Indonesia Forum 2016 Year in Review Contents

Indonesia Forum: An Overview - 3 Convenor’s Report - 4 Indonesia Forum Postgraduate Roundtable - 6 Faculty of Arts - 7 Asia Institute - 10 School of Social and Political Sciences - 16 School of Historical and Philosophical Studies - 20 Grimwade Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation - 24 Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences - 25 The Nossal Institute for Global Health - 25 Department of Paediatrics - 28 Department of Medical Education - 30 Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning - 32 Faculty of Business and Economics - 36 Melbourne Graduate School of Education - 38 Melbourne School of Engineering - 39 Library - 40 Melbourne Law School - 41 Faculty of Science - 44 Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences - 46 Vicorian College of the Arts - 47 Melbourne Conservatorium of Music - 47 AsiaLink - 50 Asialink Arts - 50 Asialink Business - 51 Asialink Diplomacy - 52 Asia Education Foundation - 53 Appendix 1: Publications - 54 Appendix 2: Staff with Indonesia interests - 59 Appendix 3: Postgraduate students with Indonesia-focused research topics - 70 Appendix 4: Indonesia-related theses completed in 2016 - 72 Appendix 5: 2015-2016 Indonesian student enrolments by faculty - 73 3

Indonesia Forum: An Overview

The University of Melbourne pioneered Indonesian studies in the mid-1950s. Over the decades, there has been a growth in student numbers, staffing and the diversity of Indonesia-related subjects offered to students. Research and teaching relating to Indonesia is conducted across several Faculties, Departments and Centres, including Architecture, Building and Planning, Arts, Business and Commerce, Economics, Engineering, Science, Law and Medicine.

Formed in 1991 as the Indonesia Interest Group, the Indonesia Forum is an informal and open network of academics and administrative staff of the University who share a common interest and professional involvement in Indonesia. Members keep in touch by email and hold regular meetings, seminars and discussions. For the past 25 years, the Indonesia Forum has hosted major functions that have brought together the wider Melbourne Indonesian and Indonesia-interested community on campus.

The Indonesia Forum also plays a policy advisory role on Indonesia-related issues within the University and works closely with the Asia Institute and Asialink, whose missions are related but more broadly oriented towards Asia as a whole. The Forum also maintains close links with the Indonesian Postgraduate Students Association, international students from Indonesia and domestic students studying in Indonesia-related areas. Since 1999, the Indonesia Forum has convened six-monthly postgraduate roundtables for students studying in Indonesia-related fields.

The Indonesia Forum maintains an email bulletin, moderated by Charles A Coppel, to keep members up to date with Indonesia-related events on campus and elsewhere, including in Indonesia. Its website, indonesiaforum.arts.unimelb.edu.au, provides Indonesia-related information for staff, students, prospective students and colleagues from other institutions. From 2014, the Forum began running a Facebook page, which it uses to connect with the Indonesia-interested community and promote its events: facebook.com/indonesiaforummelbourne. The Indonesia at Melbourne blog, indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au, was founded by Indonesia Forum members, Professor Tim Lindsey and Dr Dave McRae, who comprise the editorial board along with Dr Ken Setiawan. The blog has been edited since its establishment by Tim Mann. 4 5

Convenor’s Report

Celebrating its 25th anniversary, the Indonesia Forum had a busy and for the 33rd annual conference of the Society of Architectural Historians highly productive 2016, and it is our pleasure to revisit our activities and Australia and New Zealand (SAHANZ), held in Melbourne from 6-9 July. achievements in this report. As one of the longest running university-wide In 2016, the Forum also supported Indonesian postgraduate students forums, the Indonesia Forum has continued to remain true to its collegial to host a series of documentary movie screenings, which were paired and interdisciplinary nature. We are proud of the Forum’s role in promoting with a critical discussion on the featured topic chaired by a University and cultivating the University’s long-standing engagement with Indonesia of Melbourne academic. Last year the Forum supported screenings of by facilitating and showcasing exchanges between academic, professional documentaries on the controversial Jakarta Bay reclamation project, the and broader communities. ongoing fear of communism in Indonesia, as well as the history of Darul In 2016, the Forum continued its tradition of hosting two sessions of Islam–Tentara Islam Indonesia. the Indonesia Forum Postgraduate Roundtable in what has become an We would like to acknowledge the financial support from the University of institution among Indonesian postgraduate students in Victoria. The 34th Melbourne’s Chancellery, and we particularly wish to express our gratitude and 35th roundtables welcomed participants from all major universities for the continuing guidance and support we receive from Professor Simon in Melbourne and from fields ranging from history, to politics and social Evans, Pro Vice Chancellor International, Professor Mark Considine, Dean of sciences, medicine, science and engineering. About 90 presenters and Arts, and Professor Pookong Kee, from the Asia Institute. guests attended the two roundtables. My personal gratitude goes to the 2015 Deputy Convenor Dr Ken Setiawan, In its Public Seminar Series, the Forum explored the multifaceted historical, Postgraduate Roundtable organiser Hani Yulindrasari, 2015 Indonesia political, and socio-cultural dynamics of Indonesia. In June, Dr Linda Rae Forum Report designer Tessa Shaw, Indonesia Forum mailing list convenor Bennet presented insightful analysis on pressing issues in public health in Charles Coppel, Indonesia at Melbourne blog editor and advisers Tim Indonesia, critiquing the artificial disconnection of sexual and reproductive Mann, Tim Lindsey and Dave McRae, Indonesia Forum ‘gatekeepers’ Helen health that has occurred in the country. Dr Manneke Budiman, from the Pausacker, Michael Ewing, Edwin Jurriëns and Kate McGregor, and Asia University of Indonesia (UI), provided insight into the fascinating nature Institute logistics managers Rachael Ballamy and Cathleen Benevento. of identity formation among Indonesian youth, looking at the interaction Through your support and reliable contribution, the Indonesia Forum between Islamic popular culture and the Korean pop culture wave. Dr continues to build on its proud tradition. Budi Hernawan, from Paramadina University and the Centre for Interfaith Dialogue and Peace at UI, highlighted the worrying I wish the new convenors, Dr Ken Setiawan and Dr Rachael Diprose, a restriction of civil liberties that has emerged in democratic Indonesia. In productive, successful and undoubtedly highly engaging 2017. a public lecture, Dr Abdul Wahid, from Gadjah Mada University (UGM), examined the elimination of ‘leftist elements’ within Indonesian universities between 1965-1980, characterising the anti-communist campaign as a form DR AMANDA ACHMADI of ‘intellectual genocide’. Budiman, Hernawan and Wahid were visiting Indonesia Forum Convenor 2016 academics to the University, sponsored by the Faculty of Arts’ Indonesia Initiative.

Showcasing the Forum’s commitment to promoting interdisciplinary dialogue on Indonesia, we hosted a series of panel discussions, featuring academics from diverse backgrounds. Early in the year, Asia Institute and the Forum co-hosted a panel discussion on Jokowi’s economic policy, featuring Professor Vedi Hadiz (Asia Institute), Dr Matthew Wai-Poi (The World Bank), and Eve Warburton (Australian National University). The main Forum event last year was a panel discussion on Indonesian cities. This discussion addressed issues of the urban future in Indonesia, considering the environmental and social crises faced by Jakarta, and the role of politics in shaping them. The fascinating panel featured eminent scholars in urban history and urban studies, including Professor Abidin Kusno, from York University, Canada, Professor Widjaja Martokusumo, from Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB), and University of Melbourne urban design expert Professor Kim Dovey, and Professor Vedi Hadiz. Further, in collaboration with the Herb Feith Foundation, the Forum co-hosted Kusno’s talk, ‘Shophouses, Chinese Indonesians and Other Stories’, and with the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, co-sponsored his keynote lecture

Dr Amanda Achmadi 6 7

Indonesia Forum Postgraduate Roundtable FACULTY OF ARTS

Since 1999, the Indonesia Forum has hosted the Postgraduate Roundtable. This twice-yearly event creates an open forum for postgraduate students from the DR BUDI HERNAWAN University of Melbourne (and across Australia) to disseminate and share their ideas, research, and experiences. It is an opportunity for postgraduate students Indonesia Initiative Dr Budi Hernawan, research fellow at the Public Events to introduce their work to a wider audience and make connections with University of Melbourne staff and other students, rather than to present a formal The Faculty of Arts Indonesia Initiative is a Abdurrahman Wahid Centre at University of • Manneke Budiman, ‘Banality of conference paper. visiting scholar program that aims to further Indonesia and lecturer at Paramadina University, Expressions: Language and Politics in enhance teaching and research relationships visited the Asia Institute for three weeks in Post-New Order Indonesia’, public lecture, Indonesian postgraduate students and students of Indonesia from all disciplines are invited to submit abstracts. Students prepare 10-15 minute with colleagues in Indonesia. The initiative, October under the Faculty of Arts Indonesia 14 July. presentations on their research, which can be delivered in English or Indonesian. Following the presentations, academics provide feedback, and conduct led by Associate Professor Kate McGregor, Dr Initiative, hosted by Dr Richard Chauvel and Dr exercises on academic writing and writing for the media. In 2016, Roundtables were held on 9 April and 22 October, attracting about 90 postgraduate • Manneke Budiman, ‘Between Islamic Edwin Jurriëns and Professor Thomas Reuter Ken Setiawan. During his visit, Hernawan met students, academics and observers from across Melbourne. In 2016, 19 students presented on a broad range of topics, including public health, architecture, Popular Culture and the Korean Wave: funds three to four visiting scholars per year with scholars across the faculty, delivered a urban planning, governance, education, religion, politics, and business. Cosmopolitan Identity Formation Among from Indonesian universities and will provide public seminar on civil liberties and spoke in Indonesian Youth’, seminar, 28 July. opportunities for increased engagement. The the well-attended panel ‘West Papua, Indonesia initiative commenced in 2014. In 2016, the and the Pacific’ together with Nic Maclellan, • Abdul Wahid, ‘Was It an Intellectual Initiative welcomed the following scholars: journalist and researcher of the Pacific. Genocide? The Elimination of ‘Leftist Hernawan also contributed to the Indonesia Elements’ in the Indonesian Higher DR MANNEKE BUDIMAN at Melbourne blog and the Talking Indonesia Education, 1965-1980’, public lecture, 11 Dr Manneke Budiman, Vice-Dean for Academic, podcast. August. Research, and Student Affairs, Faculty of Humanities, University of Indonesia, visited as a DR ABDUL WAHID • Abdul Wahid, ‘Ivory Tower on Dirt: University of Melbourne Faculty of Arts Indonesia Dr Abdul Wahid is a lecturer in the Department The Practice of Academic Freedom in Initiative visiting scholar in August. Hosted by Dr of History, Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta. Indonesian Universities before and after Michael Ewing, during his visit Budiman engaged His research interests include the political and 1965’, brown bag seminar, 18 August. with scholars from across the faculty, was a economic history of colonial and post-colonial • Evi Fitriani, ‘Jokowi’s Foreign Policy and guest lecturer in several of our subjects and gave Indonesia, the social dimensions of violence Australia-Indonesia Relations’, public two stimulating public seminars on aspects in modern Indonesia (during the revolutionary lecture, 22 August. of Indonesian politics, media and popular period of 1945-1950 and in the transition to the culture. During his visit, Budiman also wrote a New Order in 1965-1966), and socio-political • Budi Hernawan, ‘Shrinking Space of Civil very popular contribution for the Indonesia at issues of minorities, particularly the Chinese Liberties in Indonesia’, 20 October. Melbourne blog in colonial and postcolonial Indonesia. During his visit to Melbourne, Wahid delivered a well- • Budi Hernawan, ‘West Papua, Indonesia DR EVI FITRIANI attended public lecture on the elimination and the Pacific’, discussion panel, 25 Dr Evi Fitriani, Head of the Department of of ‘leftist elements’ from Indonesian higher October. International Relations at the University of education institutions from 1965-1980. Wahid Indonesia visited the Asia Institute for three completed his PhD in Social and Economic weeks in August under the Faculty of Arts’ History at the Research Institute for History and Indonesia Initiative, hosted by Dr Dave McRae. Culture, Utrecht University, The Netherlands in While in Melbourne, Dr Fitriani gave a public 2013, and holds a two master’s in history, from lecture on Jokowi’s Foreign Policy and Australia- Leiden University in 2009, and Gadjah Mada Indonesia relations, held roundtables and University, in 2006. discussions with several government agencies in Canberra, participated in a Victorian government roundtable on education ties to Indonesia, and made several media appearances. Her visit has also led to the establishment of a joint intensive masters subject on Indonesian foreign policy to be held for the first time in July 2017 at the University of Indonesia’s Depok campus.

Exterior of the Sidney Myer Asia Centre 8 9

Two Decades of Reformasi: Reflections on Social and Political Change in Indonesia Conference

Avery Poole Dave McRae

Two decades have passed since a broad-based movement for reform emerged in the final years of the Soeharto presidency, during which time Indonesia has undergone dramatic social, economic, administrative and political changes. The ‘Two Decades of Reformasi’ conference, subtitled ‘Reflections on Social and Political Change in Indonesia’, discussed the various political, governance and economic reform initiatives that have taken place.

The conference was held on 3-4 November 2016 and was funded and hosted by the School of Social and Political Sciences, the Asia Budiman Sudjatmiko Jemma Purdey Institute and the Faculty of Arts. The exciting conference attracted more than 100 participants, including scholars, government and the media, and was the first major Indonesia conference hosted by the Faculty of Arts for more than a decade. In addition to reaching the very engaged audience in Melbourne, most sessions were live-streamed, allowing interested individuals to connect with the conference remotely. Some session streams attracted more than 500 views during or shortly after the conference.

The conference was convened by Dr Rachael Diprose (SSPS), and Professor Vedi Hadiz and Dr Dave McRae from the Asia Institute, and was supported by the Faculty of Arts, SSPS and the Asia Institute. The conference involved 47 renowned speakers and Muhammad Najib Azca Edwin Jurriëns chairs from Australia and Indonesia, including academics, senior policy makers, researchers and civil society representatives. The keynote address from the conference, delivered by eminent Indonesian government advisor and analyst Dr Dewi Fortuna Anwar was published on the Indonesia at Melbourne blog. Prominent Indonesian officials Dr Hilmar Farid, the director general of culture at the Ministry of Education and Culture, and Budiman Sudjatmiko, member of the People’s Representative Council (DPR) for the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), also presented at the conference. A number of journal articles have been submitted as a result of the conference. Substantial support for organising the conference was also provided by Primatia Wulandari, who is undertaking her PhD at SSPS. Ed Aspinall, Budiman Sudjatmiko, Dewi Fortuna Anwar Michael Ewing, Wahyu Susilo, Ken Setiawan, Edwin Jurriëns

Audience members Mark Considine, Rachael Diprose 10 11

Asia Institute

The Asia Institute plays a leading role in Indonesia-focused research and engagement in the Faculty of Arts and the University in general. internet. The edited volume Digital Indonesia: Research, Technology and Higher Education to a The Institute’s Indonesian Program is one of the premier Indonesia-related programs in Australia and works closely with stakeholders from Collaboration and Connectivity and Divergence, which is based gathering of ‘world class Indonesian professors’ Victoria, across Australia and internationally to promote and develop Indonesian studies. It provides thorough training in the language and a Engagement on the conference, will be published by ISEAS, who teach overseas to provide advice on broad understanding of contemporary Indonesian culture, politics and society. Singapore, in May 2017. In conjunction with the enhancing the research and publishing The Indonesian Program at the Asia Institute Indonesia Update, Jurriëns delivered a seminar, capabilities of Indonesian universities. As part again hosted the annual Victorian Indonesian ‘Art markets, communities and cultures of the of the program, he gave lectures at Diponegoro Language Teachers Association (VILTA) Speech digital revolution in Indonesia’, for the Indonesia University in Semarang, , and Competition Finals and Awards Night in June In addition to the teaching of Indonesian In late 2016, Andrew Rosser was appointed as Study Group (ISG) at the ANU on 6 April. Padjadjaran University in Bandung, West Java. and July. The awards ceremony was hosted by Teaching politics, culture and society in Melbourne, in Professor in Southeast Asian Studies, taking up Dr Edwin Jurriëns on 15 July. This collaboration Jurriëns was involved in a series of activities Dr Richard Chauvel, Dr Rachael Diprose (from 2016, the University of Melbourne embarked the position from February 2017. • Indonesian Language: beginner, helps to support and promote the teaching involving visiting scholars and artists, as well as the School of Social and Political Sciences) and intermediate and advanced levels on a new collaborative teaching partnership The Indonesian Program also developed of Indonesian in Victoria and is also an with the Indonesian community in Melbourne. Dr Craig Thorburn (Monash University) were with Udayana University, in Denpasar. The a new program, the ‘Indonesian Language opportunity for to showcase the University as an He served as judge of the short film competition members of the Joint Selection Team for the • Diversity: Identities in Indonesia Indonesian Program secured New Colombo Refresher Program’, in conjunction with Victorian internationally recognised centre of Indonesian of the Indonesian Film Festival, Melbourne, in Australia Awards Indonesia scholarships. Plan scholarships for University of Melbourne • Literature: Reading Indonesian Lives Department of Education and Training. The Studies to teachers, students and parents from April, and the Indonesian Language Competition students to attend the overseas subject Dr Michael Ewing was the principal local program, which was held from 28 June to 7 across the state. organised by Radio Kita 3ZZZ at the Consulate • Translation: Intercultural Indonesian ‘Analysing Indonesia: Concepts and Issues’, organiser of the 20th International Symposium July, offered training in Indonesian language of the Republic of Indonesia, on 10 September. taught in collaboration with the Faculty of Arts Two public lectures held at the Asia Institute on Malay/Indonesian Linguistics, held at the • Indonesia in the World and opportunities for in-depth discussions on On 7 December, he also moderated the artists’ at Udayana, in January. Eleven University of in 2016 were live-streamed via the Indonesia University of Melbourne from 14-16 July, in a range of topics on contemporary Indonesian talk ‘Crossing: Beyond Baliseering’, part of the • Analysing Indonesia: Concepts and Issues Melbourne students joined this program in 2016 at Melbourne blog, in each case attracting collaboration with the Max Planck Institute, politics and society for teachers from Victorian Mapping Melbourne Festival, Multicultural at its inaugural iteration under the coordination a significant secondary audience as well as Germany, and the University of Delaware, • Creative Industries in Indonesia schools. It was coordinated by Dr Michael Arts Victoria. Jurriëns also organised a of Professor Thomas Reuter. Several Udayana questions submitted via social media. In April, USA. Forty-eight scholars from Indonesia, Ewing and taught by all members of staff in the public seminar by curator Alia Swastika, • Indonesian Languages in Social Context University students joined the subject, providing Professor Vedi Hadiz, Dr Matt Wai-Poi (World Australia, and across Asia, Europe and North Indonesian Program. from Ark Gallery, Yogyakarta, on Indonesian a tremendous opportunity for the sharing of Bank) and Eve Warburton (ANU) spoke at a America presented research on Indonesian and • Popular Cultures in Indonesia contemporary art at the University of Melbourne ideas between students from the two countries. well-attended public panel on ‘Who is benefiting Malay, covering a range of topics in linguistics, on 22 June, co-sponsored by Sherman • Indonesian Politics and Society Funding from the Department of Foreign Affairs from Jokowi’s economic policies’. In August, anthropology and language education. Contemporary Art Foundation, Sydney. and Trade’s (DFAT) New Colombo Plan and the Dr Evi Fitriani, the head of the International • Topics in Indonesian Studies Ewing was also co-organiser, with Dr Novi Melbourne Student Exchange Office has been Relations Department at the University of In 2016, Professor Vedi Hadiz initiated a Djenar of the University of Sydney, of a panel • Honours Indonesian secured until 2019. Indonesia, spoke on ‘Jokowi’s Foreign Policy and documentary film screening and seminar discussion on ‘The future of research in Australia-Indonesia relations’, at another well- series that was run by Indonesian postgraduate • Asian Arts: Networks and Hubs Indonesian language and culture education’ at attended lecture. students in the Faculty of Arts, supported by The Australian Society of Indonesian Language • Media and Urban Culture in Asia the Asia Institute and Indonesia Forum. Five Jurriëns was also co-convenor of the 2016 Educators Conference, held in Adelaide from 30 film screenings and discussions were held • Language and Power in Asian Societies Australian National University Indonesia September-2 October. Key concepts coming out throughout the year, covering topics including Update, themed ‘Digital Indonesia’, together of the panel included the need for educators at • Genders and Desires in Asia radical Islam (specifically Darul Islam and with Dr Ross Tapsell (ANU). Conducted annually all levels to recognise and embrace linguistic Tentara Islam Indonesia), the 1965 violence, • Asian Religions in Societal Context since 1983, and funded by the Department of and cultural diversity and the complexity of Papua, the Jakarta Bay reclamation project, and Foreign Affairs and Trade, the Update is the Indonesian society and to provide students of • Critical Asian Perspectives the murder of human rights activist Munir Said premier conference on Indonesian Studies in Indonesian language, as well as Indonesian Thalib. • Human Rights in Southeast Asia Australia. The conference was held on 16-17 studies more generally, with skills, strategies September at the ANU in Canberra, and was Hadiz also continued to engage with institutions, and, most crucially, the flexibility to deal with attended by more than 400 people, including researchers and policy makers in Indonesia. this diversity. the Indonesian ambassador to Australia, the He gave keynote addresses at international deputy chief of staff at the Executive Office of conferences at Airlangga University in the President of Indonesia, two Indonesian Surabaya and the University of North Sumatra Professor Thomas Reuter (third from right) at Bali Udayana University former cabinet ministers, and academics from (USU) in Medan, and a plenary address at an various universities in Indonesia and Australia. international conference held by the University Several thousand people also followed and of Indonesia in Denpasar. He was invited in interacted through the live stream on the December 2016 by the Indonesian Ministry of 12 13

Asia Institute Indonesia at Melbourne blog Indonesia Policy Roundtable Series and Talking Indonesia podcast

The ‘Indonesian Policy Roundtable Series’ is an invitation-only series of Chatham The Indonesia at Melbourne blog was launched on 1 July 2015 to present analysis, House rule discussions convened by Dr Dave McRae and hosted at the Asia research and commentary on contemporary Indonesia from academics and Institute. In what is a unique format for Melbourne, the roundtable series brings postgraduate students affiliated with the University of Melbourne. In its second year together policy makers from both The Australian and Indonesian governments, of operation, the Indonesia at Melbourne blog has established itself as a distinct and the media, the private sector and academics from all of Melbourne’s major valued voice in the public conversation on contemporary Indonesia. In their second universities for frank exchanges on current Indonesian policy issues. The three year of operation, both the Indonesia at Melbourne blog and the Talking Indonesia roundtables held in 2016 each featured current or former senior Indonesian podcast experienced rapid audience growth. The largest share of the blog’s audience government officials. Dr Yanuar Nugroho, deputy chief of staff at the Executive now comes from Indonesia (47.5 percent), followed by Australia (23.8 percent) and Office of the President, spoke about bureaucratic reform challenges, Mr the United states (6.6 percent). Monthly page views doubled across the course of Suharso Monoarfa, a member of the Presidential Advisory Council, spoke on 2016, with the most popular articles focusing on the controversy surrounding the Indonesia’s infrastructure challenges, and former Deputy Justice and Human Jakarta gubernatorial election and Indonesia’s future trajectory as an international Rights Minister Professor Denny Indrayana spoke about justice sector reform. actor. Academics or postgraduate students affiliated with the University of Melbourne contributed 60 percent of posts published on the site, affirming the University’s Dr Yanuar Nugroho emerging reputation as a leading institution for research on Indonesia. Several popular blog posts have made an impact on English-language media coverage of Indonesian events, with posts quoted directly and authors contacted for interviews in broadcast or print media.

