List of Delegates, Participants and Observers Liste De Délégués, Participants Et Observateurs Lista De Delegados, Participantes Y Observadores

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

List of Delegates, Participants and Observers Liste De Délégués, Participants Et Observateurs Lista De Delegados, Participantes Y Observadores CFS 2015/42/Inf.4 October 2015 E COMMITTEE ON WORLD FOOD SECURITY COMITÉ DE LA SÉCURITÉ ALIMENTAIRE MONDIALE COMITÉ DE SEGURIDAD ALIMIENTARIA MUNDIAL Forty-second Session Quarante-deusième session 42.º periodo de sesiones Rome, Italy, 12-15 October 2015 Rome, Italie, 12-15 octobre 2015 Roma, Italia, 12-15 de octubre de 2015 LIST OF DELEGATES, PARTICIPANTS AND OBSERVERS LISTE DE DÉLÉGUÉS, PARTICIPANTS ET OBSERVATEURS LISTA DE DELEGADOS, PARTICIPANTES Y OBSERVADORES Chairperson Président Ms Gerda Verburg (Netherlands) Presidente Bureau Members Afghanistan, Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Congo, France Pakistan, Philippines, Sudan, Switzerland, Uganda, United States of America This document is printed in limited numbers to minimize the environmental impact of FAO's processes and contribute to climate neutrality. Delegates and observers are kindly requested to bring their copies to meetings and to avoid asking for additional copies. Most FAO meeting documents are available on the Internet at www.fao.org CFS 2015/42/Inf.4 2 MEMBERS OF THE COMMITEE MEMBRES DU COMITÉ MIEMBROS DEL COMITÉ AFGHANISTAN - AFGANISTÁN M. Angelo Rosario RAFAEL Conseiller Head of Delegation Représentant permanent adjoint auprès de Mr Abdul Razak AYAZI la FAO Agriculture Attaché Rome Alternate Permanent Representative to FAO ARGENTINA - ARGENTINE Rome Jefe de Delegación ALGERIA - ALGÉRIE - ARGELIA Sr Javier L. RODRIGUEZ Viceministro Chef de délégation Secretario de Coordinación Político M. Rachid MARIF Institucional y Emergencia Agropecuaria Ambassadeur Ministerio de Agricultura, Ganadería y Représentant permanent auprès de la FAO Pesca Rome Buenos Aires Suppléant(s) Sr Claudio J. ROZENCWAIG M. Mohamed MELLAH Embajador Ministre Plénipotentiaire Representante Permanente ante la FAO Représentant permanent suppléant auprès Roma de la FAO Rome Suplente(s) Sr Nazareno Cruz MONTANI CAZABAT M. Abdenour GOUGAM Primer Secretario Secrétaire des Affaires Etrangères Representante Permanente Alterno ante la Ambassade d'Algerie FAO Rome Roma M. Scander MEKERSI Sra. Julia SOUTO Directeur Jefa de Gabinete Programmation des investissement et des Subsecretaría de Coordinación Política Etudes Ecomoniques Ministerio de Agricultura, Ganadería y Ministère de l'agriculture, du Pesca developpement rural et de la pêche Buenos Aires Alger Sr Francisco ZELAYA ANGOLA Funcionario Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Suppléant(s) Agropecuaria M. Carlos Alberto AMARAL Buenos Aires Ministre Conseiller Representant permanent adjoint auprès de Sr Lucas CANDIA la FAO Asistente Técnico Rome Dirección de Negociaciones Multilaterales Ministerio de Agricultura, Ganadería y Pesca Buenos Aires CFS 2015/42/Inf.4 3 Sra. Liliana DE LUISE BANGLADESH Directora Area Alimentación Universidad Nacional de Rosario Head of Delegation Santa Fe Ms Mushfeka IKFAT Secretary Sr Juan José BORRELL Ministry of Food Coordinador Académico del Programa de Dhaka Maestría en Política y Gestión de la Seguridad Alimentaria Alternate(s) Universidad Nacional de Rosario Mr