maluku: The case of Ambon’, Australian Journal of Public Administration, vol. 62, no. 2, 2003 Asian Ethnicity, vol. 4, no. 2, June 2003. (with R Taylor). Turner, Donna ‘Performance measurement in Australian and Hong Kong ‘Malaysia’s regime of labour control and the attempted transition government departments’, Public Performance and Management to a knowledge based economy: The problematic role of migrant Review, vol. 29, no. 3, 2006. labour’, Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs, vol. 39, no. 2, 2006. ‘Statutory bodies and performance reporting: Hong Kong and Singapore experience’, Public Organization Review, vol. 6, no. 3, Ward, Steven 2006. ‘The fit between cultural values and countries: Is there evidence Taylor, Ranald of globalization, nationalism or crossvergence?’ Journal of International Management, vol. 5, no. 4, 1999 (with H Winzar ‘Can Labour-Savings, Capital-Intensive Production Techniques and L Entrekin). Reduce Unemployment Rates in Developing Countries? Evidence from Malaysia’, Australian Journal of Labour Economics, vol. 7, Warren, Carol No. 4, December 2004. ‘The state, the people, and their mediators: The struggle over Thompson, Herb agrarian law reform in post-New Order Indonesia’, Indonesia, vol. 76, 2003 (with A Lucas). ‘Indonesia’s wood resource: Trends and policies’, Journal of Mineral Policy, Business and Environment, vol. 12, no. 1, 1996. ‘Mapping common futures: Customary communities, NGOs and the state in Indonesia’s reform era’, Development and Change, ‘The pulp and paper industry: Indonesia in an international vol. 36, no. 1, 2005. context’, Journal of Asian Business, vol. 12, no. 2, 1996 (with D Kennedy). ‘Community mapping, local planning and alternative land use strategies in Bali’, Geografisk Tidsskrift (Danish Journal of ‘Ecological-economics of biodiversity and tropical rainforest Geography), vol. 105, no. 1, 2005. deforestation’, The Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics, vol. 7, 1996 (with D Kennedy). ‘Tourism as a tool for poverty alleviation: A critical analysis of “pro-poor tourism” and implications for sustainability’, Current ‘Political economy of the forestry industry in Indonesia’, Journal Issues in Tourism, vol. 10, no. 2-3, 2007 (with S Chok and J of Contemporary Asia, vol. 26, no. 3, 1996 (with J Duggie). Macbeth). ‘Social forestry: An analysis of Indonesian forestry policy’, Journal Warren, James of Contemporary Asia, vol. 29, no. 2, 1999. ‘Savagism and civilization: The Iranun, globalization and the ‘Crisis in Indonesia: Forests, fires and finances’, Electronic Green literature of Joseph Conrad’, Journal of the Malaysian Branch of Journal, no. 14, Spring 2001. the Royal Asiatic Society, vol. LXXIV, no. I, 2001.

Tower, Greg ‘The Balangingi Samal: The global economy, maritime raiding ‘Disclosure (discernibility) and compliance of accounting policies: and diasporic identities in the nineteenth-century Philippines’, Asia Pacific evidence’, Accounting Forum, feature article, vol. 26, Asian Ethnicity, vol. 4, no. 1, March 2003. no. 2, 2002 (with R Taplin and P Hancock).

89 ‘The global economy and the Sulu zone: Connections, ‘Food consumption in urban China: An empirical analysis’, commodities and culture’, Crossroads Studies on the History of Applied Economics, no. 27, 1995 (with E Li and N Samuel). Exchange Relations in the East Asian World, vol. 3, May 2011. ‘Technical efficiency and firm attributes in the Chinese iron and ‘The Balangingi Samal: ‘Pirate Wars’, dislocation and diasporic steel industry’, International Review of Applied Economics, vol. 10, identities’, The Great Circle, vol.33, no.2, 2011. no. 2, 1996.

Wilson, Ian ‘China’s health care sector in transition: Resources, demand and ’Reog Ponorogo: Spirituality, Sexuality, and Power in a Javanese reforms’, Health Policy, vol. 39, 1997. Performance Tradition’, Intersections: Gender and Sexuality in Asia ‘Changing patterns of alcohol consumption in rural China: and the Pacific, vol. 2, May 1999. Implications for the grain sector’, Journal of the Asia Pacific ‘Continuity and change: The changing contours of organized Economy, vol. 3, no. 2, 1998. violence in post-New Order Indonesia’, Critical Asian Studies, vol. Zhang, Jian 38, no. 2, June 2006. ‘Reassessing the role of the local state: A case study of local ‘Ethnicized violence in Indonesia: Where criminals and fanatics government interventions in property rights reform in a meet’, Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, vol. 13, no. 3, 2007 Hangzhou district’, China Journal, no. 42, 1999 (with (with D Brown). S Sargeson).

Wilson, Sandra ‘Bureaucrats and Villagers in Japan: Shimin and the Crisis of the Early 1930s’, Social Science Japan Journal, 1, 1998.

‘Rethinking the 1930s and the “15-Year War” in Japan’, Japanese Studies, 21: 2, 2001.

‘The discourse of national greatness in Japan, 1890 – 1919’, Japanese Studies, vol. 25, no. 1, May 2005.

‘Bridging the gaps: New views of Japanese colonialism, 1931 – 1945’, Japanese Studies, vol. 25, no. 3, December 2005.

‘Family or state? Nation, war, and gender in Japan, 1937-45’, Critical Asian Studies, vol. 38, no. 2, June 2006.

‘War, soldier and nation in 1950s Japan’, International Journal of Asian Studies, vol. 5, no. 2, July 2008.

’Enthroning Hirohito: Culture and Nation in 1920s Japan’, Journal of Japanese Studies, vol. 37, no. 2, 2011.

‘After the Trials: Class B and C Japanese War Criminals and the Post-War World’, Japanese Studies, vol. 31, no. 2, 2011.

‘Prisoners in Sugamo and their Campaign for Release, 1952 – 1953’, Japanese Studies, vol. 31, no. 2, 2011.

‘Exhibiting a New Japan: the Tokyo Olympics of 1964 and Expo ’70 in Osaka’, Historical Research, vol. 85, no. 227, February 2012.

Wright, Tim ‘Coping with the world depression: The Nationalist government’s relations with Chinese industry and commerce, 1932 – 1936’, Modern Asian Studies, vol. 25, no. 4, October 1991.

‘Electric power production in pre-1937 China: A research note’, The China Quarterly, no. 126, June 1991.

‘Shanghai imperialists versus rickshaw racketeers: The defeat of the 1934 rickshaw reforms’, Modern China, vol. 17, no. 1, January 1991.

Wu, Yanrui ‘Total factor productivity growth, technological progress and technical efficiency change in China: A three sector analysis’, Journal of Comparative Economics, no. 21, 1995.