The podcast, co-hosted in 2016 by Dr Dave McRae and Dr Ken Setiawan, also more than doubled its monthly listens over the course of the year, with an episode featuring Dr Nadirsyah Hosen on race, religion and democracy in the context of the Jakarta Public Lecture gubernatorial election proving the most popular. Informal feedback indicates that the podcast has a broad audience in Australian government circles and among journalists, by Bambang Brodjonegoro as well as the broader Indonesia-interested public. Indonesia at Melbourne is a joint initiative of the Asia Institute at the Faculty of Arts, the Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and Society (CILIS) at the Melbourne Law School, and the University of Melbourne’s Indonesia Forum, with support also provided by Pro Vice-Chancellor (International), Professor Simon Evans. Founded by Professor Tim Lindsey and Dr Dave McRae, who comprise the editorial board, the blog has been On 15 August, His Excellency Professor Bambang Brodjonegoro, minister for national edited since its establishment by Tim Mann. development planning and head of the National Development Planning Agency (Bappenas), delivered a public lecture on Indonesia’s future economic prospects. In this lecture, which was co-hosted by the Asia Institute, the Melbourne School of Government, and the Centre for Asian Business and Economics, Minister Brodjonegoro surveyed Indonesia’s recent economic performance in a changing global context, and outlined the policies of President ’s administration designed to unlock Indonesia’s future economic potential. Following the lecture, the Victorian government and the University of Melbourne hosted a roundtable luncheon with Professor Brodjonegoro, with the Victorian State Government Minister for Small Business, Innovation and Trade Hon Philip Dalidakis MP providing welcoming remarks.

Bambang Brodjonegoro Photo by Cabinet Secretariat of the Republic of Indonesia Brodjonegoro served as Minister of Finance when President Joko Widodo came to power in October 2014 and switched to his current portfolio in July 2016. He also served as Deputy Minister of Finance from 2013-2014, and chairman of the Fiscal Policy Office at the Ministry of Finance in 2011. He holds a bachelor’s degree majoring in Economic Development and Regional Economy from Faculty of Economics at the University of Indonesia, and a master’s degree and PhD from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He served as dean of the Faculty of Economics at the University of Indonesia from 2005-2009 and director-general of the Islamic Research and Training Institute at the Islamic Development Bank until 2010. 14 15

Appointment of Professor Vedi Hadiz

In 2016, Vedi Hadiz began his appointment as professor of Asian Studies at the Asia Institute. Before joining the Asia Institute, Hadiz was Professor of Asian Societies and Politics at Murdoch University’s Asia Research Centre and Director of its Indonesia Research Program. He was an Australian Research Council Future Fellow in 2010-2014. Professor Hadiz received his PhD at Murdoch University in 1996 where he was Research Fellow until he went to the National University of Singapore in 2000. At NUS, he was an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology until returning to Murdoch in 2010. His research interests revolve around political sociology and political economy issues, especially those related to the contradictions of development in Indonesia and Southeast Asia more broadly, and more recently, in the Middle East. Professor Hadiz’s latest book is titled Islamic Populism in Indonesia and the Middle East.

Islamic Populism in Indonesia and the Middle Easi In a novel approach to the field of Islamic politics, this provocative new study compares the evolution of Islamic populism in Indonesia to the Middle East. Utilising approaches from historical sociology and political economy, Hadiz argues that competing strands of Islamic politics can be understood as the product of contemporary struggles over power, material resources and the result of conflict across a variety of social and historical contexts. Drawing from detailed case studies across the Middle East and Southeast Asia, the book engages with broader theoretical questions about political change in the context of socio-economic transformations and presents an innovative, comparative framework to shed new light on the diverse trajectories of Islamic politics in the modern world.

Professor Vedi Hadiz on campus with XYZ? 16 17

School of Social and Political Sciences

The School of Social and Political Sciences (SPSS) undertakes significant engagement in research, teaching, and executive education in Dr Rachael Diprose and Associate Professor Helen Dickinson from SSPS, and Catherine Smith from the Faculty of Education, delivered a highly regarded Indonesia. It has partnerships with the Gadjah Mada University (UGM), the University of Indonesia (UI), and Udayana University, among executive education course in Indonesia on ‘Evidence-Based Advocacy for Policy’ supported by the Department of Foreign Affairs-funded Empowering others, for joint subjects and collaborative research. Along with other schools, it also hosts the Faculty of Arts Indonesia Initiative Fellows each Indonesian Women for Poverty Reduction (MAMPU) development program in Indonesia. The program was delivered through the Melbourne School of year, and has partnerships with various government agencies in Indonesia. Government, and representatives from 26 women’s organisations across Indonesia, including from remote areas, participated in this highly interactive course. The program saw women engage in learning around policy cycles, evidence-based decision making, research methods and communications for advocacy The School works on a number of collaborative research projects with Indonesian partners in development, governance and political order, and policy formulation. Various innovations were included in the program including graphic notetaking, where images of the teaching and learning were conflict management and peacebuilding, natural resource governance, corporate social responsibility, and state building, frontiers and drawn alongside the training, and later converted into a take home summary booklet (in digital form) for participants to revisit and share their learning with borderlands. The School provides executive education courses in Indonesia, particularly in policy analysis, research, evidence-based policy their organisations. making, and advocacy, among others. Its staff also support many of the activities of The Australian Aid program in Indonesia, including the Knowledge Sector Initiative (KSI), the Empowering Indonesian Women for Poverty Reduction (MAMPU) and a number of others.

Social Policy, International Relations, and During late 2016, Professor Adrian Little and Dr Teaching Development Studies. In Indonesia, the Irma Mooi-Reci negotiated the substance of a • Indonesia Rising Melbourne students work alongside an joint Masters in Social Policy with the Faculty of (transferred to the Asia Institute in 2017) equivalent group of Indonesian students, with a Social and Political Sciences at UGM. Selected jointly developed and delivered curriculum, over students will study at UGM, including taking the • Conflict, Security and Development a week to 10 days. The subjects include field joint intensive UMOS subjects in social policy. (uses case work from Indonesia) visits, for example, to ministries and civil society They will then enroll with advanced standing for Joint subjects with Indonesian institutions: and activist organisations, and always involve a a year of study in Melbourne in the Masters of lot of interchange and friendship between The Social Policy. The collaboration with UGM draws • Social Policy and Development, with UI Australian and Indonesian students. The three on a partnership with BPJS Ketenagakerjaan, the • Comparative Social Policy, with UGM subjects taught in 2016 were ‘Social Policy and government body established to develop and Development’ (UI), ‘Comparative Social Policy’ administer occupational benefits in Indonesia’s • ASEAN and Southeast Asian Regionalism, and ‘ASEAN and Southeast Asian Regionalism’ emerging social security system, including work with UGM (both at UGM). In 2016, ‘Social Policy and accident insurance and retirement savings. The In 2016, three University of Melbourne Overseas Development’ was taught by Professor Paul first intake in this program will be in mid-2017. Smyth (SSPS) and Dr Bagus Aryo (Department Study (UMOS) intensive Masters subjects were In 2016, an agreement was also finalised with of Social Welfare, UI) who is also a Faculty of jointly taught with UGM and UI in Indonesia. UGM for selected undergraduate students to Arts Asian Scholar with a joint appointment Eligible students in Melbourne Masters degrees study for a semester in the Bachelor of Arts at with SSPS. ‘ASEAN and Southeast Asian submit an application, and are selected on the Melbourne. These students will be part of two Regionalism’ was taught by Dr Avery Poole in basis of their GPA, and a written statement of international undergraduate programs (IUP) collaboration with colleagues in the Department how studying in Indonesia draws on, and will at UGM – international relations and public of International Relations at UGM, while advance their interests. Demand for these places policy – which are taught in English and have ‘Comparative Social Policy’ was taught by Dr has been very high, with only 10-12 Melbourne a requirement that students study overseas as Irma Mooi-Reci in collaboration with colleagues students selected for each subject. Students part of their program. The first group of UGM in UGM’s Department of Social Development have predominantly been enrolled in Masters students will arrive in Melbourne in mid-2017. degrees in Public Policy and Management, and Welfare.

The executive education course on ‘Evidence-Based Advocacy for Policy’ utilised a novel The ‘Evidence-Based Advocacy for Policy’ training program method to record program learnings – graphic illustrations, which were then distributed to program participants 18 19 School of Social and Political Sciences (continued)

Randy Wirasta Nandyatama

In December, the Faculty of Arts hosted a visit Research Collaboration from the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences Randy Wirasta Nandyatama is a lecturer at the Department of International Relations, Gadjah Mada University (UGM), Yogyakarta. From 2013 to 2015, In 2016, researchers from The Australian and Engagement at Airlannga University in Surabaya, with he was the director of the ASEAN Studies Centre at UGM’s Faculty of Social Research Council-Linkage Project on ‘Non- discussions about developing staff exchanges, In March, a Faculty of Arts/SSPS delegation, and Political Science. Randy’s research interests include diplomacy, Sino- Judicial Redress Mechanisms’ (led by Dr Kate curriculum review and research collaboration. including the Dean of Arts Professor Mark Southeast Asian relations, and ASEAN regionalism. Randy is pursuing his PhD Macdonald in SSPS, and Dr Shelley Marshall Considine, Professor John Murphy, Dr Rachael New and strengthened partnerships and in Political Science (International Relations) at the University of Melbourne with at Monash University) published their series of Diprose and Faculty of Arts External Relations collaborations include: National Institute of the support of a Melbourne International Research Scholarship. His research reports on conflict management through non- Manager Fiona Abud, met with senior Public Administration, or LAN (custom education focuses on understanding the role of Indonesian civil society organisations in judicial redress mechanisms, following years government officials in key ministries in Jakarta: and technical support/research), National the institutionalisation of human rights in ASEAN. of research in Indonesia, India and elsewhere. Development Planning Agency, or Bappenas Researchers in the program at Melbourne • Dr Anwar Sanusi, secretary-general of the (custom education), Ministry of Villages (custom included Professor Fiona Haines from SSPS Ministry of Villages, Disadvantaged Areas education and support); the State Secretariat and Sarah Rennie from the Faculty of Law. and Transmigration (a memorandum of understanding is being Other research partners include the Corporate • Dr Mu’man Nuryana, head of the Board of developed); and the Ministry of Social Affairs (an Responsibility Coalition, UK, Action Aid, UK, Education and Research at the Ministry of MoU has been signed). Federation of Homeworkers Worldwide, Monash Social Affairs University, the University of Newcastle, the University of Essex and RMIT. The reports were • Professor Pratikno, minister for the State launched in a well-attended event on 24 October Secretariat, and Setya Utama, secretary of at the Faculty of Arts’ new Arts West building the ministry at the Parkville campus, and published online These discussions largely focused on staff (http://corporateaccountabilityresearch.net/ development needs in these ministries, events/). particularly for PhD study, Masters coursework Research also commenced in Indonesia and and short-course customised executive Primatia Romana Wulandari Myanmar for the ‘States, Fragility and Conflict’ education. project involving researchers from SSPS In Jakarta, the delegation also hosted a (Dr Rachael Diprose, Dr Bart Klem, Dr Kate ‘welcome home event’ with the alumni chapter Macdonald, Nathan Bond, Professor Adrian in Indonesia, and participated in a workshop on Little, and Professor John Langmore), SOAS, the ‘Building the Capacity of Policy Analysts’ with the University of Gadjah Mada (Dr Muhammad Najib National Institute of Public Administration (LAN) Primatia Romana Wulandari is a PhD Candidate at the School of Social and Political Azca and Professor Purwo Santoso) and partners and the DFAT-supported Knowledge Sector Science at The University of Melbourne. Before pursuing her doctorate, Primatia worked in Myanmar. Researchers from this group Initiative (KSI). Participating in the workshop on various development programs funded by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs also convened a popular panel on ‘Contested was the deputy head of People’s Representative and Trade (DFAT). Her research interests focus on the dynamics of bureaucratic reform, Development in the Asian Frontiers’ at the Council (DPR) Commission VI, officials from particularly on how policy actors, institutions and contexts interact, and how lessons biannual Asian Borderlands conference in Nepal. the Ministry of Law and Human Rights, and the are learned over time. Her PhD also focuses on bureaucratic reform and seeks to reveal Further, with a Faculty of Arts research grant and University of Indonesia. the challenges of reform during the period of democratisation in Indonesia. Primatia also holds a Master of Arts in Management and Development from Van Hall Larenstein- SSPS support, Dr Rachael Diprose and Dr Kate During this visit, Considine also delivered a Wageningen University, the Netherlands. Macdonald undertook research in collaboration public lecture on ‘Democratic Public Policy: How with UGM (Dr Poppy Winanti, Dr Nanang Do We Deepen the Sustainable Development Kurniawan, Hasrul Hanif and others). Analysis Trajectory?’. KSI published an in-depth interview for the project, ‘Multi-level Governance and with Considine about ‘Evidence, Policy Analysis Adaptive strategies to Manage Natural Resource and the Knowledge Sector in Indonesia’. Primatia Romana Wulandari Conflicts’ is now underway. This has led to a successful competitive application for the team Rachael Diprose was appointed to the Joint to build on this research with further work Selection Committee for Australia Awards funded by an UGM Faculty of Social and Political Indonesia for 2016-19. Richard Chauvel from Sciences Internationalisation Grant in 2017. the Asia Institute, and Dr Craig Thorburn from Monash University also sit on the committee. 20 21

Fifty Years On: Reflections on the Anniversary and School of Historical and Philosophical Studies Recent Efforts to Address the 1965 Violence in Indonesia

The School of Historical and Philosophical Studies (SHAPS) teaches the history of Indonesia in a range of subjects. Staff from SHAPS have longstanding partnerships with Indonesian institutions and researchers. SHAPS also hosts Faculty of Arts Indonesia Initiative Fellows each year, along with other schools in the Faculty.

McGregor continued work on her Australian Teaching Collaboration Research Council Future Fellow (2014-2018) • History, Memory and Violence in Asia and Engagement Confronting Historical Injustice in Indonesia: Memory and Transnational Human Rights Historian of Indonesia Dr Abdul Wahid, from • Modern Southeast Asia Activism’. UGM, spent three weeks in the history program • Cold War Cultures in Asia in August on a visit funded by the Faculty Dr Simon Creak received a Faculty of Arts of Arts Indonesia Initiative. He met other Research Grant for the project: ‘Sport, Politics historians, co-taught classes and gave two and Community in a Tumultuous Region: The public presentations on his research on the Southeast Asian Games, 1975-1989’, which 1965 violence in Indonesia and on the history of includes research on Indonesia. Indonesian universities. Dr Jess Melvin, recent PhD graduate in history, Associate Professor Katharine McGregor commenced a postdoctoral fellowship at Yale gave a keynote at the first ever humanities Univeristy and was awarded the Asian Studies undergraduate conference (INUSHARTS) hosted Association of Australia prize for the best thesis by the Faculty of Letters at the University of on Asia in Australia. Indonesia in August-September. History honours students Johnathon Peters (2015) and Paul O’Shea (2016) presented their honours theses at this conference. The Asian History Hub co-sponsored with the Indonesia Forum and the Herb Feith Foundation the conference ‘Fifty Years On: Reflections on the Anniversary and Recent Efforts to Address the 1965 Violence in Indonesia’, held at the University McGregor continued to oversee the Faculty of Melbourne on 6-7 October. Opening the conference, Dodi Yanuar, program manager for Indonesian human rights of Arts Indonesia Initiative, which allows staff organisation Asia Justice and Rights (AJAR), delivered the Herb Feith Memorial Lecture, ‘Unlearning impunity: Indonesian members to host Indonesian academics for civil society efforts aimed at truth seeking’, in which he described how AJAR has centred its activism on overcoming short visits to the University of Melbourne. The impunity in Indonesia. Associate Professor Katharine McGregor, Dr Ken Setiawan, Dr Ana Dragojlovic, Professor Vedi Indonesia Initiative is described in detail earlier Hadiz and PhD student Hellena Yoranita Souisa, from the University of Melbourne, delivered papers and chaired panels, in the report. alongside academics and activists from Indonesia and Australia. The conference was attended by more than 50 people, including staff and students from the Arts Faculty with interests in both Indonesia and historical justice, as well as members of the community.

The conference also launched ‘The Act of Living: A Photo Exhibition of Women Survivors of Indonesia’s Violence in 1965’, hosted in the Asia Institute. This AJAR curated exhibition was to be part of the Ubud Writers and Readers Festival in 2015, but was cancelled following pressure from police. The exhibition featured photographs of 16 Indonesian women who survived the 1965 violence and who participated in a joint research project with AJAR staff to consider how they have lived with their histories and found resilience in doing so. The exhibition was on display for two weeks and viewed by many students and passers by. At the launch, one of the participants in the project, Ibu Kadmiyati from Yogyakarta, sang about her experiences and AJAR Project Manager Dodi Yuniar explained the project. 22 23

Associate Professor Katharine McGregor Dr Jess Melvin

Associate Professor Katharine McGregor was a co-convenor of the conference, In January 2016, Dr Jess Melvin was awarded the 2016 Asian Studies Association ‘Fifty Years On: Reflections on the Anniversary and Recent Efforts to Address of Australia Presidents’ prize for the best thesis on Asia conferred in 2015 for the 1965 Violence in Indonesia’, along with Dr Jemma Purdey, from Monash her dissertation ‘Mechanics of Mass Murder: How the Indonesian Military University, and University of Melbourne PhD student Hellena Souisa. McGregor Initiated and Implemented the Indonesian Genocide’, which was supervised has a particular interest in memory studies and human rights activism and by Associate Professor Kate McGregor. Melvin has now begun a postdoctoral is completing a four-year Australian Research Council Future Fellowship fellowship at Yale University. During 2016 at Yale, Melvin worked on revising her on the project: Confronting Historical Injustice in Indonesia: Memory and book for publication. In early 2017, she began a faculty fellowship and teaching Transnational Human Rights Activism. The project examines Indonesian two courses: a seminar course on Indonesian history for freshmen and a lecture activism from the late Soeharto period (1990s) to 2016. It analyses memories of: course on Southeast Asian history for senior students. the Japanese occupation (1942-45) including forced labour and forced sexual slavery; the independence struggle (1945-49), focusing on Dutch atrocities against Indonesians; and the 1965-68 anti-communist violence, including mass killings and detention without trial. The project examines how memories are used within activism and how activism has developed for these cases across Indonesia, Japan and the Netherlands. The research hopes to offer new insights into Indonesian human rights activism by moving beyond a national focus. It also aims to provide a historically grounded analysis of the effects of using memory to advance human rights claims.

