Indonesia Forum Annual Report 2013

Transcription

Indonesia Forum Annual Report 2013
Indonesia Forum
Annual Report 2013
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 1
20/01/2015 1:44:55 PM
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 2
20/01/2015 1:44:55 PM
Indonesia Forum
Annual Report 2013
CONTENTS
Indonesia Forum: An Overview
4
Convenor’s Report 2013
5
Highlights of 2013
8
Indonesia Forum Member Publications 2013
11
Indonesia-related Activities of Faculties, Departments and Centres
17
Appendix 1
47
Appendix 2
48
Appendix 3
52
Appendix 4
54
Appendix 5
54
Appendix 6
55
Darbotz painting photo.
Original artwork painted March 2013.
Photo courtesy of MIFA Intercultural Fine Art gallery in Melbourne.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 3
3
20/01/2015 1:44:55 PM
INDONESIA FORUM: AN OVERVIEW
The University of Melbourne pioneered Indonesian studies in the
more broadly oriented towards Asia as a whole. The Forum also
mid-1950s. Over the decades Indonesian studies at the university
maintains close links with the Indonesian Postgraduate Students
Association, international students from Indonesia and domestic
of Indonesia-related subjects offered to students. Research
students studying in Indonesia-related areas. Since 1999 the
and teaching relating to Indonesia is conducted across several
Indonesia Forum has convened six-monthly postgraduate
Departments, Faculties and Centres, including Architecture, Arts,
Building and Planning, Economics and Commerce, Law and
Medicine.
The Indonesia Forum maintains an email bulletin, moderated by
Associate Professor Charles A Coppel, to keep members up to
The Indonesia Forum was formed in 1991 as the Indonesia Interest
date with Indonesia-related events on campus and elsewhere,
Group. It changed its name in 1996, to standardise with other
including in Indonesia. Its website <www.indonesiaforum.org.
country forums throughout the university. The Indonesia Forum is
au> provides Indonesia-related information for staff, students,
an informal and open network of academics and administrative staff
prospective students and colleagues from other institutions. From
of the University who share a common interest and professional
2014 the Forum began a Twitter account <@indoforummelb>
involvement in Indonesia. Members keep in touch by email and
and
hold regular meetings, seminars and discussions. For the past
indonesiaforummelbourne>.
a
Facebook
page
<https://www.facebook.com/
twenty 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
Indonesia Forum: An Overview
with the Asia Institute and Asialink, whose missions are related but
4
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 4
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:44:56 PM
CONVENOR’S REPORT 2013
2013 saw continued growth in research and engagement with Indonesia and Indonesian Studies across the University. Some highlights were
the launch of the Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and Society (CILIS) headed by Professor Tim Lindsey in the Asian Law Centre: the launch
of the Asian History Hub in the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies (SHAPS) and the commencement of Associate Professor Harry
Minas and Dr Ritsuko’s project to improve the treatment of mentally ill persons in Indonesia in the Centre for International Mental Health funded
by an AUSAID Public Sector Linkages Program. In recognition of the strength of our Indonesia expertise The University of Melbourne was
one of four universities included in the federally funded Australia Indonesia Centre, announced in November 2013. The centre aims to assist
in providing solutions to Australia and Indonesia’s joint challenges through extensive research collaborations. The University of Melbourne
further supported Indonesian studies by announcing a new Melbourne Asia Visting Fellows Scheme that will allow staff to sponsor leading
Indonesian researchers to visit the university in coming years. Consistent with the university’s Asia strategy the Faculty of Arts also approved
an Indonesia Initiative developed by Dr Katharine McGregor (SHAPS), Dr Edwin Jurriëns (Asia Institute) and Professor Thomas Reuter (Asia
Institute) with input from Professor John Murphy (School of Social and Political Sciences). The initiative will allow three nominated Indonesian
scholars from Arts Faculties of Indonesian universities to visit the Faculty each year for the next three years in order to build lasting research
and teaching collaborations.
Film Festival entitled ‘Caught in the Act: Indonesia and The Act of Killing’. The discussion centred around the Oscar nominated documentary
The Act of Killing’ which focuses on the re-enactments of the 1965 killings by executioners from Medan, Indonesia. The panel discussion
The second event, on 30 August, ‘After The Act of Killing: Historical Justice and the 1965-66 Mass Killings in Indonesia’, was a multisite
conference sponsored by the Indonesia Forum, SHAPS and the Herb Feith Foundation. The conference included papers from University of
Melbourne staff Dr Katharine McGregor and PhD candidate Jess Melvin in addition to other Australian based experts on the 1965-66 killings
in Indonesia including University of Melbourne PhD graduate, Dr Vannessa Hearman (Sydney University) and former staff member Associate
Professor Ariel Heryanto (ANU). The conference was hosted at the University of Melbourne and STF Driyarkara, Jakarta. Sixty people
attended the Melbourne conference.
The third event, on 3 October, was a panel discussion entitled ‘Reimagining Urban Culture and Space in Indonesia’, with the Melbourne
School of Design, Faculty of Architecture, University of Melbourne. Panellists included Mr Revianto Budi Santosa (Lecturer at Universitas
Islam Indonesia), Dr Seno Gumira Ajidarma, (Author and Lecturer in Faculty of Film and Television, Jakarta Institute of Art [IKJ], 2013 Mangold
Fellow), Mr Yori Antar (Principal Architect, Han Awal & Partners, Honorary member of the Indonesian Institute of Architects) and Dr Amanda
Achmadi (Lecturer in Asian Architecture and Urbanism, The University of Melbourne). Seventy people attended the event.
The Forum held two Postgraduate Roundtables in 2013 allowing students across Melbourne and beyond working on Indonesia related topics
to present their research. The Roundtables are proving increasingly popular. The 28th Roundtable was held on 6 May, with eight students
were presentations on a wide variety in topics across different disciplines including medicine, science, engineering, technology, history, gender
studies and development. Issues discussed at the 2013 seminars ranged from rubbish collectors in Surabaya, transgender and development
in Indonesia, psychology curriculums for doctors and Indonesian teacher education. Thanks to the staff and students who gave up their
Saturdays to attend these roundtables. Over 2013 the number of postgraduate students researching topics related to Indonesia continued
at a consistent level with seven PhD completions. (See list of current thesis topics in Appendix 3 of this report.)
There were many other events on campus, which had Indonesian speakers or an Indonesia focus. The Faculty of Arts hosted celebrated
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 5
Convenor’s Report 2013
presenting. The 29th Roundtable was held on 14 September, with 15 students presenting. About thirty people attended each roundtable. There
5
20/01/2015 1:44:56 PM
author Dr Seno Gumira Ajidarma as the Walter Mangold Fellow. Meidytama Suryodiningrat the Editor-in-Chief of The Jakarta Post delivered a
Indonesian Politics 2013 through Media Eyes
the 9th Islamic Studies Postgraduate Conference.
Publications by Indonesia Forum staff members have appeared in a wide variety of outlets in 2013, ranging from international journals to local
newspapers and have covered topics as varied as reproductive rights, human rights and labour, new media, law reform, history and memory,
the 1965 violence, people smuggling, religious diversity and Australian-Indonesian identity negotiations. Two forum members, Professor
In 2013, Dr Antje Missbach a McKenzie Postdoctoral Fellow in the Asian Law Centre received an ARC DECRA Fellowship for the project
Katharine McGregor received an ARC Future Fellowship
and Transnational Human Rights Activism’. Professor Abdullah Saeed (Asia Institute) received an ARC Discovery Grant for a project entitled
the university a large number of Indonesianists hold ARC Grants won in earlier rounds. ARC Future Fellow Linda Rae Bennett (Nossal
Institute) won a further competitive ESHIRE Insight Grant
Family, and Migration in the Global Era’, in which she will focus on Indonesian migrant women who have settled in Australia. Dr Edwin Jurriëns
and Associate Professor Robyn Slogget (SHAPS) were successful in 2013 round of The Australia Awards Fellowships which will enable up
and Cultural Recovery’ in 2014.
The University’s Indonesian language enrolments have remained stable in 2013 with a student population that combines both Arts students
- many continuing their language study from school - with those from faculties outside of Arts who choose to study Indonesian as part of their
breadth requirements under the Melbourne Model. The Language Curriculum Reform process that the Indonesian language program has
been conducting together with all other modern languages taught in the Faculty of Arts continues. The second round of new advanced level
subjects were introduced in 2013. Enrolments in gamelan classes continued at a healthy number.
The Indonesia Forum would not have been able to engage in its activities without the help of many other organisations and supporters at
has provided funding to the Forum. The Forum is also grateful for the guidance and support of Professor Simon Evans, Pro Vice Chancellor
Forum.
As the 2013 Convenor, from half way through the year, I am grateful to Dr Michael Ewing who I took over from mid-year for his on-going
support and to Dr Edwin Jurriëns, the Deputy Convenor of the forum for 2013, both of whom have been a delight to work with. I would also
like to thank Dr Helen Pausacker, Jess Melvin and Dr Amanda Achmadi for the invaluable work they have put into organising Indonesia Forum
Convenor’s Reprt 2013
events and for their advice and guidance. Associate Professor Charles Coppel has continued to moderate the Indonesia Forum’s email
listing, which is a vital means of communication both between Indonesia Forum members and with the wider community. I also wish to thank
our PhD students Morgan Harrington and Hani Yulindrasari who organised the 2013 Postgraduate Roundtables and Jess Melvin and Tessa
Shaw who helped with the compilation and production of this report.
Dr Katharine McGregor and Dr Michael Ewing
Indonesia Forum Convenors 2013
6
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 6
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:44:56 PM
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 7
Convenor’s Reprt 2013
Nanang Indra Kurniawan, VUT, presents at the 28th Indonesia Forum
Postgraduate Roundtable, 6 May 2013. Photo by: Hani Yulindrasari.
7
20/01/2015 1:44:56 PM
HIGHLIGHTS OF 2013
Canberra, involving forum members Jess Melvin and Katharine McGregor.
Seminar for the Indonesia Forum.
27 February
Indonesian Politics 2013 through Media Eyes
Editor-in-Chief, The Jakarta Post.
Indonesia and Australia in the Asian Century’.
6 June
Building Creative Connections between Australia & Indonesia, Asialink Next Generation Public Lecture
Series with Australia Indonesia Youth Association.
25- 27 June
Standard Chartered, Indonesia, Danny Burrows, Principal, Tradeworthy, Kris Sulisto, President, Indonesia
Australia Business Council, Debnath Guharoy, Consultant, Roy Morgan Research and Allaster Cox, First
Assistant Secretary, South East Asia Division, DFAT. Held in Melbourne and Sydney.
18- 19 July
with Noke Kiroyan, Kiroyan Partners, Indonesia. Held in Sydney and
Brisbane.
22 July
with George Marantika, Rector & President, University Kristian
Immanuel (UKRIM) Indonesia.
The Act of Killing’, Melbourne International Film Festival panel discussion
with Joshua Oppenheimer, Tito Ambyo and Jess Melvin, sponsored by the Indonesia Forum and MIFF at
The Wheeler Centre.
11 August
Putra Panji Asmara directed by Dr Michael Ewing performed topeng dance and kuda lumping (horse
Arts at Monash Gallery of Art.
The Act of Killing: Historical Justice and the 1965-66 Mass Killings in Indonesia’, multisite conference
sponsored by the Indonesia Forum and School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, held by the
University of Melbourne, Melbourne in partnership with the Herb Feith Foundation and STF Driyarkara,
Highlights of 2013
Jakarta.
4 September
Dr. Seno Gumira Ajidarma 2013 Visiting Walter Mangold Fellow delivered the Mangold Lecture,
Melbourne.
20 September
8
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 8
Asian History Hub launch involving forum members Jess Melvin, Hannah Loney and Katharine McGregor,
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:44:56 PM
The University of Melbourne.
Indonesia’, with the Melbourne School of Design, Faculty of Architecture, University of Melbourne.
Panellists included Mr Revianto Budi Santosa (Lecturer at Universitas Islam Indonesia), Dr Seno Gumira
Ajidarma, (Author and Lecturer in Faculty of Film and Television, Jakarta Institute of Art [IKJ], 2013
Mangold Fellow), Mr. Yori Antar (Principal Architect, Han Awal and Partners, Honorary member of the
Indonesian Institute of Architects) and Dr Amanda Achmadi (Lecturer in Asian Architecture and Urbanism,
The University of Melbourne).