Md. Shahadat HOSSAIN Santa Fe Ambassador Permanent Representative to FAO Sra. Gabriela SACCO Rome Universidad Nacional de Rosario Santa Fe Mr Md. Mafizur RAHMAN Counsellor (Economic Affairs) AUSTRALIA - AUSTRALIE Alternate Permanent Representative to FAO Head of Delegation Rome Mr Matthew WORRELL Minister Counsellor (Agriculture) BELARUS - BÉLARUS - BELARÚS Deputy Permanent Representative to FAO Rome Head of Delegation Mr Evgeny SHESTAKOV Alternate(s) Ambassador Mr Raj PATIL Permanent Representative to FAO Assistant Director Rome G20 (Agriculture) Multilateral Engagement and Market Alternate(s) Strategy Mr Evgeny SOBOLEVSKY Trade and Market Access Division First Counsellor Department of Agriculture Alternate Permanent Representative to Canberra FAO Rome Ms Rosemary NAVARRETE Adviser (Agriculture) Mr Vladimir KORONETS Australian Embassy First Secretary Rome Alternate Permanent Representative to FAO AUSTRIA - AUTRICHE Rome Head of Delegation Ms Natallia KIREYENKA Ms Natalia FEISTRITZER Embassy of the Republic of Belarus Counsellor (Agricultural Affairs) Rome Permanent Representataive to FAO Rome Ms Lyudmila NIZHEVICH Embassy of the Republic of Belarus Rome 4 CFS 2015/42/Inf.4 BELGIUM - BELGIQUE - BÉLGICA Suplente(s) Sr Nilo Germán CANDIA YANGUAS Chef de délégation Director General M. Guy BERINGHS Ministerio de Desarrollo Rural y Tierras Ministre-Conseiller La Paz Représentant permanent adjoint auprès de la FAO Sra. Roxana Wilma OLLER CATOIRA Rome Segunda Secretaria Representante Permanente Alterno ante la Suppléant(s) FAO Mme Virginie KNECHT Roma Ambassade de Belgique Rome Sra. Maria Eugenia GAZAUI Asistente BENIN - BÉNIN Embajada del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia Chef de délégation Roma Mme Rosemonde YAKOUBOU R. Ambassadeur BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA - Représentant permanent auprès de la FAO BOSNIE-HERZÉGOVINE - BOSNIA Y Rome HERZEGOVINA Suppléant(s) Head of Delegation Mme Bio Iréné ABOUDOU Ms Ziejana ZOVKO Directeur Général Ambassador Office d'Appui à la Sécurité Alimentaire Permanent Representative to FAO Cotonou Rome M. Armand Comom TCHIAKPE BRAZIL - BRÉSIL - BRASIL Directeur Affaires Financières à l'ONASA Head of Delegation Cotonou Ms Maria Laura DA ROCHA Ambassador Mme Adjiri Emilienne AGOSSA Permanent Representative to FAO ASSONGBA Rome Attachée Représentant permanent suppléant auprès Alternate(s) de la FAO Mr Arnoldo DE CAMPOS Rome National Secretary of Food and Nutritional Security BOLIVIA (PLURINATIONAL STATE Ministry of Social Development and Fight OF) - BOLIVIE (ÉTAT PLURINATIONAL Against Hunger DE) - BOLIVIA (ESTADO Brasilia DF PLURINACIONAL DE) Mr Eronildo BRAGA BEZERRA Jefe de Delegación National Secretary of Science, Technology Sr César Hugo COCARICO YANA and Innovation for Social Inclusion Ministro de Desarrollo Rural y Tierras Ministry of Science, Technology and La Paz Innovation Brasilia DF CFS 2015/42/Inf.4 5 Mr ANTONIO OTÁVIO SÁ RICARTE Ms Manuelita FALCAO BRITO Minister Counsellor General Coordinator Deputy Permanent Representative to FAO National School Feeding Programme Rome Brasilia DF Mr Luiz Maria PIO CORREA Ms Alexandra VIEIRA Counsellor General Coordinator of Research and Alternate Permanent Representative to Development of Food Security and FAO Nutrition Rome Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation Ms Candice VIANNA Brasilia DF Secretary Alternate