Hani Yulindrasari

Hani Yulindrasari is a PhD candidate in Gender Studies at the School of Social and Political Science. She has a background in psychology and works as a lecturer in the early childhood education program at the Indonesia University of Education (UPI). She is also a certified assessor and instructor for the Indonesian government’s early childhood teacher professional development program. Her research interests are in the area of early childhood and gender studies, especially investigating how certain idealisations of gender are transfered to and internalised by individuals in childhood. She is committed to improving children’s education and gender equality and equity.

Her PhD research focuses on the masculinities of men who work in early childhood education, a non-traditional occupation. It illuminates how male teachers navigate gendered societal expectations and negotiate their masculinities in early childhood education, a context where gender conformity is highly expected.

Associate Professor Katharine McGregor Hani Yulindrasari 24 25

Grimwade Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation MEDICINE, DENTISTRY AND HEALTH SCIENCES

Through students, graduates and colleagues, the Grimwade Centre has continued to grow its relationships and collaborations to preserve the rich culture of Indonesia. The Nossal Institute for Global Health

The Grimwade Centre student group Student Teaching Collaboration Conservators for Timor-Leste has collaborated • Conservation Assessment and Treatment 2 and Engagement with the Clearing House for Archival Records on Timor Inc. (CHART) to carry out conservation The Nossal Institute has a long-term engagement with the Indonesian health sector, ranging from high level policy analysis and advice, The Grimwade Centre for Cultural Materials • Minor Thesis - Conservation assessment and digitise newspapers from to research in collaboration with Indonesian research partners, capacity building programs for Indonesian health service managers and Conservation has developed a very productive its highly significant historical collection. The providers, and supervision of masters and PhD research projects. The Nossal has also a role in facilitating the engagement of staff from other Masters students enrolled in these subjects have collaborative relationship with Music Archive University Digitisation Centre generously Faculties and Departments within the University of Melbourne on projects and activities which require disciplinary expertise carried out treatments and studies on traditional of Monash University around its collection of assisted with this. outside those related directly to health. Indonesian musical instruments from the Indonesian instruments. Foyer displays in the collection of Music Archive of Monash University new Arts West building have showcased this in collaboration with Professor Margaret Kartomi work on the Jeune Scott Kemball collection • Providing mentors to participate with Review of report on estimates of maternal from Monash University’s School of Music. This of Wayang Kulit. This collaboration has led to Teaching Indonesian experts in delivering a mortality offers students an opportunity to gain insight several conservation treatment projects for A highlight of 2016 was the development and series of four ‘manuscript clinics’ in Hort also undertook a consultancy for the into the conservation of complex and functional Grimwade Centre masters students, as well as delivery of the first round of teaching on malaria Indonesia, under the auspices of the DFAT-funded Empowering Indonesian Women items with a rich cultural context. three minor thesis projects (Bridget Hale, Rosie for an inter-disciplinary group of 50 health Ministry of Research, Technology and for Poverty Reduction Program (MAMPU) in Cook and Susan Logan Morris). service managers and malaria program staff Higher Education. These clinics aimed to which he provided peer review of a report from the eastern Indonesian provinces of Papua improve the ability of mid-level Indonesian commissioned by MAMPU that developed and East Nusa Tenggara. The course was funded researchers to gain publication for their estimates of maternal mortality at the national by the Australia-Indonesia Awards program papers in international standard journals and provincial level from 2010 Census data. under the Department of Foreign Affairs and These estimates were considerably lower • Hosting a visit by a delegation from the Trade. than the estimates from the 2012 Indonesia Ministry and the Indonesian Academy Demographic and Health Survey (IDHS), of Sciences (AIPI) to the University of Rosie Cook Collaboration which had caused considerable controversy in Melbourne, during which a letter of intent Indonesia. and Engagement for further collaboration was signed (see Knowledge Sector Initiative (KSI) below). The Knowledge Sector Initiative (KSI) is a Australia-Indonesia Partnership in Maternal program funded by the Department of Foreign and Neonatal Health (AIPMNH) Grimwade Centre masters student Rosie Cook’s research on the fragile bamboo Affairs and Trade (DFAT) that aims to improve The DFAT-funded AIPMNH program provided kowangan from Wonosobo district in Central Java was a particular highlight in the production and use of knowledge and technical support and resources to 14 districts 2016. Kowangan are rigid hooded capes made of woven bamboo, typically worn evidence in the development of public policy in in East Nusa Tenggara from 2009 to 2015 for by duck herders as protection from the rain. When they are converted into musical Indonesia. The program is now in its fourth year. services to reduce maternal and neonatal instruments, using strings and bamboo plucks, they are known as bundengan. Rosie DFAT recently agreed to extend the KSI program mortality. While this project concluded in visited Wonosobo district and met with Bapak Mahrumi, who may be the last master- for five years, and the Nossal will continue to December 2015, Dr Krishna Hort from Nossal artisan who knows how to make high quality kowangan, specifically for bundengan- engage and facilitate broader engagement undertook a follow-up visit in March 2016 to playing. Rosie captured videos of the making of the kowangan and met with local across the University in phase 2. compile and analyse reports of maternal and musicians to better understand its use in bundengan-playing. Rosie also stablised the Key activities during 2016 included: neonatal health services and deaths for the full fragile bamboo materials of a kowangan first collected by Professor Margaret Kartomi year of 2015. The analysis found a slight rise in from Wonosobo in 1972. Rosie’s research was awarded the Alexander Copland Award • Peer review and assessment of the maternal deaths following a decline of about 40 for the best minor thesis. quality of key knowledge products from percent since the project commenced in 2009. Indonesian research partner institutes, This may have been caused by the transition to Kowangan covering topics in political science, law, the National Health Insurance program, which religion and health commenced in 2014, and the administrative changes associated with that change. 26 27

Delegation from Indonesian Ministry of Research and Dr Krishna Hort Higher Education visits Melbourne

Dr Krishna Hort is senior technical advisor for Health Systems Governance and The University of Melbourne hosted a joint delegation from the Indonesian Academy of Sciences (AIPI) and the Finance, at the Nossal Institute for Global Health. Hort has a background as a Indonesian Ministry of Research and Higher Education on 19-20 June, as part of the Nossal Institute’s role in the medical doctor, with post graduate training in obstetrics, paediatrics and public Knowledge Section Initiative (KSI) program. The delegation included AIPI President Professor Sangkot Marzuki, health. He has worked alternately in The Australian health system, and in health Director General of the Ministry of Research and Higher Education Dimyati, Executive Director of the Indonesian assistance programs in countries of Southeast Asia, with a particular interest Science Fund Pak Saputro, and Indonesian Academy of Young Scientists (ALMI) President Professor Jamaluddin in Indonesia. His engagement in Indonesia includes technical leadership and Jompa. support for development assistance programs, as well as research on health The delegation met with Professor Mark Considine, dean of the Faculty of Arts, Professor Terry Nolan, head of systems, and spans a period of more than 20 years. Technical engagement the Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, Siôn Lutley, executive director of advancement, and has focused on maternal and neonatal health in East Nusa Tenggara (NTT) representatives from the Asia Institute and LH Martin Institute, to discuss potential opportunities for collaboration. and West Nusa Tenggara (NTB) provinces, and health system reconstruction in The meeting concluded with the signature of a letter of intent between the University and the Indonesian Ministry Aceh. Following the Indian Ocean Tsunami, the Nossal developed a research of Research, Technology and Higher Education. partnership with the Centre for Health Policy and Management at Gadjah Madah University, which has covered research on hospitals, particularly The Letter of Intent recorded the intention of the University and the Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher hospital governance and regulation of quality of care, dual practice of health Education to promote further co-operation in the fields of research and education, with a particular focus on workers in the Indonesian system, and the impacts of the national health online education, research training and joint publication in mutual priority areas; and the sharing of experiences insurance scheme. Hort has also led Nossal engagement in the Department and lessons learnt in building research quality and research funding in academic institutions. of Foreign Affairs and Trade-funded Knowledge Sector Initiative, including by conducting studies mapping the policy making process and the types and use of evidence in policy making in the health sector. Hort was co-editor of the recently released Indonesian Health System Assessment for the Asia Pacific Observatory on Health Systems and Policies. Australian Awards Indonesia (AAI) Short Course: ‘Malaria Prevention and Treatment for Infants, Children and Pregnant Women in Eastern Indonesia’

Two groups of government, health service and community organisation staff braved the chill of a Melbourne autumn to join with the Nossal Institute and collaborators for an intensive three-week program of training in malaria prevention, treatment and control in April and May 2016.

The visit of the 24 participants from East Nusa Tenggara (NTT) and 22 from Papua and West Papua provinces was part of a longer-term program, developed and delivered by the Nossal Institute, in collaboration with the Burnet Institute, Menzies University and the Faculty of Tropical Medicine at Mahidol University in Thailand. The consortium was selected by The Australian Awards Indonesia (AAI) program to deliver this program with funding from DFAT.

The program aimed to develop the skills and understanding of the participants to strengthen the malaria programs and activities undertaken by their organisations and institutions in areas of Indonesia where malaria is still a major cause of disease and death. Following the course, participants were supported to implement a series of 13 evidence- based projects designed to strengthen the delivery of malarial treatment and prevention programs in their respective areas. The program was warmly received by the participants Dr Krishna Hort and The Australian Awards Indonesia (AAI) program, and may lead to further programs in the future, as AAI offers more short-term awards and programs. 28 29

Department of Paediatrics Rotovirus Vaccine Trial

The Department of Paediatrics works with Gadjah Mada University (UGM) on research and training, and establishing links between Yogyakarta and the Melbourne Children’s Campus. Several of these connections have resulted in PhDs through University of Melbourne. Rotavirus gastroenteritis is a major cause of illness in children worldwide, and leads Strong research collaboration is ongoing in the fields of rotavirus vaccine, diarrhoea, tuberculosis and pneumonia. to the deaths of about 215,000 children under five every year. In Indonesia alone, an estimated 5,450 deaths, 117,110 hospitalisations and more than 300,000 outpatient clinic visits occur each year because of rotavirus gastroenteritis in children under five. A vaccine to prevent severe rotavirus disease therefore has the potential to have a huge impact on child mortality and suffering. Teaching Collaboration For the past 40 years, researchers from Melbourne (University of Melbourne, Murdoch The University of Melbourne MD course in Child and Engagement Childrens Research Institute (MCRI), and Royal Children’s Hospital) and Gadjah Mada and Adolescent Health contains a lecture on The Department of Paediatrics is continuing to University (UGM) in Yogyakarta have been working together to develop a vaccine to ‘Child Health in a Global Context’, which outlines collaborate with its counterpart at Gadjah Mada prevent rotavirus disease in Indonesian children. In 2015-2016, the team conducted the child health situation in Indonesia, and other University (UGM) on a major field trial of RV3 a clinical trial to assess the ability of this vaccine to protect against severe rotavirus countries in the Asia-Pacific. rotavirus vaccine in Yogyakarta. Professor Julie disease in the first 18 months of life, using a novel human neonatal rotavirus vaccine Bines is the principle investigator. This project developed in Melbourne (RV3-BB vaccine). The study was conducted in primary care builds on decades of collaboration between centres and hospitals in Yogyakarta and Central Java provinces and involved over 500 Department of Paediatrics and UGM, and is midwives, in addition to doctors, pharmacists and research assistants across these discussed in further detail below. regions. The goal is to develop an effective, affordable rotavirus vaccine aimed at prevention of rotavirus disease from birth for children in Indonesia and worldwide. In November-December 2016, the Department of Paediatrics conducted a three-week child health epidemiology and research methods and leadership course, which included several mid-career academic staff from the Department of Paediatrics at UGM.

Dr Trisasi Lestari, a PhD candidate from Charles Darwin University co-supervised by Steve Graham, conducted a study of household screening of tuberculosis cases in a high incidence setting in Indonesia. 30 31

Department of Medical Education Training Programs

Since 2003, the Department of Medical Education has collaborated with the University of Indonesia to run the one-year Bachelor of Medical Science program. More than 350 Indonesian students have participated in the program, which continues to build strong linkages in the academic and medical fields between Australia and Indonesia.

their work to an audience of their peers, and In 2016, Dr Anita Horvath and Dr Justin Bilszta Collaboration network with and listen to some of Victoria’s top from the Department of Medical Education and Engagement medical researchers in a cooperative scientific continued their research collaboration with environment. Two Indonesian students, Bhanu Dr Ardi Findyartini, MD, PhD, and Dr Diantha In 2016, the Department of Medical Education A and Brenda, were accepted to deliver 3-Minute Soemantri, MD, PhD, both from the Faculty welcomed 13 medical students from the thesis presentations at this meeting. One of Medicine at the University of Indonesia, University of Indonesia into the Bachelor of student, Rhema Susilo, went on to present her to evaluate the experiences of students who Medical Science program at the University research on chronic neuropathic pain in New undertake the Bachelor of Medical Science of Melbourne. This one-year program offers York and Auckland. program. This project is exploring the Dr Justin Bilszta and Ms Jayne Lysk collaborated with Dr Ardi Findyartini and Dr medical students an opportunity to gain experiences of students who undertake a clinical Diantha Soemantri from the Department of Medical Education at the Faculty of research training and experience and to The top student for this year and the recipient of placement in Australia and comparing this Medicine, UI, to develop a clinical teacher training program funded through a grant undertake a clinical placement, giving them the Deans’ Prize was Vivianne Chandrakesuma. to a similar group of students who undertake from the Australia Indonesia Institute (AII). The project represents the initiative of two insight into what it is like to combine research Her project was titled: ‘Functional and clinical placements in Indonesia. A focus of the medical education faculties working together create a program for a better education with medical practice. This is an important step Radiological Outcomes of Dorsal Versus study will be their in-placement experiences, for future doctors. The program was designed to train clinical teachers for their roles in towards developing them as future clinician Volar Plate Fixation for Distal Radius Fracture’. especially in relation to language and cultural teaching and education to improve the quality of education of future generations and scientists. Chandrakesuma undertook her clinical acclimatisation, as well as the integration of the patient-centred care. In November 2016, the first Advanced Clinical Teacher Training placement alongside one of the Asia Pacific All 13 students presented their research Australia-exposed students back into the clinical and Training of Trainers was held over three days at the UI Faculty of Medicine. It was region’s leading orthopaedic surgeons, Professor projects at The Australian Society for Medical environment on return to Indonesia. attended by 27 clinical teachers from UI partner hospitals. This training of trainers Peter Choong, at St Vincent’s Hospital, and her Research Student Symposium in Melbourne. program represented the beginning of efforts to develop internationally benchmarked systematic review was supervised by Associate The symposium is an opportunity for health advanced training of clinical teachers at UI and is a sign of the strengthened Professor Michelle Dowesy. and medical research students to present collaboration in medical education and research with the Melbourne Medical School.

The 2015-16 cohort 32 33

FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE, BUILDING Professor Abidin Kusno AND PLANNING

In 2016, the Indonesia Forum contributed funding in support of a visit to the University The Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning continues to nurture relationships with key staff and institutions throughout Indonesia of Melbourne by Professor Abidin Kusno, whose research is widely recognised in and continues to develop links with the University of Indonesia in Jakarta, Gadjah Mada University (UGM) in Yogyakarta, Bandung Institute of Indonesian architecture and urban studies. His research interests, with a focus on Technology (ITB) and 10 November Institute of Technology (ITS) in Surabaya. Jakarta and Indonesia, include urban/suburbanism, politics and culture, history and The study of Southeast Asian (including Indonesian) architecture, planning and urbanism is included in a number of subjects taught at theory of architecture. While in Melbourne, Professor Kusno delivered one of the undergraduate and graduate level, including as part of the Bachelor of Environments and Bachelor of Design degrees. keynotes in GOLD: the 33rd Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand. His keynote speech, ‘Gold, Power and Architectural Stories in Indonesia’ looked at how different meanings of gold from the past and present have informed stories of architecture and urbanism in Indonesia. He was architecture in the Asia-Pacific. Participants also a panellist at an Indonesia Forum Panel Discussion, Reading Indonesian Cities: Teaching Collaboration include academics and students from national Dreams, Nightmares and Memories of a Nation, with the University of Melbourne’s • Foundations of Architecture and Engagement and international universities with research Professor Vedi Hadiz and Professor Kim Dovey and Professor Widjaja Martokusumo focused on Southeast Asia and East Asia, and (ITB). Kusno held a Canada Research Chair in Asian Urbanism and Culture (with Amanda Achmadi and Sidh Sintusingha co- • Formative Ideas in Architecture a panel from the Centre for Asian and Middle University of British Columbia) and currently serves as President of Canadian Council coordinated a joint exhibition based on the Eastern Architecture (CAMEA) at The University for Southeast Asian Studies. His books include Appearances of Memory: Mnemonic • Managing Global City Regions works that resulted from the 2015 Bandung of Adelaide. The event was organised with Practices of Architecture and Urbanism in Indonesia (Duke University Press, 2010), Professor Abidin Kusno Traveling Studio in Melbourne. The Studio • Multicultural/Postcolonial Cities funding from the Strategic Initiative Fund at the After the New Order: Space, Politics and Jakarta(Hawaii University Press, 2013), and was a joint program that brought together 15 Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, Behind the Postcolonial: Architecture, Urban Space and Political Cultures in Indonesia • Strategic Planning in Asia-Pacific Cities students from the University of Melbourne and The University of Melbourne and led by Anoma (Routledge, 2000). 20 students from ITB to explore the complex • Theorising the Asian Metropolis Pieris, Duanfang Lu (University of Sydney), and interstices of informal and formal urbanism in Cecilia Chu (Hong Kong University). The event • Urban Environments Bandung. The exhibition, ‘The Informal City’, was also aimed to increase regional participation in held in the MSD building in February 2016. • Asia Pacific Modernities the SAHANZ conference that followed. Abidin Professor Widjaja Martokusumo • Spatial and Political Architectures of Asia Gideon Aschwanden coordinated the 2016 Kusno from York University, Toronto, Canada, travelling studio to Bandung, delivered in gave the keynote address at the workshop. • Principles of Heritage and Conservation Semester 2, 2016. The studio is built on The workshop was followed by a postgraduate an interdisciplinary teaching and learning • Design Thesis (Jakarta Studio) student plenary: Rethinking Modern Asia- approach, bringing together the staff and Pacific Architectures, on 6 July 2016, held in • International Travelling Studio students from the University of Melbourne, collaboration with the University of Hong Kong (Bandung Studio) Institute Technology in Bandung and the Future In July 2016, Amanda Achmadi, from the Melbourne School of Design (MSD), hosted (HKU) and the National University of Singapore Cities Laboratory in Singapore. Professor Widjaja Martokusumo, Dean of Bandung Institute of Technology’s (ITB) (NUS) and funded through an International School of Architecture, Planning and Policy Development. Professor Martokusumo The Faculty of Architecture, Building and Research and Research Training Fund workshop was a recipient of the 2015/2016 Melbourne Asia Visiting Fellowship. During his visit, he Planning hosted Professor Abidin Kusno from grant from the University of Melbourne. presented a research seminar and contributed to studio teaching while working alongside York University in Toronto, Canada, in July Collaborating academics included Cecilia Chu staff at MSD to explore future research collaborations between the two departments. 2016. Professor Kusno, a leading historian of and Eunice Seng from HKU and Jiat-Hwee Professor Martokusumo graduated from ITB’s Department of Architecture in 1991 and architecture and urbanism of Indonesia, was Chang and Lilian Chee from NUS. in 1999 was awarded a Doktor-Ingenieur degree in urban planning and design from a keynote speaker at the 33rd International the Fachbereich Stadt- & Landschaftsplanung, Universität Gesamthochschule Kassel, Conference of the Society of Architectural Germany. He is also the chairman of the Architectural Design Research Group. Since 2014, Historians, Australia and New Zealand (SAHANZ), he has been a professor in architecture and urban heritage conservation. His writings have hosted by the University of Melbourne, 6-9 July been published in Jahrbuch Stadterneuerung TU Berlin (2000 and 2002), the Journal 2016. of Southeast Asian Architecture NUS (2008), ASEAN Journal on Tourism and Hospitality On 4-5 July, the University of Melbourne (2011), and the International Journal of Built Environmental and Sustainability, University hosted the workshop ‘Spaces in transition: of Teknologi Malaysia (2015). He has also contributed pieces to The Indonesian Town globalisation, transnationalism and urban Revisited, edited by PJM Nas, (2002), and Managing Change at Universities: A Selection of change in the Asia-Pacific’. The workshop aimed case studies from Africa and Southeast Asia, edited by Peter Mayer and Marc Wilde (2013). to offer insights on architecture and urbanism in the Asia-Pacific region. It engaged with issues of decolonisation, indigenisation, urbanisation and globalisation and encouraged critical reflection on the histories, pedagogies and practices of 34 35

MSD-ITB joint exhibition 36 37

FACULTY OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS Book Launch: Doing Business in ASEAN Markets