Tim Lindsey and Professor Pip Nicholson focusing on drug laws and the death penalty in Indonesia,
Singapore and Vietnam.
Rights and (Multiple) Citizenship: An Ethnographic Look at Issues of Decentralisation and the Revival of
Tradition in Indonesia’.
1 November
Melbourne Community Gamelan accompanied two short wayang kulit performances by Dr Helen
Killing: Historical Justice and the 1965- 66 Mass Killings in Indonesia’ conference, Melbourne, 30 August 2013. Photo by: Jemma Purdey.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 9
Highlights of 2013
Indonesian language at Point Cook College.
9
20/01/2015 1:44:58 PM
15 November
Indonesia Investment & Business Forum. Held in partnership with BKPM -Indonesia Investment
Coordinating Board, Austrade, Australia Indonesia Business Council and Australian Institute of Company
Directors.
Justice in Asian Countries’, including papers on Indonesia.
3-4 December
9th Islamic Studies Postgraduate Conference hosted by CILIS at the Melbourne Law School.
Highlights of 2013
Edo Siregar, La Trobe University, and Dian Harahap at the 28th Indonesia
Forum Postgraduate Roundtable, 6 May 2013. Photo by: Hani Yulindrasari.
10
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 10
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:44:58 PM
INDONESIA FORUM MEMBER
PUBLICATIONS 2013
Oceanic Linguistics, 52(2), pp.
457-480.
Tense,
Aspect, Mood, and Evidentiality in Languages of Indonesia. NUSA Linguistic Studies of Languages in and around Indonesia, 55, pp. 5-21.
Jakarta: Badan Penyelenggara Seri NUSA, Universitas Atma Jaya / (E-publication) Tokyo: Linguistic Diversity Project, Tokyo University
of Foreign Studies.
Language Documentation and Conservation
(Honolulu) 7, pp. 12-34.
Adelaar, Sander (Alexander), 2013, Voice Variation in Austronesian Languages of Indonesia. NUSA Linguistic Studies of Languages in
and around Indonesia, 54, Jakarta: Badan Penyelenggara Seri NUSA, Universitas Atma Jaya / (E-publication) Tokyo: Linguistic Diversity
Project, Dept. of Linguistics, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.
Eastern Indonesia,’ in Wacana, Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia, 15(1), pp. 20-42.
Editor Suad Joseph. Brill Online.
) Asian Ethnicity: Chinese Indonesians Reassessed:
History, Religion and Belonging, (Oxford/New York: Routledge)’, in Asian Ethnicity <http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14631369.2013.828974>.
The Routledge
Handbook of the Chinese Diaspora (Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon and New York NY: Routledge), pp. 345-358.
Inside Indonesia 111: Jan-Mar (Review of Daniel S.
Lev, No Concessions: The Life of Yap Thiam Hien, Indonesian Human Rights Lawyer, Seattle and London: University of Washington
Press, 2011.)
, Depok: Komunitas Bambu, 2013.)
Law and Islamic Studies, Melbourne.
Annals
, pp. 169-185.
Quaternary
, 74, pp. 273-279.
Trade Union Rights Violations by Indonesian Sports Shoe Manufacturers’, in Theoretical Criminology, 17(2), pp. 197-214.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 11
Indonesia Forum Member Publications 2013
Inside Indonesia 114: Oct-Dec (Review of Julia Suryakusuma, Julia’s Jihad: Tales of the
11
20/01/2015 1:44:58 PM
and Effectiveness of Current Regulations’, in
, 82, pp. 30-34.
Inside Indonesia 112: Apr-Jun <http://www.insideindonesia.org/feature-editions/
art-and-the-city-2>.
Indonesia and the Malay World, 41,
119, pp. 48-75.
Bijdragen tot de
Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, 169 (1), pp. 7-36.
Public Law in East Asia. London: Ashgate.
The Age, 21 November;
, 21 November.
Mirjam Künkler and Alfred Stepan (eds), Indonesia, Islam and Democratic Consolidation. New York: Columbia University Press.
The Age, 23 July, <www.theage.com.au/
comment/turn-back-the-boats-why-indonesia-isnt-happy-20130723-2qfmo.html>.
2015’, in Energy Policy, 61, pp. 12-21.
Makruf, Jamhari and Lindsey, Tim (eds), 2013, Hukum Keluarga, Pidana dan Ekonomi: Kajian Perundang-undangan Indonesia, Fikih
dan Hukum Internasional, (Family Law, Crime and Economics: A study of Indonesian Law, Islamic Jurisprudence and International Law).
Jakarta: Kencana Prenada Media Group.
Indonesia Forum Member Publications 2013
of the Private Sector and Effectiveness of Current Regulations’, in
, 82, pp. 30-34.
Global Dialogue, Volume 15 (1),
, 37(3), September, pp. 350-361.
Pieper Mooney and Fabio Lanza (eds.) De-Centring Cold War History (London: Routledge), pp. 31-51.
Inside Indonesia 112: Apr-Jun.
Atjeh Post, 9 January 2013, republished in The Jakarta Post, 10 January.
12
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 12
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:44:59 PM
The Jakarta Post, 30 September, republished in The Globe Journal, 30
September.
Al Jazeera, 7 October.
The Act of Killing, in Inside Indonesia Edition 112: Apr-Jun.
, 32(3),
pp. 63- 91.
The Interpreter, 26 November, <www.
lowyinterpreter.org/post/2013/11/26/How-effective-are-Indonesias-efforts-to-stop-asylum-seekers.aspx>.
The DRUM, 29 November, <www.abc.net.au/
news/2013-11-28/missbach-indonesian-cooperation/5122470>.
Asylum Insight, 22 December, <www.
The Jakarta Post, 28 May.
The Conversation, 18 September, <https://theconversation.com/
prosecuting-people-smugglers-in-indonesia-18251>.
), Indonesia’s
. Baden-Baden: Nomos, pp. 259-276.
, 47(3),
pp. 1055-1082.
1970s to the Early 2000s’, in ASEAS –
, 6(2), pp. 281-306.
Australian
Journal of Asian Law, 14(2), pp. 119.
Inside Indonesia 113: Jul-Sept, <www.insideindonesia.org/
current-edition/life-and-death-in-immigration-detention>.
A. Horstmann (eds), Faith in the Future: Understanding the Revitalization of Religions and Cultural Traditions in Asia. Leiden: Brill.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 13
Indonesia Forum Member Publications 2013
, 39: 31-35,
13
20/01/2015 1:44:59 PM
Report 2013: Changing Global Environments. Paris: UNESCO and International Social Science Council.
The Conversation, 26 November,
2.31pm
AEST
<http://theconversation.com/australian-espionage-and-the-history-of-foreign-intervention-in-indonesia-20648>.
The Jakarta Post, 1 December, 10:46am WIB, <http://www.thejakartapost.
com/news/2013/12/01/australian-espionage-and-history-foreign-intervention-indonesia.html>. Republished by Jakarta Online News,
10:46am WIB, <http://jakartaonlinenews.blogspot.com.au/2013/12/inti-net-australian-espionage-and.html>.
The Indian Journal of
Anthropology, Inaugural Issue, 1(1), pp. 1-20.
in WACANA - Jurnal Ilmu Pengetahuan Budaya
), Faith
in the Future: Understanding the Revitalization of Religions and Cultural Traditions in Asia. Leiden: Brill.
Anthropological
Forum. Review paper. Anthropological Forum
Reuter, Thomas, 2013,
minutes; Indonesian with English subtitles.
Published by Ronin Films. An ethnographic
Musicology Australia,
35(1), pp. 3-19.
Indonesia Forum Member Publications 2013
Reuter, Thomas and Horstmann, A. (eds), 2013, Faith in the future: Understanding the revitalization of religions and cultural traditions in
Asia. Leiden: Brill.
, Women and Gender:
Values’ and Islamic Revival: Gender, Rights and State Moral Projects in Malaysia’,
, Special Double
Issue, Human Rights, Gender and Islam, 29(4), Jul-Aug, pp. 354-367).
Thompson eds,
, Dordrecht, Heidelberg, New York and
London: Springer, ARI - Springer Asia Series, 3, pp.143-160.
14
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 14
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:44:59 PM
Working Paper No 27 Health Policy and
Health Finance Knowledge Hub.
Viktor Jahana (eds.).
. Dili: Sylvia Dili and Planet.
Flores Pos, 31 January.
Flores Pos, 25 February.
Pos Kupang, 25 February.
Flores Pos, 5 March.
Flores Pos, 13 March.
Flores Pos, 6 April.
Flores Pos, 25 November.
Pos Kupang, 9 December.
Indonesia Forum Member Publications 2013
Flores Bangkit, 9 December.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 15
15
20/01/2015 1:44:59 PM
28th Indonesia Forum Roundtable, 6 May 2013.
Photo by Simon Williams.
16
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 16
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:00 PM
INDONESIA-RELATED ACTIVITIES OF
FACULTIES, DEPARTMENTS
AND CENTRES
ARCHITECTURE, BUILDING
AND PLANNING
www.abp.unimelb.edu.au
RESEARCH TOPICS
Informal settlements
Candi architecture of East Java
Housing and settlement patterns in urban and rural
The Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning continues to
communities
nurture relationships with key staff and institutions throughout
Islamic architecture of Southeast Asia
Indonesia and continues to develop links with Universitas
Land and landscape
Indonesia (Jakarta), Universitas Gadjah Mada (Yogyakarta),
Planning in Indonesia
Institut Teknologi Bandung (Bandung) and Institut Teknologi
Resort and tourism architecture
Sepuluh Nopember, (Surabaya).
Architecture and identity politics in Indonesia
Colonial and postcolonial urbanism in Bali
The study of Southeast Asian (including Indonesian) architecture,
planning and urbanism is included in a number of subjects taught
SUPERVISION
at undergraduate and graduate level, including as part of the
Bachelor of Environments degree.
In 2013, Architecture, Building and Planning staff supervised
THREE research higher degree student with Indonesia-related
topics (See Appendix 3).
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
Professor Tom Kvan (Dean)
ARTS
Professor Ross King (Professorial Fellow)
www.arts.unimelb.edu.au
Professor Miles Lewis (Emeritus Architecture)
Mr Hugh O’Neill (Senior Fellow)
Professor Kim Dovey (Architecture, Urban Design)
Dr Greg Missingham (Architecture)
Dr David O’Brien (Architecture)
Dr Amanda Achmadi (Architectural Design)
Anthropology and Development
Studies
http://ssps.unimelb.edu.au/study-areas/
anthropology-and-development-studies
Associate Professor Carolyn Whitzman (Urban Planning)
Professor Katherine Darian-Smith (Cultural Heritage)
TEACHING
Foundations of Architecture
Managing Global City Regions
Multicultural/Postcolonial Cities
Theorising the Asian Metropolis
Urban Environments
Spatial and Political Architectures of Asia
Principles of Heritage and Conservation
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 17
STAFF WITH INDONESIAN INTERESTS
Dr Paul Green
TEACHING
Paul Green
Engaging the World in Theory and Practice
Anthropology of Gender and Sexuality
Kinship and Family: A Global Perspective
RESEARCH
Paul Green
International lifestyle and retirement migration in Southeast
Architecture, Building and Planning | Arts
Dr Jennifer Day (Urban Planning)
17
20/01/2015 1:45:00 PM
Asia (including Indonesia)
CONFERENCE PAPERS/ PRESENTATIONS
Paul Green
RESEARCH
Indonesian grammar in conversational interaction (Ewing)
Endangered Moluccan languages (Ewing)
Dialect variation in Javanese (Ewing)
Youth language in Indonesia (Ewing)
and retirees in Southeast Asia’, Theorising Mobilities in/from
Contemporary art (Jurriëns)
Asia conference, Singapore, 14-15 November 2013.