Permanent Representative to Ms Michele LESSA DE OLIVEIRA FAO General Coordinator Rome Food and Nutrition Ministry of Health Ms Roberta Maria LIMA FERREIRA Brasilia DF Secretary Brasília Alternate Permanent Representative to FAO Mr Cledisson Geraldo SANTOS JUNIOR Rome General Coordinator of the National Human Rights Council Ms Larissa Maria LIMA COSTA Brasilia DF Third Secretary Alternate Permanent Representative to Ms Nathalie BEGHIN FAO Counsellor Rome CONSEA - National Council on Food and Nutrition Security Ms Fernanda MANSUR TANSINI Secretary Mr MARCOS AURELIO LOPES FILHO Alternate Permanent Representative to FAO Ms Claudia Marcia RAMOS ROSENO Rome Operational Manager Program Mesa Brazil Ms Maria Fernanda NOGUEIRA Social Service of Commerce (SESC) BITTENCOURT Rio de Janeiro Director Educational Activities Ms Karime CADER RIBEIRO QUEIROZ National Fund for the Development of Technical Coordination Mesa Education Rio de Janeiro Ministry of Education Brasilia DF Mr Sergio PODGORNIK ABRAMOVICI Attaché Ms Cristina TIMPONI CAMBIAGHI Alternate Permanent Representative to Head FAO International Office Rome Ministry of Agrarian Development Brasilia DF Ms Helena FERRARY ROCHA DE BITENCOURT Permanent Representation of the Federative Republic of Brazil to FAO Rome 6 CFS 2015/42/Inf.4 Ms Maria Helena LOPES ZEREDO BURUNDI Attaché Alternate Permanent Representative to Chef de délégation FAO Mme Justine NISUBIRE Rome Ambassadeur Représentant permanent auprès de la Ms Sonia Maria RIBEIRO BALEOTTI FAO,FIDA et PAM Attaché Rome Alternate Permanent Representative to FAO Suppléant(s) Rome M. Jean Bosco NDINDURUVUGO Représentant permanent suppléant auprès Ms Miriam De Fatima FUIZA DE de la FAO, FIDA et PAM OLIVEIRA FREITAS Rome BULGARIA - BULGARIE CABO VERDE Head of Delegation Chef de délégation Mr Lubomir IVANOV M. Manuel AMANTE DA ROSA Ambassador Ambassadeur Permanent Representative to FAO Représentant permanent auprès de la FAO Rome Rome Alternate(s) Suppléant(s) Ms Bojkova TSVETINA Mme Sonia Cristina MARTINS Expert Conseillère Assistant to the Permanent Representation Représentant permanent adjoint auprès de to FAO la FAO Rome Rome Ms Mariyana GANCHEVA CAMEROON - CAMEROUN - Permanent Representation of the Republic CAMERÚN of Bulgaria to FAO Rome Chef de délégation M. Dominique AWONO ESSAMA BURKINA FASO Ambassadeur Représentant permanent auprès de la FAO Chef de délégation Rome M. Raymond BALIMA Ambassadeur Suppléant(s) Représentant permanent auprès de la FAO M. Jean Claude EKOÓ AKOUFANE Rome Secrétaire Général MINADER Suppléant(s) Yaounde Mme Alice Gisele SIDIBE ANAGO Représentat permanent adjoint auprès de la M. Medi MOUNGUI FAO Deuxième Conseiller Rome Représentant permanent adjoint auprès de la FAO Rome CFS 2015/42/Inf.4 7 M. M. FOUDAMA CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC - Coordonnateur national RÉPUBLIQUE CENTRAFRICAINE - Programme National de sécurité REPÚBLICA CENTROAFRICANA alimentaire Yaounde Chef de délégation M. Théotime SOULE BALOUWE CANADA - CANADÁ Ministre chargé du développement du monde rural Head of Delegation Bangui Mr Peter MCGOVERN Ambassador Suppléant(s) Permanent Representative to FAO M. Honoré FEIZOURE Rome Chargé de mission en matiére d'agriculture Ministère chargé du développement du
Recommended publications
  • Appendix 2 Intelligence Career Paths