On 19 October, Melbourne Business School professors Ian Williamson and Peter Verhezen hosted an event to launch the book Doing Business in ASEAN Markets, with co-editor Natalia Soebagjo, executive director of University of Indonesia’s Centre for the Study of The Faculty of Business and Economics is a leading centre of teaching and research in accounting, actuarial studies, economics, finance and Governance, and contributors, including former Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources management and marketing. The Faculty maintains strong and enduring teaching and learning and research relationships with Indonesia Sudirman Said, President Commissioner of PT Pertamina Tanri Abeng, Senior lecturer at and undertakes a range of engagement activities with leading higher education institutions, government bodies, and corporations. The the University of Indonesia’s Faculty of Economics Faisal Basri, Independent Commissioner James Riady Chair in Asian Business and Economics supports these teaching, research and engagement endeavours, to drive a deeper of Axiata XL Peter Chambers, and CEO of Pasifik Satelit Nusantara Adi Rahman Adiwoso. understanding of the Asian region. The James Riady Chair is endowed by James Riady, a Bachelor of Commerce alumnus, and sits at the heart of the Faculty’s dedicated Centre for Asian Business and Economics. The book analyses the pitfalls and risks of doing business in ASEAN countries that are mostly absent in Western markets, covering various strategic, external, operational, and legal-cultural challenges for international companies. Doing Business in ASEAN Emerging Markets addresses how to resolve those barriers. Encompassing issues of governance and Book Launch for Doing Business in ASEAN Markets of Finance. His research interests include market Department of Accounting brought together leadership standards, the authors present case studies and practical solutions underpinned by academic research. Helping executives learn how to implement Teaching microstructure, behavioural finance, and asset faculty and key industry partners experienced high international standards and maintain sensitivity to socio-cultural and political Asian contexts, the book highlights the need to create an international • Business, Governance & Ethics in Asia pricing. In 2013, Irwan and several Indonesian in transitioning public sector reporting to diverse and unified leadership team that will take better decisions and effectively deal with risks, and apply best corporate governance practices within an finance scholars founded the Indonesian accrual based international standards and in the Asian context. • Business in Asia (Indonesia focus) Finance Association (IFA). Since then, he has development and use of those standards. More According to Professor Verhezen, challenges include weak legal institutions and bureaucratic red tape that often result in institutional voids that can make legal been appointed IFA president. Since June 2013, than 50 University of Melbourne academic and • Business in the Global Economy and judicial certainty a far-fetched dream for many global firms. Ethical leadership is sometimes also challenged by outright coercive corruption that can arise he has served as one of the board members administrative staff and 11 presenters delivered when attempting to obtain legal licenses or to finalise deals in these growth markets. • Doing Business in the Asia-Pacific of the Asian Finance Association (AsFA). He the program. is also the Director of the Graduate School of Indonesian Minister of Finance Sri Mulyani Indrawati provided a foreword in the book, explaining that good corporate governance was critical to improving the • Asian Business and Management Professor Prakash Singh and Dr Krzysztof Management in the Faculty of Economics and ability of boards, managers and owners to steer their companies through rapidly changing and volatile market conditions. Dembek, from the Department of Management • Managing Entrepreneurship and Business at UI. Innovation and Marketing, and Dr Brad Potter and Dr Jodi In October 2016, the Department of York, from the Department of Accounting, • Strategy, Ethics and Governance Accounting delivered a three-week short continued to work on a two-year grant on (with Asia focus) course in ‘Strengthening the Implementation ‘Analysing the Business Models of Organisations 20th David Finch Lecture by Professor Chatib Basri and Application of Accrual Accounting’ to Involved in Creating Social and Economic Value Collaboration 30 middle and senior managers from the in the Philippines, Indonesia and Australia’. Reform in a ‘second best world’: the case of Indonesia and Engagement Indonesian Ministry of Finance under the Australia Awards Indonesia (AAI) program. The In 2016, Associate Professor Irwan Adi Ekaputra Australia Awards short courses are designed (University of Indonesia) was appointed a to develop senior-level participants’ technical Centre for Asian Business and Economics The practice of policy reform was the subject of the 20th David Finch lecture, delivered and leadership competencies and to provide Visiting Research Fellow in the Faculty of on 14 September by Chatib Basri, Professor of Economics at the University of linkages between Indonesians and Australians Business and Economics and spent three Indonesia and former Indonesian minister of finance. at the individual and organisational level. The months visiting Melbourne, in the Department In a fascinating and insightful talk on how policy is made, Basri suggested that a policy maker must choose between two paths. One involves conducting reform only when government institutions allow perfect policies to be chosen and implemented. This might sound attractive, he said, but reforms would be a long time coming because establishing government institutions that facilitate perfect policies is a major undertaking. The alternative path, he said, was to commence policy reform today, accepting that it would have to be done in a ‘second-best world’, where institutions were not perfect. Professor Ross Garnaut, Consul-General to Indonesia Ms Dewi Savitri Wahab, Professor Chatib Basri, Basri was able to draw on his experience as finance minister to reflect on conducting policy reform in a second- Professor Jeff Borland and Dean of Faculty of Business and Economics and Melbourne Business School best world. He described changes to processes for attracting foreign investment to Indonesia, dealing with the Professor Paul Kofman sharp drop in the value of the Indonesian currency in mid-2013, reforms to Indonesian customs to reduce costs of shipping, and introducing a major scholarship scheme for Indonesian students to study at leading international universities.

Basri proposed many lessons for policy makers. His main advice was that policy makers should concentrate on reforms with the highest likelihood of success and the greatest gains to society. All this needed to be done while recognising the constraints of the existing political and institutional environment.

(Text by Professor Jeff Borland) 38 39

MELBOURNE GRADUATE SCHOOL MELBOURNE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING OF EDUCATION

The Melbourne School of Engineering maintains strong research links with the University of Indonesia, Bandung Institute of Technology The Melbourne Graduate School of Education (MGSE) is engaged with Indonesia primarily through the LH Martin Institute, which provides a (ITB), 10 November Institute of Technology (ITS), Gadjah Mada University, and Bogor Agricultural Institute (IPB). It also partners with Monash range of organisational governance, leadership and management programs tertiary sector institutions in Indonesia. University and University of Sydney in its engagement with Indonesia.

graduate researchers and 5 academics from innovation ecosystems. Participants explored the Laboratory to Full-Scale Systems’ at the Professor Colin Duffield continued to serve Collaboration 11 universities in Australia and Indonesia their own roles in the sector by engaging with Collaboration 20th Australasian Fluid Mechanics Conference as co-lead of the Infrastructure cluster at the and Engagement to enhance research excellence through digital tools and in discussions, and were and Engagement at the University of Western Australia, Perth, 5-8 Australia-Indonesia Centre. During 2015, the interdisciplinary training and collaborative skills supported to develop high-impact research December. Infrastructure Cluster was successful in obtaining Graduate Research Interdisciplinary Network Dr Robert Gordon was awarded a $60,000 development. proposals. $2.1 million in research funding through an (GRIN) grant from the Australia-Indonesia Centre (AIC) The Faculty of Engineering participated in active investment plan. The projects associated The LH Martin Institute was also involved in the The program was delivered on campus at Energy Cluster’s Tactical Research Projects the 3rd annual Indonesia-Australia Research with this funding were completed in 2016. Graduate Research Interdisciplinary Network Monash University, the University of Melbourne scheme to research ‘Enhanced Technology Cost Summit, which took the theme of: ‘Innovating Projects related to: improving rail infrastructure (GRIN), which is an initiative of the partner and The Australian National University. Leading Assessment Models’. The funding was confirmed Together: Starting Local, Reaching Global’ (interfacing to a port intermodal terminal); institutions of the Australia-Indonesia Centre. academics from across the participating partner in 2016, and the project is underway. and was held in Surabaya from 22-23 August. efficient facilitation of major infrastructure A pilot program was delivered over nine days institutions contributed to program design The summit was supported by the AIC and Dr Sebastian Thomas delivered a project projects; effective structuring and packaging in Australia in November 2016 to coincide with and delivery. LH Martin Institute’s Åsa Olsson the Ministry of Research, Technology and progress report on his Energy Cluster Tactical of funding and financing arrangements for the the joint meeting of The Australian Academy of facilitated a session, in conjunction with the Higher Education. A wide range of University Research Project grant to research ‘Building delivery of infrastructure; seismic performance Science and the Indonesian Academy of Science University of Melbourne’s Dr Sebastian Thomas, of Melbourne academics participated in coalitions and processes to support community of critical infrastructures in port development; (AIPI). The GRIN Program brought together 21 that explored trends in the global research and the summit, including Pro Vice-Chancellor empowerment through renewable energy and and the internet of things, big-data analytics and (International) Professor Simon Evans. livelihood solutions’. smart cities. The University of Melbourne hosted the final Professor Saman Halgamuge and Associate days of the Graduate Research Interdisciplinary Professor Lu Aye delivered project progress Network inaugural program in early December. Pilot Doctoral Training reports on their Energy Cluster Tactical Research The GRIN is a network of promising research Project grant to research ‘Control the Grid or students from the AIC’s 11 participating with the University of Gadjah Mada be Controlled: Near Off-Grid Solutions using universities. Renewable Energy Technologies and Demand Side Prediction’. The Department of Mechanical Engineering was also involved in the visit to Melbourne Professor Nicholas Hutchins presented the by Dr William Sabandar, chair of Indonesia’s The LH Martin Institute and Faculty of Medicine at Gadjah Mada results of his Energy Cluster Small Projects Grant Renewable Energy Task Force, which was also University (UGM) work collaboratively to develop contextualised at an invited plenary titled ‘Turbulent Boundary supported by the AIC. leadership and management capabilities for the next generation of Layers Developing Over Rough Surfaces: From medical research leaders. In 2016, on 22-24 November and 19-21 December, the Melbourne Graduate School of Education piloted a ‘Doctoral Supervision Training’ program that aimed to build the capacity of UGM faculty members to effectively supervise doctoral students to achieve timely completion rates. This is an important strategic step for the university as they are expanding their local PhD programs.

LH Martin Institute worked collaboratively with Victoria University in the delivery of the program. A key element of the program involved unpacking the various dimensions of doctoral supervision. Training focused, in particular, on institutional culture, dynamics in styles of supervision, managing self and others, balancing academic work and personal issues, mentoring publications and professional development, academic integrity, fabrication, falsification and plagiarism. The program was facilitated by LH Martin Institute Program Director Åsa Olsson and Professor Ron Adams, from Victoria University. 40 41

LIBRARY MELBOURNE LAW SCHOOL

The Library strongly supports Indonesian studies teaching and research at the University of Melbourne through the provision of specialist The Melbourne Law School has been one of the leaders of engagement with Indonesia, through the Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and library support to staff and postgraduate students from the Asia Institute and Indonesia Forum, including research consultations and research Society (CILIS, launched in 2013) and the Asian Law Centre. The Law School enjoys close cooperative links with government, professional, skills development, and targeted collection development of electronic and print materials in both Indonesian and English. academic and non-governmental institutions throughout Indonesia and has significant numbers of Indonesian students studying law-related aspects of Indonesian society in the university’s graduate and research higher degree programs. In fact, Indonesian students are now among the top three foreign alumni groups in the Law School. In 2016, the Library continued to develop its collections of Indonesia-related monographs and other materials in the subject areas of Indonesian politics and government, religion, history, anthropology, language, literature, law, education, mass media, architecture and performance. Some 306 Indonesian-language monographs were purchased, of which 277 were funded by the Pitt Bequest (which supports the work of the School of Historical Studies). Most of these were supplied by Indonesian vendor Patamga Dhanam Jaya (formerly PT Bhratara Indonesia and Australia’, 23 August. Money Islamic Studies Postgraduate Conference Niaga). A further 27 books in English, six books in other languages, four electronic books and two DVDs on Indonesian subjects were also Teaching in politics poses challenges to democracies On 15-16 November, CILIS hosted its 12th Annual purchased. JD Program across the world. The seminar looked at the Islamic Studies Postgraduate Conference. complex ways ‘money politics’ works to subvert Twenty students presented and CILIS Senior There are now well over 15,000 Indonesia-related items in the University’s collection, including more than 7,000 Indonesian-language items. • Deals in the Asia-Pacific democracy in two very different systems in two Associates Professor Greg Fealy (ANU), Professor There are more than 2000 Indonesia-related electronic resources on the Library catalogue, mainly English-language. These include e-books, very different societies, and asked what could be Virginia Hooker (ANU), Professor Merle Ricklefs, reports, facsimiles of early works and journals. • Law and Legal Practice in Asia done to prevent it. and CILIS Associates Dr Nadirsyah Hosen Masters Programs (University of Wollongong), Professor Denny Mohammad Mahfud MD, the former chief justice Indrayana (University of Melbourne) and • Commercial Law in Asia of the Indonesian Constitutional Court, chaired Professor Jamhari Makruf (Syarif Hidayatullah (formerly, ‘Commercial Deals in Asia’ a roundtable discussion on ‘Current Issues in State Islamic University Jakarta) served as Indonesian Law and Politics’, 21 October. This is • Islamic Law and Politics in Asia mentors. Professor Tim Lindsey acted as host. discussed in further detai below. • Criminal Justice: Drugs in Asia Bibliographic Websites CILIS Senior Associates Associate Professor Greg Asian Law Online continued in 2016. It can be Fealy, Dr Stewart Fenwick, and Dr Nadirsyah Collaboration accessed at: www.law.unimelb.edu.au/alc/ Hosen, presented at a seminar and launched the and Engagement bibliography. book Religion, Law and Intolerance in Indonesia, CILIS Seminar Series edited by Tim Lindsey and Helen Pausacker, 15 Asian Law Online is a collection of English In 2016, CILIS continued to host its regular November. This seminar examined the political language materials on Asian laws available Seminar Series at the Melbourne Law School. and legal implications of resurgent Islamism throughout the world. It is offered to the public In this series, postgraduates and academics in Indonesia and analyse particular cases of as a free service to assist students, scholars and who are researching and writing on Asian legal intolerance and violence against minorities, as practitioners of Asian legal systems. It includes topics present a 45-minute paper, followed by well as discussed the responses by a weak state books, chapters in books, journal articles and questions and discussion. that seems too often unwilling to intervene theses on Indonesian law, and provides access to protect vulnerable minorities against rising to a large number of Indonesian law websites. Professor Michelle Foster, Professor Susan religious intolerance. Kneebone, David Manne, and Dr Antje Missbach In 2016, CILIS continued to develop its new presented on ‘Asylum Seekers and the Australia- Daniel Pascoe, an Assistant Professor at the bibliographic database, ‘Islamic Law Online’, Indonesia Relationship’, 15 March. Although School of Law, City University of Hong Kong, which can be accessed at: http://cils.law. irregular departures of asylum seeker boats presented a seminar titled: ‘Dodging Death Row? unimelb.edu.au/ilo. Islamic Law Online is from Indonesia to Australia have slowed down, Victim-Perpetrator Reconciliation Agreements in a collection of publications on Islamic law numbers of new arrivals in Indonesia remain Death Penalty Cases’, on 21 November. Pascoe available throughout the world. steady. Indonesia’s capacity to host these people compared the 14 death penalty retentionist for the long term and provide them with proper nations that have most strictly incorporated protection is reaching its limits. In this seminar, shari’a criminal law principles into their positive prominent scholars of refugee law and asylum law, along with the People’s Republic of China, seeker issues discussed current developments to analyse the functions underpinning victim- and considered their implications for a range of perpetrator reconciliation agreements in death issues, including foreign policy, regional politics penalty cases. At the same seminar, Michael and Indonesia’s relations with Australia. O’Connell SC, a lawyer to the leaders of the so-called Bali Nine, launched the book Drugs Professor Denny Indrayana, Maxine McKew, and Law and Legal Practice in Southeast Asia by Tim Alison Byrne presented on ‘Political Corruption Lindsey and Pip Nicholson. CILIS 12th Annual Islamic Studies Postgraduate - Elections and Beyond: Perspectives from Conference 42 43 Melbourne Law School (continued)

Visit by Mahfud MD

Australian Journal of Asian Law CILIS Policy Papers in 2016 Advice to Government With Professor M B Hooker, Professor Veronica No. 11. The Hidden Driver of Deforestation: Why In 2016, Tim Lindsey acted as Senior Adviser Former Constitutional Court Chief Justice Mohammad Mahfud MD visited Taylor of ANU, Professor Richard Cullen of the Effecting Reform of Indonesia’s Legal Framework (Courts), to the aid program’s Australia Indonesia the Melbourne Law School on 21 October 2016. Mahfud MD also served as a University of Hong Kong and, Amanda Whiting is Critical to the Long-term Success of REDD+, Partnership for Justice program, based in member of the House of Representatives (DPR) for the National Awakening of the Asian Law Centre, Tim Lindsey and Helen Arjuna Dibly and Josi Khatarina Jakarta. Party (PKB) and as Ministers of Defence and Justice and Human Rights under Pausacker of CILIS edited the international President Abdurrahman Wahid (Gus Dur). The former top judge spoke at a No. 12. Sentencing People-Smuggling Offenders Visitors refereed journal, The Australian Journal of Asian lunch time roundtable with more than 30 students and academics. In a frank in Indonesia, Antje Missbach Law, which covers Southeast Asia, including Professor Denny Indrayana and generous discussion, Mahfud MD described the challenges faced during his Indonesia. No. 13. Combating Corruption in Yudhoyono’s Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia five-year tenure as chief justice (2008-2013), when the court made a number Indonesia: An Insider’s Perspective, Denny 4 April 2016 - 31 December 2016 of controversial decisions, such as the 2010 decision to uphold the Blasphemy Indrayana Academic Host: Professor Tim Lindsey Law and the 2012 decision to disband the upstream oil and gas regulator, BP Migas. In his typically candid and forthright manner, Mahfud also discussed contemporary challenges related to bureaucratic and political corruption. According to Mahfud, the primary obstacle impeding ongoing legal reform was the politicisation of and corruption in the bureaucracy. Drugs Law and Legal Practice in Southeast Asia

Drugs Law and Legal Practice in Southeast Asia, co-authored by Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and Society (CILIS) Director Professor Tim Lindsey and Asian Law Centre Director Professor Pip Nicholson, investigates criminal law and practice relevant to drugs regulation in three Southeast Asian jurisdictions: Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam. These jurisdictions represent a spectrum of approaches to drug regulation in Southeast Asia, highlighting differences in practice Appointment of Professor Denny Indrayana between civil and common law countries, and between liberal and authoritarian states. This book offers the first major English language empirical investigation and comparative analysis of regulation, jurisprudence, court procedure, and practices relating to drugs law enforcement in these three states.

This book by Professor Tim Lindsey and Professor Pip Nicholson is a product of a major collaborative four-year project funded by The Australian Research Council to investigate criminal law and practice in the region. In 2016, Denny Indrayana was appointed as visiting professor at Melbourne Law School. Indrayana is an internationally recognised anticorruption campaigner who has played a leading role in law reform efforts in Indonesia. He is a Professor of Constitutional Law at Gadjah Mada University (UGM) and served as Deputy Minister of Law and Human Rights from 2011 to 2014 under . Before taking up the deputy minister Religion, Law and Intolerance in Indonesia position, Denny held roles including Special Advisor for Legal Affairs, Human Rights and Anticorruption to Yudhoyono, Chair of the Centre for the Study of Anti-Corruption at UGM, and Director of the Indonesian Court Monitoring NGO. Denny has a PhD from the Melbourne Law School and won the prestigious Australian Alumni Award in 2009. Despite its overwhelmingly Muslim majority, Indonesia has always been seen as exceptional for its diversity and pluralism. In recent years, however, there has been a rise in ‘majoritarianism’, with resurgent Islamist groups pushing hard to impose conservative values on public life – in many cases with considerable success. This has sparked growing fears for the future of basic human rights, and, in particular, the rights of women and sexual ethnic minority groups. Professor Denny Indrayana There have, in fact, been more prosecutions of unorthodox religious groups since the fall of Soeharto in 1998 than there were under the three decades of his authoritarian rule. Some Indonesians even feel that the pluralism they thought was constitutionally guaranteed by the national ideology, the Pancasila, is now under threat.

This book, edited by CILIS Director Professor Tim Lindsey and CILIS Deputy Director Dr Helen Pausacker contains essays exploring these issues by prominent scholars, lawyers and activists from within Indonesia and beyond, offering detailed accounts of the political and legal implications of rising resurgent Islamism in Indonesia. Examining particular cases of intolerance and violence against minorities, it also provides an account of the responses offered by a weak state that now seems too often unwilling to intervene to protect vulnerable minorities against rising religious intolerance. 44 45

FACULTY OF SCIENCE Skye Turner-Walker

Skye Turner-Walker is a PhD researcher at the University of Melbourne’s School of Geography and at The Office of Environmental Programs Australian-German Climate College. Her research is on processes of local engagement in climate change adaptation in Indonesia, and how these influence outcomes in local resource management. Her research draws on three cases in Central Java, West Kalimantan and Central Maluku. Collaboration Skye has a background of research and programming on environment and development issues across the and Engagement Asia-Pacific region, with a focus on responding to environmental and climate change risks and uncertainty. She works on the development of climate change adaptation and environment projects in the Asia-Pacific Dr Sebastian Thomas of the Office for Environmental Programs and School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences is leading a research partnership with Bandung region for the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and previously as a researcher and research Institute of Technology, Monash University, Paramadina University, and an Indonesian civil society organisation, the People Centred Economic and Business coordinator for the Asia centre of the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) Asia Centre, including Indonesia, Institute (IBEKA). The project is funded by the Australia-Indonesia Centre (AIC), and is titled ‘Building Coalitions and Processes to Support Community Livelihood amongst other things. Needs and Aspirations Through Renewable Energy.’ The project is part of the AIC’s larger work on energy in Indonesia, and runs from 2016 until late 2017.