90 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Newspapers and Current Affairs Magazine ‘Buckle up, there’s economic turbulence ahead’, The Australian, 26 December 1997. Articles ‘Hanson’s new “legitimacy”’, The Asian Wall Street Journal, Aditjondro, George 18 June 1998. ‘Tide swells against family cartels’, The Australian (Special Liftout- Indonesia), 17 August 1995. ‘Why many miss the boat in sales to Japan’, The Australian Financial Review, 17 October 1995. Beeson, Mark ‘Governmental as anything’, Arena Magazine, no. 19, 1995. ‘Capital offence: Indonesia’s crisis was caused by global ‘market forces’ transforming nation-states into commodities’, Inside ‘Trade houses exploit lack of homework by Australia’, The Indonesia, July-September 1998. Australian, 5 June 1995. ‘Empty feeling as optimism shrinks’, The Australian, ‘Karaoke band must learn to feel Asian beat’, The Australian 11 September 1998. (Special Survey – Japan), 7 July 1995. Bourchier, David ‘Australia-Japan trade relations: The coal industry as a case in ‘Privatising social justice’, Inside Indonesia, April-June 1997 point’, Australian Quarterly, vol. 3, no. 67, Spring 1995. (with I Chalmers).

‘Trade in the Asia-Pacific: Implications of the US-Japan dispute ‘The sorcerer’s apprentice’, Asia-Pacific Magazine,1998. for Australia’, Current Affairs Bulletin, vol. 3, no. 72, 1995. ‘More educated, more ruthless’, Inside Indonesia, January-March ‘One nation’s APEC is another’s poison’, The Australian, 1998. 26 October 1995. ‘Why Indonesia had to explode’, The Sun- Herald, 17 May 1998. ‘Symbolic gesture that’s purely personal’, The West Australian, 15 December 1995. ‘Electoral system due for overhaul’, The Sydney Morning Herald, 25 May 1998. ‘Cornerstone poised on shaky supports’, The Australian, 1996. ‘How the new order collapsed: Rule by the iron fist comes ’APEC: Nice theory, shame about the practice’, Australian unstuck in the end’, Inside Indonesia, July-September 1998. Quarterly, vol. 68, no. 2, 1996. Brown, Andrew ’Trade with Japan: What is to be done?’ Australian Quarterly, ‘Organised labour loses pariah status’, The Australian, vol. 68, no. 3, 1996. 5 December 1994. ‘Policy scuttles fast ferry industry’, The Australian, 20 December Carroll, Toby 1996. ‘Aid misses the mark’, The Age, 8 June 2006, (with S Hameiri). ’The state we’re all in: What’s at stake for post-Thatcherite politics’, Arena Magazine, 1997. ‘The politics of the financial crisis’, Bangkok Post, 7 October 2008 (with S Hameiri). ’Competing capitalisms’, Harvard Asia Pacific Review, vol. 2, no. 1, 1997. Chu, Jou-Juo ‘Class factor could dominate elections’, The Australian (Taiwan ‘Our economy needs vision’, The Australian, 8 April 1997. Country Survey), 7 October 1994.

‘Japan’s new lesson for the West’, The Australian Financial Review, Chalmers, Ian 29 April 1997. ‘Privatising social justice’, Inside Indonesia, April-June 1997 ‘Mr Howard and the “stolen children”, Asian Wall Street Journal, (with D Bourchier). 5 June 1997. Christensen, Joseph ‘In the grip of global finance’, The Age, 7 August 1997. ‘Islands as arks: nature protection and the preservation ethic, 1898-1918’, A Gaynor and J Davis (eds), Environmental ‘Tokyo’s version of capitalism exerts growing influence’, Exchanges: Studies in Western Australian History, vol. 27, 2011. The Australian, 5 September 1997. ‘Between history and science: History of marine animal ‘And never the twain shall meet’, The Australian, 23 October populations’, Marine Adaptation Bulletin, vol. 2, no. 4, 2011. 1997. Feng, Chongyi ‘East’s collision with West has lessons for both’, The Age, ’What are the merits of Chinese civilization?’, Dushu, no. 2, 5 November 1997. 1993. ‘The Left must get off the shelf’, The Australian Financial Review, Ganguly, Rajat 17 November 1997. ‘Terror in our backyard’, The Age, 6 August 2009. ‘Economic giants in the firing line’, The Age, 25 November 1997. ‘The war of ideas’, ABC Unleashed, 6 August 2009.

91 Gore, Lance Hameiri, Shahar ‘Small-scale big business’, The Australian, 6 June 1997. ‘What really went wrong in Solomons’, The Age, 24 April 2006.

Hadiz, Vedi ‘Aid misses the mark’, The Age, 8 June 2006 (with T Carroll). ‘Upah dan ekonomi biaya tinggi’, Media Indonesia Minggu, ‘Cole removal about politics, not diplomacy’, The Age, 5 May 1996. 15 September 2006. ‘Demokrasi sosial sedang sekarat’, Kompas, 24 June 1996. ‘Howard’s doctrine’, On Line Opinion, 28 November 2006. ‘TB Simatupang, prajurit pemikir’, Suara Pembaruan, 26 June ‘Our parlous region’, The Age, 13 January 2007 (with T Carroll). 1996. ‘Julian Moti and the future of RAMSI’, Australian Policy Online, ‘Our misplaced cultural sensitivity’, The Australian Financial 18 July 2007. Review, 12 August 1996. ‘The politics of the financial crisis’, Bangkok Post, 7 October ‘Riots underline woes of the elites’, The Australian (Indonesian 2008 (with T Carroll). Special Country Survey), 16 August 1996. ‘Moti case highlights pitfalls of global policing’ National Times, ‘Rappers give New Order an attack of the nerves’, The 22 December 2009. Australian, 17 August 1995. ‘The political consequences of Australia’s resources boom’, ‘Reformasi politik’, Panjit Masyarakat, no. 38, 29 December – The Australian Broadcast Corporation, The Drum Unleashed 18 5 January 1997. August 2011 (with T Carroll). ‘New forms of social conflict’, Inside Indonesia, January – March ‘The threat to liberal democracy’, The Bangkok Post, 18 August 1997 (with J Thamrin). 2011 (with T Carroll). ‘Pelajaran dari Perjuangan Buruh Korea’, Kompas, February ‘It’s not booming for everyone’, The Canberra Times, 1997. 12 September 2011 (with T Carroll). ‘Labour policy may be defective’, The Jakarta Post, 17 May ‘A crisis of politics’, Le Monde Diplomatique, English edition, 1997. 1 October 2011 (with T Carroll). ‘RUUK dan gejolak perburuhan’, D&R, June 1997. ‘Caught between a rock and a hard place, Australia can’t just ‘Can human rights be guaranteed by decree?’, The Jakarta Post, dig its way out’, On Line Opinion, invited contribution part of a 13 October 1997. special feature, ‘Australia: Best Times or End Times?’, 30 November (with T Carroll). ‘Politics of East Asia’s mirage’, The Jakarta Post, 26 January 1998. ‘Where are they now?’ Le Monde Diplomatique, English edition, 5 December 2011 (with T Carroll). ‘Jakarta money stirs Ujung Pandang riot’, Inside Indonesia, no. 53, January – March 1998. Handley, Paul ‘Elite woes of Thai economy’, The Australian Financial Review, ‘RI needs a new political party’, The Jakarta Post, 18 May 1998. 6 September 1996.