Media (Jurriëns)
Popular Culture (Jurriëns)
Asia Institute
www.asiainstitute.unimelb.edu.au
Religious Diversity and Change (Reuter)
Indonesia’s National Elite (Reuter)
Sustainability and Food Security (Reuter)
Local politics, religion and culture in eastern Indonesia
Indonesian Studies
w w w. a s i a i n s t i t u t e . u n i m e l b . e d u . a u / p r o g r a m s /
indonesian.html
(Wejak)
SUPERVISION
In 2013, the Asia Institute supervised FOURTEEN research higher
degree students with Indonesia-related topics (See Appendix 3).
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
Professor Abdullah Saeed
CONFERENCE PAPERS/ PRESENTATIONS
Dr Michael Ewing
Dr Edwin Jurriëns
Michael C. Ewing
Ms Nani Pollard
Professor Thomas Reuter
Ms Elisabeth Riharti
Mr Justin Wejak
TEACHING
Indonesian Language Beginners, Intermediate and Advanced
language in conversation and print’, International Symposium
Special Genres in Indonesia, Tokyo University of Foreign
Studies, 18 February 2013.
Florey, International Conference on Language Documentation
and Conservation, Honolulu, 1 March 2013.
levels
Diversity: Identities in Indonesia
Linguistics, University of California at Santa Barbara, 10
Literature: Reading Indonesian Lives
January 2013.
Translation: Intercultural Indonesia
Unity: Evolving Indonesian Nationhood
in Javanese conversation’, International Cognitive Linguistics
Analysing Indonesia: Concepts and Issues
Conference, University of Alberta, Special Session on Units in
Creative Industries in Indonesia
Linguistics Analysis, 21 June 2013.
Indonesian Language in Social Context
Popular Cultures in Indonesia
Edwin Jurriëns
Topics in Indonesian Studies
Arts
Honours Indonesian
music’ at the Inter-Asia Cultural Studies conference Beyond
the Culture Industry, National University of Singapore,
18
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 18
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:00 PM
Singapore, 3-5 July 2013.
illustrated with Indonesian Examples.’ An Ethnographic Film
Panelist, Indonesia-Australia screen-based art collaboration
presented at the 7th EuroSEAS.
Mes 56 and Bus Projects, at New Low gallery, Melbourne, 7
AFFILIATIONS
November 2013.
Michael Ewing
and Space in Indonesia’, Indonesia Forum with the Melbourne
Member of the editorial board NUSA: Linguistic studies
School of Design, Faculty of Architecture, University of
of languages in and around Indonesia, Tokyo University of
Melbourne, 3 October 2013.
Foreign Studies and Atmajaya Catholic University, Jakarta.
Public lecture at the new media art community The House of
Victorian representative, National Reference Group of The
Australian Consortium for In-Country Indonesian Studies
Opening talk, Haris Purnomo contemporary art exhibition at
(ACICIS).
Musical Director, Gamelan Putra Panji Asmara.
2013.
Edwin Jurriëns
between Indonesia and Australia’, Asialink Arts-Indonesia
Visiting fellow, School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Australia Youth Association (AIYA) Next Gen Series,
(HASS), University of New South Wales (UNSW), Canberra.
University of Melbourne, 19 June 2013.
Editor, Asian Visual Cultures book series, Amsterdam
Opening talk, Darbotz contemporary art exhibition at MiFA
University Press.
Editorial board member, Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia
,
Thomas Reuter
Universitas Indonesia (UI), Jakarta.
Editorial Advisory Board member, The International Journal of
, Monash University, Melbourne.
Ethnographic Film Festival, Melbourne, 21 November 2013.
Nani Pollard
A Case Study of Neoliberal Intervention in East Timor.’
Member of AIAV (Australian Indonesian Association of
Australian Anthropological
Victoria).
Society
annual
conference,
Australian National University, Canberra, 6-8 November
Committee member of lndoAustay.
2013.
Thomas Reuter
Sovereignty: A Case Study From East Timor.’ Annual Australia
Senior Vice President, International Union of Anthropological
Awards Lecture (Ausaid) at the Indonesia Australia Language
and Ethnological Sciences.
Foundation (IALF), Jakarta, 9 October 2013.
Past Chair, World Council of Anthropological Associations.
Board member, Anthropologists without Borders.
Sustainable Agriculture and Food Sovereignty: A Case study
from East Timor.’ Paper presented at the joint WCAA-IUAES
and the Environment.
symposium on Averting a Global Environmental Collapse:
Documentary Film Festival.
Congress of the IUAES, Manchester, 7 August 2013.
Board member, John Darling Fellowship Scheme for
Arts
The Role of Anthropology and Local Knowledge, 17th World
Indonesian Film Makers.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 19
19
20/01/2015 1:45:00 PM
Fellow, Asian Studies Association and Indonesia Council.
at the Jakarta Institute of Art, the University of Indonesia, and
Fellow and former president, Australian Anthropological
Padjadjaran University. His research interest include various
Association.
forms of Indonesian contemporary culture. He is a columnist on
Jakartan urban culture for the Djakarta! Magazine and also writes
PROJECTS/ ACHIEVEMENTS
Abdullah Saeed received an ARC Discovery Grant for a project
on political issues for the Koran Tempo daily. As the 2013 Mangold
Visiting Fellow at The University of Melbourne, he delivered the
Secret Codes of a Language of Opposition’. His latest award is the
a case study
2013 Art Award (Anugerah Seni) for Literature from the Indonesian
government. He worked on the French translation of his play Why
Edwin Jurriëns was successful in the 2013 round of The Australia
Did You Kidnap Our Child? and the audio-book version of The
Awards Fellowships which will enable up to 10 visiting fellows
Incident Trilogy.
from Indonesia and Timor-Leste to visit Melbourne for an intensive
Joel S. Kahn is Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Social
Recovery’ in 2014.
Sciences in Australia. His research interests are in Religion and
Secularity in Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia. He is recipient
Thomas Reuter
religion and secularism: New Spiritualities in Southeast Asia’
ARC Future Fellowship commenced in 2010.
ARC 2010 discovery project (extending to 2013).
Islam: Scholars, Reformers, Mystics And Gnostics’ at The Religion
and Society Research Centre of the University of Western
HONORARY FELLOWS AND VISITORS
Associate Professor Sander Adelaar (Honorary Principal Fellow)
World between the local and the global’ for the workshop on
Dr Seno Gumira Ajidarma (Honorary Fellow)
Professor Joel Kahn (Professorial Fellow)
at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle/Saale,
Associate Professor Maila Stivens (Honorary Principal Fellow)
Sander Adelaar’s research interests related to Indonesia include
the linguistic history and variety of Malay, description and history
and language documentation in Indonesia. He is a Fellow of
Department of Anthropology, University of Bergen, Norway (20-24
June 2012).
the Academy of Humanities, Australia; on the Advisory Board,
Maila Stivens’ research focuses on gender, the family and kinship
the Borneo Research Council, Phillips, Maine, USA; and on the
in Southeast Asia, globalisation, modernity and postmodernity
editorial boards of Moussons, journal of Southeast Asian studies
in social theory, gender relations globally, global/transnational
(Aix-en-Provence, France); Etudes Ocean lndien (lnstitut National
feminisms and feminist theory. She has carried out research
de Langues et Cultures Orientales, Paris); Bahasa (Dewan Bahasa
on modernity, work and family among the new Malay middle
South East Barito languages in Indonesia and Madagascar:
Arts
Safeguarding their past and future’.
Seno Gumira Ajidarma teaches Media and Cultural Studies
20
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 20
Asian Childhoods’. She is a member of a number of journal and
publishing editorial boards including Critique of Anthropology
(London); Intersections: Gender History and Culture in the Asian
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:00 PM
(Australian National University);
,
Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, Denmark;
(Australia), and
East Timorese art, museums and cultural conservation
(Slogget and Tse)
, Asian Studies
Association of Australia .
Indonesianists
and
Australian
based
activism
(Kate
Darian-Smith)
Indonesia and piracy (Craze)
School of Historical and
Philosophical Studies
History of the ethnic Chinese in Indonesia (Chan and Melvin)
SUPERVISION
www.historical-studies.unimelb.edu.au
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
Ms Faye Yik-Wei Chan (Tutor, Research Assistant, PhD candidate,
History)
Professor Kate Darian-Smith (History)
Dr Ara Keys (Senior Lecturer, History)
Ms Hannah Loney (Research Assistant, Tutor, PhD candidate,
History)
Dr Katharine McGregor (Senior Lecturer, History)
Ms Jess Melvin (Research Assistant, PhD candidate, History)
Associate Professor Robyn Sloggett (CCMC)
Dr Nicole Tse (Lecturer, CCMC)
Ms Hani Yulindrasari (Research Assistant, PhD candidate, History)
TEACHING
History, Memory and Violence in Asia (McGregor)
Holocaust and Genocide (Welch and McGregor)
discussion at the Melbourne International Film Festical, 10 August 2013. Photo by: MIFF.
International History (Keys and McGregor)
Modern Southeast Asia (McGregor)
RESEARCH
East Timor and human rights activism (Keys)
East Timorese women and violence (Loney)
Memory and Human Rights Activism related to the 1945-49
Independence Struggle (McGregor)
Indonesian Transnational Political Activism and the Cold War
(1949-66) (McGregor)
(McGregor)
The 1965 violence (McGregor and Melvin)
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 21
Historical Justice and the 1965-66 Mass Killings in Indonesia, 30 August 2013.
Photo by: Jemma Purdey.
Arts
Islam and the politics of memory in post-Suharto Indonesia
21
20/01/2015 1:45:00 PM
Joshua Oppenheimer addresses the audience live via Skype from
Arts
the Melbourne International Film Festival, 10 August 2013.
Photo by: MIFF.
with Joshua Oppenheimer, live via Skype.
Photo by: MIFF.
Photo by: MIFF.
Photo by: MIFF.
with Joshua Oppenheimer, live via Skype.
Photo by MIFF.
with Joshua Oppenheimer, live via Skype.
Photo by: MIFF.
22
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 22
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:01 PM
students with Indonesia-related topics (See Appendix 3).
the Asia History Hub, the Faculty of Arts, the University of
CONFERENCE PAPERS/PRESENTATIONS
Faye Yik-Wei Chan
Melbourne, 20 September 2013.
research NGO, Fundasaun Mahein [Watchdog Foundation]
in Dili, Timor-Leste, 3 September 2013.
Independence Indonesia: An overview of select legislation
from the late 1960s until the early 2000s’,
a Women’s Movement in Portuguese Timor’, June 2013 at
Progress Day, University of Melbourne, 1 November 2013.
the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies Work in
Sarah Craze
of piracy, responded to a Somali pirate attack’,
Progress Day, Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne, 7
June 2013.
Katharine McGregor
in Progress Day, University of Melbourne, 1 November 2013.
Kate Darian Smith
Moving Beyond Historical Deadlock’, New Perspectives
on the 1965 Violence in Indonesia (Australian National
University), 11-12 February 2013.
in the mid-twentieth century’, at What difference does a war
Women of Asia and Africa’, Australian Historical Association,
26-27 August 2013 Murdoch University.
Women’s History Symposium, University of Wollongong, 10
July 2013.
Reform Group, Contemporary Witness Seminar’, Panel
Facilitator and Interviewer, Public Seminar, History of the
University Unit/ University of Melbourne Archives, 19 June.
Hannah Loney
The Act of Killing: Historical Justice and the
1965-66 Mass Killings in Indonesia’, Multisite Conference
sponsored by the Indonesia Forum and School of Historical
and
Philosophical
Studies,
University
of
Melbourne,
Melbourne, in partnership with the Herb Feith Foundation and
the Indonesian Period of Timor-Leste’s Past’, Graduate
STF Driyarkara, Jakarta, 30 August 2013.
Student’s Association’s Feminist Research Workshop, the
University of Melbourne, 28 October 2013.
Indonesian Representations of the Captain Westerling
Massacres in South Sulawesi (1946-1947)’, Historical Justice
Memories of the Indonesian Occupation’, 2013 Timor-Leste
Contemporary Society, Columbia University, 5-7 December
Timor-Leste 2013: A TLSA Research Conference’, Dili, Timor-
2013.
Leste, 15-16 July 2013.
Jess Melvin
the Australian Women’s History Network Symposium in
association with the Australian Historical Association (AHA)
Perspectives on the 1965 Violence in Indonesia (Australian
National University) 11- 12 February 2013.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 23
Arts
New South Wales, 8-12 July 2013.