    Appendix 2 Intelligence career paths In this Appendix I will sketch the main groupings in the Indonesian intelligence world in the New Order period, and discuss what appear to be typical career groups and paths. This will, to some extent, mean covering ground already presented, but looked at from a slightly different angle. However, the detailed evidence for most of what I have to say here lies in the biographies of men involved in intelligence set out in Appendix 1.1 The three major divisions are obvious enough: a large number of military men against several small groups of significant civilians; the predominance of the Army against the other services; and generational groupings within the Army. Beyond these broad divisions, I will look at competing streams within the Army in the New Order period: Mainstream Army Intelligence and the Military Police streams; the career patterns of intelligence professionals under Moerdani; the role of combat/Special Forces officers in intelligence in the 1970s and 1980s; and the distinctions suggested in the 1970s between what have been called "principled" (or technocratic) versus "pragmatic" or manipulative approaches to intelligence agencies' political interventions. Military and civilian intelligence roles It is clear that the great bulk of intelligence posts since 1965, as well as before, have been filled by serving or retired military officers - it is a thoroughly militarized system. The principal intelligence organizations throughout the new Order period have either been military in nature, or, as in the case of Bakin, dominated at the higher levels by military officers. That said, let us begin this discussion by looking at the small number of civilians who do come into the picture at different times in the story.
    [Show full text]
  • Interview with Paul M. Kattenberg
    Library of Congress Interview with Paul M. Kattenberg The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project DR. PAUL M. KATTENBURG Interviewed by: Charles Stuart Kennedy Initial interview date: June 18, 1990 Copyright 1998 ADST Q: This is an interview with Dr. Paul Kattenburg concerning his career in the Foreign Service. This is being done on behalf of the Foreign Affairs Oral History Program and I am Charles Stuart Kennedy. Okay Paul, I wonder if you would give me a little about your background. KATTENBURG: I was born in Brussels and educated there in a private school. I came to the United States in 1940 without any particular intention of remaining there permanently because I was determined to get into the Free French Forces in London. I had come from Brussels via London to the U.S. By early 1941 I was enrolled in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on a scholarship provided to foreign refugees from Europe by Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. Her acolyte Joe Lash, who was subsequently her biographer, was the administrator of this. After I started college at Chapel Hill I never gave leaving the United States another thought. Immediately after graduation in March 1943, on a speed up system, I was drafted into the army. After basic training, I was assigned to ASTP where for some reason which I will never be able to understand I was put into East Asian area and language studies and sent to study Chinese at Harvard. From there I went to the Office of Strategic Services and they plucked me out for a western European mission, a sabotage mission.