Field work was conducted in November 2016 and February 2017, the second trip involving use of a drone to engage communities in discussions about their local areas, and capture high-impact visual media. The drone footage is also being used in an evaluation of renewable energy options to support economic development activities.

In 2016, Thomas represented the University of Melbourne in the third annual Australia-Indonesia Centre’s Leaders Program. The theme of the program was ‘Economic Diplomacy, Energy and Innovation’. It was held over 10 days in May in Canberra, Sydney and Melbourne. Skye Turner-Walker Thomas was a speaker during the 3rd annual Indonesia-Australia Research Summit, which took the theme of: ‘Innovating Together: Starting Local, Reaching Global’ and was held in Surabaya from 22-23 August.

Anna Sanders

Geography

Anna Sanders is a PhD candidate in the School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences. Sanders’ research examines multi-level governance and decision-making in Indonesia. The focus of the research is on sub-national policy Research arrangements and implementation of Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation REDD+ and Wolfram Dressler was awarded an ARC Future Fellowship (2014-2018) to examine local social responses to the convergence of transnational land-use policy. Its main goal is to understand how global governance instruments interact with local politics, how governance, major resource extraction/ investment and climate change in the Philippines and Indonesia. As part of his Fellowship, Dressler has land use decisions are made in practice, and the consequences of these decisions. Her fieldwork was based in been working with the nongovernmental organisation Operation Wallacea Tropical (OWT), based in Bogor, West Java, on a study of the history of Central Kalimantan province in the southern peatland region, and comprised several sites in two districts. It was forest conservation programs in East Kalimantan. Dr Dressler and his team have examined the ways in which conservation NGOs have provided undertaken in collaboration with the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), which is headquartered incentives to draw farmers toward forest conservation for orangutan protection and how these incentives and associated forest stewardship in Bogor, Indonesia. In 2016, she completed a working paper from the study, ‘Analysing multilevel governance have proven difficult. Farmers’ aspirations for wealth tend to align more closely with oil palm production, and other cash cropping initiatives. in Indonesia’, which is available on the CIFOR website: http://www.cifor.org/publications/pdf_files/WPapers/ Dr Dressler is in the process of writing one of the papers associated with this project. WP202Myers.pdf

Anna Sanders 46 47

FACULTY OF VETERINARY VICTORIAN COLLEGE OF THE ARTS (VCA) AND AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND MELBOURNE CONSERVATORIUM OF MUSIC (MCM) Melbourne Veterinary School Victorian College of the Arts (VCA)

The Melbourne Veterinary School is engaged with Indonesian institutions primarily in the area of research. Projects encompass animal The VCA has been involved in establishing higher-order dialogue centred on developing practice-led innovation in the visual and performing production, nutrition and infectious diseases. arts between Australia and Indonesia, particularly with the Graduate School at the Indonesian Institute of the Arts (ISI) in Yogyakarta. Professor Barbara Bolt has been working closely with Professor Djohan, director of the Graduate School at ISI, since 2014 in building links. In 2016, progress was made on a memorandum of understanding between ISI and the University of Melbourne, Collaboration which is expected to be signed in 2017. A group of seven student animation films were selected to be screened at a film festival at ISI in 2017. and Engagement Melbourne Conservatorium of Music Through the Australia-Indonesia Centre, researchers at the Melbourne Veterinary School have been involved in work investigating the effect of soy straw on The Melbourne Conservatorium of Music maintains three sets of gamelan (Javanese, Sundanese and Cirebonese musical instruments/ nutrition in Brahman-cross beef cattle, which resulted in a joint publication between the University of Melbourne and Airlangga University, Surabaya. orchestras), representing many of the gamelan traditions of Indonesia, as well as a set of wayang kulit puppets and a kecapi-suling ensemble. There is active study and performance of gamelan music and associated performing arts such as puppetry and dance. The gamelan Over an extended period, a strong collaboration has been developed between the Melbourne Veterinary School, the Indonesian Research Centre for Veterinary collection is housed in the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music’s Parkville annex in Berkeley Street. Science, Gajah Mada University (UGM), and University Malaysia Sabah (UMS), in relation to avian influenza. The work is centred on vaccination and diagnostic testing, particularly tests that differentiate vaccinated from infected animals. The project is also aimed at training in advanced molecular techniques against this devastating zoonotic disease. Joint publications between researchers from these institutions were also produced in 2016.

Melbourne Community Gamelan performing on 10 September. Front row (left to right): Marianne Lessels, Ilona Wright, Joko Susilo, Michael Ewing. Middle row: Joe Browning, Ze Lin Teo, Yuniar Ponco Pranoto; Back row: Robert McMullen, Elisabeth Riharti. (Photo by Gianna Rizzo.) 48 49

of MCG’s performances in 2016. Narelle Villella Law, Islam and Society (CILIS) at the Teaching is president of the group. The group can be Melbourne Law School. This performance, • Gamelan in Modern Indonesia contacted by email: melgamelan@hotmail. University of Melbourne (dancing), with a com, through its website: www.melgamelan. grant from the Australia Indonesia Institute. • Music Cultures of Asia com.au and Facebook: www.facebook.com/ • 31 October: ‘The Final Gong’ end of melgamelan. In 2016, 29 students enrolled in gamelan in first semester performance featured two semester and 39 students in second semester. In 2016, MCG performed six times: University of Melbourne student gamelan Many of these students took gamelan as a ensembles; Lenggok Geni, a traditional • 12 February: MCG Gadhon (small breadth subject. The students all participated in Indonesian dance group based at Monash ensemble) played Professor John Legge’s a combined concert with Melbourne Community University; and MCG. Gamelan at the end of both semesters. funeral, Monash University Putra Panji Asmara Inc (PPA) rehearses at • 6 June: ‘The Final Gong’ end of semester Ilona Wright taught ‘Gamelan in Modern the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music and Indonesia’ and directed the gamelan ensemble. performance featured two University of performs musical pieces from Cirebon, a region Dancer Ade performing at ‘The Taste of Gamelan’ on 12 September 2016 Melbourne Community Gamelan performing at ‘The Taste of Gamelan’ Melbourne student gamelan ensembles; Jenny McCallum taught the breadth subject on the north coast of West Java, with a focus on Finnish music; and MCG, which ‘Music Cultures of Asia’ which included lectures music to accompany topeng (masked dance). accompanied Javanese dancer, Dora Melati. on Indonesian traditional and popular music. The group is led by Michael Ewing from the • 21 August: MCG Gadhon played at the University of Melbourne’s Asia Institute, who Research University of Melbourne’s Open Day. can be contacted by email on: mce@unimelb. edu.au. Throughout 2016, David Irving and Jenny • 10 September: MCG (full gamelan) played McCallum continued work on an ARC Discovery at the 40th wedding anniversary of Waluya PPA took part in the following performances in Project, ‘Malay Music and Dance from the Cocos Dimas and Sue McKemmish (from Monash 2016: (Keeling) Islands and Christmas Island’ (2015-17, University) in Prahran. MCG was joined • 22 July: Asyik Melbourne (a night Principal Investigator David Irving). The project is by Dr Joko Susilo from the University of celebrating Indonesian local arts, dance, investigating the history and current practice of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. Malay arts in this small community predominantly music and food), held at the Church of All descended from Indonesian migrants. • 12 September: ‘The Taste of Gamelan’ at Nations, Carlton. the Uniting Church Hall, Northcote. Event • 29 October: PPA performed and provided Performances and Engagement organised in conjunction with Indonesian musical accompaniment for five topeng Melbourne Community Gamelan Inc (MCG) restaurant Yuni’s Kitchen. MCG was joined (masked) dances for an event organised by performs musical pieces from Solo (Central by Joko Susilo (music) and dancer Ade the Museum of Indonesian Arts at the Fo Java). The group rehearses at the Melbourne Suharto, who also works with the Asian Guang Yuan Art Gallery, Melbourne. Conservatorium of Music and is taught by Ki Law Centre and the Centre for Indonesian Poedijono, who was the musical director for all

Nek Rahma shows Jenny Mccallum his kompang (frame drum) on the front porch. (Photo by David Irving.) 50 51

ASIALINK

Asialink Business

Asialink is Australia’s leading centre for building Asia capability, public understanding of Asia, and appreciation of Australia’s role in the Asian region. It is based at the University of Melbourne’s Sidney Myer Asia Centre and is an initiative of the Myer Foundation. As Australia’s National Centre for Asia Capability, Asialink Business provides practical support to help organisations realise the potential of Asian markets. Asialink Business equips organisations to be Asia-ready by developing critical skills, knowledge and networks needed to Asialink works with business, government, philanthropic and cultural partners to initiate and strengthen Australia-Asia engagement engage with the complexities of the region. Grounded in market feedback, its training programs, research, and events enable businesses to on all levels and across all sectors. Asialink works to build an Asia-capable, deeply Asia-engaged Australia through thought leadership forge ahead with confidence to enter and grow in Asia. and innovative programs that build knowledge, skills and partnerships. Asialink delivers high-level forums, international collaborations, leadership training, education and cultural exchange programs in Australia and Asia. Asialink Business was engaged by Austrade • A boardroom briefing with Mr Noke Collaboration to explore how Australian legal and Kiroyan, Chief Consultant at Kiroyan Asialink regularly works in partnership with a variety of organisations including the Asia Institute, the Asian Law Centre, Asian Economics and Engagement management consulting services can increase Partners, who reflected on governance Centre, The Australian Centre for International Business, the Indonesia Forum, the Indonesian Muslim Youth Exchange Program and the their penetration of four key Asian markets, under President Joko Widodo and how Asialink Business designed and delivered Australia-Indonesia Business Council. including Indonesia. The resulting report, this has impacted business. Noke provided an ‘Indonesian Cultural Intelligence and ‘Growing Knowledge Economies’, focused on an insight into the investment climate Effectiveness’ program to key partners and key competitive drivers of these sectors and and cultural landscape of Southeast senior staff of a leading national law firm to markets, and identified potential commercial Asia’s largest economy, including the support its engagement with projects involving opportunities where Australian firms’ opportunities and challenges for ethical Indonesian counterparts. The program sought capabilities are positioned for developing Asia’s business, and the future prospects of Asialink Arts to build participants’ skills, awareness and knowledge economies. Indonesia’s economic reform agenda. confidence in working within the Indonesian business culture. In July, Asialink Business hosted two forums Asialink Business also supported the Australia focused on Indonesia: Indonesia Business Council National Conference Asialink Arts develops opportunities for cultural exchange between Australia and Asia to improve the Asia capability of the cultural sector, Indonesia Country Starter Pack. First published in Perth. In particular, Director of Marketing and based on the principles of partnership, collaboration and reciprocity. Asialink Arts has been engaging with Indonesia since 1992 through in September 2015, the ‘Indonesia Country • A public event in Melbourne, with keynote External Relations Raj Wilson moderated a panel residencies, touring exhibitions and special projects Starter Pack’ offers a comprehensive resource address by the Australian Ambassador to discussion that included, Austrade CEO Bruce for navigating the Indonesian business Indonesia, HE Paul Grigson, who provided Gosper, Senior Trade Commissioner for Jakarta environment. The content was updated in 2016 an update on the opportunities for Art House, the Gadjah Mada University, and as the Ubud Writers and Readers Festival. Kym Hewett, and Indonesian Consul General in Collaboration to reflect the changing business landscape in Australian businesses in the country. held an exhibition at Cemeti Art House from 15 Four of the stories written in Indonesia were Perth Ade Padmo Sarwono. and Engagement October -1 November. published while on residency, while outlets Indonesia, and a shareable app was launched such ABC International and Island Magazine are to enable easy access to the content via mobile Kerjasama Building on their achievements during the considering several others for publication. Post- devices. During 2016, Asialink Arts supported ‘Kerjasama’, exchange, a further exhibition of Tony Albert residency, the writer has facilitated workshops in a residency exchange between Indonesian and Timoteus Anggawan Kusno’s work Darwin, sharing the skills and networks gained artist Timoteus Anggawan Kusno and Australian was presented at Sullivan+Strumpf gallery, during her residency. Indigenous contemporary artist Tony Albert. The Singapore, between 25 February– 26 March project comprised of a six-week joint residency 2017. in Australia’s Northern Territory at ArtbackNT, Residency at Saritaksu Editions, Bali followed by a six-week joint residency at Cemeti In 2016, Asialink Arts supported Northern Art House in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Territory-based writer Natalie Sprite for a three- During their time in Alice Springs, the artists month residency at Saritaksu Editions, Bali. conducted a workshop with Iltja Ntjarra Many During her residency, the writer completed 12 Hands Art Centre and presented a pop-up short stories and ran seven workshops. She exhibition at Watch this Space. While based in received mentoring in best arts practice and Indonesia, the artists presented talks at Cemeti expanded her networks at organisations such

Australian Ambassador to Indonesia, HE Paul Grigson, presenting at the Asialink Business forum on Indonesia 52 53

Asialink Diplomacy Asia Education Foundation

Asialink Diplomacy conducts Track 2 dialogue and applied research on Australia’s engagement with Asia. In collaboration with regional The Asia Education Foundation (AEF) is a joint activity of Asialink at the University of Melbourne and Education Services Australia Ltd. partners, it is experimenting with new ways to shape public discussion and expert commentary on strategic issues in Australia-Asia relations. The AEF supports schools with curriculum resources, professional learning, innovative programs and networks to develop Asia capability for Foundation to Year 12 students in Australian schools. The Asia Education Foundation engaged Indonesian primary and secondary teachers in art laboratory that is developing community funding for two Indonesian participants in the 2016 through the Australia-Indonesia BRIDGE School Partnerships Program and the Australia Awards Indonesia short-term award Collaboration engagement programs and raising awareness of program, Gigih Rezki Septianto, from WeCare. for teacher professional development. and Engagement sustainable technology. id, and Annisa Arsyad, from Ecofun Indonesia, who are visiting Melbourne and Sydney in March all over Indonesia. Funded by The Australian five-days of immersive learning with Australian In May and November, Asialink Diplomacy From 30 October-1 November, Asialink 2017. Collaboration Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, the partners around intercultural understanding and coordinated academic symposiums for Diplomacy delivered the 9th annual ASEAN- and Engagement program was delivered in partnership with the school partnership building, including in the visiting Indonesians as part of the Australia Australia-New Zealand Dialogue in partnership Indonesian Ministry of Education and Culture use of information communication technology Indonesia Centre leaders program. More with the Institute of Strategic and International Australia Awards Indonesia and involved Indonesian teachers spending five- (ICT) for collaborative learning, and a two-week than 15 policymakers, business leaders, and Studies (ISIS) in Malaysia and the Asia New The Asia Education Foundation delivered a days in a Victorian school. school visit and homestay. academic experts from Indonesia participated Zealand Foundation. The dialogue explored three-week professional learning program for in workshops at the University, discussing smart common challenges and identified policy two delegations of Indonesian educators (27 per Australia-Indonesia BRIDGE School cities and energy policy. Partners included the opportunities for strengthening relations group) under the Australia Awards Indonesia Partnerships Program Melbourne School of Government, the Carlton between Australia, New Zealand and ASEAN. (AAI) Short Term Award program. The inaugural The Australia-Indonesia BRIDGE Program Connect Initiative, the Victorian Eco-Innovation Discussion covered the future of regional trade program consisted of two intakes of teachers established 16 school partnerships between Lab, and the Melbourne Networked Society initiatives, law enforcement cooperation against (in October and December) with a subsequent Australian and Indonesian schools in 2016. Institute. drug trafficking, and joint maritime patrolling. three intakes scheduled for 2017. The program Indonesian schools were selected across levels This dialogue also included Dr Philips Vermonte, focused on building teacher capability across and sectors from Central Kalimantan, South In 2016, Asialink Diplomacy managed the Executive Director of the Centre for Strategic and a range of areas (pedagogy, deep learning, Sulawesi, West Sumatra and East Nusa Tenggara Women in Leadership video project, with International Studies (CSIS) in Jakarta. student-centred learning and assessment). and partnered with schools across Australia. support from the Australia-ASEAN Council in the Indonesian teachers selected to participate in Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. This Asialink Diplomacy also designed the Australia- Two teachers from each participating Indonesian the program were high-performing teachers project involved recording and broadcasting ASEAN Emerging Leaders Program (A2ELP), a school joined a pre-departure workshop in from primary schools, junior high schools and interviews with six inspiring women from professional intensive opportunity for 15 social Jakarta followed by a three-week professional special schools, across sectors from provinces Australia and South-East Asia. The Indonesian entrepreneurs from Southeast Asia and Australia learning program in Australia. This focused on candidate, Irene Agrivina, co-founded the House to exchange insights and discuss best practices of Natural Fiber (HONF) in Yogyakarta, a digital in social impact. Asialink Diplomacy secured 54 55