‘Reformasi perburuhan’, Panji Masyarakat, 25 May 1998. ‘Through raucous debate, Thailand applies the rule of law’, International Herald Tribune, 25 September 1996. ‘Chance for independent unions after decades of state control’, The Sydney Morning Herald, 25 May 1998. Heij, Gitte

‘Kelas menengah, krisis ekonomi, dan Reformasi’, Eksekutif, ‘Finding a way in Vietnam’s tax minefield, 1994’, The July 1998. Australian, 13 September 1994.

‘Indonesia’s recipe for disaster: no jobs, no food’, The ‘Swings and roundabouts with new taxation law’, The Australian Australian, 8 September 1998. Financial Review (Special Report- Indonesia), 16 August 1995.

‘Menghitung-hitung Kursi’, Tempo, 23 November 1998. ‘Take your partners for access to local knowledge’, The Australian (Indonesian Special Country Survey), 16 August 1996. ‘Polls demand neutral monitors’, The Jakarta Post, 8 January 1999. ‘Foreign advisers may miss link between rules and society’, The Australian, 6 September 1996. ‘Mahasiswa, Gerakan Moral dan Gerakan Politik’, Mahasiswa Indonesia, 25 January 1999. ‘Key to success starts at home’, The Australian Financial Review, 9 September 1997. ‘Politik lokal’, Tempo, 26 January- 1 February 1999. ‘Asian tax shake-up looming’, The Australian Financial Review, ‘Tesis Balkanisasi Republik’, Tempo, 3 October 1999. 12 October 1998 (with M Asher).

‘The internet fails tax mesh’, The Australian Financial Review, 22 July 1999.

92 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Hewison, Kevin Hutchison, Jane ‘Not so risky business begs beyond the Bangkok border’, ‘Garments industry: A small player’, The Australian (Special The Australian, 5 December 1994. liftout- the Phillippines), 18 August 1995.

Hill, David Jayasuriya, Kanishka ‘Writing on the border: Irian, and Gerson ‘Asian values and conservative modernisation’, Asia-Pacific Poyk’s “Matias Akankari”’, Span (Journal of the South Pacific Magazine, 3 June 1996. Association for Commonwealth Literature and Languages Studies), no. 34, November 1992. ‘The rule of law: Authoritarian governance in East Asia’, Harvard Asia Pacific Review, vol. 2, no. 1, 1997. ‘Bans expose contradictory media policy’, The Australian (Indonesia Country Survey), 15 July 1994. ‘Asian values as reactionary modernism’, NIASnytt, no. 4, December, 1997. ‘Dari bredel ke bredel’, Minggu, 12 February 1995. ‘The splintering of the Right’, The Australian Financial Review, ‘Yang alternatif dan yang menyimpang’, Suara Independen, 15 June 1998. no. 1, June 1995. ‘Asia short-changed by Euro’, The Australian Financial Review, ‘Daya tahan pers perjuangan’, Forum Keadilan (Edisi Khusus 50 4 January 1999. Tahun Indonesia Merdeka), August 1995. ‘Beware the fascist roots of populism’, The Australian, ‘Pressing challenges: The threats facing Indonesia’s print media’, 17 February 1999. Harvard Asia Pacific Review, vol. 2, no. 1, 1997. ‘Revisionist social democracy’, Australian Quarterly, May-June ‘Rock’n’roll radicals’, Inside Indonesia, October-December 1997, 1999. pp. 27 – 27 (with K Sen). ‘It’s the dawning of a new political era in East Asia’, ‘Language divide widens’, The Australian (Higher Education The Australian Financial Review, 24 June 1999. supplement), 15 September 2004. ‘The advent of Asia’s “illiberal democracy”’, Asian Wall Street ‘Australia should seek to enhance Indonesian ties’, The West Journal, 14 July 1999. Australian, 30 September 2004. ‘The new touchy-feely Washington’, Australian Quarterly, ‘Europe takes initiative in Southeast Asia studies’, The Australian November-December 1999. (Higher Education supplement), 24 November 2004. ‘Howard’s new paternalism’, The Canberra Times, 7 February ‘Wild West TV: Televangelism comes to regional Indonesia’, 2000. Inside Indonesia, vol. 82, April – June 2005. ‘WTO and its foes stuck in a time warp’, The Nation (Thailand), ‘They’re not talking our language’, The Australian (Higher 25 April 2000. Education supplement), 20 July 2005. ‘Asia-Pacific regionalism in the form of multilateralism’, ‘Mochtar Lubis’, Inside Indonesia, vol. 83, July – September The Straits Times, 18 November 2000. 2005. ‘Iraq, September 11 and the end of multilateralism’, South ‘Southeast Asia seizes the moment’, The Australian (Higher China Morning Post, 4 March 2003. Education supplement), 12 April 2006. ‘Why public health is now a global issue’, South China Morning ‘Promoting linguistic assets’, Campus Review, 22 April 2008. Post, 22 April 2003.

‘Big neighbour fading from our radar’, The Australian (Higher ‘SARS, globalisation and public health’, World Today, May 2003. Education supplement), 12 March 2008. ‘Short-sighted decision will help to keep the poor poor’, South ‘Encouraging signs on the Asian front’, The Australian (Higher China Morning Post, 20 June 2003. Education supplement), 25 February 2009. ‘APEC sideshow has become yesterday’s fashion’, The Australian ‘Indonesian studies at a tipping point’, The Jakarta Post, Financial Review, October 2003. 3 March 2009. ‘Howard’s Third Way’, Australian Policy On Line, 5 November ‘Interest lost, a study falls silent’, The Australian (Higher 2004. Education supplement), 2 September 2009. Kenworthy, Jeff Hirsch, Phil ‘Exit to Eden or highway to hell?’, The Australian, 5 December ‘Environment in precarious balance with development’, 1994. The Australian (Vietnam Country Survey), 2 September 1994.

Hooper, Beverly ‘Capitalism expose wealth gap’, The Australian (China Country Survey), 30 September 1994.

93 Khoo, Boo Teik ‘Strategic monitor’, Access Economics Monitor, 2 September ‘Mahathir, foreign media no bitter foes’, The Nation (Thailand), 1994. 5 August 1999. ‘Prosperity the key to Indonesia’s political stability’, The West ‘Malaysia’s “Reformasi” breaks cultural lines’, The Nation Australian, 15 November 1994. (Thailand), 9 August 1999. ‘Economic revolution: Hope or delusion?’, The Jakarta Post, ‘Roar of the mouse could stop the elephant’s charge’, 16-17 November 1994. The Australian Financial Review, 2 September 1999. ‘Values of East and West converging?’, The Jakarta Post, ‘Malaysia’s political meltdown’, Asian Wall Street Journal, 24 November 1994. 19-20 November 1999. ‘Tariff gain will cause pain’, Business News, 24 December 1994. ‘Leave Malaysia’s politics to Malaysia’, The Australian Financial ‘New era dawns in post-Cold War Asia’, The Jakarta Post, Review, 23 November 1999. 31 December 1994. ‘Look, who’s afraid of a second ?’, malaysiakini.com, ‘Macan-macan Asia kehilangan taring?’, Jawa Pos, 17 April 29 November 1999. 1995. ‘Not about race, religion or riots’, malaysiakini.com, ‘Sights level slowly on culture of corruption’, The Australian, 29 November 1999. 17 August 1995. Lambert, Rob ‘Ekonomi kerakyatan tanpa subsidi’, Kompas, 20 September ‘Workers demand reforms’, The Australian (Indonesia Country 1995. Survey), 15 July 1994. ‘”Indonesian Assessment 1994” focuses on finance sector’, Lane, Max The Jakarta Post, 2 November 1995. ‘Did an opposition pass “verification”?’, The Jakarta Post, 17 December 2003. ‘Civil servants lack incentive, competence’, The Jakarta Post, 20 November 1995. Lee, You-il ‘Benang-benang kisah keuangan’, Infobank, Jakarta, February ‘Quick profits push industry offshore’, The Australian (Korean 1996. Country Survey), 9 September 1994. ‘Revolusi Keuangan Asia’, Infobank, Jakarta, August 1996. Makinda, Samuel ‘A note on rotten politicians and rotten strategies’, The Jakarta ‘Koboi Perusahaan di gunung utang’, Infobank, Jakarta, October Post, 29 January 2004. 1996.