23
20/01/2015 1:45:01 PM
University, 19 February 2013.
Member, Australian Historical Association
Member, Dialogues on Historical Justice and Memory Network
The Act of
Editorial Board,
Killing’, co organised by the Indonesia Forum and Melbourne
International Film Festival.
Jess Melvin
3rd Dr Jan Randa Conference in Holocaust and Genocide
Member, Association of Asian Studies of Australia
Studies, Aftermath 2013: Sites and Sources of History and
Member, International Network of Genocide Scholars
Memory, Monash University, 7 August 2013.
and the Sumatran death squads during the Indonesian
Hannah Loney
Member, Timor-Leste Studies Association
Member, Australian Historical Association
The Act of Killing: Historical Justice and the 1965-66 Mass
Member, Asian Studies Association of Australia
Killings in Indonesia’, Multisite Conference sponsored by the
Editorial collective member for Lilith: A Feminist History
Indonesia Forum and School of Historical and Philosophical
Journal
Studies, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, in partnership
with the Herb Feith Foundation and STF Driyarkara, Jakarta,
Robyn Sloggett
30 August.
Live interviews with Joshua Oppenheimer and Anonymous,
The Act of Killing: Historical Justice and the 1965-66
Mass Killings in Indonesia’, Multisite Conference Sponsored
Research Network
Nicole Tse
-
by the Indonesia Forum and School of Historical and
Philosophical Studies, University of Melbourne, Melbourne,
vation Art Research Network
in partnership with the Herb Feith Foundation and STF
Driyarkara, Jakarta, 30 August.
genocide’, SHAPS Asian History Hub Launch, September 20,
Melbourne University.
Lily Yulianti
Sukarnoputri’s campaign strategies in the direct presidential
elections 2004 and 2009’ Indonesian Council, Open
Conference, University of Tasmania, 11-12 July 2013.
AFFILIATIONS
Katharine McGregor
Regional Councillor for Southeast Asia for the Association of
Arts
Asian Studies of Australia
Ariel Heryanto delivering his presentation
Member, Association of Asian Studies of Australia
24
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 24
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:01 PM
PROJECTS/ ACHIEVEMENTS
Ara Keys
With Partner Investigator, Dr Bradley R Simpson (Princeton
University, USA), ARC Funded Project Making Torture
Unthinkable: The International Campaign Against torture,
1967-1984 (2011-2014).
Katharine McGregor
2013.
Jess Melvin
Conference Committee Member, New Perspectives on the
1965 Violence in Indonesia, Australian National University,
11- 12 February 2013,
with Sri Dean and Norma Manalu, SBS Radio, 16 January
2013.
Conference Committee Member, New Perspectives on the
1965 Violence in Indonesia, Australian National University,
11-12 February 2013.
The Act of Killing’, Melbourne University, 30 August 2013.
Robyn Sloggett
Co-founder with Professor Finnane and Associate Professor
May of the SHAPS Asian History Hub, launched 20 September
2013.
Conference Committee Member, multi-sited conference After
The Act of Killing, Melbourne University, 30 August 2013.
Co-editor with Dr Jemma Purdey of the Herb Feith Series,
Translating Accounts of the 1965 Mass Violence in Indonesia:
First volume of the series, Truth will out: Indonesian accounts
of the 1965 mass violence, edited by Dr Baskara Wardaya,
published by Monash University e-press in September 2013.
Radio National, 3 June 2013.
Awarded a four-year (2014-2017) Australian Research
Council Future Fellowship (FT 130100957) for the project,
Transnational Human Rights Activism’ with the host institutions
Conservation Art Research Network.
Co-editor of the APTCCARN Journal.
Successful as a lead investigator in Round 14 of The Australia
Awards Fellowships. The grant for $128,000 will enable up
to 10 visiting fellows from Indonesia and Timor-Leste to visit
Melbourne for an intensive series of workshops on the theme
Through Associate Professor Robyn Sloggett, the University’s
Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation (CCMC) has an
ongoing relationship and is conducting ongoing work with
the East Timorese Secretariat of State for Culture in training
and museum development. The program has been in place
since 2000 and has included AusAID Fellowships, in country
training and seminars at UoM and Museum and Art Gallery of
of Gadjah Mada University and Wollongong University.
Hannah Loney
Tutored in HIST20034 Modern Southeast Asia.
Conference committee member, the Timor-Leste Studies
Leste 2013: A TLSA Research Conference’, Dili, Timor-Leste,
15-16 July 2013.
2013.
Awarded a Graduate Research in Arts Travel Scheme
(GRATS) to fund a trip to Wollongong for a conference, July
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 25
Pohlman, Jess Melvin and Vannessa Hearman with John Roosa live via
Skype from Canada, 30 August 2013. Photo by: Jemma Purdey.
Nossal Institute
Awarded a Faculty of Arts PhD Fieldwork Grant to fund a
25
20/01/2015 1:45:01 PM
development of the Los Palos Cultural Centre in
School of Social and Political
Sciences
partnership with Many Hands International and
www.ssps.unimelb.edu.au
the Northern Territory. In 2013 CCMC conducted the following
projects:
Secretariat of State for Culture
preservation of the tais collection in partnership with
Timor Aid
STAFF WITH INDONESIAN INTERESTS
Dr Kate MacDonald
Murals’ and exploring sustainability in contemporary
Professor Fiona Haines
art training for Timorese youth - in partnership with
Professor John Murphy
Dr Bagus Aryo (Universitas Indonesia, Faculty Asian Scholar
Student Conservators at Melbourne: CCMC Masters students,
Fellow)
Fran Paterson and Lisa Yeats worked with Arte Moris,
examining links between traditional culture as manifested in
contemporary youth cultures.
Lily Yulianti
Co-produced the multi-platform art project with Australian
TEACHING
Social Policy and Development (Joint Masters coursework
subject taught in Jakarta with Universitas Indonesia)
SUPERVISION
project was launched during the Makassar International
In 2013, the School of Social and Political Sciences supervised
Writers Festival in July 2013 see <www.vesselforstories.
FOUR research higher degree students with Indonesia-related
com>. This project is part of Indonesia – Australia soft
topics (See Appendix 3).
diplomacy through literature and arts.
Nicole Tse
Co-chair APTCARN
Chair Publications Committee APTCCARN Journal
HONORARY FELLOWS/VISITORS
PROJECTS/ ACHIEVEMENTS
The School of Social and Political Sciences will begin teaching
two new Masters coursework subjects (Comparative Social Policy
and ASEAN and Southeast Asian Regionalism) in Yogyakarta with
colleagues at Universitas Gadja Mada, beginning in 2015.
Professor Fiona Haines and Dr Kate MacDonald currently hold a
joint ARC Linkage Grant with other scholars including Indonesian
Associate Professor Charles Coppel (Principal Fellow)
case studies called: Evaluating redress mechanisms governing
Charles Coppel’s current research is on religion and the ethnic
the human rights practices of transnational business: lessons for
Chinese in contemporary Indonesia and the position of the ethnic
institutional design and operation
Chinese in Indonesia since the fall of Suharto.
HONORARY FELLOWS/VISITORS
Arts
Professor Richard Tanter
26
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 26
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:01 PM
ECONOMICS AND
COMMERCE
www.ecom.unimelb.edu.au
Melbourne Centre of International Business
www.managementmarketing.unimelb.edu.au/mcib
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
Dr Peter Verhezen (Associate Professor; Principal Fellow University
of Melbourne and Adjunct Professor Melbourne Business School)
TEACHING
Asian Economies (Master of International Business and MBS)
Business and Development in Southeast Asia (Indonesia
focus)
Global Corporate Business (Graduate School of Business
and Economics)
Strategy, Ethics and Governance (with Asia focus) (MBS)
RESEARCH
Governance and institutional change in Indonesia
Governance and institutional change in Indonesia
Corruption and corporate governance
Risk management and sustainable management
SUPERVISION
In 2013, the Melbourne Centre for International Business
supervised ONE research higher degree student with an
Economics and Commerce
Indonesia-related topic (See Appendix 3).
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 27
27
20/01/2015 1:45:01 PM
LIBRARY
www.lib.unimelb.edu.au/
collections, including more than 6,300 Indonesian-language items.
There are over 1,600 Indonesia-related electronic resources on
the Library catalogue, mainly English-language. These include
e-books, reports, facsimiles of early works and journals.
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
Dr Aline Scott-Maxwell
Ms Michelle Hall
Ms Mary Ann Gibson
Mr Richard Serle
Aline Scott-Maxwell is the University’s Indonesian Studies
Library Consultant and is based in the Asia Institute one day
per fortnight. Her appointment at the University of Melbourne
is part of a co-operative arrangement with Monash University
Library, where she is Senior Asian Studies Librarian. This shared
position is made possible by the Melbourne-Monash protocol and
the Asian Libraries in Melbourne consortium, which promotes
resource sharing between University of Melbourne and Monash
University libraries and reciprocal access to their Asian collections.
Aline Scott-Maxwell provides reference support to Asia Institute
and Indonesia Forum staff and postgraduates, including research
consultancies. She also coordinates collection development.
Additional library support for Indonesian studies in 2013 was
provided by Michelle Hall (East Asia collection) and staff in the
Collection Development division, including Mary Ann Gibson and
Richard Serle
Indonesian collection in the area of acquisitions.
In 2013, 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. These acquisitions included
supports the work of the School of Historical and Philosophical
Studies) funded the purchase of 226 Indonesian-language books,
largely through Indonesian supplier Patamga Dhanam Jaya
(formerly Bhratara), and 10 books on Indonesian subjects in
Library
English. A small number of other titles were purchased from the
Library’s allocation to the Asia Institute and the Arts approval plan.
There are now over 14,000 Indonesia-related items in the
28
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 28
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:02 PM
MEDICINE, DENTISTRY AND
HEALTH SCIENCES
www.mdhs.unimelb.edu.au
Indonesia (Indah Kartika Murni, PhD candidate).
SUPERVISION
In 2013, the Department of Paediatrics and the Royal Children’s
Department of Paediatrics and
the Royal Children’s Hospital
Centre for International Child Health
www.rch.org.au/cich
Hospital Centre for International Child Health supervised THREE
research higher degree students with Indonesia-related topics
(See Appendix 3).
Centre for International Mental Health, Melbourne
School of Population and Global Health
www.cimh.unimelb.edu.au/
STAFF WITH INDONESIA-RELATED INTERESTS
Professor Julie Bines (Victor and Lotti Smorgon Chair of
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
Paediatrics, University of Melbourne)
Associate Professor Harry Minas (Director, Centre for International
Professor Steve Graham (Centre for International Child Health,
Mental Health)
Department of Paediatrics)
Dr Ritsuko Kakuma (Senior Research Fellow, Centre for
Professor Trevor Duke (Centre for International Child Health,
International Mental Health)
Department of Paediatrics)
Dr Erminia Colucci (Research Fellow, Centre for International
The University of Melbourne is working with the Department of
Mental Health)
Paediatrics at Gadjah Mada University (UGM) in Yogyakarta on
a neonatal rotavirus vaccine trial, which is being conducted in
PROJECTS/ ACHIEVEMENTS
Yogyakarta and surrounding districts. This has involved training of
The Centre for International Mental Health (CIMH) has a strong
over 500 staff at UGM and in the community in GCP requirements,
history of collaborative partnerships with leaders in mental health
recognition and management of common childhood illness and
systems development and services in Indonesia, particularly with
advanced paediatric life support for doctors at primary health
University of Indonesia, Gadjah Mada University, and with the
centres. In addition, studies have been developed that will lead to
Ministry of Health and Ministry of Social Affairs. Several of the
research higher degrees including a study on maternal antibodies
key leaders for mental health systems and policy development in
and immune response to rotavirus vaccines (Vicka Oktaria,
Indonesia are past graduates of the Centre’s International Mental
PhD candidate). The program is also working closely with the
Health Leadership Program (IMHLP).
Indonesian government vaccine manufacturer, BioFarma with
the aim to manufacture the RV3 rotavirus vaccine at low cost for
Since 2005, CIMH has been involved in supporting the
babies in Indonesia and globally.
development of mental health systems at provincial and national
levels, with capacity building, policy development and program
The Centre for International Child Health is working with the
implementation activities.