    [Show full text]
  • Bagaimana Indonesia Merujuk Malaysia
    Memperingati 15 tahun tamatnya Konfrontasi EJAK dilancarkan konfrontasi Indonesia terhadap. Malaysia dalam tahun 1963, maka putuslah hubungan rasmi kedua-dua buah negara. Ini adalah kerana Indonesia tidak mahu mengakui Malaysia yang saat itu disebut Bagaimana Indonesia sebagai satu projek Neo-kolonialis. Setahun berikutnya kegiatan konfrontasi dari pihak Indonesia memuncak. Pemusatan pasukan di perbatasan diperkukuhkan, di sam- ping beberapa pasukan payung terjun diturun- kan di kawasan pedalaman Malaysia di sam- ping beberapa kegiatan sabotaj dijalankan. merujuk Malaysia Namun perubahan situasi di dalam negeri Indonesia yang berubah sejak tahun 1965 DI DEWAN "Pancasila" Kementerian menjadikan adanya kehendak untuk memu- Luar Negeri Indonesia baru-baru ini lihkan kembali hubung- telah berlangsungnya satu upacara an antara kedua-dua penuh "nostalgia" memperingati tamat- buah negara termasuk nya konfrontasi yang genapnya 15 Singapura. (Singapura memisahkan dirinya dari tahun pada 11 Ogos lalu. Malaysia pada 9 Ogos MEREKA yang turut hadir dalam majlis mem- 1965) peringati rujuknya Malaysia — Indonesia ini adalah terdiri dari mereka yang telah turut menyertai usaha Usaha ke arah ber- pendamaian sehingga datangnya missi Angkatan Ber- baik-baik ini dilakukan senjata Republik Indonesia dengan Hercules ke Kua- oleh beberapa pihak, na- la Lumpur dan Kedah. mun yang akhirnya ber- Pertemuan itu juga akhirnya telah mewujudkan hasil adalah usaha yang DES ALWI "pertemuan Bangkok" yang pada akhirnya terukir per- dijalankan oleh kelom- janjian ikatan muhibbah kedua-dua negara di Jakarta pok Ali Murtopo. warganegara pada 11 Ogos 1966. Kelompok ini terdiri Indonesia yang juga Dari Malaysia yang turut hadir dalam majlis ter- dari Ali Murtopo. Benny bekas pelarian politik diri dari Menteri Luar Negeri Malaysia, Tan Sri Gha- Murdani, Abdul Rach- yang saat itu menetap di zali Shafie [Joe Louis) selaku ketua rombongan yang mengetuai rombongan Malaysia seramai 41 orang, an- man Romly, Jarry Albert Malaysia.
    [Show full text]
  • ANNEX 1 the DELEGATES of the 5Th ASEM CULTURE MINISTERS
    ANNEX 1 THE DELEGATES OF THE 5th ASEM CULTURE MINISTERS MEETING Yogyakarta, Indonesia, 17-19 September 2012 NO COUNTRY NAME OFFICIAL TITLE INSTITUTION Federal Ministry for Education, 1 Austria Norbert Riedl Director Arts and Culture Ministry of Information and and H.E. Abul Kalam Azad Minister Ministry of Cultural Affairs 2 Bangladesh Embassy of Bangladesh in H.E. Golam Mohammad Ambassador Indonesia 3 Belgium Arnaud Lion Deputy Head of Mission Embassy of Belgium in Indonesia H.E. Dato Seri Setia Awang H. Minister Hazair Bin H. Abdullah H. Mohd Rozan bin Dato Paduka H. Permanent Secretary Mohd Yunos Bantong bin Antaran Director of Museum Department Dk Hj. Juni Hana binti Pengiran Haji Ministry of Culture, Youth, and 4 Brunei Darussalam Assistant Head of Culture Officer Chuchu Sport Norlita binti Haji Ahmad Shaminan bin H. Mohd Yassin Personal Assistant Helena Mahathir Second Secretary 5 Bulgaria Katina Novkova Chargé d’Affaires a.i Embassy of Bulgaria in Indonesia 6 Cambodia H.E. Samraing Kamsan Secretary of State Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts Deputy Director General of Bureau for Zhang Aiping External Cultural Relations Song Wei Deputy Director of Department of Policy Ministry of Culture Wang Hanjie Director People Republic of 7 Director of Chinese State Administration of China Zhang Jianhua Cultural Heritage Zhang Ling Deputy Director Division Shao Yiwu Cultural Councellor Embassy of China in Indonesia Yang Xiaoqiang Second Secretary H.E. Nicos Panayi Ambassador 8 Cyprus Embassy of Cyprus in Indonesia Michael Chatzikyrou Deputy of Embassy Embassy of Czech Republic in 9 Czech Republic H.E. Tomas Smetanka Ambassador Indonesia 10 Denmark Mogens A.