‘After the 2004 national election: What next for the people?’, ‘Australia must review its policies’, The Jakarta Post, The Jakarta Post, 1 March 2004. 18 November 1996.

‘Out with the old: Capital picks new players in 2004’, The Jakarta ‘Australia seeks a financial future’, The Jakarta Post, Post, 19 April 2004. 13 December 1996.

‘Street demonstrations effective for achieving change in ‘Habibie’s pet project running out of runway’, The Australian, Indonesia’, The Jakarta Post, 31 May 2004. 22 August 1997.

‘Presidential elections and threat of voter boycott’, The Jakarta ‘Rupiah woes a lesson in crisis management’, The Jakarta Post, Post, 15 June 2004. 27 August 1997.

‘Terrorism: Attack the root causes’, Financial Mail Pendleton, Michael (Johannesburg), August 2005. ‘Linda Chih Ling Koo and another v Tam Tai Hing’, Intellectual Property Reports, vol. 23, 1992. ‘On Kenya’, The Australian,8 January 2008. Pinches, Michael ‘On Zimbabwe’, The Australian, 24 June 2008. ‘Economic saviour soldiers on for dragonhood’, The Australian, Weekly column in the Business Daily (Nairobi) 2008-9. 18 August 1995.

McCarthy, John - ‘Consumers discover new place for worship as malls transform ‘Villagers take to the hills’, The Australian, 1 May 1998. cities’, The Australian, 1 December 1995.

Njo, Usmanto ‘Shopping boom spreads wings’, The Australian, 1 December 1995. ‘Deregulation exacts a high price’, The Australian (Indonesian Country Survey), 15 July 1994. Resasyah, Teuku

‘Neighbours lead the charge’, The Australian (Vietnam Country ‘PBB: harapan dan kenyataan’, Jawa Pos, Week III 1995. Survey), 2 September 1994 (with C Spencer). ‘Faktor mantiri dalam hubungan Indonesia-Australia’, Jawa Pos, Week I, July 1995.

94 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years ‘Dampak penarikan mantiri atas hubungan Indonesia-Australia’, Rodan, Garry Jawa Pos, Week II, July 1995. ‘Civil desires test political opposition’, The Australian (Singapore Country Survey), 12 September 1994. ‘Krisis Bosnia dan dilema PBB’, Jawa Pos, Week III, July 1995. ‘Singapore picks its ground for showdown over Western values’, ‘Vietnam dalam ASEAN’, Jawa Pos, Week I, August 1995. The Australian, 17 January 1995. ‘Harold Crouch ilmuwan Australia’, Pikiran Rakyat, 25 August ‘Party hardliners allow fears to rule’, The Australian, 1996. 23 June 1995. ‘Restrukturisasi PBB’, Republika, 24 October 1996. ‘MP’s perks strain Singapore dream’, The West Australian, ‘Silat di Australia’, Pikiran Rakyat, 9 November 1996. 20 June 1996.

Robison, Richard ‘State Super in display of riding the tiger’, The Australian, 28 June 1996. ‘Transition to entrench new order oligarchies’, The Australian (Indonesia Country Survey), 15 July 1994. ‘Plan for information hub sets censor a poser’, The Australian, 28 June 1996. ‘Clash of civilizations could highlight weakness’, The Australian, November 19 – 20 1994. ‘Pragmatism wins vote of Singaporeans’, The West Australian, 8 January 1997. ‘Masa depan konglomerat Indonesia’, Forum Keadilan, August 1995. ‘Markets and media: Economic development and press control in Asia’, Harvard Asia Pacific Review, vol. 2, no. 1, Winter 1997. ‘Standing alone on the brink of uncertainty’, The Age, 17 August 1995. ‘Expect Asia’s values to turn out much like everyone else’s’, International Herald Tribune, 4 August 1997. ‘Asians could give Western liberalism run for its money’, The Australian Financial Review, 13 October 1995. ‘Fear and loathing of Malaysia’, Far Eastern Economic Review, 8 October 1998. ‘Megawati’s downfall, Indonesia’s loss’, Asian Wall Street Journal, 1 July 1996. ‘Turning the tables on Lee Kuan Yew’, The Australian Financial Review, 29 October 1998. ‘Riots shake Suharto’s New Order’, The West Australian, 30 July 1996. ‘Making a monkey out of free speech’, The Australian Financial Review, 2 March 1999. ‘Comfortable and relaxed, in Asia too’, The Australian, 20 September 1996. ‘Singapore stumbles on election process’, The Australian Financial Review, 20 August 1999. ‘Asian engagement necessary’, The Australian, 28 October 1996, p. 11. ‘Free press missing from Malaysia transparency plan’, The Australian Financial Review, 27 January 2000. ‘Building markets: The confusion behind Indonesia’s economic reform’, Harvard Asia Pacific Review, vol. 2, no. 1, 1997. ‘Mental block’, Asiaweek, 12 May 2000.

‘A slow metamorphosis to liberal markets’, The Australian ‘Singapore tightens grip’, The West Australian, 30 June 2001. Financial Review, 17 November 1997. ‘Opening for SingTel – but media doors keep closing’, The ‘Living dangerously’, The Bulletin, 17 February 1998. Australian Financial Review, 24 August 2001.

‘A regime that won’t go away’, The Australian, 17 April 1998. ‘Goh seals vote before poll’, The Australian Financial Review, 30 October 2001. ‘A suspect pedigree’, The Weekend Australian, 23 – 24 May 1998. ‘Cyber civil society? Keeping a tight grip on the internet’, Asian Wall Street Journal, 13 June 2002. ‘After Reformasi, it’s old forces in new clothing’, The West Australian, 5 June 1999. ‘Mahathir and beyond’, The West Australian, 18 October 2003.

‘Military consolidates as it flouts democratic process’, ‘The coming challenge to Singapore Inc.’, Far Eastern Economic The Australian Financial Review, 14 September 1999. Review, 168(1), December 2004.

‘Partnership bodes well for Indonesian democracy’, ‘Image of Singapore tarnished’, The Australian, 29 November The Australian, 26 October 1999. 2005.

‘Factions fight for Jakarta’s “honey pots” of power’, ‘Singapore’s levers of power’, The Wall Street Journal (Asia), The Australian Financial Review, 19 January 2000. 10 – 12 February 2006.