Department of Paediatrics at UGM on several research projects
that will lead to higher research degrees for their staff. These
include a study of community-based prevention of childhood
tuberculosis (Rina Triasi, PhD candidate) and rational antibiotic
These have included:
1.
Developing a Monitoring and Evaluation Strategy for the
Indonesia Free from Pusang Program. A/Prof Harry Minas
prescribing and the prevention of hospital acquired infections in
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 29
29
20/01/2015 1:45:02 PM
and Dr Ritsuko Kukuma. This 12-month project, supported by
Ms Judith Ascroft (CEO)
an AusAID Public Sector Linkages Program grant, is linked to
Dr Krishna Hort (Deputy Director and Head of Health Systems
the national Indonesia Free from Pusang (Indonesia Bebas
Strengthening Unit)
Pusang) initiative. The design of the national program has
Associate Professor Tilman Ruff
Dr Alison Morgan (Senior Technical Advisor, Maternal and Child
training in program monitoring and evaluation at the University
Health)
of Melbourne, and a monitoring and evaluation strategy has
Dr Martha Morrow (Senior Research Fellow)
been developed.
Dr Tim Moore (Head of International Health Education and
Learning Unit)
Minas, Dr Hervita Diatri and other Indonesian partners ‘Free
Dr Linda Rae Bennett (ARC Future Fellow, Senior Research
Fellow)
Mr Brendan Allen (Business Development Manager)
mentally ill.
Ms Brigitte Tenni (Senior Technical Advisor, HIV)
Synopsis: The practice of using shackles and chains (known in
Indonesia as pasung) to physically restrain persons with mental
Team)
illness to control their behaviour is widespread in Indonesia (as in
many other developing countries) and almost universally ignored.
To address these severe human rights violations, the Indonesian
AFFILIATIONS
government has committed to the elimination of this practice
Nossal Institute staff members work collaboratively with several
Universities and research partners. These include Universitas
kind, highlights the activities carried out at several levels in the
Gadjah Mada, particularly with the Pusat Manajemen Pelayanan
country (from the government to the Pasung survivors and their
Kesehatan (Centre for Health Service Management) under
community) to eradicate this form of human rights abuse and give
Professor Yodi Mahendradhata; and the medical faculties of The
freedom and dignity to the mentally ill.
University of Indonesia – Dr Budi Wiweko and Dr Andon Hestianto,
Airlangga University - Dr Aucky Hinting, Udayana University – Dr
IB Putra Adayana, and University of Gadja Mada – Professor (dr.)
SUPERVISION
Siswanto Agus Wilopo.
In 2013, the Centre for International Mental Health, Melbourne
School of Population and Global Health supervised TWO research
higher degree students with Indonesia-related topics (See
PROJECTS / ACHIEVEMENTS
Appendix 3).
Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Pro-Poor Policy, The
Knowledge Sector Initiative
Nossal Institute for Global
Health
The overall goal of this program is to build the capacity of Indonesia
to develop effective and socially accountable policies that meet the
www.ni.unimelb.edu.au
towards an increase in the supply side of high quality research; a
STAFF
WITH
INDONESIA-RELATED
INTERESTS
AND
EXPERIENCE
Professor Graham Brown (Director, Nossal Institute for Global
model for evidence-informed policy making applied by key policy
makers; and an avenue for diverse stakeholders to debate policies.
The Program’s four components are:
Health)
30
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 30
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:02 PM
improve service delivery and community engagement, provide
generate and communicate high-quality evidence to relevant
health systems support and assist system reforms in performance
policy makers;
and accountability. The Nossal Institute provides technical support
to the following areas:
policy makers effectively demand and utilise high-quality
Monitoring & Evaluation, including analysis of performance
evidence to inform social development policy;
improvement, effectiveness of development assistance, and
capacity building
Clinical training and provision of specialist clinical services
Management and leadership training for health service
into policy options and policy options feed back into research,
managers
and;
Performance management and incentives program.
Australian Awards Fellowships: Strengthening Youth HIV
mitigated.
Working with the core Indonesian supply side research
organisations in the health sector, the Nossal Institute is
supporting analysis and planning of health research capabilities,
aligning research capabilities with policy needs, and identifying the
impact of research on health policy by helping to build research
capacity. The institute is also assessing demand side research
barriers and developing and assisting in demand side health policy
Prevention in Indonesia (Tanah Papua): Building workforce
capacity (26 September – 25 October 2013, total number of
fellows: 8)
Broad Development Goal: To ensure young people in Indonesia
(Tanah Papua - Papua and West Papua provinces), particularly
adolescent girls, have access to appropriate and integrated youth
friendly health services, including HIV prevention information and
counselling.
development; providing Short Term Advisors to support capacity
AAF Goal: To increase the depth and breadth of the response to
building of health sector CSOs to use networks and advocacy
HIV prevention and positive youth development in Indonesia by
strategies to communicate with policy makers; as well as providing
building the capacity of local leaders (both Government and NGO)
overall support to monitoring and evaluation activities including
responsible for HIV prevention.
consortium partners and relevant Indonesian supply and demand
side research organisations and partners.
times higher than the national average. UNAIDS estimates young
people in this region are disproportionately represented with
Australia Indonesia Partnerships in Maternal and Neonatal
prevalence among 15-24 year olds estimated to be higher than
Health (AIPMNH)
3%. Transmission is primarily through unprotected sex. The urgent
The Australia Indonesia Partnership in Maternal and Neonatal
Health (AIPMNH) aims to improve maternal and neonatal
health (MNH) in targeted districts within the Nusa Tenggara
need for an integrated and responsive approach to HIV prevention
is largely unmet because human resource capacity to deliver is
low.
Timur Province. Working in partnership with Coffey International
Eight fellows acquired knowledge on youth health/development,
Development and Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale
evidence-based HIV prevention interventions and integration
models. Building leadership and technical capacity to develop/
oversight and technical support to this health systems focused
program to progressively achieve MDG targets for maternal and
to accelerating the HIV response for young people and has the
child health. The Program has three components designed to
greatest potential to reverse the epidemic. This program built on
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 31
31
20/01/2015 1:45:02 PM
the successful ALA Fellowships (Round 8, Round 11) to strengthen
government on support for rural and remote health workforce has
the coordination systems between the district and provincial
provided new policy options for Indonesia.
sectoral institutions to ensure an integrated HIV response for
young people.
The Hub’s work in Indonesia highlights the governance challenges
of mixed public/private health systems in countries with a
Health Policy and Health Finance Knowledge Hub (completed
decentralised and fragmented government, and poorly regulated
June 2013)
markets.
The
Indonesian
Government
has
substantially
increased
In 2013, outputs were targeted towards dissemination and
investment in health over the last decade, mainly through demand-
communication of the results of Hub studies and analyses to
policy makers, in particular AusAID, partner governments and
considerable supply-side constraints, with a concentration of
health facilities and workforce in the central islands of Java, Bali
and Sumatra, and a scarcity in the more peripheral islands.
development partners. This involved:
Targeted engagement and communication by knowledge
hubs with key stakeholders and potential users of knowledge
The Hub focuses on the contribution of the rapidly growing private
products, if possible from early in the process, but particularly
sector and the parallel increasing commercialisation of the public
at the dissemination stage;
sector and the subsequent poor distribution of resources and
Development and distribution of relevant and useful
inequity in access. Improved government stewardship of this
knowledge resources to stakeholders in forms appropriate to
mixed commercialised health system has the potential to increase
their needs; and
access to quality health care throughout Indonesia. Stewardship
Revisions to the monitoring and evaluation framework to
mechanisms include aligning and rationalising payments and
ensure that it assists the description and measurement of
incentives, and more engagement with the private sector and
the process and results of Hub dissemination, engagement
professional bodies through co-regulation.
and uptake. The revisions will also address the need for
Initial studies conducted in collaboration with our research partner,
the Centre for Health Service Management at the Universitas
Gadjah Mada (UGM), highlighted the important roles of not-for-
monitoring and evaluation at the individual Hub level, cross
Hub level, and at the initiative-wide level, recognising the role
of AusAID in the dissemination process.
Practice: Strengthening Systems for Effective Delivery of Youth
have been engaged in dialogue with the Ministry of Health, the NFP
hospital associations and the medical professional associations
on policy implications and options.
Health and Development Services in Aceh’
This AusAID supported program began implementation in June
2011. The program recognises the need for improved provision
Provisions in the Hospital Law of 2009 paved the way for
and coordination of adolescent health services and education
government support of NFP hospitals and subsequent policy
in Aceh, Indonesia. The program aims to ensure the inclusion
engagement has explored the development of regulations required
of the Pelayanan Kesehatan Peduli Remaja, (PKPR) policy for
to implement these provisions.
youth friendly services, in both health and education planning and
The Hub and UGM have been instrumental in facilitating
implementation.
dialogue between the Ministry of Health and medical professional
The PKPR is a national program that was developed by the
associations, creating opportunities for collaboration on the
Indonesian Ministry of Health (MOH) with support from the United
poor distribution of specialist doctors. Exposure to Australia’s
Nation Population Fund (UNFPA) in 2003. It is a program designed
experience of collaboration between professional bodies and
32
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 32
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:02 PM
health (youth friendly puskesmas [health clinics]) and education
(life skills, including comprehensive sexuality education). The
program received a no cost extension until December 2013.
Compromised fertility in contemporary Indonesia – ARC
Future Fellowship project
investigation of infertility in Indonesian society. It focuses on
women’s experiences of compromised fertility and its impact on
their lives, examining the intersections of social suffering and
gender discrimination for infertile women.
CONFERENCE PAPERS/ PRESENTATIONS
L R Bennett
kinship and connectivity in the Asian Century,’ at Australian
Anthropological Association annual conference, Canberra,
6-8 November.
in Australia: identity, gender, beauty and performance’ at
Australian Anthropological Association annual conference,
Canberra, 6-8 November.
PROJECTS/ ACHIEVEMENTS
Nossal staff have been involved in the engagement of medical
professional associations in the distribution of specialist doctors
to support universal health coverage in Indonesia (B Allen, K Hort,
A Meliala; Health Policy and Health Finance Knowledge Hub,
Nossal Institute for Global Health). Disparities in the distribution
of specialist doctors among the regions of Indonesia contribute to
limiting access to referral services of rural and remote populations,
and threaten achievement of the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs) and Indonesia’s introduction of universal health coverage.
In 2013, L Butt (PI1), L Mitchell (PI2), L R Bennett (CI1) and D
Mc Kay (CI2), won a competitive $450,893 grant for their project
Era’, ESHIRE Insight Grant – Canada. The focus of Dr Bennett’s
contribution to this project is on Indonesian migrant women who
have settled in Australia.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 33
33
20/01/2015 1:45:02 PM
MELBOURNE
CONSERVATORIUM OF
MUSIC
During 2013 Melbourne Community Gamelan performed three
times:
On Monday 3 June and Monday 28 October, Melbourne
Community Gamelan coordinated end of semester concerts,
www.music.unimelb.edu.au
The Melbourne Conservatorium of Music maintains three sets
of gamelan (Javanese, Sundanese and Cirebonese musical
instruments/orchestras), representing most of the main 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 the gamelan collection is housed in the
Melbourne Conservatorium of Music’s Parkville annex in Berkeley
Street.
Community Gamelan and the University of Melbourne student
groups. They were held in the Berkeley Street premises and
about 80 to 100 people attended. Helen Pausacker performed
a short wayang (shadow puppet) performance, accompanied
by Melbourne Community Gamelan for the October concert.
The June concert also featured Brandon Lee on koto and
the October concert featured Robert McMullen and Friends
playing Celtic music.
On Friday 1 November, Melbourne Community Gamelan
accompanied two short wayang kulit performances by Helen
STAFF WITH INDONESIA-RELATED INTERESTS
Professor Cathy Falk (Head of Ethnomusicology)
Ms Ilona Wright (Lecturer [casual] and Director of Gamelan
Ensemble)
Archery) for primary school students, studying Indonesian
language at Point Cook College.
Putra Panji Asmara Inc. performs musical pieces from Cirebon,
a region on the north coast of West Java, with a focus on music
TEACHING
In 2013 there was once again a large number of students enrolled
and 27 students in second semester. Many of these students are
to accompany topeng (masked dance). The group is lead by
Michael Ewing from the University of Melbourne’s Asia Institute,
and can be contacted by email on: [email protected].