    [Show full text]
  • VU Research Portal
    VU Research Portal review van: Wonder en geweld. De Molukken in de verbeelding van vertellers en schrijvers [Review of: H. Straver (2007) Wonder en geweld. De Molukken in de verbeelding van vertellers en schrijvers (2dln)] Schutte, G.J. published in Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde 2009 document version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Link to publication in VU Research Portal citation for published version (APA) Schutte, G. J. (2009). review van: Wonder en geweld. De Molukken in de verbeelding van vertellers en schrijvers [Review of: H. Straver (2007) Wonder en geweld. De Molukken in de verbeelding van vertellers en schrijvers (2dln)]. Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde, 165, 417-419. General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. • Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. • You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain • You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal ? Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. E-mail address: [email protected] Download date: 29. Sep. 2021 Book reviews Des Alwi, Friends and exiles; A memoir of the nutmeg isles and the Indonesian nationalist movement.
    [Show full text]
  • Traces of the Socialist in Exile: Mohammad Hatta and Sutan Sjahrir
    The Journal of Society and Media, April 2020, Vol. 4(1) 133-155 https://journal.unesa.ac.id/index.php/jsm/index E-ISSN 2580-1341 and P-ISSN 2721-0383 Accredited No.36/E/KPT/2019 DOI: 10.26740/jsm.v4n1.p133-155 Traces of The Socialist in Exile: Mohammad Hatta and Sutan Sjahrir Muhammad Farid1* 1Lecture of Social Science, STKIP Hatta-Sjahrir, Banda Naira, Maluku Tengah, Indonesia Nusantara, Banda, Kabupaten Maluku Tengah, Maluku, Indonesia Email: [email protected] Abstract This paper aims to reveal the traces of the two national figures, Mohammad Hatta and Sutan Sjahrir during exile in Banda Naira. Both are warrior figures that are difficult to forget in the history of the nation. But their popularity was barely revealed during their exile in Banda Naira. In fact, the legacy of their thoughts and role models is needed to respond to the crisis of leaders who have morality and integrity for Indonesia, and at the same time respond to the challenges of the global era. This paper based on the results of qualitative-historical research, using a phenomenological perspective, especially on the narratives of everyday life of Hatta and Sjahrir in exile Banda. The results of this study indicate that Hatta and Sjahrir were both patriots and educators even they were far away in exile. They built an "Kelas Sore" for Banda children, teaching the values of everyday life, including; religious-ethics, self-integrity, and nationalism. These values are become valuable exemplary for todays young generation, and especially for the people of Banda Naira.
    [Show full text]
  • Downloaded from Brill.Com09/28/2021 07:30:37AM Via Free Access 358 Book Reviews
    Book reviews Des Alwi, Friends and exiles; A memoir of the nutmeg isles and the Indonesian nationalist movement. Edited by Barbara S. Harvey. Ithaca, New York: South East Asia Program Publications, Cornell University, 2008, vii + 171 pp. ISBN 9780877277446. Price: USD 20.95 (paperback). CHRIS F. VAN FRAASSEN Goes (Netherlands) [email protected] Des Alwi was born on 17 November 1927 in Banda Neira, capital of the fabled ‘Nutmeg Isles’. His maternal grandfather, Said Tjong Baadilla (1859-1933), born from a marriage between an Arab entrepreneur and a daughter of the head of the Chinese community in Banda, was a very prominent figure in Bandanese society. He had got fabulous rich by the exploitation of pearl banks. However, in the beginning of the 1930s he became bankrupt and shortly the- reafter he passed away, according to Des Alwi in this memoir (p. 15) in 1934, and according to other sources on February 4, 1933. Des Alwi’s paternal grandfather, Pangeran Omar, descended from the royal dynasty of Palembang. He came to the Moluccas to seek information about the fate of his grandfather, Sultan Mahmud Badaruddin of Palembang (1818-1821), who had been banned to Ternate in 1825, where he died in 1852. Des Alwi’s father was born in Ternate and came to Banda in 1912, where he got a job in the Baadilla fleet. He married a daughter of Said Tjong Baadilla in 1923. After the Baadilla glory had crumbled in the early 1930s, Des Alwi grew up in destitute circumstances. Nevertheless, in Friends and exiles he looks back on a relatively carefree youth.