‘Australia’s ever turbulent neighbour?’, The Australian Financial ‘Lion city baits mousy opposition’, Far Eastern Economic Review, Review, 10 August 2000. May 2006.

‘A Singapore surprise’, The Wall Street Journal (Asia), 9 May 2006.

95 ‘Singapore’s founding myths vs. freedom’, Far Eastern Economic ‘Urbanisation opens opportunities for foreign food’, Review, October 2006. The Australian (Special Country Survey – Indonesia), 16 August 1996. ‘Scrutinizing Singapore’, The Wall Street Journal (Asia), 21 June 2007. ‘Mining law gives investors solid basis’, The Australian, 6 September 1996. ‘Singapore maneuvers in response to Chee’, Far Eastern Economic Review, December 2008. ‘Challenge is to tap Mekong without being damned’, The Australian, 6 September 1996. ‘Human rights, Singapore style’, Far Eastern Economic Review, December 2009. ‘Financial benefits to flow from river region development’, The Australian, 5 December 1996. ‘Singapore’s “Accountability Election,”’ The Wall Street Journal, 6 May 2011. ‘Open backyard creates boom’, The Australian, 5 December 1996. ‘Analyzing the Singapore election: A step on the long road to political pluralism?’ Asia Sentinel, 11 May 2011. ‘Staples remain unstable’, The Australian, 17 August 1998.

‘A rare contentious election in Singapore,’ Asia Sentinel, ‘Socialist market mix works’, The Australian’s Inside Asia, 17 August 2011. 26 July 1999.

‘Singapore divides over elite rule,’ The Wall Street Journal, Tanji, Miyume 31 August 2011. ‘Protests at G8 talks linked to globalisation’, The West Australian, 20 July 2000. Rosser, Andrew ‘Reform bid loses steam’, The Australian, 15 August 1997. ‘Okinawa screaming: Anti-globalisation protest in the American empire’, Arena Magazine, August – September 2001. ‘From chaos to disaster’, The Weekend Australian, 23 – 24 May 1998. Thamrin, Juni ‘New forms of social conflict’, Inside Indonesia, January – March Sargeson, Sally 1997 (with V Hadiz). ‘Collectives thrive despite reforms’, The Australian, 6 June 1997. Thompson, Herb ‘China questions worth of long march to WTO’, The Australian, ‘Indonesia: Unsustainable forestry’, Asia Pacific Daily Brief, 17 June 1999. 6 June 1995. Scott, Ian ‘Corruption, poverty and the loss of biological treasure in the ‘Constitutional reform and the problem of consent’, Hong Kong Philippines’, Antepodium Electronic Journal, May 2001. Journal, July 7, 2007. Warren, Carol Sen, Krishna ‘The Garuda monument debate: Environment, culture and the ‘When a woman acts’, Cinemaya, no. 10, 1991. discourses of nationalism in late New Order Bali’, Kulturen und Raum: Theoretische Ansatze und empirische Kulturlorschung in ‘Rock’n’roll radicals’, Inside Indonesia, October – December 1997 Indonesien, Verlag Ruegger AG, 1995. (with D Hill). Warren, James Spencer, Cisca ‘Climate, natural hazards and change in Southeast Asia’, Asian ‘Neighbours lead the charge’, The Australian (Vietnam Country Currents, February, 2011. Survey), 2 September 1994 (with U Njo). Wilson, Ian ‘Strategic monitor’, Access Economics Monitor, 2 September 1994. ‘The rise and fall of a Jakarta gangster’, Inside Indonesia, vol. 92, 2008. ‘APEC brewing an alphabet soup’, Business News, 12 October 1994. Wu, Yanrui ”New rich” boosts China’s growth’, Business Week, 20 April – ‘Asian middle class our target’, Business News, 13 – 26 October 3 May 1995. 1994. ‘Rural desire for consumer goods feeds booming import ‘Foreign firms turn minerals into export wealth’, The Australian market’, The Australian, 29 September 1995. (Special Country Survey – Vietnam), 8 September 1995. ‘Rural Chinese joining the consumption boom’, The Australian ‘Saigon South high-stakes game unfolds’, The Australian (Special Financial Review, 13 October 1995. Country Survey – Vietnam), 8 September 1995. ‘China’s health care system needs foreign injection’, ‘ASEAN pact adds some pressure to meet tariff and trade The Australian, 15 October 1996. targets’, The Australian (Special Country Survey – Vietnam), 8 September 1995. Zhang, Jian ‘Country capitalists collecting on conflict’, The Australian (China Special Country Survey), 27 September 1996.

96 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years Asia Research Centre Publications

In 1991 the Centre started with five series of publications: Working Papers, Policy papers, and ARC Papers published by the Centre; and Asia Papers and Studies on Contemporary Asia published by Longman Cheshire, Allen and Unwin, University of Western Australia Press and the Centre.

Asia Papers are intended for immediate and largely-Australian consumption. They are about 25-40,000 words in length and could deal with aspects of economies and societies of the region with specific policy implications for Australia.

ARC Papers are around 25-40,000 words in length, concerned with analyses of economies and societies of the region and with conceptual and theoretical issues. They are intended primarily for the academic community.

Policy Papers are short, topical papers between 5-8,000 words in length, typically containing highly specific recommendations based on Centre research for decision-makers in government, academe and business.

Working Papers are about 10,000 words in length and reflect the Centre’s research currently under way. They present the opportunity for staff to crystallize their thoughts and try out new ideas.

Studies on Contemporary Asia are full length books intended for a broad international readership.

Asia Papers

No. 1 Philip Lewis, On the Move: The Changing Structure of Singapore’s Labour Market, 1993.

No. 2 Greg Bankoff and Kylie Elston, Environmental Regulation in Malaysia and Singapore, 1994.

No. 3 Carol Warren and Kylie Elston, Environmental Regulation in Indonesia, 1994.

No. 4 David T Hill, The Press in New Order Indonesia, 1994.

No. 5 Feng Chongyi and David SG Goodman, China’s Hainan Province: Economic Development and Investment Environment, 1995.

No. 6 Rob Lambert, State and Labour in New Order Indonesia, 1997.

Studies on Contemporary Asia

David Birch, Singapore Media, Communication Strategies and Practice, Melbourne, Longman Cheshire, 1992.

James Cotton (ed.), Korea Under Roh Tae-woo: Democratisation, Northern Policy and Inter-Korean Relations, Sydney, Allen and Unwin, 1993.

Garry Rodan (ed.), Singapore Changes Guard: Social, Political and Economic Directions in the 1990’s, Longman Cheshire, 1993.