For more information see the website: <http://home.vicnet.net.
taking gamelan as a breadth subject. The students all participated
in a combined concert with Melbourne Community Gamelan at the
Putra Panji Asmara was on leave for most of second semester
end of both semesters.
in 2013, but took part in one performance on Sunday 11 August,
performing both topeng dance and kuda lumping (horse trance
Melbourne Conservatorium of Music
gamelan ensemble.
Miniatures’ by the Museum of Indonesian Arts at Monash Gallery
of Art.
PERFORMANCES
Melbourne Community Gamelan Inc. performs musical pieces from
Solo (Central Java). The group is taught by Ki Poedijono, who was
the musical director for all of the Melbourne Community Gamelan’s
2013 performances. Marianne Lessels is the current President of
the group. The group can be contacted by email: melgamelan@
hotmail.com, through its website: <www.melgamelan.com.au>
and facebook: <www.facebook.com/melgamelan>.
34
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 34
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:02 PM
Melbourne Community Gamelan performing for Point Cook College primary
school students on 1 November 2013. Front row (left to right): Marianne Lessels,
Helen Pausacker performing a wayang kulit performance accompanied
by Melbourne Community Gamelan at Point Cook College primary
school, 1 November 2013. Photo by: Kopitoebruk.
Lin Teo, Aline Scott-Maxwell, Poedijono. Back row: Linda Joy, Marleny Gonzalez,
Dina Dharjono, Elisabeth Riharti. Photo by: Kopitoebruk
Putra Panji Asmara, kuda lumping
(horse trance dance) by Helen
Pausacker, 11 August 2013.
Back: Marianne Lessels.
Photo by: Linda Hibbs
Putra Panji Asmara, Klana
topeng (masked) dance by
Michael Ewing, 11 August 2013.
Back (left to right):
Linda Seymour, Michelle Abbott,
Nathalia Gould.
Photo by: Linda Hibbs
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 35
Putra Panji Asmara, kuda lumping (horse trance dance) by Elisabeth
Riharti, 11 August 2013. Back (left to right): Nathalia Gould, Linda
Seymour, Morgan Harrington. Photo by: Linda Hibbs
Melbourne Conservatorium of Music
August 2013. Front row (left to right): Helen Pausacker, Elisabeth
Riharti, Michael Ewing. Photo by: Linda Hibbs
35
20/01/2015 1:45:04 PM
MELBOURNE GRADUATE
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
www.education.unimelb.edu.au/
Design and delivery of short-courses in Adolescent Development
and Participation
In 2013 the YRC worked with UNICEF to design and deliver a
Development and Participation’. The course presents up-to-date
STAFF WITH INDONESIAN INTERESTS
local data on adolescents, explores how data can be used to inform
Associate Professor Helen Cahill (Deputy Director, Youth Research
programs, presents the latest evidence-based interventions,
Centre)
advocates for meaningful participation of adolescents and shares
Sally Beadle (Research Fellow, Youth Research Centre)
promising practice from around Indonesia and the broader Asia
AFFILIATIONS
in November 2013, attended by a range of participants from
In 2013, Youth Research Centre (YRC) staff continued to work
with members of the Faculty of Education at University of
Government, NGOs and UN Agencies working in Papua and West
Papua.
Cenderawasih, Papua. Teacher training staff from this university
A second course was commissioned by UNICEF Indonesia to be
collaborated with the YRC to deliver teacher training.
delivered at the national level in Jakarta in 2014.
PROJECTS / ACHIEVEMENTS
Violence prevention in schools in Papua Province
The Youth Research Centre, Melbourne Graduate School of
Education have continued to work with UNICEF in Papua Province
in collaboration with Provincial Government partners on a violence
prevention education initiative. This work is funded by the UN Trust
Fund to End Violence Against Women.
In 2013, the YRC worked with UNICEF to design and deliver
additional training in positive discipline strategies to teachers,
principals and District government staff in Jayawijaya, Jayapura
and Keerom districts. The training aims to present a rationale for
using positive discipline (rather than corporal punishment) and
uses a range of participatory techniques so that teachers can
practice strategies to use in their classrooms. This project has
involved a collaborative effort from UNICEF, the YRC, Papua
and the University of Cenderawasih.
In 2014, the YRC will continue to work with UNICEF and partners
on this project, introducing additional classroom materials in social
and emotional learning and explore how these materials can be
integrated into the local curriculum.
36
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 36
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:04 PM
Violence prevention training in schools in Papua Province training course,
November 2013. Photo by: Sally Beadle.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 37
37
20/01/2015 1:45:11 PM
MELBOURNE SCHOOL OF
LAND AND ENVIRONMENT
www.land-environment.unimelb.edu.au/
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
Professor Jim Falk
Associate Professor Robert Day
Jim Falk and Robert Day are involved with the Association of
(APRU-SCC) research program, which held a major conference at
University of Indonesia in 2013.
CONFERENCE PAPERS/ PRESENTATIONS
Jim Falk and Robert Day attended the APRU-SCC International
Meeting and Symposium, Jakarta. This meeting consisted of
an international team discussion on 3 July, followed by the
International Symposium on Coastal Cities, Marine Resources
and Climate Change in the Coral Triangle over 4-5 July at the
Hotel Sultan and University of Indonesia.
38
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 38
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:12 PM
THE MELBOURNE LAW
SCHOOL
www.law.unimelb.edu.au
Asian Law Centre & Centre for
Islamic Law and Society
www.alc.law.unimelb.edu.au/
www.cils.law.unimelb.edu.au/
In 2013 the Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and Society (CILIS)
was launched, replacing the Centre for Islamic Law and Society
(CILS, formerly, Centre for the Study of Contemporary Islam).
2013 Islamic Studies Postgraduate Conference, 3-4 December 2013.
Photo: Tessa Shaw
done by the centre. Through the Asian Law Centre (ALC) and
CILIS, the Melbourne Law School has been one of the leaders
in internationalisation at the University, with a particular emphasis
on Indonesia. The Law School now enjoys close cooperative links
with government, professional, academic and non-governmental
Indonesian students studying law-related aspects of Indonesian
society in the University’s Graduate and Research Higher Degree
Programs. In 2013 both centres were active in Indonesia-related
research and worked closely with the Asia Institute on a range of
Indonesia-related projects.
Launch of CILIS publications, 21 May 2013.
Left to right: Dr Antje Missbach, Professor Tim Lindsey, A/Professor Simon
Butt, Dr Kerstin Steiner and Dr Richard Woolcott. Photo: Tessa Shaw
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
TEACHING
Professor Tim Lindsey (Director, CILIS)
Dr Helen Pausacker (Deputy Director, CILIS; Principal Research
The following subjects included Indonesia-related content:
Assistant)
JD and Masters Programmes
Dr Antje Missbach (McKenzie Post-Doctoral Fellow)
Commercial Law in Asia (2013)
Ms Faye Yik-Wei Chan (Principal Research Assistant)
Drugs and the Death Penalty in Asia (2013)
Ms Rebecca Lunnon (Research Assistant)
Islamic Law and Politics in Asia (2013)
Mr Nick Mark (Research Assistant)
Rule of Law in Asia (2013)
Ms Rheny Pulungan (Research Assistant)
Ms Sarah Rennie (Research Assistant)
Ms Alison Youssef (Research Assistant)
SUPERVISION
In 2013, Asian Law Centre and Centre for the Islamic Law and
Society staff supervised or co-supervised TEN research higher
degree students with Indonesia-related topics. (See Appendices
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 39
39
20/01/2015 1:45:13 PM
3 and 4.) Centre members also supported a number of LLM
coursework students from Indonesia.
CONFERENCE PAPERS/PRESENTATIONS
Tim Lindsey
program, Price Waterhouse Coopers, Melbourne 14 March.
program, Price Waterhouse Coopers, Sydney, 21 March.
Century – the Case of Indonesia’, Keynote paper presented
at Australian Federation of Modern Language Teachers
Association Annual Conference, Canberra, 7 July.
Launch of CILIS, 21 May 2013. Left to right: Dr Helen Pausacker, Mr Irmawan
Emir Wisnandar (Consul-General of the Republic of Indonesia, Victoria),
Dr Richard Woolcott and Professor Tim Lindsey.
Photo: Tessa Shaw.
CAUSINDY (Conference of Australian and Indonesian Youth),
Centre, Adelaide, 31 July.
Canberra, 17 October.
Antje Missbach
Foundation Annual Conference, Melbourne, 12 August.
Contemporary Administration of Islamic Law in Iran, Malaysia
and Indonesia: A Comparative Study’, Joint Conference, The
Porous Borders’, presented at Asia Institute Lunchtime Public
Seminar, University of Melbourne, 11 September.
Johns Hopkins University, SAIS, Washington DC, and the
Smugglers in Indonesia (2008-2012)’, presented at CILIS
Iran: Kuala Lumpur, 21-22 August.
Lunchtime Seminar, University of Melbourne, 16 September.
Porous Borders’, presented at CSEAS Seminar Series,
Monash University, Melbourne, 19 September.
Refugees in Indonesia: The Role of International Refugee
and Migration Organisation’, presented at Interdisciplinary
and Asylum Seekers’, University of Melbourne, 20 September.
of International Refugee and Migration Organisations in
Indonesia’, presented at the Annual Conference of the
Australian Anthropological Society (AAS), The Australian
National University, 6 November.
2013 Islamic Studies Postgraduate Conference, 3-4 December 2014.
Guest mentors with CILIS Director and Deputy Director, left to right: Professor Tim Lindsey, Professor Greg Fealy, Professor MB Hooker, Dr Arskal
Salim, Dr Nadirsyah Hosen, Professor Virginia Hooker, Professor Merle
Ricklefs and Dr Helen Pausacker. Photo: Tessa Shawv
40
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 40
in Indonesia (2008-2012)’, presented at Universitas Sebelas
Maret, Solo, 3 December.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:15 PM
Helen Pausacker
Dr Dina Afrianty
Dr Melissa Crouch
Islamic Defenders Front’, Melbourne Law School (PhD
completion seminar), 15 May.
Australia’, at ALC and National University of Singapore
Justice in Asian Countries’, 18-19 November.
RESEARCH PROJECTS / ACHIEVEMENTS
Mr Arjuna Dibley
Mr Stewart Fenwick
Dr Susi Dwi Harijanti
Dr Nadirsyah Hosen
Dr Jeremy Kingsley
Dr Dave McRae
Dr Antje Missbach
Dr Arskal Salim
Dr Kerstin Steiner
Ms Cate Sumner
Tim Lindsey
Editor of the international refereed journal, the Australian
CILIS/ALC CONFERENCES & SEMINARS
Journal of Asian Law, which covers Southeast Asia, including
CILS Launch and Public Lecture, Mr Richard Woolcott AC,
Indonesia.
Tim Lindsey and Helen Pausacker worked with Julia
Indonesia and Australia in the Asian Century’, 21 May.
Four
Suryakusuma and Deborah Jatim on a new translation of
Soekarno’s
.
Helen Pausacker
Editor of the Australian Journal of Asian Law.
launched at the event.
CILIS Research Seminar Series
In 2013 the ALC and the CILIS hosted their regular Seminar
CILIS SENIOR ASSOCIATES
Professor Christoph Antons
Professor Azyumardi Azra
Associate Professor Simon Butt
Associate Professor Charles Coppel
Professor Howard Dick
Associate Professor Greg Fealy
Associate Professor Michael Feener
Professor MB Hooker
Professor Virginia Hooker
Professor Denny Indrayana
Associate Professor David Linnan
Dr Jamhari Makruf
Professor Dr Iur Adnan Buyung Nasution
Professor Merle Ricklefs
Associate Professor Benny Tabalujan
CILIS ASSOCIATES
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 41
2013 Islamic Studies Postgraduate Conference, 3-4 December 2014.
Dr Arskal Salim and Ms Cemen Polat. Photo: Tessa Shaw
41
20/01/2015 1:45:16 PM
Series. In this series, postgraduates and academics who are
Studies Postgraduate Conference. Nineteen students presented,
researching and writing on Asian legal topics present a 45 minute
with nine of the presentations related to Indonesia. CILIS Senior
paper, followed by questions and discussion. Nine speakers gave
Associates Professor Greg Fealy (ANU), Professor Virginia Hooker
papers on Indonesia-related issues:
(ANU), Professor MB Hooker (ANU), Professor Merle Ricklefs
(ANU) and CILIS Associates Dr Nadirsyah Hosen (University of
from the International and Indonesian Experience’ (PhD
completion seminar), 8 May.
and Indonesia’s Islamic Defenders Front’ (PhD completion
seminar), 15 May.