Learning About Cultural Safety From Sasak Midwives’, Medical Anthropology, [Epub ahead of McCallum, Jenny. ‘Beguiling Voices: Traces of Sounding Voices in the Riau Malay Literary print], doi:10.1080/01459740.2016.1142990 Tradition’. Accepted for publication in Ethnomusicology Forum, December 2016. Appendix 1: Publications Bennett, Linda Rae, 2016, ‘Women Living Beyond the Norms: Review of Wieringa, S, Bhaiya, A MacDonald M; Chung D; Hutchins N; Chan L; Ooi A; and Garcia-Mayoral R, 2016, ‘The Minimal & Katjasungkana, N, 2014, Heteronormativity, Passionate Aesthetics and Symbolic Subversion Channel: A Fast and Direct Method for Characterising Roughness’, 2nd Multiflow Summer in Asia,’ International Institute for Asian Studies, 74: 21, June 7, doi: http://www.newbooks. School on Turbulence, Journal of Physics, 708(1). asia/review/Heteronormativity McGregor, Katharine, 2016, ‘Emotions and Activism for Former So-Called “Comfort Women” Durr PA; Wibowo MH; Tarigan S; Artanto S; Rosyid MN; and Ignjatovic J, 2016, ‘Defining “Sector of the Japanese Occupation of the Netherlands East Indies’, Women’s Studies International BOOKS AND EDITED VOLUMES Intolerance in Indonesia. Abdigdon, Oxon: Routledge, 289-316. 3” Poultry Layer Farms in Relation to H5N1-HPAI: An Example from Java, Indonesia’, Avian Forum, 54, 67-78. Diseases, 60, 183-190. Hadiz, Vedi, 2016, Islamic Populism in Indonesia and the Middle East. Cambridge: Cambridge Pausacker, Helen, 2016, ‘The Oldest Child Dhalang: Learning and Performing Wayang in McGregor, Katharine, 2016, ‘Cold War Scripts: Comparing Remembrance of the Malayan University Press. Solo and Melbourne / Dhalang Cilik yang Paling Gedhe: Pengalaman Belajar dan Berpentas Ewing, Michael C, 2016, ‘Reiterative Construction of Narrative: A Storytelling Device From Emergency and 1965 Violence in Indonesia’, Southeast Asia Research, 24(2), 242-260. Wayang di Solo dan Melbourne’, in Gunawan, Tuti and Yahya, Iip (eds) Footsteps of Lee, Julian; Prior, John; and Reuter, Thomas (eds), 2016, Trajectories: Excursions with the Javanese Conversation’, Narrative Inquiry 26 (2), 376 – 401. Indonesians in Victoria. Melbourne: IKAWIRIA, 233-240. McGregor, Katharine, 2016, ‘Transnational and Japanese Activism on Behalf of Indonesian Anthropology of E Douglas Lewis. Frankfurt: Peter Lang Publishing. Fletcher R; Dressler W; Büscher Bram; Anderson, Zachary R, 2016, ‘Questioning REDD+ and and Dutch Victims of Enforced Military Prostitution During World War II’, Japan Focus: The Asia Reuter, Thomas, 2016, ‘The Disappearing of a World Religion: Reflections on Ancestor Pacific Journal Lindsey, Tim and Pausacker, Helen (eds), 2016, Religion, Law and Intolerance in Indonesia. the future of market-based conservation’, Conservation Biology, 30(3), 673-675. , 14(16), No 7. http://apjjf.org/2016/16/McGregor.html. Religion, Dualism, and the Deeper Significance of the Austronesian Approach to Life’, in Lee, London/New York: Routledge. Julian; Prior, John; and Reuter, Thomas (eds), Trajectories: Excursions with the Anthropology of Graham SM; Grzemska M; Brands A; Nguyen H; Amini J; Triasih R; Talukder K; Ahmed S; Murni IK; Duke T; Kinney S; Daley AJ; Soenarto Y, 2015, ‘Reducing Hospital-Acquired Infections Lindsey, Tim and Nicholson, Pip, 2016, Drugs Law and Legal Practice in Southeast Asia: E Douglas Lewis. Frankfurt: Peter Lang Publishing, 125-162. Amanullah F; Kumar B; Tufail P; Detjen A; Marais B; Hennig C; Islam T, 2015, ‘Regional and Improving the Rational Use of Antibiotics in a Developing Country: An Effectiveness Archives of Disease in Childhood Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam. London: Hart Publishing. Initiatives to Address the Challenges of Tuberculosis in Children: Perspectives From the Study’, , 100(5), 454-9, doi: 10.1136/archdischild-2014-307297. Reuter, Thomas, 2016, ‘The Once and Future King: Utopianism as Political Practice Asia-Pacific Region’, International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 32, 166-9, doi: 10.1016/j. Nugroho B; Utama IKAP; Suastika IK; Prasetyo FA; Yusuf M; Tullberg M; Monty JP; Hutchins McRae, David (trans. M. Haripin), 2016, Poso: Sejarah Komprehensif Kekerasan Antar-Agama in Indonesia’, in Guerra, Pablo (ed), Utopia: 500 Years. Bogota: Ediciones Universidad ijid.2014.12.013. Terpanjang di Indonesia Pasca Reformasi. Jakarta: Marjin Kiri (Indonesian translation of A Few Cooperativa de Columbia Press, 293-315. Open access: http://ediciones.ucc.edu.co/index. N; and Ganapathisubramani B, in press, ‘Managing International Collaborative Research Poorly Organised Men: Inter-religious Violence in Poso, Indonesia, published by Brill in 2013). php/ucc/catalog/book/37 Hasan NH; Ebrahimie E; Ignjatovic J; Tarigan S; Peaston A; and Hemmatzadeh F, 2016, Between Academics, Industries, and Policy Makers in Understanding the Effects of Biofouling ‘Epitope Mapping of Avian Influenza M2e Protein: Different Species Recognise Various in Ship Hull Turbulent Boundary Layers’, International Journal of Maritime Engineering. Verhezen, Peter; Williamson, Ian; Crosby, Mark; Soebagjo, Natalia (eds), 2016, Doing Business Wejak, Justin L, 2016, ‘Myths of Origins of Rice in Flores, Eastern Indonesia’, in Lee, Julian; Epitopes’. PLOS One, 11, e0156418. in ASEAN Markets: Leadership Challenges and Governance Solutions Across Asian Borders. Prior, John; and Reuter, Thomas (eds), Trajectories: Excursions with the Anthropology of E Setiawan, Ken, 2016, ‘From Hope to Disillusion: The Paradox of Komnas HAM, the Indonesian Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. Douglas Lewis. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 293-321. Hasan NH; Ignjatovic J; Peaston A; and Hemmatzadeh F, 2016, ‘Avian Influenza Virus and DIVA National Human Rights Commission’, Strategies’, Viral Immunology, 29, 198-211. Southeast Asia (Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde), 172 (1), 1-32. BOOK CHAPTERS Wejak, Justin L, 2016, ‘Life is a Journey’, in Gunawan, Tuti and Yahya, Lip (eds), Footsteps of Indonesians in Victoria. Melbourne: IKAWARIA, 371-378. Idris NS; Cheung MM; Grobbee DE; Burgner D; Kurniati N; Djer MM; Uiterwaal CS, 2016, ‘Effects Squire D; Baars W; Hutchins N; and Marusic I, 2016, ‘Inner-Outer Interactions in Rough-Wall Adelaar, Alexander, 2016, ‘Austronesians in Madagascar: A Critical Assessment of the Works of of Paediatric HIV Infection on Electrical Conduction of the Heart’, Open Heart, 3(1), doi: Turbulence’, Journal of Turbulence, 17(12). Paul Ottino and Philippe Beaujard’, in Campbell, Gwyn (ed), East Africa and Early Trans-Indian JOURNAL ARTICLES 10.1136/openhrt-2015-000340. Ocean World Interchange. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 77-112. Squire D; Morrill-Winter C; Hutchins N; Marusic I; Schultz MP; Klewicki J, 2016, ‘Smooth- and Abdullah A; Hort K; Butu Y; Simpson L, 2016. ‘Risk Factors Associated with Neonatal Deaths: Idris NS; Cheung MM; Grobbee DE; Burgner D; Kurniati N; Uiterwaal CS, 2016, ‘Cardiac Effects Rough-Wall Boundary Layer Structure from High Spatial Range Particle Image Velocimetry’, Bennett, Linda Rae, 2016, ‘Young Sasak Mothers – ‘Tidak Manja Lagi’: Transitioning from A Matched Case-Control Study in Indonesia’. Global Health Action, 9: 30445 – http://dxdoi. of Antiretroviral-Naïve versus Antiretroviral-Exposed HIV Infection in Children’, PLOS One, Physical Review Fluids, 1(6). Single Daughter to Young Married Mother in Lombok, Eastern Indonesia,’ in Robinson, K (ed), org/10.3402/gha.v9.30445 11(1), e0146753, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0146753. Youth Identities and Social Transformations in Modern Indonesia, London: Brill, 238-261 Squire D; Morrill-Winter C; Hutchins N; Schultz MP; Klewicki J; and Marusic I, 2016, Achmadi, Amanda, 2016, ‘The Other Side of Tropical Paradise: Traces of Modernism within Idris NS; Grobbee DE; Burgner D; Cheung MM; Kurniati N; Sastroasmoro S; Uiterwaal CS, 2015, ‘Comparison of Turbulent Boundary Layers Over Smooth and Rough Surfaces Up to High Chauvel, Richard, 2016, ‘Kebudayaan, Sejarah dan Politik: Menuju Maluku Baru’ [Culture, the Vernacular Landscapes of Early Twentieth-Century Bali’, ABE Journal: Architecture Beyond ‘Cardiovascular Manifestations of HIV Infection in Children’, European Journal of Preventative Reynolds Numbers’, Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 797. History and Politics: Towards a New Maluku], in Tim Lembaga Kebudayaan Daerah Maluku Europe, Vol 9-10 (2016), online since 28 December 2016, connection on 06 March 2017. URL: Cardiology, 22(11), 1452-61, doi: 10.1177/2047487314560086. (ed), Identitas Ke-Maluku-an Dalam Dinamika Pembangunan Bangsa [Maluku Identity in the http://abe.revues.org/3211; doi:10.4000/abe.3211. Triasih R; Padmawati RS; Duke T; Robertson C; Sawyer SM; Graham SM, 2016, ‘A Mixed- Dynamics of Nation Building]. Ambon, Indonesia: Lembaga Kebudayaan Daerah Maluku Idris NS; Grobbee DE; Burgner D; Cheung MM; Kurniati N; Uiterwaal CS, 2016, ‘Effects of Methods Evaluation of Adherence to Preventive Treatment Among Child Tuberculosis Adelaar, Alexander; Brucato, Nicholas; Kusuma, Pradiptajati; Cox, Murray P; Pierron, Denis; International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (LKDM), 3-14. Paediatric HIV Infection on Childhood Vasculature’, European Heart Journal, 37(48), 3610- Contacts in Indonesia’, , 20(8), 1078-83, Razafindrazaka, Harilanto; Purnomo, Gludhug; Letellier, Thierry; Kivisild; Sudoyo, Herawati; 3616, doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehv702. doi: 10.5588/ijtld.15.0952. Dick, Howard, 2016. ‘Negotiating Better Governance: Jurisdictional Arbitrage within ASEAN’ Ricaut, François-Xavier, 2016, ‘Malagasy Genetic Ancestry Comes From an Historical Malay in Verhezen, Peter, Williamson, Ian, Crosby, Mark, Soebagjo, Natalia (eds). Doing Business Trading Post in Southeast Borneo’, Molecular Biology and Evolution, 33(9), 2396-2400. Jurriëns, Edwin, 2016, ‘”TV or Not TV”: Spelling the Indonesian Media with Veven Sp. Triasih R; Robertson C; de Campo J; Duke T; Choridah L; Graham SM, 2015, ‘An Evaluation of in ASEAN Markets: Leadership Challenges and Governance Solutions Across Asian Borders. Wardhana’, Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia (Bijdragen tot de Chest X-Ray in the Context of Community-Based Screening of Child Tuberculosis Contacts’, Adelaar, Alexander; Pradiptjajati, Kusuma; Brucato; Cox, Murray P; Pierron, Denis; International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease Palgrave Macmillan. Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde), 172 (1), 33-65. , 19(12), 1428-34, doi: 10.5588/ Razafindrazaka, Harilanto; Sudoyo, Herawati; Letellier, Thierry; Ricaut, François-Xavier, ijtld.15.0201. Loney, Hannah, 2016, ‘The Emergence of an East Timorese Women’s Movement’, in Smith, 2016, ‘Contrasting Linguistic and Genetic Influences During the Austronesian Settlement of Jurriëns, Edwin, 2016, ‘Intimate Video: Creative Bodies in the Age of the Selfie’, Continuum: Sarah, da Silva, Antero Benedito, Mendes, Nuno Canas, Ximenes, Alarico da Costa, Fernandes, Madagascar’, Scientific Reports, 6(260661): 1-9. doi: 10.1038/srep26066. Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, 30(1), 1-19. Triasih R; Robertson C; Duke T; Graham SM, 2015, ‘Risk of Infection and Disease with Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Among Children Identified Through Prospective Community- Clinton, and Leach, Michael (eds), Timor-Leste: The Local, the Regional, and the Global: Keylock CJ; Ganapathasubramani B; Monty J; Hutchins N; and Marusic I, 2016, ‘The Coupling Adelaar, Alexander, 2016, ‘Talen, Culturen En Genen in het Austronesische Taalgebied’, Based Contact Screening in Indonesia’, Tropical Medicine and International Health, 20(6), Proceedings from the Timor-Leste Studies Association 2015 Conference, Hawthorn: Swinburne Between Inner and Outer Scales in a Zero Pressure Boundary Layer Evaluated Using a Holder Karakter. Tijdschrift van Wetenschap 53: 25-27. 737-43, doi: 10.1111/tmi.12484. University Press, 20-24. Exponent Framework’, Fluid Dynamics Research, 48(2). Al-Arif MA; Suwanti LT; Estoepangestie ATS; Lamid M; and Scheerlinck JPY, 2016, ‘Effects of Soy Triasih R; Robertson CF; Duke T; Graham SM, 2015, ‘A Prospective Evaluation of the Symptom- McRae, Dave, 2016, ‘Jokowi dan Regu Tembaknya’ [Jokowi and his Firing Squads] in Robet, Kuilder JS; Idris NS; Grobbee DE; Bots ML; Cheung MM; Burgner D; Kurniati N; Uiterwaal Straw Based Complete Feed on Daily Weight Gain, Nutrient Consumption, Feed Efficiency Based Screening Approach to the Management of Children Who Are Contacts of Tuberculosis Robertus and Lubis, Todung Mulya (eds), Politik Hukuman Mati di Indonesia. Indonesia: Marjin CS, 2017, ‘Association Between Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection and Arterial and VFA Production of Brahman Cross Beef Cattle’, Journal of Applied Environmental and Clinical Infectious Diseases Kiri and Perhimpunan Pendidikan Demokrasi, 182-197. Cases’, , 60(1), 12-8, doi: 10.1093/cid/ciu748. Biological Sciences, 6(12), 155-159. Stiffness in Children’, European Journal of Preventative Cardiology. 24(5), 480-488, doi: Nilan, Pam; Parker, Lyn; Robinson, Kathryn; and Bennett, Linda Rae, 2016, ‘Contemporary 10.1177/2047487316680694. Wawegama NK; Tarigan S; Indriani R; Selleck P; Adjid RA; Syafriati T; Hardiman; Durr, PA; Baars W; Hutchins N; and Marusic, I, 2016, ‘Spectral Stochastic Estimation of High-Reynolds- and Ignjatovic J, 2016, ‘Evaluation of a Conserved HA274-288 Epitope to Detect Antibodies Indonesian Youth: Trends and Inequalities,’ in Robinson, K (ed), Youth Identities and Social Lee JH; Rogers E; Chor YK; Samransamruajkit R; Koh PL; Miqdady M; Al-Mehaidib AI; Pudjiadi Number Wall-Bounded Turbulence for a Refined Inner-Outer Interaction Model’, Physical to Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Virus H5N1 in Indonesian Commercial Poultry’, Avian Transformations in Modern Indonesia, London: Brill, 23-46 A; Singhi S; Mehta NM, 2016, ‘Optimal Nutrition Therapy in Paediatric Critical Care in the Asia- Review Fluids, 1(5). Pathology, 45, 478-492. Pausacker, Helen, 2016, ‘Pink or Blue Swing? Art, Pornography, Islamists and the Law Pacific and Middle East: A Consensus’, Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 25(4), 676-696, Bennett, Linda Rae, 2016, ‘Indigenous Healing Knowledge and Infertility in Indonesia: in Reformasi Indonesia’, in Lindsey, Tim and Pausacker, Helen (eds), Religion, Law and doi: 10.6133/apjcn.012016.07. 56 57

CONFERENCE PAPERS Ewing, Michael C, 2016, ‘Noun Phrases in Indonesian Conversation: Free, Restrained and Setiawan, Ken, 2016, ‘Komnas HAM dalam Sistem Ketatanegaraan Indonesia’ [Komnas HAM MEDIA AND BLOGS In-Between’, paper presented at the International Symposium on the Noun Phrase as Units of in the Indonesian Constitutional System], public lecture at Airlangga University, Surabaya, 17 Abbassi MR; Baars, WJ; Hutchins N; and Marusic I, 2016, ‘Drag Reduction via Large-scale Achmadi, Amanda, ‘Visual Jalanan: Amplifying Voices from the Urban Fringe’, Indonesia at Linguistic Structure and Interaction, Yokohama, 11-13 March. May. Opposition Flow Control in a High-Reynolds-number Turbulent Boundary Layer’, paper Melbourne, 13 January 2016, http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/visual-jalanan- presented at the 20th Australasian Fluid Mechanics Conference (AFMC), Perth, Western Ewing, Michael C, 2016, ‘The Indonesian Noun Phrase: Structure and Interaction’, paper Setiawan, Ken, 2016, ‘Disciplining a New Society: Prison Units on Buru’, paper presented at amplifying-voices-from-the-urban-fringe/ Australia, 5-8 December. presented at the 2nd Symposium on Interactional Linguistics and Chinese Language Studies, the Asian Studies Association of Australia Biennial Conference, Canberra, 5-7 July. Hort, Krishna, ‘Should Indonesian smokers pay more for health costs?’, Indonesia at Shanghai, 18-19 March. Achmadi, Amanda, 2016, ‘The Architecture of Cultuurstelsel in Nineteenth-century Dutch Setiawan, Ken, 2016, ‘A Future with or Without the Past? Contemporary Discourses on Melbourne, 14 September 2016, http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/should- East Indies: Built Traces of Colonial Agricultural Industry Traces of Colonial Agricultural Ewing, Michael C, 2016, ‘Rapport to Fit in – Rapport to Stand Out: The Dynamics of Alignment Reconciliation in Indonesia’, invited paper presented at the workshop Transitional Justice and indonesian-smokers-pay-more-for-health-costs/ Industry’, paper presented at the 33rd International Conference of the Society of Architectural During Group Interaction’, paper presented at the Conceptualizing Rapport Symposium, Civil Society: Asia-Pacific Perspectives, ANU, Canberra, 29-30 September. Jurriëns, Edwin, and Tapsell, Ross, ‘Digital Can Breach the Divide’, New Mandala, 13 Historians, Australia and New Zealand, Melbourne, Australia, 6-8 July 2016. Melbourne, Australia, 17-19 July. Setiawan, Ken, 2016, ‘The Limits of Legalism: Responses of State Bodies to Claims for Justice September, http://www.newmandala.org/digital-can-breach-divide/ Baidya R; de Silva CM; Huang Y; Castillo L; Marusic I; and Hutchins N, 2016, ‘Developing Ewing, Michael C. and Dwi Noverini Djenar, 2016, ‘“This is so Omar” – Building Interpersonal for the 1965-1966 Case’, paper presented at Fifty Years On: Reflections on the Anniversary and Jurriëns, Edwin, ‘The Rise of Indonesian Digital Art’, APPS Policy Forum, 28 April, http://www. Turbulent Boundary Layers with Spanwise Periodic Trips’, paper presented at the 20th Relationships Through Multi-Layered Perspective Shifting in Indonesian Youth Conversation’, Recent Efforts to Address the 1965 Violence in Indonesia, Melbourne, 7 October. policyforum.net/rise-indonesian-digital-art/ Australasian Fluid Mechanics Conference (AFMC), Perth, Western Australia, 5-8 December. paper presented at the 20th International Symposium on Malay/Indonesian Linguistics, Setiawan, Ken, 2016, ‘Negotiating Political Interests and Human Rights Claims: Komnas Melbourne, 14-16 July. Lindsey, Tim, ‘Blasphemy Charge Reveals Real Fault Lines in Indonesian Democracy’, Bennett, Linda Rae, 2016, ‘Addressing the Artificial Disconnection of Sexual and Reproductive HAM in the Age of Reform’, paper presented at the Two Decades of Reformasi: Reflections on The Australian, 24 November 2016. http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/ Health in Indonesia: Imperatives for Research, Policy and Medical Education’, Indonesian Ewing, Michael C, 2016, ‘The Emergence of Clauses in Indonesian Conversation’, paper Political and Social Change in Indonesia Conference, Melbourne, 3-4 November. blasphemy-charge-reveals-real-fault-lines-in-indonesia-democracy/news-story/ Forum public seminar, 23 June. presented at the Symposium on the Emergence of Units in Social Interaction, Helsinki, 3-5 Setiawan, Ken, 2016, ‘Traces of the Past: Digital Storytelling as Practice of Postmemory’, paper d748c881028069a19d1459dc592d7213 August. Chauvel, Richard, ‘Conflict Resolution Strategies in Papua’, paper presented at Indonesian presented at the Alliance for Historical Dialogue and Accountability (AHDA) Annual Network Lindsey, Tim, ‘Beyond Baggies and Bogans in Bali’, Australian Institute of International Affairs, Christian University, Jakarta, 12 May. Ewing, Michael C, 2016, ‘Colloquial Indonesian: Its Relationship with Standard Indonesian Conference, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 1-3 December. 7 December 2016. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/australian_outlook/beyond- and its Role in Language Teaching’, paper presented at The Australian Society for Indonesian Chauvel, Richard, ‘Defence White Paper and Indonesia’, paper presented at the ADIPI Tse, Nicole; Hale, Bridget; Kartomi, Margaret; and Kornhauser, Bronia, ‘MAMU’s Collection baggies-and-bogans-in-bali/ Language Educators Conference, Adelaide, 30 September-2 October. Congress organised by the Centre for Elections and Political Parties, University of Indonesia, of Wayang Kulit: Reconstructing and Sharing Knowledge’, Paper presented to Revivify 2016, Loney, Hannah. ‘Online feminist communities bring sexual violence into the spotlight’, Semarang, 3 June. Hutchins N, 2016, ‘ Turbulent Boundary Layers Developing Over Rough Surfaces: From the AICCM Paintings Special Interest Group Symposium, Canberra, October 2016. Indonesia at Melbourne, 13 May 2016, http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/online- Laboratory to Full-Scale Systems’, keynote delivered at the 20th Australasian Fluid Mechanics Chauvel, Richard, ‘Budaya Politik di Tanah Papua’ [Political Culture in Papua], public lecture Utama IKAP; Ganapathisubramani B; Hutchins N; Nugroho B; Monty JP; Prasetyo FA; Yusuf feminist-communities-bring-sexual-violence-into-the-spotlight/ Conference (AFMC), Perth, Western Australia, 5-8 December. at the Faculty of Political and Social Sciences, Cendrawasih University, Jayapura, 23 August. M; and Tullberg M, 2016, ‘International Collaborative Work to Improve Research Quality Loney, Hannah. ‘Review: Women, Sexual Violence and the Indonesian Killings of 1965-66’, McCallum, Jenny, 2016, ‘What is Cocos Malay dance? Change and Continuity in Dance and and Enhance Academic Achievement’, paper presented at the Education and Professional Chauvel, Richard, ‘Sejarah Politik dan Pemerintah di Papua’ [History of Politics and Inside Indonesia, 124, April-June 2016, http://www.insideindonesia.org/review-women- Music Traditions of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands’, paper presented at the 12th International Development of Engineers in the Maritime Industry Conference, Singapore, 20-21 September. Government in Papua], public lecture at the Education Faculty, Cendrawasih University, sexual-violence-and-the-indonesian-killings-of-1965-66 Small Islands Cultures Conference, Naha, Okinawa, Japan, 18 June. Jayapura, 24 August. POLICY PAPERS Mann, Tim, ‘What is a fatwa and what does it mean for Indonesian policy?’, Indonesia at McRae, Dave, 2016, ‘Jokowi’s Foreign Policy’ paper presented at Indonesia at the Crossroads Chauvel, Richard, ‘Buku Putih Pertahanan Australia: Implikasi untuk Indonesia’ [Australian Asialink Business, 2016, ‘Growing Knowledge Economies: Insights for Australian Professional Melbourne, 30 March 2016. http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/what-is-a-fatwa- Public Forum, La Trobe Asia, Melbourne, 7 July. Defence White Paper: Implications for Indonesia], conference presentation as keynote Services in Asia’. and-what-does-it-mean-for-indonesian-policy/ speaker at the 1st International Conference on Social Sciences and Humanities, Indonesian McRae, Dave, 2016, ‘Indonesia’s Approach to the South China Sea’, paper presented at the Asialink Business, 2016, ‘Country Starter Pack: Indonesia’. Mann, Tim. ‘Indonesia on Trump’, Indonesia at Melbourne, 15 November 2016. http:// Institute of Sciences (LIPI), Jakarta, 18 October. Two Decades of Reformasi Conference, University of Melbourne, 3-4 November. indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/indonesia-on-trump/ Balaton-Chrimes, Samantha and Macdonald, Kate, ‘Wilmar and Palm Oil Grievances: Chauvel, Richard, ‘Social, Cultural and Political Transformation in Eastern Indonesia’, paper McRae, Dave, 2016, ‘Pembagian Kerja Dalam Produksi Kekerasan: Konflik Antar Agama di The Promise and Pitfalls of Problem Solving’, October 2016, available at: http:// McGregor, Katherine and Purdey, Jemma, ‘Indonesia takes a small but critical step toward presented as keynote speaker at the International Conference on Social and Political Issues Poso’ [A Division of Labour in the Production of Violence: Inter-religious Conflict in Poso]’, corporateaccountabilityresearch.net/njm-report-viii-wilmar reconciliation’, 26 April 2016, Indonesia at Melbourne, http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb. 2016: Knowledge and Social Transformations, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, paper presented at the Navigating Global Flows of Capital, Policy and Values Conference, edu.au/indonesia-takes-a-small-but-critical-step-toward-reconciliation/ University of Indonesia, Denpasar, 20 October. Tadulako University and the Celebes Foundation, Palu, 19-22 December. Dibly, Arjuna and Khatarina, Josi, 2016, ‘The Hidden Driver of Deforestation: Why Effecting Reform of Indonesia’s Legal Framework is Critical to the Long-term Success of REDD+’, CILIS McGregor, Katherine and Purdey, Jemma, ‘The IPT 1965 is a historic moral intervention. Will Chauvel, Richard, ‘Resources, Autonomy and Conflict in “Reformasi-era” West Papua’, paper Pausacker, Helen, 2016, ‘Legislating Morality: Before and After Indonesia’s Pornography Law’, Policy Paper No. 11, ‘The Hidden Driver of Deforestation: Why Effecting Reform of Indonesia’s it finally lead to action?’, 29 July 2016, Indonesia at Melbourne, http://indonesiaatmelbourne. presented at the Two Decades of Reformasi: Reflections on Political and Social Change in paper presented at the Australia Indonesia Association of Victoria AGM, East Melbourne, 21 Legal Framework is Critical to the Long-term Success of REDD+’ CILIS Policy Paper No. 11. unimelb.edu.au/the-ipt-1965-is-a-historic-moral-intervention-will-it-finally-lead-to-action/ Indonesia Conference, Melbourne, 4 November. October. Indrayana, Denny, 2016, ‘Combating Corruption in Yudhoyono’s Indonesia: An Insider’s Rowe, Anna and Wu, Amy, ‘Visions for Bandung: Balancing Urban Dreams and Socio-spatial Chauvel, Richard, ‘Maluku dan Melanesia: Perspektif Sejarah dan Budaya’ [Maluku and Reuter, Thomas, 2016, ‘Toward an Integrated Plan for Sustainability in Asia’, paper presented Perspective’, CILIS Policy Paper No. 13. Realities’, Indonesia at Melbourne, 1 March 2016, http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu. Melanesia: Historical and Cultural Perspectives], keynote address given at the Second at the Future Earth Symposium, Korean Academy of Science, Seoul, 20 April. au/visions-for-bandung-balancing-urban-dreams-and-socio-spatial-realities/ Congress of Maluku Culture, Namlea, 7 November. Macdonald, Kate and Ardhianto, Imam, ‘The Siawan Belida REDD+ Project in Indonesia: Reuter, Thomas, 2016, ‘Emerging Vulnerabilities in Indonesian Food Systems: The Case of Community-Oriented Approaches to Consultation and Grievance Handling’, October 2016, Setiawan, Ken, ‘“Old guard” Continues to Block Human Rights Reform in Indonesia’, Asian Chauvel, Richard, ‘Nationalists, Soldiers and Separatists: A Reflection’, public lecture given at Highland Bali’, paper presented at the IUAES Congress on World Anthropologies and the available at: http://corporateaccountabilityresearch.net/njm-report-vii-redd Currents, 7 January 2016, http://asaa.asn.au/old-guard-continues-constrain-human-rights- Indonesian Christian University, Maluku, Ambon, 11 November. Privatisation of Knowledge, Dubrovnic, Croatia, 4-9 May. reform-indonesia/ republished ‘“Old Guard” Blocking Human Rights Reform in Indonesia’, Macdonald, Kate and Balaton-Chrimes, Samantha, ‘The Complaints System of the Diprose R and Maddison S, 2016, ‘Conflict Dynamics and Dialogue on Historical Violence: Reuter, Thomas, 2016, ‘Emerging Vulnerabilities in Indonesian Food Systems: The Case of East Asia Forum, 4 February, http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2016/02/04/old-guard-blocking- Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO)’, October 2016, available at: http:// Plural Voices in Conflict Transformation in Asia’, paper delivered at the Politics of Memory Highland Bali’, public lecture presented at Udayana University, Bali, Indonesia, 23 June. human-rights-reform-in-indonesia/ corporateaccountabilityresearch.net/njm-report-xv-rspo International Conference, Columbia, New York, December 2015. Reuter, Thomas, 2016, ‘Environmental Limits and Uncertain Human Futures: Food System Setiawan, Ken, ‘The Politics of Compromise’, Inside Indonesia, 123, January-March 2016, Missbach, Antje, 2016, ‘Sentencing People-Smuggling Offenders in Indonesia’, CILIS Policy Diprose R and Azca MN, 2016, ‘Mobilisation and Socio-Political Change: The Political Vulnerabilities in Bali’, paper presented at the EASA conference Anthropological legacies and http://www.insideindonesia.org/the-politics-of-compromise Paper No. 12. Economy of Conflict and Statebuilding in Indonesia’, paper delivered at the Two Decades of human futures Milan, Italy, 20-23 July. Setiawan, Ken, ‘The Fear of Communism Still Haunts Indonesia’, Indonesia at Melbourne, Reformasi: Reflections on Social and Political Change in Indonesia Conference, Melbourne, Myers, Rodd; Sanders Anna JP; Larson, Anne M; H, Rut dini Prasti; Ravikumar, Ashwin, 2016, Setiawan, Ken, 2016, ‘Remembering Suffering and Survival: Sites of Memory on Buru’, seminar 3 March 2016, http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/belok-kiri-fest-fear-of- 3-4 November. ‘Analysing Multilevel Governance in Indonesia: Lessons for REDD+ from the Study of Land-Use at the Department of Indonesian Studies, University of Sydney, 16 March. communism-still-haunts-indonesia/ Change in Central and West Kalimantan’, CIFOR Working Paper 202, available at http://www. Diprose R and Azca MN, 2016, ‘Profiteers, Religious Warriors, and Agents of Socio-political Setiawan, Ken, 2016, ‘Site, Memory and Humanity’, seminar at Sanata Dharma University, cifor.org/publications/pdf_files/WPapers/WP202Myers.pdf Setiawan, Ken, ‘Review: Sites, Bodies and Stories’, Inside Indonesia, 124, April-June 2016, Change’, panel on Contested Development in the Asian Frontiers, Asian Borderlands Yogyakarta, 4 May. http://www.insideindonesia.org/review-sites-bodies-and-stories conference, Nepal, 12-14 December. 58 59