97 Policy Papers Working Papers

No. 1 Don Smart and Alan Marshall, Submission to Industry No. 1 David T Hill, The Press in ‘New Order’ Indonesia: Commission on Draft Report on Exports of Education entering the 1990s, October 1991. Services, September 1991. No. 2 David SG Goodman, Leadership, Social Change and No. 2 Don Smart and Grace Ang, Medium Term Market Foreign Influence: The Prospects for Political Stability and Opportunities for Australian Higher Education: A Pilot Reform in China, October 1991. Survey of Singapore, March 1992. No. 3 David SG Goodman, The People’s Republic of China: No. 3 Allen Nash, The Korean Wool Processing Industry Provinces Confronting the State?, December 1991. Structure: Implications for Australian Industry Development, 1993. No. 4 Kevin Hewison, Thai Politics in the 1990’s: Back to the Future?, January 1992. No. 4 Leslie O’Brien, The Economic Climate for Joint Ventures in Malaysia, 1993. No. 5 Philip Lewis, The Singapore Labour Market in the 1990’s, February 1992. No. 5 Cisca Spencer, Australian Business in Vietnam: Opportunities and Constraints, 1993. No. 6 Shiu-hing Lo, Changing Executive-Legislative Relations in Hong Kong, August 1992. No. 6 Don Smart and Grace Ang, Overseas Student Recruitment: Some Recommendations on the Preparation No. 7 Chen Shuping, Urban Housing Reform in China, August of Print Materials, 1993. 1993.

No. 7 Joe H Zhang and Joan X Zheng, Challenges and No. 8 Shiu-hing Lo, Civil Service Reform in Macao, April Opportunities for Foreign Banks in China, 1993. 1992.

No. 8 Allen Nash, The Structure of the Taiwan Wool No. 9 Don Smart and Grace Ang, A Comprehensive Processing Industry: Implications for Australian Industry Bibliography: Export of Education Services and Australian Development, 1993. Full-Fee Policy for Overseas Students, April 1992.

No. 9 Gitte Heij, Doing Business in Indonesia: A Tax Guide for No. 10 Cisca Spencer (ed.), The Future of Vietnam: Economic Australian Investors (vol. 1) and Tax Administration and Opportunities for Australia, July 1992. Compliance in Indonesia (vol. 2), 1993. No. 11 Cisca Spencer (ed.), Doing Business in Indonesia, No. 10 Allen Nash, Investment Opportunities in the Indonesian September 1992. Textile Industry, 1993. No. 12 James Cotton, Liberalisation in Korea: Obstacles and No. 11 Allen Nash, Investment Opportunities in the Vietnam Prospects, October 1992. Textile Industry, 1993. No. 13 Ian Chalmers, Weakening State Controls and Ideological No. 12 Don Smart and Grace Ang, Medium Term Market Change in Singapore: The Emergence of Local Capital as a Opportunities for Australian Education: A Survey of Hong Political Force, October 1992. Kong, 1993. No. 14 Greg Bankoff, Changing Perspectives of the Environment: No. 13 Malcolm Tull, Prospects for Australian Seafood Exports: State and Society in Southeast Asia, 1993. A Case Study of the Taiwanese Market, 1993. No. 15 Radha Krishnan and Malcolm Tull, Resource Use and No. 14 Don Smart and Grace Ang, Enhancing Australia’s Environment Management in Japan 1890-1990, 1993. Recruitment of International Students: Singapore No. 16 Kevin Hewison and Maniemai Thonyou, The New Revisited, 1995. Generation of Provincial Business People in Northeastern No. 15 Don Smart and Grace Ang, Enhancing Australia’s Thailand, 1993. Recruitment of International Students: A Survey of Taiwan, No. 17 Robert W Armstrong, The Influence of Culture on 1995. Perception of Ethical Problems in International Marketing, No. 16 Gitte Heij and Cisca Spencer, A Guide to Doing Business 1993. in Vietnam, 1995. No 18 David SG Goodman, China: The PLA and Regionalism in No. 17 Yanrui Wu, Household Consumption and Market Guangdong Province, 1993. Prospects in China: Spending Patterns and Demand for No. 21 Jou-Juo Chu, The Political Economy of Post 1980s Consumer Durables, 1996. Taiwanese Foreign Investment, 1993. No. 18 Yanrui Wu, Opportunities and Trends in China’s Health No. 22 Kevin Hewison and Andrew Brown, Labour and Unions Care System, 1996. in an Industrialising Thailand: A Brief History, 1993. No. 19 Gitte Heij and Thorsten Stromback, Australian Service No. 23 James Parsonage, Singapore’s Growth Triangle: What Companies in Indonesia: Learning from Experience, Future the State?, 1993. 1997. No. 24 Carlos Lo, Environmental Management By-Laws in China, 1993.

98 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years No. 25 Rob Lambert, Authoritarian State Unionism in New Order No. 49 Mark Beeson, Australian Policy Failures in the Area of Indonesia, 1993. Japanese Trade and Investment, 1995.

No. 26 David SG Goodman, The Political Economy of No. 50 George McKeon and Pemlal Dias, Strategies and Case Regionalism, 1993. Studies of Western Australian Companies Doing Business in Southeast Asia, 1995. No. 27 David SG Goodman, Guangdong: Greater Hong Kong and New Regionalism, 1993. No. 51 Shiu-Hing Lo and Donald McMillen, Images and Perceptions of the ‘Pro China Hong Kong Elite’, 1995. No. 28 David SG Goodman, China as Number One, 1993. No. 52 Herb Thompson, The Political Economy of Forestry No. 29 Jou-Juo Chu, A Sociological Analysis of the New Rich in Logging and Timber Industries in Southeast Asia and the Taiwan, 1993. Pacific Region, 1995.

No. 30 Ian Chalmers, The Indonesian Auto Industry: From No. 53 Yanrui Wu, Household Consumption in China: Wealth Instrumental to Structural Power, 1994. and Spending Patterns, 1995.

No. 31 Yang Wen Shan, Perceived Life Satisfaction and Life No. 54 Vandana Shiva, The Enclosure and Recovery of the Quality in Taiwan: Past, Present and Future, 1994. Commons, 1995.

No. 32 Werner Vennevald, The Role of Technocrats in the State No. 55 Ji Ungpakorn, The Struggle against the Military for Thai Enterprise of Singapore, 1994. Democracy, 1995.

No. 33 Constance Lever-Tracey, Trailblazing into China, 1994. No. 56 Richard Robison, Economic and Political Liberalisation in Southeast Asia: Inexorable Force or Red Herring, 1995. No. 34 Zhang Xiaohe and Noel Tracy, The Third Foreign Investment Wave in Mainland China: Origins, Features and No. 57 Richard Robison, The Emergence of the Middle Class in Implications, 1994. Southeast Asia, 1995.

No. 35 Joe Zhang, Inflation in China: A Necessary Evil, 1994. No. 58 George Junus Aditjondro, Bali, Jakarta’s Colony: Social and Ecological Impacts of Jakarta Based Conglomerates in No. 36 Noel Tracy, The Making of the New Little Dragon, 1994. Bali’s Tourism Industry, 1995. No. 37 Feng Chongyi, The Peasantry and the Chinese No. 59 Zhang Wei, Modern Chinese Press: Origin and Political Communist Party Under Reform, 1994. History, 1996. No. 38 Teresa Shuk Ching Poon, Comparing the Subcontracting No. 60 Garry Rodan, Theoretical Issues and Oppositional Politics System: Towards a Synthesis in Explaining Development in in East and Southeast Asia, 1995. Hong Kong and Taiwan, 1994. No. 61 David Brown, Reconstructing Ethnic Politics in Southeast No. 39 David SG Goodman, Collectives and Connectives, Asia, 1996. Capitalism and Corporatism: Structural Change in China, 1994. No. 62 Rachel Murphy, A Dependent Private Sector: No Prospects for Civil Society in China, 1996. No. 40 David SG Goodman, Corruption in the People’s Liberation Army, 1994. No. 63 Chua Beng-Huat, Private Ownership of Public Housing in Singapore, 1996. No. 41 Thee Kian Wee, Reflections on Indonesia’s Emerging Industrial Nationalism, 1994. No. 64 Kanishka Jayasuriya, Franz Neumann and the Rule of Law and Capitalism: The East Asian Case, 1996. No. 42 Carol Warren, Centre and Periphery in Indonesia: Politics, Environment and Human Rights in the Regional Press No. 65 August Schlapfer, Reactors on the Ring of Fire: (Bali), 1994. Implications for Indonesia’s Nuclear Program, 1996.