    [Show full text]
  • A Study of Foreign Policies with Special Reference to Bilateral
    Malaysia and Indonesia: A Study of Foreign Policies with Special Reference to Bilateral Relations Ahmad Nizar Yaakub This thesis is presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Arts) The University of Western Australia School of Social and Cultural Studies Discipline of Political Science and International Relations October 2009 i Abstract In the post-Cold War era, the ‘special relationship’ between Malaysia and Indonesia appears to have become not as cordial as during the 1970s-80s. In fact, it has been characterized more by conflict and rivalry than cooperation. Many issues have contributed to the tension namely, clash of personality between leaders, national political transformation, cross-border environmental concerns, illegal migrant workers, separatist movement, territorial disputes, transnational terrorism, and disputes over cultural rights. While examining those specific developments, this thesis organizes its analysis of Malaysian and Indonesian foreign policies, with special reference to their evolving bilateral relations, from a constructivist perspective. Constructivists believe that culture, ethnicity, elite/leadership, national identity, and religious beliefs are among the main factors which should be examined in order to better understand a state’s behaviour in relation to other states in the international arena. Those non-material factors, which are ignored or under-studied in the leading international theories which mostly focus on military/economic power and the international system underpinned by balance of power, provide a useful interpretive framework to understand the cases of Malaysia and Indonesia. Deploying this constructivist perspective, this thesis examines and compares those factors’ impact on Malaysian and Indonesian foreign policies in general, and on their conduct of bilateral relations in particular, in the post-Cold War era.
    [Show full text]
  • Tempo Edisi Khusus “Sjahrir”
    Tempo edisi khusus “Sjahrir” Tempo Edisi Khusus “Sjahrir” Peran Besar Bung Kecil................................................................................. 1 Sjahrir Adalah ... ........................................................................................... 4 Rumah di Kaki Singgalang ........................................................................... 8 Kolaborasi Dua Pejuang Sayap Kiri ............................................................. 10 Sang Atom dan Dua Ideologi ........................................................................ 13 Surat Pengagum Faust .................................................................................. 15 Berkawan Lewat Diplomasi Beras ............................................................... 17 Berbagi Peran dari Bawah Tanah ................................................................ 20 Manifesto Seorang Antifasis ......................................................................... 23 Tak Ada Patung Bung Kecil ......................................................................... 25 Paspor Pertama Indonesia ............................................................................ 27 Zurich, Detik-detik Terakhir ........................................................................ 28 Patah Arang Kawan Seiring ......................................................................... 31 Tiga Serangkai Ahli Waris Revolusi ............................................................ 35 Kasih yang Tak Sampai................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Killing of Brigadier General A.W.S. Mallaby in Allied Duty In
    Advances in Social Science, Education and Humanities Research, volume 473 Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Social Sciences (ICSS 2020) The Killing of Brigadier General A.W.S. Mallaby in Allied Duty in Surabaya 1945 Sumarno* Wisnu Septina Alrianingrum History Education Department History Education Department History Education Department Faculty of Social Sciences and Law, Faculty of Social Sciences and Law, Faculty of Social Sciences and Law, Universitas Negeri Surabaya, Indonesia Universitas Negeri Surabaya, Indonesia Universitas Negeri Surabaya, Indonesia [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Abstract—Research into the killing of Brigadier General A.W.S. Mallaby in Surabaya is still interesting I. INTRODUCTION because there is still controversy over who committed Brigadier General Aubertin Walter Sothern the murder. This study examined the events that had MallabyAn officer born in the United Kingdom, 12 occurred on the killing of Mallaby in Surabaya in the December 1899 who died in Surabaya, Indonesia, 30 Allied assignment of 1945. The Historical method was October 1945 at the age of 45 years remains interesting to used by analyzing several sources, especially examined, because his death in the Allied duties in autobiography and biography of Ruslan Abdulgani as Surabaya were still debated until this day,to find out the real the perpetrators in the event, a source of the 1945 murderer. Besides, he did not die in the battlefield, newspaper published from the Netherlands, the sources insteadencounter against the youthwarrior who opposed of the work of the survey results of the perpetrators of after the ceasefire had been agreed with President Sukarno, the events of 1945, and also several sources in National to stop the fighting[1].