Associate Professor Simon Butt (University of Sydney)
Indonesia as Corrupt as Most People Believe and Is It Getting
Wollongong) and Dr Arskal Salim (University of Western Sydney)
attended as guest mentors.
Bibliographic Websites
Asian Law Online continued in 2013. It can be accessed at: <www.
law.unimelb.edu.au/alc/bibliography>.
Offered to the public as a free service to assist students, scholars
and practitioners of Asian legal systems, Asian Law Online is a
collection of English language materials on Asian laws available
People Smugglers in Indonesia (2008-2012)’, 16 September.
throughout the world. It includes books, chapters in books,
journal articles and theses on Indonesian law, and provides
Rights and (Multiple) Citizenship: An Ethnographic Look at
Issues of Decentralisation and the Revival of Tradition in
Indonesia’, 25 October.
access to a large number of Indonesian law websites.
In 2013 CILIS continued to develop its new bibliographic
database, ‘Islamic Law Online’, which can be accessed at: <http://
cils.law.unimelb.edu.au/ilo>. Islamic Law Online is a collection of
publications on Islamic law available throughout the world.
National Identity but not to the Nation-State – the Case of
Aceh, Indonesia, 13 November.
Dr Jeremy Kingsley (National University of Singapore)
Australian Journal of Asian Law
With Professor Veronica Taylor of ANU, Professor Richard Cullen
of the University of Hong Kong and Dr Melissa Crouch of the
Islamic education in Southeast Asia and the Middle East’, 12
December.
National University of Singapore, Amanda Whiting, Tim Lindsey
and Helen Pausacker from the Asian Law Centre edited the
ALC and CILIS conference
international refereed journal, the Australian Journal of Asian Law,
Southeast Asia’, 15 October. This conference focused on drug
which covers Southeast Asia, including Indonesia.
laws and the death penalty in Indonesia, Singapore and Vietnam.
ALC and National University of Singapore symposium,
CILIS Policy Papers
CILIS began producing a series of Policy Papers in 2013, including:
Countries, 18-19 November. Papers covered a number of Asian
countries, including Indonesia.
1.
Trials of People Smugglers in Indonesia: 2007-2012 by
Melissa Crouch and Antje Missbach
Islamic Studies Postgraduate Conference
2.
On 3-4 December 2013, CILIS hosted the 9th National Islamic
42
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 42
Indonesia and Australia in the Asian Century by Richard
Woolcott AC
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:16 PM
3.
Is Indonesia as Corrupt as Most People Believe and Is It
ADVICE TO GOVERNMENT
In 2013, Tim Lindsey continued his term as Chair of the Board
of the Australia Indonesia Institute, an advisory body within the
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade funded to support projects
to strengthen the bilateral relationship.
VISITORS
1-31 October: Dr Melissa Crouch, National University of
Singapore.
1 October 2013- 15 February 2014: Dr Dina Afrianty, State
Islamic University (UIN) Jakarta, Endeavour Post-Doctoral
Research Fellow at the Melbourne Law School.
3- 20 December: Dr Jeremy Kingsley, National University of
Singapore.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 43
43
20/01/2015 1:45:16 PM
THE MELBOURNE SCHOOL
OF ENGINEERING
ASIALINK
www.eng.unimelb.edu.au/index.html
Asialink is Australia’s leading centre for the promotion of public
www.asialink.unimelb.edu.au
understanding of the countries of Asia and of Australia’s role in the
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
region. It is based at the University of Melbourne’s Sidney Myer
Asia Centre and is an initiative of the Myer Foundation.
Dr Chris Hale
Asialink’s mission is to work with business, government,
philanthropic and cultural partners to initiate and strengthen
SUPERVISION
In 2012, the Melbourne School of Engineering and IT supervised
TWO research higher degree students with Indonesia-related
topics (See Appendix 3).
Australia-Asia engagement. Its vision is to see all Australians
equipped with knowledge and networks for full participation in
the Asian region. Asialink aims to achieve its mission through
high-level forums, international collaborations, school programs
and cultural exchanges. It engages the corporate, media, arts,
education, health and community sectors – reaching from primary
PROJECTS/ ACHIEVEMENTS
school children to prime ministers in Australia and Asia.
Project Name: Tender – Activity P255.02: AIRA – Feasibility Study
Asialink regularly works in partnership with a variety of
for the Establishment of the Indonesian Centre for Infrastructure
organisations – from Universities, Business Councils and
Policy Studies (3IDE).
Community groups - including the Asia Institute, the Asian Law
Centre, Asian Economics Centre, the Australian Centre for
Contract Value: $120,000.00
Date Awarded: 22 July 2013
International Business, the Indonesia Forum, the Indonesian
Muslim Youth Exchange Program and the Australia-Indonesia
Business Council.
STAFF WITH INDONESIA INTERESTS
Mr Kurt Mullane (Director, Asia Education Foundation)
Mr Aaron O’Shannessy (Manager, International Programs)
Ms Deryn Mansell (Project Manager, International Programs)
Ms Jennifer Ure (Partnerships and Professional Learning Manager,
Asia Education Foundation)
Mr David Paroissien (Program Manager, Asia Australia Mental
Health)
Mr Hugh Passmore (Manager, Strategy, Asialink Business)
Ms Lesley Alway, (Director, Asialink Arts)
Ms Eliza Roberts, (Residencies Manager, Asialink Arts)
Ms Louise Joel, (Exhibition Touring and Communications Manager,
Asialink
Asialink Arts)
PUBLICATIONS
44
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 44
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:16 PM
The Asialink Arts 2012-13 Annual Report
schools attended professional learning programs facilitated by the
AEF at the University of Melbourne in March and May 2013. The
This report was published in four languages, including Bahasa
Indonesia.
program focused on information and communication technologies
(ICT), intercultural understanding, Australian education, history
and contemporary society and school partnership building. The
PwC Melbourne Institute Asialink Index
Indonesian teachers accompanied their Australian counterparts
This annual report is the only comprehensive, long-term measure
to their respective Australian states and territories for a two-
of Australia’s engagement with Asia. It assesses the level and rate
week school and homestay program, further consolidating their
professional learning experience.
The index examines our engagement across trade, investment,
research
and
business,
development,
education,
tourism,
migration, and humanitarian assistance.
Australian Aid and the Department of Education provided funding
in September 2013 to support all new Australian BRIDGE teachers
the opportunity to visit their Indonesian partner schools. This
The Report reveals the importance of tourism and education
funding is secured until 2015.
services to the Australia-Indonesia economic relationship.
AEF Study Programs – Indonesia 2013
The 2013 Report and analysis of our engagement with Indonesia
can be accessed at: <http://www.asialinkindex.com.au/2013/
In 2013 the AEF delivered three Study Programs. The Indonesia
Indonesia.php>.
study programs are aimed at increasing Australian educators’
knowledge and understanding of contemporary issues via school
ASIALINK EDUCATION (Asia Education Foundation)
The Asia Education Foundation (AEF) is a joint activity of Asialink
at the University of Melbourne and Education Services Australia
Ltd. The AEF supports schools to implement Asia and Australia’s
engagement with Asia cross-curriculum priority of the Australian
Curriculum.
Australia-Indonesia BRIDGE Project
and experts in Indonesia.
In January, seventeen educators from all over Australia participated
in a program visiting Jakarta, Bandung and Yogyakarta. In June,
nine educators joined a program to Jakarta, Yogyakarta and
Sulawesi and Java.
The Indonesian Study Programs work closely with the BRIDGE
project where partners from the Australian BRIDGE schools are
The Australia-Indonesia BRIDGE (Building Relationships through
able to access scholarship funding to join the Study Program
Intercultural Dialogue and Growing Engagement) Project is
before or after their Indonesian school visit/homestay.
an internationally recognised professional learning program
that supports the establishment of Australia-Indonesia school
partnerships. Since 2008, the project has established ninety-
ASIALINK BUSINESS
six school partnerships and directly involved 384 Australian and
Asialink facilitates a range of forums and services for business,
Indonesian teachers through a blended model of face-to-face and
government, academia and the broader community that serve to
online interaction.
stimulate debate, provide increased understanding and promote
greater engagement with the Asian region. In 2013, this included:
and Australia–Indonesia Institute (AII), funded by Australian Aid.
Indonesian Politics 2013 through Media Eyes, Asialink
Sixty-four Australian and Indonesian teachers from thirty-two
in-Chief, The Jakarta Post. Held in Melbourne, 27 February.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 45
Asialink
The project is an initiative of the Asia Education Foundation (AEF)
45
20/01/2015 1:45:16 PM
Building Creative Connections between Australia & Indonesia,
community mental health is supported by the Australia-Indonesia
Asialink Next Generation Public Lecture Series with Australia
Institute of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
Indonesia Youth Association. Held in Melbourne, 6 June.
, Asialink State of the Nation
Chartered, Indonesia, Danny Burrows, Principal, Tradeworthy,
Kris Sulisto, President, Indonesia Australia Business Council,
Debnath Guharoy, Consultant, Roy Morgan Research and
Allaster Cox, First Assistant Secretary, South East Asia
Division, DFAT. Held in Melbourne and Sydney, 25/27 June.
with Noke Kiroyan,
Kiroyan Partners, Indonesia. Held in Sydney and Brisbane,
Ministry of Social Affairs – Recovery-oriented
practice training
In September 2013, Asia Australia Mental Health (AAMH) and its
Australian partners, Mind, were asked by the Ministry of Social
Affairs, Indonesia to provide a two-day training seminar to key
mental health workers in Jakarta, focusing on recovery-oriented
practice. The training was funded through the Australia Indonesia
Institute of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
18-19 July.
with George Marantika,
Rector & President, University Kristian Immanuel (UKRIM)
ASIALINK ARTS
Indonesia. Held in Melbourne, 27 July.
Asialink Arts develops opportunities for cultural exchange between
Indonesia Investment & Business Forum. Held in partnership
Australia and Asia to improve the Asia capability of the cultural
with BKPM -Indonesia Investment Coordinating Board,
sector, based on the principles of partnership, collaboration and
Austrade,
reciprocity.
Australia
Indonesia
Business
Council
and
Australian Institute of Company Directors. Melbourne, 15
November.
Asialink Arts initiated the following Indonesia related activities in
2013:
ASIALINK HEALTH (Asia Australia Mental Health)
Asia Australia Mental Health
Asia Australia Mental Health (AAMH) is a consortium of the
University of Melbourne’s Asialink and Department of Psychiatry,
and St Vincent’s Health. In partnership with health sector,
government, academic and community peak bodies in Asia and
Australia, AAMH aims to develop culturally appropriate and best
practice mental health programs through promotion, research,
training and service reform.
Deepening ties with Indonesia in mental health
In March 2013, AAMH and its partner Mind Australia - a leading
community-managed psychosocial rehabilitation service, visited
of Social Affairs.
A research trip to Yogyakarta, Bandung and Jakarta
in November 2013 in order to develop networks and
organisational partnerships;
Facilitation of
, an artist exchange featuring
Indonesian and Australian screen based art. The project
was co-curated by Indonesian curator Agung Nugroho Widhi
and Bus Projects, Melbourne. The outcome of the exchange
November, 2013;
Invited Yogyakarta based Indonesian curator Agung Nugroho
to Melbourne for a fortnight in November 2013;
Hosted a forum addressing what digital platforms can offer
in terms of intercultural communication and exchange in
November 2013. Speakers included Indonesian curator
Agung Nugroho Widhi and Melbourne University academic
Edwin Jurriëns. Video works by Indonesian artist Muhammad
Akbar were exhibited.
Asialink
based Social Rehabilitation Program Development Plan for People
with Mental Disability’.