No. 43 Andrew MacIntyre, Organising Interests: Corporatism in No. 66 Tim Wright, Price Reform in the Chinese Coal Industry, Indonesian Politics, 1994. 1996.

No. 44 Malcolm Tull, Growth and the Environment: The Case of No. 67 Simon Avenell, The Competition for Corporate Regional Taiwan 1945 to the 1990s, 1994. Headquarters, 1996.

No. 45 Yao Souchou, Mahathir’s Rage: Mass Mesia and the West No. 68 Sally Sargeson and Zhang Jian, The Market in Service of as Transcendental Evil, 1994. the Local State? Property Rights Reform in Xihu, 1997.

No. 46 Philip ET Lewis and Danielle C Shea, Malaysian Demand No. 69 Rajasundram Sathiendrakumar and Richard Watson, for University Education in Australia, 1994. Outbound Tourism from Singapore, 1997.

No. 47 Chamlong Pobon, Jeff Kenworthy, Peter Newman and No. 70 Alexandra Gartrell, Resource Management in the Paul Barter, Bangkok: Anatomy of a Traffic Disaster, Cambodian Mekong Basin, 1997. 1995. No. 71 Sunil Pednekar, Resource Management in the Thai No. 48 Mark Beeson, Preconditions and Prospects for Australia’s Mekong Basin, 1997. APEC Initiative, 1995.

99 No. 80 Tim Wright, Small Mines in the Chinese Coal Industry, No. 101 John F McCarthy, Changing to Gray: Decentralization and June 1997. the Emergence of Volatile Socio-legal Configurations in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia, January 2004. No. 81 Paul Barter and Jeffrey Kenworthy, Urban Transport and Land Use Patterns: Challenges & Opportunities of High No. 102 Max Lane, ‘Re-organisation’ of Mass Politics and the Density Cities in East and Southeast Asia, September Weakened National Revolution in the Era of Neo-Liberal 1997. Globalisation, January 2004.

No. 82 Paul Handley, BOT Privatisation in Asia: Distorted Goals No. 103 Soek-Fang Sim, Dewesternising Theories of and Processes, September 1997. Authoritarianism: Economics, Ideology and the Asian Economic Crisis in Singapore, June 2004. No. 83 Lance L.P. Gore, Bureaucratic Entrepreneurs: Politically and Socially Embedded Economic Actors, October 1997. No. 104 Shaun Breslin, Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics: The Public, the Private and the International, June No. 84 Johannes Dragsbek Schmidt, Southeast Asia Between 2004. Global Neoliberal Discipline and Local Quests for Welfare, February 1998. No. 105 David Brown, Why Independence? The Instrumental and Ideological Dimensions of Acehnese Nationalism, July No. 85 Heath McMichael, Economic Change in : 2004. Balanced Development or Skewed Growth? February 1998. No. 106 Garry Rodan and Kevin Hewison, Neo-Liberal Globalisation, Conflict and Security: New Life for No. 86 Mark Beeson and Andrew Rosser, The East Asian Authoritarianism in Asia? August 2004. Economic Crisis: A Brief Overview of the Facts, the Issues and the Future, June 1998. No. 107 Mark Beeson, The Rise of the ‘Neocons’ and the Evolution of American Foreign Policy, August 2004. No. 87 Amitav Acharya, Democratising Southeast Asia: Economic Crisis and Political Change, August 1998. No. 108 Kanishka Jayasuriya, Neo-Liberalism, Securitisation and the New Transnational Regulatory Governance, August No. 89 Jonathan Unger and Anita Chan, Inheritors of the Boom: 2004. Private Enterprise and the Role of Local Government in a Rural South China Township, January 1999. No. 109 Pasuk Phongpaichit, Thailand under Thaksin: Another Malaysia?, September 2004. No. 90 Jonathan Unger, The Rise of Private Business in a Rural Chinese District: The Emerging Characteristics of No. 110 David Wright-Neville, Losing the Democratic Moment? Entrepreneurship in the PRC, January 1999. Southeast Asia and the War on Terror, October 2004.

No. 91 Mukul G Asher, Tax Reform in Singapore, March 1999.

No. 92 Yanrui Wu, The Emerging Health Care Market in Taiwan: An Economic Analysis, April 1999.

No. 93 Andrew Rosser, The Political Economy of Accounting Reform in Developing Countries: The Case of Indonesia, July 1999.

No. 94 Kanishka Jayasuriya and Andrew Rosser, Economic Orthodoxy and the East Asian Crisis, November 1999.

No. 95 Christopher A McNally, The Political Dynamics of Chinese State Sector Reforms, May 2000.

No. 96 Kanishka Jayasuriya, The Rule of Law and Regimes of Exception in East Asia, July 2000.

No. 97 Terence Chong, Meditating the Liberalisation of Singapore Theatre: Towards a Bourdieusian Analysis, May 2003.

No. 98 Kanishka Jayasuriya, ‘Workfare for the Global Poor’: Anti politics and the New Governance, October 2003.

No. 99 Ian Taylor, Neo-Liberal Globalism and Multilateralism: The Asia Pacific Economic Co-Operation Forum (APEC) as a Terrain of Struggle, October 2003.

No. 100 Wil Hout, Good Governance and the Political Economy of Selectivity, October 2003.

Sidney Jones and Sir Ronald Wilson, 1995

100 Asia Research Centre celebrating 20 years ‘Empire Media and Political Regimes in Asia’ conference participants

No. 111 Edward Comor, Asia, ‘Media’ and U.S. Foreign Policy, No. 124 Chua Beng Huat, Taking Group Rights Seriously: September 2004. Multiracialism in Singapore, October 2005.

No. 112 Garry Rodan, Neoliberalism and Transparency: Political No. 125 Mark Beeson, Living with Leviathan: Australia, Asia and Versus Economic Liberalism, September 2004. American Hegemony, November 2005.

No. 113 Amitav Acharya, Terrorism and Security in Asia: No. 126 Martin Stuart-Fox, Politics and Reform in the Lao Redefining Regional Order?, September 2004. People’s Democratic Republic, November 2005.