Setiawan, Ken, ‘1965 Massacre: Indonesia Holds First Public Discussions’, Radio National Drive, 18 April 2016, http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/drive/1965-massacre:- indonesia-holds-first-public-discussions/7335508 Appendix 2: Staff with Indonesia interests

Setiawan, Ken, ‘International Tribunal Says Australia Complicit in Indonesian Crimes Against Humanity’, Radio National Drive, 21 July 2016, http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/ programs/drive/international-tribunal-says-australia-complicit-in-indonesian-c/7650240

Setiawan, Ken, ‘Rights in the Firing Line’, New Mandala, 16 August 2016, http://www.

newmandala.org/rights-firing-line/ DEPARTMENT NAME TITLE RESEARCH INTERESTS RELEVANT AFFILIATIONS

Setiawan, Ken, ‘Review: Dancing the Feminine’, Inside Indonesia, 4 September 2016, http:// Architecture, Building Professor Katherine Darian- Professor of Australian Studies Cultural Heritage Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia www.insideindonesia.org/review-dancing-the-feminine and Planning Smith and History and Chair of the (ASSA) History Program in the School Yulindrasari, Hani, ‘The Indonesian Broadcasting Commission: policing masculinity’, 5 April of Historical and Philosophical 2016, Indonesia at Melbourne, http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/the-indonesian- Studies, and Professor of Cultural Heritage in the Faculty broadcasting-commission-policing-masculinity/ of Architecture, Building and Planning

Architecture, Building Professor Kim Dovey Professor of Architecture and Architecture, Urban Design and Planning Urban Design

Architecture, Building Professor Ross King Professorial Fellow Ross King maintains a close relationship with the 10 and Planning November Institute of Technology (ITS) in Surabaya. He reviews and edits research papers written by staff members of the Faculty of Civil Engineering and Planning.

Architecture, Building Professor Carolyn Whitzman Professor in Urban Planning Urban Planning Planning Institute of Australia. Board member (2004-) and Planning Women in Cities International. Board member (2002-2012)

Architecture, Building Dr Amanda Achmadi Convenor, Indonesia Forum Architectural Design Society of Architectural Historians Asia Incorporated, and Planning Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning, University of Melbourne SAHANZ (Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand)

Architecture, Building Dr Ajibade Aijabe Senior Lecturer in Quantity Quantity Surveying and and Planning Surveying and Construction Construction Economics

Architecture, Building Dr Jennifer Day Urban Planning and Planning

Architecture, Building Dr Hemanta Doloi Senior Lecturer in Project and Property and Planning Construction Management

Architecture, Building Associate Professor Property and Planning Christopher Heywood

Architecture, Building Dr Greg Missingham Architecture and Planning

Architecture, Building Dr David O’Brien Disaster relief - tsunami and Planning reconstruction housing Indigenous housing and development in Australia Self-build housing design and construction Sustainable housing developments in marginalized Australian and Asian communities

Architecture, Building Dr Sidh Sintusingha Landscape Architecture and Planning 60 61

Architecture, Building Mr Hugh O’Neill Senior Fellow Asia Institute Dr Edwin Jurriëns Lecturer in Indonesian Studies Contemporary Art Adjunct Lecturer, School of Humanities and Social and Planning Sciences, University of New South Wales, Canberra Visual Culture Editor, Asian Visual Cultures book series, Amsterdam Media Asia Institute Professor Vedi Hadiz Professor in Asian Studies Political sociology University Press Political Economy Regional Editor, Australia, for The Newsletter, International Institute for Asian Studies Asia Institute Professor Thomas Reuter ARC Future Fellow Anthropology and the politics Editorial Board Member, Space – The Journal of Built Editorial Advisory Board Member, The International of religion Environment Journal of Indonesian Studies Comparative Southeast Asian Board Member, John Darling Fellowship Scheme for Member of the executive committee, The Indonesian Studies Indonesian Film Makers Language and Culture Centre for Victoria and Ethnic minorities, marginality Fellow, Asian Studies Association and Indonesia Tasmania (BBBIVT) and representation Council Social organisation, status and Asia Institute Dr Dave McRae Senior Research Fellow Contemporary Indonesian Associate, Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and social justice politics Society Indonesian foreign policy Editorial board member, Indonesia at Melbourne Asia Institute Associate Professor Principal Fellow The languages of Indonesia, Fellow, Academy of Humanities Australia Australia-Indonesia relations Co-host, Talking Indonesia Podcast Alexander Adelaar Malaysia, Taiwan and Humboldt Fellow, University of Cologne, Germany Madagascar Regional security studies Member of editorial collective, Inside Indonesia Member, Academic Advisory Committee, Institute of The settlement history of Linguistics, Academia Sinica (Taipei) Madagascar from Southeast Asia Asia Institute Dr Ken Setiawan McKenzie Research Fellow Human Rights Co-host, Talking Indonesia Podcast Executive Board Member of Majlis Antarbangsa The variety, history and Transitional Justice Member, Asian Studies Association of Australia Bahasa Melayu – International Council of Malay, sociolinguistics of Indonesian/ (ASAA) Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (Malay Literacy Bureau), Historical Justice and Memory Malay (including Malay in Sri Kuala Lumpur Affiliate Researcher, Institute for the Study of Human Lanka, Cocos Keeling Islands, Rights (ISHR), Columbia University Netherlands) Steering committee member, International Conference of Austronesian Languages The linguistic analysis of 17th Asia Institute Ms Nani Pollard Lecturer in Indonesian Studies Indonesian Studies Member of The Australian Indonesian Association of century text in Siraya, a dormant Editorial Board Member of: Victoria (AIAV) language of Taiwan Oceanic Linguistics (Honolulu) Borneo Research Bulletin (USA) Committee member of IndoAustay Pacific Linguistics (Publication Series, Canberra) Member of the executive committee, Indonesian Études Océan Indien (Paris: Institut de Langues et Language and Culture Centre for Victoria and Civilisations Orientales) Tasmania (BBBIVT) Moussons (Aix-en-Provence) Jurnal Bahasa (Dewan Bahasa, Kuala Lumpur) Asia Institute Mr Justin Wejak Lecturer in Indonesian Studies Local politics, culture, tradition NUSA Linguistic Studies of Languages in and around and religion in eastern Indonesia Indonesia (Universitas Atma Jaya, Jakarta / Tokyo University of Foreign Studies) Fear of 1965 Member of project ‘Unexplored human history in the Indian Ocean: Human biological adaptations School of Social and Dr Bart Klem Lecturer, Development Studies Borderlands and frontiers UGM partnership on the States, Frontiers and to the Indian Ocean slave trade and Indonesian Political Sciences Conflict Research Project Conflict and politics dispersal to Madagascar’, an international project of (SSPS) the Eijkman Institute for Molecular Biology (Jakarta) and the Laboratoire d´Anthropobiologie (CNRS FRE School of Social and Dr Kate Macdonald Senior Lecturer Governance of transnational 2960) at the University of Toulouse (sponsored by Political Sciences business; resource governance ANR, the French National Research Agency). (SSPS) Visiting Professor, Kelaniya University, Colombo School of Social and Dr Rachael Diprose Lecturer Political economy and sociology Researcher in the Melbourne School of Government Asia Institute Dr Richard Chauvel Honorary Fellow History and politics Political Sciences of conflict, state-building and funded States, Frontiers and Conflict Project (with (SSPS) development. partners from the University of Gadjah Mada, SOAS, Australia-Indonesia relations and other country Partners). Patterns of violence, Australian foreign policy processes of mobilisation Development Studies Association UK and conflict de-escalation, Convenor of the School of Social and Political conflict transformation and Asia Institute Dr Michael Ewing Senior Lecturer in Indonesian Multiple modes of grammatical Member of the International Pragmatics Association Sciences Conflict, Development and Justice Studies organisation in colloquial peacebuilding. Member of The Australian Linguistics Association Research Cluster varieties of Indonesian Group dynamics and identity Member of the Association of Asian Studies of Deputy Convenor of the Indonesia Forum Youth languages in Indonesia politics, human development Australia and inequalities. Member of the Comparative Peacebuilding Network Conversational interaction in Victorian Representative to the National Reference Indonesian and Javanese The dynamics of contention in Joint Selection Committee Member, Australia Group of The Australian Consortium for In-Country decentralisation and multi-level Awards Indonesia Endangered languages of Indonesian Studies (ACICIS) governance, with a particular Eastern Indonesia focus on the resource and land Advisor to numerous DFAT-funded Australian Aid Board member of the Indonesian Language and programs in Indonesia Culture Centre of Victoria and Tasmania (BBBIVT) sectors and emerging field of climate change mitigation. Contested dimensions of development policy formulation and implementation. 62 63

School of Social and Professor Fiona Haines Professor of Criminology Corporate and White Collar School of Historical Associate Professor Robyn Director of the Centre for Cultural East Timorese art, museums and Political Sciences Crime and Philosophical Sloggett Materials Conservation, CCMC cultural conservation (SSPS) Studies (SHAPS) Globalization and Comparative Regulation School of Historical Dr Simon Creak Lecturer in Southeast Asian History of the Southeast Asia Regulation and Philosophical History Games Studies (SHAPS)

School of Social and Professor John Murphy Social policy development School of Historical Dr Nicole Tse Lecturer, CCMC East Timorese art, museums and Political Sciences in South East Asia, especially and Philosophical cultural conservation (SSPS) Indonesia Studies (SHAPS) The history of Australian social policy; contemporary social School of Historical Ms Faye Yik-Wei Chan Tutor, Research Assistant, PhD History of ethnic Chinese Assistant Editor of the Indonesia Section of the policy and welfare to work and Philosophical candidate, History women and the law in Indonesia Women and Empires Database co-ordinated by Studies (SHAPS) Professor Kathryn Sklar (UC Berkely) Australian history, primarily since the second world war School of Historical Ms Sarah Craze PhD candidate Maritime piracy Biography, memory, narrative and Philosophical and historiography Studies (SHAPS)

School of Historical Ms Hannah Loney Research Assistant, Tutor, PhD History of the Indonesian Member, Timor-Leste Studies Association and Philosophical candidate, History occupation of Timor Leste, School of Social and Professor Mark Considine Dean of the Faculty of Arts Comparative studies of the Member, Australian Women’s History Network Studies (SHAPS) women’s history, oral history Political Sciences reform of employment services Member, Australian Historical Association (SSPS) in Australia, the UK, the Netherlands and other OECD Member, Asian Studies Association of Australia countries Editorial collective member for Lilith: A Feminist History Journal School of Social and Dr Sara Bice Director of Research Translation Corporate-community- President-Elect of the International Association for Political Sciences for the Melbourne School of government interactions to Impact Assessment International Association of Genocide Scholars (SSPS) Government inform long-term decision- making, risk management and School of Historical Ms Hani Yulindrasari Research Assistant, PhD Childhood education, gender, stakeholder engagement and Philosophical candidate, History/Gender masculinities Studies (SHAPS) Studies School of Social and Dr Paul Green Lecturer in Anthropology Kinship, personhood, migration Political Sciences and mobilities, nationalism and Department of Professor Trevor Duke Director of the Centre for International child health Joint Faculty of Intensive Care, Royal Australasian (SSPS) urban field methodologies Paediatrics International Child Health, College of Physicians / Anaesthetists (2002-) Deputy Director of the ICU and Experiences of older, foreign Chairman, Asia-Pacific Committee, Royal Clinical Director of the general migrants and retirees living in Australasian College of Physicians (2001-) ICU at the Royal Children’s Malaysia and Indonesia Hospital Australian & New Zealand Intensive Care Society (1998-) Medical Society of Papua New Guinea (1997-) School of Historical Professor Kate Darian-Smith Professor of Australian Studies Australian Studies and Australian Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia and Philosophical and History and Chair of the History (ASSA) Papua New Guinea Paediatric Society (1997-) Studies (SHAPS) History Program in the School Australian cultural and social Royal Australasian College of Physicians (1996-) of Historical and Philosophical history Studies, and Professor of Cultural Heritage in the Faculty Cultural heritage studies Department of Professor Julie Bines Victor and Loti Smorgon Chair of Clinical trials Paediatrics Paediatrics, Deputy Head of the of Architecture, Building and Nutrition Planning Memory, history and Department of Paediatrics commemoration Paediatrics Museum studies and forms of Rotavirus exhibiting histories and cultures Vaccine development

School of Historical Associate Professor ARC Future Fellow, History History, memory and Editor of the Indonesia Section of the Women and and Philosophical Katharine McGregor activism related to: Dutch Empires Database co-ordinated by Professor Kathryn Department of Professor Stephen Graham Professor of International Child International Health, Infectious European Society of Pediatric Infectious Diseases Studies (SHAPS) colonial violence during the Sklar (UC Berkely) Paediatrics Health Diseases, Paediatrics (2006-) independence struggle; the Member of the Association of Asian Studies of Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Japanese occupation of Australia (1998-) Indonesia and the 1965-66 Indonesian killings. Steering Committee Member, of Dialogues on International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Historical Justice and Memory Network Disease. Board Member (1996-) Indonesian transnational political activism during the Fellow of the Institute for Social Transformation Australian Conservation Foundation (1988-) Cold War Research (ISTR) at the University of Wollongong Department of Dr Margie Danchin Honorary, Paediatrics Royal Public Health (Vaccinology and Editorial Board, Social Transformations: Journal of Paediatrics Children’s Hospital epidemiology) The Global South Honorary, Melbourne Medical Editorial Board, Jurnal Perempuan School Series Editor for Translating Accounts of the 1965 Honorary, Melbourne School of Mass Violence, Herb Feith Foundation Population and Global Health Member of the working party of the Herb Feith Foundation Department of Dr Justin Bilszta Senior Lecturer in Clinical Medical Education Education 64 65