    [Show full text]
  • Uniqbu Journal of Social Sciences (UJSS)
    Uniqbu Journal of Social Sciences (UJSS) Volume 1 Nomor 2, Agustus 2020 Halaman 13–21 ”DO.TER JAWA‘ DI PENGASINGAN BANDA: TELADAN NASIONALISME DAN HUMANISME TJIPTO MANGUNKUSUMO DI BANDA NAIRA (”Dokter Jawa‘ in Exile of Banda: The Model of Nationalism and Humanism Tjipto Mangunkusumo in Banda Naira) Muhammad Farid Dosen Sejarah Sosial, Program Studi Pendidikan Sejarah STKIP Hatta-Sjahrir, Banda Naira [email protected] (Diterima: 07 Agustus; Direvisi 09 Agustus; Disetujui: Agustus 2020) Abstract This study aims to reveal the thoughts of nationalism and humanism of Tjipto Mangunkusumo's in Banda Naira. He was one of the national figures who exiled in Banda Naira in 1928. Came after, Mr. Iwa Kusumasumantri, Mohammad Hatta, and Sutan Sjahrir. The thoughts and examples of national figures are important to be revealed to answer the problems of national leadership with integrity today. This paper is based on modern historiographic research, which is an approach to reconstructing images of the past based on data for the purpose of explaining the present and designing the future. Modern historiography was chosen to test the 'validity' of historical facts by means of modern methodological measures. Focuses on tracing perceptions, interpretations and historical methods used by past historians to then contextualize for the present. This study shows that Tjipto's idea of nationalism is democratic-nationalism. This category is understood as a combination of revolutionary ideas on the one hand, and Tjipto's negotiating actions on the other. The character of Tjipto's humanism is political-humanism. This refers to the fact of Tjipto's struggle which aims to fight against the authority of human desire to colonize humans.
    [Show full text]
  • INDO 50 0 1106971426 61 76.Pdf (1006.Kb)
    Invincible Kitsch or A s Tourists in the A ge o f D es A lwi Tsuchiya Kenji and James Siegel The Banda Islands lie about 1,500 miles from Jakarta, more or less the same distance from the Indonesian capital as Bangkok. The main town on the islands, Bandaneira, is set on an island, Neira (sometimes Naira), only a few kilometers from end to end. Across its harbor is an almost perfect cone, the volcanic mountain Gunung Api, whose slopes enter the sea with only the slightest flange at their base. Less than 700 meters in height, its dwarf size and its perfect shape make it seem more an emblem of a volcano than a mountain whose erup­ tions have caused disaster. A third, longer island, Lontor or Banda Besar, wraps itself around the back of Neira. Entering the harbor, the harbor mouths disappear into the folds formed by Gunung Api and Lontor; one seems to find oneself on a lake. The clarity of the waters, the profusion of coral and multicolored fish, the ease with which the fish are obtained, the self sufficiency of these remote islands, which even during the difficulties of the Japanese occupation are said not to have experienced hunger; all this makes one feel that utopia is rightly set on a distant island. The authors spent February 20th through February 24th, 1988 as tourists on Banda. This account is based on what we were told there unless, of course, we cite other sources.1 Aside from a few officials and tourists, the population of Banda is divided into two: Bandanese (Orang Banda) and Butungese (Orang Butung).
    [Show full text]