No. 114 Yingchi Chu, From Dogma to Polyphony: Aspects of No. 127 Malcolm Tull and Simon Vieira, Potential Impacts of ‘Democratisation’, Empire, Media and Political Regimes, Management Measures on Artisanal Fishers in Indonesian September 2004. Shark and Ray Fisheries: A Case Study of Cilacap, December 2005. No. 115 Vedi Hadiz, Indonesia: Order and Terror in a Time of Empire, September 2004. No. 128 Jie Chen, NGO Community in China: Expanding Linkages with Transnational Civil Society, December 2005. No. 116 Sidney Jones, The Political Impact Of The ‘War On Terror’ In Indonesia, November 2004. No. 129 Garry Rodan and Kanishka Jayasuriya, Conflict and the New Political Participation in Southeast Asia, February No. 117 David Brown, Contending Nationalisms In Southeast Asia, 2006. January 2005. No. 130 Terence Lee and Lars Willnat, Media Research and No. 118 Ian Douglas Wilson, The Changing Contours Of Political Communication in Singapore, April 2006. Organised Violence In Post New Order Indonesia, February 2005. No. 131 Garry Rodan, Singapore ‘Exceptionalism’? Authoritarian Rule and State Transformation, May 2006. No. 119 Soek-Fang Sim, Obliterating the Political: One-party Ideological Dominance and the Personalization of News in No. 132 Terence Lee, Creativity and Cultural Globalisation in Singapore, April 2005 Suburbia: Mediating the Perth-Singapore ‘Network’, August 2006. No. 120 Carolin Liss, Private Security Companies in the Fight Against Piracy in Asia, June 2005. No. 133 Keiichi Tsunekawa, Dependent Nationalism in Contemporary Japan and Its Implications for the Regional No. 121 Kanishka Jayasuriya, Economic Constitutionalism, Order in the Asia Pacific, August 2006. Liberalism and the New Welfare Governance, June 2005. No. 134 Jessica Koch, Economic Development and Ethnic No. 122 Toby Carroll, Efficiency of What and for Whom? The Separatism in Western China: A New Model of Peripheral Theoretical Underpinnings of the Post-Washington Nationalism, August 2006. Consensus ’ Socio-institutional Neoliberalism, July 2005. No. 135 Chen Ta-Yuan (Henry Chen), The Political Foundation of No. 123 Terence Lee, ‘Online Media and Civil Society in the ‘New’ the Taiwanese Fishing Industry, September 2006. Singapore’, September 2005.

101 No. 136 Yasuji Ishigaki, Japan’s Strategic Vision for Asia and Its No. 156 Lily Zubaidah Rahim, Governing Islam and Regulating Partnership with Australia, September 2006. Muslims in Singapore’s Secular Authoritarian State, July 2009. No. 137 Loh Kah Seng, ‘Black Areas’: The Urban Kampongs and Power Relations in Post-war Singapore Historiography, No. 157 Joseph Christensen, Recreational Fishing and Fisheries September 2006. Management: An HMAP Asia Project Paper, September 2009. No. 138 Toby Carroll, Auctioning off Manila’s Water Services: Market Extension, the World Bank and Socio-institutional No. 158 Malcolm Tull, The History of Shark Fishing in Indonesia: Neoliberalism, October 2006. An HMAP Asia Project Paper, September 2009.

No. 139 Chen Ta-Yuan (Henry Chen), Japan and the Birth of No. 159 Chen Ta-Yuan (Henry Chen), The Evolution and Takao’s Fisheries in Nanyo 1895-1945, November 2006. Development of the Taiwanese Offshore Tuna Fishery, 1912- 2005: An HMAP Asia Project Paper, September No. 140 Loh Kah Seng, Migrants: The Representations 2009. and Relocation of Urban Kampong Dwellers in Postwar Singapore, February 2007. No. 160 Brooke Halkyard, Exploiting Green and Hawksbill Turtles in Western Australia: A Case Study of the Commercial No. 141 Carolin Liss, The Privatisation of Maritime Security – Marine Turtle Fishery, 1869 - 1973: An HMAP Asia Maritime Security in Southeast Asia: Between a Rock and Project Paper, October 2009. a Hard Place?, February 2007. No. 161 Jo Marie V. Acebes, Historical Whaling in the No. 142 Kanishka Jayasuriya, Riding the Accountability Wave? Philippines: Origins of ‘Indigenous Subsistence Politics of Global Administrative Law, June 2007. Whaling’, Mapping Whaling Grounds and Comparison with Current Known Distribution: An HMAP Asia No. 143 Dilip K Das, South Asian Free Trade Agreement: Project Paper, October 2009. Prospects For Shallow Regional Integration, June 2007. No. 162 Gerard Strange, World Order and EU Regionalism: No. 144 Nathan Gilbert Quimpo, The US and the Southern Towards an Open Approach to New Constitutionalism, Philippines’ Quagmire, July 2007. October 2009. No. 145 David Brown and Ian Wilson, Ethnicized Violence in No. 163 Pak Nung Wong, Pursuing the Soldier-rebels: Governing Indonesia: The Betawi Brotherhood Forum in Jakarta, July Military Rebellions in the Contemporary Congo, Sierra 2007. Leone and the Philippines, April 2010. No. 146 Rizal G. Buendia, The Politics of Ethnicity and Moro No. 164 Shahar Hameiri, Global Governance, Local Rule: Secessionism in The Philippines, November 2007. Counterinsurgency in Iraq and Afghanistan as Territorial No. 147 Miyume Tanji, Futenma Air Base as a Hostage of Politics, April 2010. Us-Japan Alliance: Power, Interests and Identity Politics No. 165 Abdillah Noh, Small Steps, Big Outcome: A Historical Surrounding Military Bases In Okinawa, November Institutional Analysis of Malaysia’s Political Economy, June 2007. 2010. No. 148 Lieutenant General John Sanderson, AC, The Shifting No. 166 Katsamaporn Rakson, The Influence of the Military in Centre Of Global Power: Australia’s Emerging Relationships Thai Politics Since the 1990s, June 2010. in Asia And the South Pacific, November 2007. No. 167 Edo Andriesse & Nguyen Chi Linh, Quang Tri Province No. 149 Loh Kah Seng, Fires and the Social Politics of Nation- on the East West Economic Corridor: Towards Inclusive Building in Singapore, May 2008. Development?, November 2010. No. 150 Terence Lee and Cornelius Kan, Blogospheric Pressures No. 168 Thomas Mouritz, Reducing Emissions from Deforestation in Singapore: Internet Discourses and the 2006 General in Indonesia: The Need to Learn from Development Election, August 2008. Experience, December 2010. No. 151 Kanishka Jayasuriya, From British Subjects to Australian No. 169 Kate Barclay, History of Industrial Tuna Fishing in the Values: Australia-Asia Relations as Citizenship Building, Pacific Islands: An HMAP Asia Project Paper, December September 2008. 2010. No. 152 Carolin Liss, Privatising the Fight against Somali Pirates, No. 170 David Hill, Indonesian in Australian Universities: November 2008. A Discussion Paper, February 2011. No. 153 Wil Hout, Between Development and Security: No. 171 Terence Lee, Recalibrating Government Communication in The European Union, Governance and Fragile States, Singapore: A Post-Election Analysis, September 2011. February 2009. No. 172 Abdillah Noh, Re-explaining Malay Nationalism: The No. 154 Ahmad Fauzi Abdul Hamid, The New Challenges of Path Dependent Argument, September 2011. Political Islam in Malaysia, June 2009.

No. 155 Sumanjeet Singh, Foreign Capital Flows into India: Compositions, Regulations, Issues and Policy Options, June 2009.

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