Department of Dr Anita Horvath Senior Lecturer in Clinical Department of Dr Jodi York Natural resource conflicts and Academy of Management, Member (2015-2016) Medical Education Education Accounting development American Sociological Association, Member (1999- Productivity measurement 2004) Department of Ms Jayne Lysk techniques (incorporating Medical Education natural resource use into official productivity measures) Nossal Institute for Professor Barbara McPake Director Health workforce Public sector productivity Global Health Health financing measurement Social Investing (firm-level social Nossal Institute for Dr Krishna Hort Principal technical advisor Quality of care investment decision making) Global Health Organisation and delivery of health care Department Associate Professor Peter Visiting Associate Professor in Business Ethics & Corporate of Business Verhezen Global Corporate Governance, Social Responsibility Administration and Adjunct Professor for (Compliance versus Integrity Nossal Institute for Dr Alison Morgan Head, Maternal, Reproductive Quality of care Strategy, Ethics and Governance Systems) Global Health Health Unit and Risk Management in Maternal and reproductive Good Governance Principles & Emerging Markets at the health services ‘Best’ (International) Corporate Melbourne Business School Governance Practices (MBS/UniMelb) Nossal Institute for Dr Linda Rae Bennett Senior research fellow Sexual and reproductive health Integrated Leadership & Risk Global Health Management in International Business Nossal Institute for Ms Brigitte Tenni Senior technical advisor Sexual and reproductive health; Global Health HIV International Relations & Business Development in Southeast Asia Nossal Institute for Dr Tim Moore Head, Education and Learning Health service delivery Global Health Unit Department Professor Ian Williamson Helen Macpherson Smith Chair Strategic human resource of Business of Leadership for Social Impact at management, employee Nossal Institute for Ms Prarthna Dayal Senior research officer Maternal and neonatal health; Administration the Melbourne Business School retention, professional service Global Health health service delivery organizations, innovation, Associate Dean of International workforce diversity Relations and Co-director of the Department of Professor Howard Dick Honorary Asian Business Australia & NZ International Business Association Asia Pacific Social Impact Centre Top management teams Management and (ANZIBA), Vice-President (2004-) Corruption, Governance and Marketing Ethics (Indonesia) Asian Studies Association of Australia, Foundation Chairman Global Logistics Department of Associate Professor Mark Associate Professor of Economics Australian Economy Institutional Development Economics Crosby Urbanisation in the Asia-Pacific Department of Professor Ross Garnaut Professorial Research Fellow in Australian Economy Chairman of the Economics Economics Department of Professor Prakash Singh Head of Department IInnovation management Production and Operations Managment Society, Asia Pacific and Development China Economy and Business Program (Australian National University) Management and (process improvement, lean six Member (2011-) China Marketing sigma, product development) Chairman of ZEN Energy Pty Ltd Academy of Management, Operations Management Climate Change Operations management Division (2009-) Chairman of the Impact Investment Group Solar (process design, operations Papua New Guinea Decision Sciences Institute, Member (2005-) Income Fund strategy, quality management, project management) European Operations Management Association, Member of the board of The Bulletin of Indonesian Member (2004-) Economic Studies (Australian National University) Supply chain management (strategy, design, analysis) Melbourne Business Dr Mabel Andalon Lopez Health Behaviours (Smoking, Sustainable operations and School Obesity, Exercise) supply chains (sustainability, social investment, social capital) Intergenerational Transmission of Poverty (Health, Education)

Department of Dr Krzysztof Dembek Management and Department Dr Robert Gordon Senior Lecturer in Fluids and Advanced laser diagnostics for Member of the Combustion Institute, ANZ Section Marketing of Mechanical Thermal Sciences turbulent combustion (2003-) Engineering Combustion chemical kinetics, Department of Dr Brad Potter Associate Professor in Accounting Accounting for public sector and kinetics of auto ignition and Accounting and Director of the Centre not-for-profit entities pollutant formation for Accounting and Industry Financial reporting and Flame-wall interactions and Partnerships disclosure transient combustion events (ignition, autoignition, flashback, International financial reporting blowout, quenching) The development of financial MILD combustion for Gas reporting regulation Turbines Water and carbon accounting Spray formation and combustion, trans-critical sprays Ultra-low emissions combustion for Gas Turbines with alternative and novel fuels 66 67

Department Prof Nicholas Hutchins ARC Future Fellow, Deputy Head Energy Melbourne Graduate Professor Helen Cahill Deputy Director, Youth Research Curriculum studies: Arts of Mechanical (Research and Research Training) School of Education Centre education Engineering Use of drama in health promotion Department Associate Professor Jason Head of Department Wall-turbulence, air-sea of Mechanical Monty turbulence Melbourne Graduate Ms Sally Beadle (left in 2016) Research Fellow, Youth Research Engineering School of Education Centre

Department of Associate Professor Lu Aye Renewable energy American Society of Mechanical Engineering (2004-) Melbourne Graduate Professor V. Lynn Meek Foundation Director and Editor of Studies in Higher Education Infrastructure Energy efficiency technologies International Institute of Refrigeration (2004-) School of Education, Professorial Fellow, L H Martin Engineering LH Martin Institute Institute of Higher Education Biomass gasification Australian Institute of Refrigeration, Air Conditioning and Heating (1993-) Green buildings Melbourne Graduate Professor Alan Pettigrew Honorary Professorial Fellow, LH Adjunct Professor, College of Medicine, Biology and Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy Energy system simulation and School of Education, Martin Institute Environment, The Australian National University (member 2003-2013) optimisation LH Martin Institute Thermal storage School of Ecosystem Dr Sebastian Thomas Lecturer Climate change mitigation and Advanced energy systems and Forest Sciences adaptation (Carbon, energy, and environmental management) Heat pumps Marine and coastal ecosystems Life cycle analysis of energy (Blue carbon, social-ecological systems systems dynamics)

Department of Professor Peter Scales Deputy Dean, School of Compressive and shear rheology Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy Socio-technical systems and Chemical Engineering Engineering (member 2003-2013) transitions (Economics, policy, Electrokinetics business strategy) Flocculation (Aggregate Sustainability science (Human- structure) nature interactions, sustainable Hydrometallurgy and futures, learning for transition) nanoparticle synthesis and dispersion School of Geography Associate Professor Simon Principal Fellow, based in Adaptation to climate change Professor of Political Ecology, Lancaster University Batterbury Melbourne for part of the year UK Particulate flow and particulate Agrarian change (colloidal) interfacial Bicycles and sustainable phenomena (Rheology) transport Separations using thickening, Geography, area studies, filtration and centrifugation environment and development Water and waste water paths processing (Membrane fouling) Political ecology of natural Water quality and recycle resource management, sustainable development Department of Professor Colin Duffield Co-leader of the Infrastructure Infrastructure Project Management Institute (2009-) and the environment, urban Infrastructure Cluster at the Australia-Indonesia transport, West Africa, Asia- Australian Institute of Project Management (2005-) Engineering Centre Pacific Building Practitioner (1995-) Program Evaluation & Social Civil College of Engineers Australia. Victorian Branch Impact Assessment (1991-) Sustainable development and National Professional Engineers Register (1977-) the environment

Department Dr Bagus Nugroho Post-doctoral researcher Ship biofouling Southampton University School of Geography Professor Jon Barnett Australian Research Council Climate Change (Vulnerability of Mechanical Future Fellow and Adaptation) Engineering Development Studies Environmental Studies Department of Professor Marimuthu Swami Fellow of the Institute of Biomedical Instrumentation, Signal and Image Electrical and Palaniswami Electrical and Electronic Processing Security Studies Electronic Engineering Engineering (IEEE) Cardiovascular signal processing and modelling, Sustainable Development human gait analysis, medical Instrumentation Water Resource Management Control and Optimization of Communication Networks School of Geography Dr Wolfram Dressler Australian Research Council Political ecology Image Processing Future Fellow Machine learning School of Geography Dr Lisa Palmer Human-environment relations Australian Institute of Geographers (2006-) Smart City Research Indigenous approaches to Institute of Australian Anthropologists (2005-) environmental and social Melbourne Graduate Åsa Olsson Program Director for research, governance School of Education, higher education and innovation LH Martin Institute for development at the LH Martin Institute 68 69

Ecosystem and Forest Dr Himlal Baral Fellow, School of Ecosystem and Ecosystem goods and services Ecosystem Services Partnership (2012-) Melbourne Dr Jenny McCallum Lecturer Ethnomusicology Sciences Forest Sciences Conservatorium of Management of Planted Forests Institute of Foresters of Australia (2005-) Music Forests and Environment Sustainable forest management Society of American Foresters (2003-) Scientist at the Center for International Forestry Research Melbourne Ms Ilona Wright Lecturer, Ensemble Director Gamelan (CIFOR), Bogor, Indonesia Conservatorium of Music Ecosystem and Forest Professor Rodney Keenan Climate change (role of forests in Association of Tropical Biologists (1995-) Sciences mitigation and adaptation) Victorian College of Professor Jon Cattapan Deputy Director VCA Political/social representations Ecological Society of Australia (1991-) the Arts of the urban environment Environmental services Institute of Foresters of Australia (1979-) through paintings (Fine Art, Forest policy (plantations and Painting, Drawing, Digital natural forests) Imaging) Global forest assessment Victorian College of Professor Barbara Bolt Associate Dean Research at the Art Theory and Criticism the Arts VCA and MCM (Performativity, Research Ethics, University of Dr Aline Scott-Maxwell Library officer New Materialism) Melbourne Library Art as Research (practice-led research) Melbourne Law Dr Rheny Pulungan Liaison support librarian (law) School Painting (urban landscapes, colourfield, digital, neon) University of Mr Richard Serle Library officer Melbourne Library Victorian College of Nicolette Freeman Head of the VCA School of Film Film production the Arts and Television (Cinematography) University of Ms Mary-Louise Edwards Library officer Film production (Documentary Melbourne Library Film)

University of Ms Xiaoju Liu Library officer Victorian College of Donna L Hensler VCA Screen Production Melbourne Library the Arts Coordinator, Infrastructure & Operations Melbourne Law Professor Tim Lindsey Redmond Barry Distinguished Indonesian law Visiting Professor, the Academy of Contemporary School Professor, University of Islamic Studies (ACIS), University Teknologi MARA, Melbourne Veterinary Professor Glenn Browning Professor and Head of Microbiology – Avian Influenza Islamic law Melbourne (2015) Malaysia (2013-) School Department Religious freedom in Indonesia Director, Centre for Indonesian Visiting Professor, Syarif Hidayatullah State Islamic Law, Islam and Society (CILIS) Indonesian politics and society University (UIN), Indonesia (2013-) Melbourne Veterinary Professor Jean-Pierre Professor and Director of Centre Animal Biotechnology School Scheerlinck for Animal Biotechnology Melbourne Law Dr Helen Pausacker Deputy Director, Centre for Morality and Law Executive Editor, Australian Journal of Asian Law School Indonesian Law, Islam and Asialink Arts Lesley Always Director, Asialink Arts Gender Society (CILIS) Culture Asialink Arts Sarah Bond Director, Visual Arts

Melbourne Law Professor Denny Indrayana Associate Director Indonesian Constitutional Law Professor of Constitutional Law at Gadjah Mada Asialink Arts Jessica O’Brien Arts Residencies Manager School University Law School, Yogyakarta Corruption Asialink Business Megan Mulia Director, Research and Criminal law Information, Asialink Business

Melbourne Law Mr Rifqi Assegaf Research Assistant Asialink Business Jaime Berrill Marketing and Communications School Brand Manager, Asialink Business

Melbourne Law Ms Hannah Ekers Research Assistant Asialink Diplomacy Erin Watson-Lynn Director, Asialink Diplomacy Economic sociology, gender, School entrepreneurship, and migration

Melbourne Law Mr Tim Mann Editor, Indonesia at Melbourne Asialink Diplomacy Nisha Srinivasan Program Manager, Asialink Electoral politics, economic School blog Diplomacy development, society and Research Assistant culture, youth and civil society

Melbourne Law Ms Trish Prentice Research Assistant Asialink Diplomacy David Schaefer Research Associate, Asialink Indonesian foreign and defence School Diplomacy policy, non-traditional security in Sulawesi and West Papua Melbourne Law Mr Aditya Tumakaka Research Assistant School Asia Education Tim Mayfield Executive Director, Asia Foundation Education Foundation Melbourne Law Ms Alison Youssef Research Assistant School Asia Education Aaron O’Shannessy Manager, International Programs Foundation Melbourne Dr David Irving Senior Lecturer Early Music Conservatorium of Asia Education Bonnie Hermawan Senior Project Officer, Music Foundation International Programs 70 71

Department of Mechanical Kevin Engineering Appendix 3: Postgraduate students with Indonesia-focused research topics Department of Mechanical Dea Daniella Wangsawijaya Engineering

Department of Paediatrics Dr Vicka Oktaria Pneumonia and vitamin D

Nossal Institute for Global Health Belinda Rina Marie Spagnoletti DEPARTMENT NAME THESIS TOPIC Nossal Institute for Global Health Tiara Marthias Towards equitable maternal health care utilization: Assessment and potential solutions for Indonesia's universal health coverage program Melbourne School of Design Aninda Moezier Negotiating boundaries: transformations of spatial practices and gender relations in Minangkabau villages, Indonesia Melbourne Dentistry and Health Eddy K Lanuma Indonesian medical intern experiences in their transition to independent medical practitioner Sciences Melbourne School of Design Citra Ongkowijoyo The development of an integrated risk assessment methodology for critical infrastructure: the case of Indonesian urban water supply infrastructure Geography Tessa Toumbourou Gender dimension of land deals for palm oil in East Kalimantan Melbourne School of Design Diah Purwaningrum Constructing factors in the formation of contemporary place identity Ecosystem and Forest Sciences Anna Sanders Multi-level governance and policy arrangements for REDD+ in Indonesia, with a focus on processes of land use change and decision-making across several sites and two districts in the province of Central Melbourne School of Design Mohammad Arif Rohman Role of the government in supporting the success of infrastructure projects in Indonesia Kalimantan.

Asia Institute Wawan Mas’udi Creating Legitimacy in Decentralized Indonesia: Joko 'Jokowi' Widodo’s Path to Legitimacy in Solo, 2005 Ecosystem and Forest Sciences Heni Kurniasih Heni's research focuses on community forestry and governance in relation to innovation theory; the - 2012 focus is on innovation processes and support structure of community forestry to achieve development objectives in Indonesia. Asia Institute Abdil Mughis Mudhoffir The Political Economy of Civilian Militias in Post-Authoritarian Indonesia Geography Skye Turner-Walker Integration of local practices into climate vulnerability assessments (CVAs) and adaptation planning Asia Institute Agus Salim Indonesian Foreign Policy Under the Presidency of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono processes: a comparative study in Indonesia, Timor-Leste and Northern Australia

Asia Institute Yu Jin Seng The Emergence of the Critical Exhibition: Mapping Exhibitions in Southeast Asia 1972 – 1994 Melbourne Law School Ms Dewi Apsari International Crime Cooperation in Extradition Between Indonesia and Australia

Asia Institute Hellena Yoranita Souisa Media Ownership Concentration and Diversity of Media Content in Indonesia Melbourne Law School Mr Rifqi Sjarief Assegaf Inconsistency in Sentencing in Indonesian Courts

Asia Institute Abdi Supriyanto Progressive-Liberal Muslim Discourse on Islam-State Relations and Religious Freedom in Post-New Order Melbourne Law School Mr Matthew Busch Law in a Weak State: A Case Study of Indonesia Indonesia Melbourne Law School/ Ms Faye Chan Citizenship vs. Alienage and the Intersectionality of Law, Race and Gender: The Legal Status of Chinese Asia Institute Justin Wejak Fear and Catholicism in Indonesia During the Years of Living Dangerously: An Analysis of the Faculty of Arts Indonesian Women, 1930-2014 Representation of a Fear Narrative as Portrayed in a 1967 Catholic Text Melbourne Law School Miss Balawyn Jones Judicial Approaches Towards Domestic Violence in the Criminal Jurisdiction: A Case Study of Sentencing Linguistics Daniela Diedrich A Grammatical Description of Paku, an Endangered Language of Central Kalimantan, Indonesia in Domestic Violence Cases in Aceh, Indonesia

School of Social and Political Nathan Bond Orientations to power among the Tidung of north-eastern Borneo Melbourne Law School Ms Josi Khatarina Regulation of the Environment in Post-Soeharto Indonesia Sciences Melbourne Law School Ms Lilis Mulyani Corporatisation of Land in Indonesia School of Social and Political Bahruddin The impact of the PROPER on companies’ policies for sustainable investment and sustainable Sciences development in the Oil and Gas sector through CSR (supervised by Rachael Diprose and Kate Melbourne Law School Mr Dudi Rulliadi The Transformation of Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) in Infrastructure: The Case of Indonesia Macdonald)

Melbourne Law School Ms Windy Triana Schooling Judges: The Education of Religious Court Judges in Indonesia School of Social and Political Prima Wulandari What Policy Learning Can Offer in the Highly Politicised Context: The Case of Indonesian Public Sciences Administrative Reform (supervised by Janine O’Flynn and Rachael Diprose)

School of Social and Political Randy Wirasta Nandyatama Civil society organisations and human rights in ASEAN Sciences

School of Historical and Faye Chan Control and Resistance: The Social and Legal Regulation of Indonesian Chinese Women, 1930-2009 Philosophical Studies/Law

School of Historical and Sarah Craze Piracy as a manifestation of failed states Philosophical Studies (History)

School of Historical and Hannah Loney “In Women’s Words: A New History of Violence and Everyday Life during the Indonesian Occupation of Philosophical Studies (History) East Timor (1975-1999)”

School of Historical and Hani Yulindrasari Negotiating Masculinities: Male Teachers in Early Childhood Education in Indonesia Philosophical Studies/ School of Social and Political Sciences 72 73

Appendix 4: Indonesia-related theses completed in 2016 Appendix 5: 2015-2016 Indonesian student enrolments by faculty

DEPARTMENT NAME THESIS TOPIC Indonesian Student Enrolments by Level and Administering Faculty 2015 2016

Second Second PhD Theses Level Administering Faculty First Half Full Year First Half Full Year Half Half Architecture, Building & Planning 32 28 34 26 22 30 Asia Institute Ashley Robertson Out of the Shadows: Female Puppeteers and the Changing Tradition of Javanese Shadow Theatre Arts 78 84 101 92 92 113 Asia Institute Nanang Indra Kurniawan Local Struggle, Recognition of Dayak Customary Land, and State Making in Central Kalimantan, Business & Economics 58 64 76 63 70 77 Indonesia. Engineering 92 95 112 97 82 111 Law 26 29 37 43 54 66 Department of Paediatrics Dr Rina Triasih Childhood tuberculosis Medicine, Dentistry & Health Sciences 79 83 89 88 88 102 Postgraduate Melbourne Business School 1 1 1 4 4 4 Department of Paediatrics Dr Ita Kartika Prevention of hospital acquired infections in Indonesia Melbourne Consulting & Custom Programs - - - 2 1 2 Melbourne Graduate School of Education 7 7 8 7 6 8 Honours and Masters Theses Science 50 45 53 43 38 52 Department of Paediatrics Dr Nikmah Salamidia Idris Cardiovascular manifestations of HIV in children VCA & MCM 1 1 1 2 3 3 Veterinary & Agricultural Science 12 5 14 15 8 17 Nossal Institute for Global Health Dwi Oktarina What are the experiences of adolescents (15-19 years old) with youth-friendly health services in Total 436 442 526 482 468 585 Yogyakarta, Indonesia? Architecture, Building & Planning 39 39 46 39 37 43 Arts 64 77 79 74 80 90 Nossal Institute for Global Health Elizabeth Sarah Aryaputri Barriers and facilitating factors for a laboratory-based antimicrobial resistance surveillance program in Business & Economics 238 271 303 279 285 336 South Jakarta (A Research Protocol) Engineering ------School of Historical and Paul O’Shea Politics of Recognition: Heroes, Victims and the Contest over History in post-Suharto Indonesia, (Honors Law ------Philosophical Studies thesis, top-ranked History thesis for 2016) Medicine, Dentistry & Health Sciences 29 28 29 32 32 32 Undergraduate Melbourne Business School ------School of Historical and Bridget Hale Investigating the significance of the Jeune Scott-Kemball Wayang Kulit collection housed at the Music Melbourne Consulting & Custom Programs 17 13 30 13 16 29 Philosophical Studies Archive of Monash University’, (Masters minor thesis) Melbourne Graduate School of Education ------

School of Historical and Rosie Cook The informed orchestrator: Roles and responsibilities on the conservation of the Kowangan (Masters Science 160 183 197 185 191 211 Philosophical Studies minor thesis) VCA & MCM 7 6 7 8 7 8 Veterinary & Agricultural Science 5 4 5 4 3 4 School of Historical and Suzy Logan-Morris Indonesian wind instrument from Aceh Indonesia: Investigation and reproduction Total 557 619 693 631 647 747 Philosophical Studies Grand Total 992 1,061 1,216 1,113 1,115 1,323

Source: OBI ISIS - Student Load as at 18th May 2017 Notes: ‘-’ Denotes where there are no student enrolments in a particular period / faculty First half includes enrolments in subjects with census dates between 1st January and 30th June as well as summer and year-long subjects Second half includes enrolments in subjects with census dates between 1st July and 31st December Full Year is not a sum of First Half and Second Half, but the total number of unique students enrolled in subjects with census dates between 1st January and 31st December The table shows a count of enrolments, as such if a student enrols in 2 courses then they are counted twice Indonesian students are identified by country of citizenship being ‘Indonesia’ and AU Citizenship being a ‘temporary entry permit’ or ‘overseas student residing overseas’ Postgraduate includes all higher degree coursework (HDCW), other postgraduate courses (OPG) and graduate research (GR) courses Undergraduate excludes all non-award courses INDONESIAFORUM.ORG.AU IndoForumMelbourne The University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria 3010 Published by: Indonesia Forum