This project, titled
46
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 46
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:16 PM
2013 Asialink Arts Residencies in Indonesia
Arts Manager Kieren Sanderson and Performing Artist Tony Yap
were the recipients of Asialink Arts Residencies to Indonesia in
2013.
Kieren Sanderson (NT)
Host organisation: Cemeti Art House, Yogyakarta, 16 September-14
December 2013.
Kieren Sanderson undertook an arts management (visual arts)
residency at Cemeti Art 8.5, a transcontinental multi-platform
exchange across Australia, India and Indonesia. Further
information can be found online: <www.disanaproject.com>.
Tony Yap (VIC)
Host Organisation: Surya Kencana (Agung Gunawan), In the
Arts Island Festival and Javanese Dancework, Java, 24 June-24
September 2013.
Tony Yap undertook classes with court dance master Ray Sri
bull trance practices of East Java, resulting in two new works –
Yogyakarta; The Arts Island and Bedog Arts Festivals.
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 47
47
20/01/2015 1:45:16 PM
APPENDIX 1:
Indonesia Forum terms of reference
To provide an inter-faculty forum for the sharing of information about Indonesia such as news of current events, visitors, university systems
and contacts between the University of Melbourne and universities in Indonesia.
To develop knowledge of how to establish contacts in Indonesia for the purposes of research, inter-university linkages and exchange programs,
and marketing education programs at the University of Melbourne.
To broaden knowledge within the University of existing and potential institutional linkages with Indonesia.
To increase awareness of such international education agencies as IDP and AEC.
To host visits by Indonesians to the University of Melbourne.
To share experiences in cross-cultural communication with Indonesians.
To disperse information on opportunities in relation to Indonesia with the various faculties at the University of Melbourne.
To make policy recommendations to the International Programs Committee (previously the International Policy Advisory Group).
48
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 48
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:16 PM
APPENDIX 2:
Indonesia Forum Members list 2013
Convenor, 2013: Katharine McGregor; Deputy Convenor: Edwin Jurriens
Surname
Name
Department
Position
Achmadi
Amanda
Architecture, Building and Planning
Lecturer
Adelaar
Sander
Asia Institute – Indonesian Program
Associate Professor, Honorary Principal
Fellow
Afrianty
Dina
Centre for Indonesian Law, Islam and Society (CILIS)
Associate
Aijabe
Ajibade
Architecture, Building and Planning
Aijabe
Ajibade
Architecture, Building and Planning
Allen
Brendan
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Business Development Manager
Andajani-Sutjahjo
Sari
Key Centre for Women’s Health
Researcher
Antons
Christoph
CILIS
Professor, Senior Associate
Aranda
Sanchia
School of Nursing
Head of School
Azra
Azyumardi
CILIS
Professor, Senior Associate
Bandyopadhyay
Mridula
Key Centre for Women’s Health
Researcher
Barnett
Jon
School of Resource Management and Geography
Professor
Batterbury
Simon
School of Resource Management and Geography
Associate Professor
Beadle
Sally
Melbourne Graduate School of Education
Research Fellow, Youth Research Centre
Bines
Julie
Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences
Victor and Lotti Smorgon Chair of
Paediatrics
Brathwaite
Emma
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Technical Advisor, Adolescent Health
Brown
Graham
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Foundation Director
Budiman
Arief
Asia Institute – Indonesian Program
Honorary Professorial Fellow
Butt
Simon
CILIS
Associate Professor, Senior Associate
Cahill
Helen
Melbourne Graduate School of Education
Deputy Director, Youth Research Centre
Chan
Faye
Yik- Wei
CILIS
Principal Research Assistant
Colucci
Ermini
Centre for International Mental Health
Research Fellow
Coppel
Charles
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies and CILIS
Associate Professor, Senior Associate
Crouch
Melissa
CILIS
Associate
Darian-Smith
Kate
Architecture, Building and Planning; School of Historical
and Philosophical Studies
Professor
Day
Jennifer
Architecture, Building and Planning
Lecturer
Dibley
Arjuna
CILIS
Research Assistant
Dick
Howard
CILIS
Professor, Associate
Dovey
Kim
Architecture, Building and Planning; Urban Design
Professor
Colin
Melbourne School of Engineering
Associate Professor
Duke
Trevor
Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences
Associate Professor
Elliott
Susan
Global Engagement
Deputy Vice-Chancellor
Erkal
Nisyan
Economics
Lecturer
Ewing
Michael
Asia Institute – Indonesian Program
Senior Lecturer
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 49
49
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
Falk
Cathy
Melbourne Conservatorium of Music
Professor
Fealy
Greg
CILIS
Associate Professor, Senior Associate
Feener
Michael
CILIS
Associate Professor, Senior Associate
Fenwick
Stewart
CILIS
Associate, PhD student
Gibson
Mary Ann
Library
Librarian
Graham
Steve
Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences
Professor
Green
Paul
Anthropology
Lecturer
Hajek
John
Linguistics and Applied Linguistics
Associate Professor
Hale
Chris
Melbourne School of Engineering
Lecturer
Hall
Michele
Library
Librarian
Haines
Fiona
School of Social and Political Sciences
Professor
Hawthorne
Lesleyanne
School of Nursing
Associate Professor, Associate Dean,
International
Harijanti
Susi Dwi
CILIS
Associate
Hermawan
Bonnie
Asialink
Hooker
Virginia
CILIS
Professor, Senior Associate
Hort
Krishna
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Head, Health Systems Strengthening Unit
Hosen
Nadirsyah
CILIS
Associate
Indrayana
Denny
CILIS
Professor, Senior Associate
Jurriëns
Edwin
Asia Institute
Lecturer
Kakuma
Ritsuko
Centre for International Mental Health
Senior Research Fellow
Keys
Ara
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies
Senior Lecturer
King
Ross
Architecture, Building and Planning
Professorial Fellow
Kingsley
Jeremy
CILIS
Associate
Komalasari
Renata
School of Health Sciences
Lecturer
Kyan
Tom
Architecture, Building and Planning
Dean
Lewis
Miles
Architecture, Building and Planning
Emeritus Architecture
Lindsey
Tim
CILIS
Professor, Director, CILIS
Linnan
David
CILIS
Associate Professor, Senior Associate
Loney
Hannah
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies
Research Assistant, Tutor, PhD candidate
Lunnon
Rebecca
Law
Research Assistant
MacDonald
Kate
School of Social and Political Sciences
Lecturer
Makruf
Jamhari
CILIS
Senior Associate
Mansell
Deryn
Asialink
Project Manager, International Programs
McCaughan
Julie
School of Nursing
Consultant - Clinical Improvement
McGregor
Katharine
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies
Senior Lecturer
McRae
Dave
CILIS
Associate
Melvin
Jess
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies
Research Assistant, PhD candidate
Minas
Harry
School of Population Health
Director, Centre for International Mental
Health
Missbach
Antje
CILIS
McKenzie Post-Doctoral Fellow, Associate
Missingham
Greg
Architecture, Building and Planning
Assistant Professor
Moore
Stuart
Law
Research Assistant
50
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 50
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
Morgan
Alison
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Head, International Health Education and
Learning Unit
Morrow
Martha
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Senior Research Fellow
Moss
Jeremy
School of Philosophy, Anthropology and Social Inquiry
Professor
Mullane
Kurt
Asia Education Foundation
Director
Nasution
Adnan
Buyung
CILIS
Professor, Senior Associate
O’Brien
David
Architecture, Building and Planning
Senior Lecturer
O’Neill
Hugh
Architecture, Building and Planning
Senior Fellow
O’Shannessy
Aaron
Asialink
Manager, International Programs
Palmer
Lisa
School of Resource Management and Geography
Senior Lecturer
Pardy
Maree
Gender Studies
Lecturer
Paroissien
David
Asialink
Program Manager, Leadership and
Community Health Programs
Pausacker
Helen
CILIS
Deputy Director, CILIS, Principal Research
Assistant
Pollard
Nani
Asia Institute – Indonesian Program
Lecturer
Prescott
Victor
Geography and Environmental Studies
Emeritus Professor
Pulungan
Rheny
CILIS
Research Assistant
Rae-Bennett
Linda
Nossal Institute
ARC Future Fellow, Senior Research
Fellow
Reuter
Thomas
Asia Institute
Professor, Future Fellow
Ricklefs
Merle
CILIS
Professor, Senior Associate
Riharti
Elisabeth
Asia Institute
Lecturer
Ruff
Tilman
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Associate Professor, Disease Prevention
and Health Promotion Unit
Salim
Arskal
CILIS
Associate
Scott-Maxwell
Aline
Information Resources Access
Senior Librarian
Serle
Richard
Library
Librarian
Sloggett
Robyn
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies
Associate Professor
Steiner
Kerstin
CILIS
Associate
Stivens
Maila
Asia Institute
Principal Research Fellow
Sumner
Cate
CILIS
Associate
Tabalujan
Benny
CILIS
Associate Professor, Senior Associate
Tse
Nicole
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies
Lecturer
Urbano
Mia
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Ure
Jennifer
Asialink
Manager, Partnerships and Professional
Learning Manager, Asia Education
Foundation
Senior Fellow
Verhezen
Peter
Melbourne Centre of International Business
Walji
Fareen
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Warne
Garry
Royal Children’s Hospital
Associate Professor, Director, Royal
Children’s Hospital International
Wejak
Justin
Asia Institute – Indonesian Program
Lecturer
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 51
51
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
Whitzman
Carolyn
Architecture, Building and Planning
Associate Professor
Williams
Jenny
Economics
Lecturer
Wright
Ilona
Melbourne Conservatorium of Music
Lecturer; Director, Gamelan Ensemble
Yulindrasari
Hani
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies / Gender
Studies
Research Assistant, PhD candidate
52
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 52
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
APPENDIX 3:
List of postgraduate students in 2013 with Indonesia-related thesis topics
who completed theses in 2013, see Appendix 4. For Honours and Minor theses completed in 2013, see Appendix 5.
Department
Surname
Name
Thesis Topic
Architecture Building & Planning
Moezier
Aninda
Spatial Organisation and Gender Relations in Minangkabau,
Indonesia
Architecture Building & Planning
Ongkowijoyo Citra Satria
Investigating (Modelling and Analysing) Stakeholder-Risk
Network in Urban Water Supply System: A Cross Country
Study of Indonesia
Architecture Building & Planning
Rohman
Mohammad
Arif
Stakeholder Perspectives of Government’s Role in Achieving
Success in Public Private Partnerships (PPP) Toll Road
Projects in Indonesia
Asia Institute
Agung
Tirtha
Entrepreneurship and Culture in Indonesia
Asia Institute / Monash University
Bader
Sandra
Exploring Nyawer Encounters at Dangdut Performances
Asia Institute/ Monash co-supervision
Barnes
Susana
Land and Culture in East Timor
Asia Institute
Harrington
Morgan
Development in Central Kalimantan
Asia Institute
Rassool
Romola
Asia Institute
Robertson
Ash
Female Shadow Theatre Puppeteers in Indonesia
Asia Institute
Salim
Agus
Transnational Mobilisation of Political Islam: Comparing
Hizbut Tahrir in Indonesia and Malaysia
Asia Institute
Supriyanto
Abdi
Islam-State Relations and Religious Freedom in Post-New
Order Indonesia: Liberal and Progressive Muslim Voices
Asia Institute
Wejak
Justin
Fear and Catholicism in Indonesia during the Years of Living
Dangerously: An Analysis of the Representation of a Fear
Narrative as Portrayed in a 1967 Catholic Text
Centre for International Mental Health,
Melbourne School of Population and Global
Health
Candra
Novi
Poespita
Listening to the Voices of Children, Parents and Teachers
about School Life: Towards Children’s Wellbeing at School
Centre for International Mental Health,
Melbourne School of Population and Global
Health
Setiayawati
Diana
A study of Australian and International Experiences to Inform
the Development of Curriculum for Psychologists Working in
Primary Health Care in Indonesia
Department of Management and Marketing/
Melbourne Centre for International Business
Pertiwi
Kanti
Business-Government Relations and Corruption in Indonesia
Department of Paediatrics
Oktaria
Vicka
Asthma and Allergies in Tropical Countries
Law
Apsari
Dewi
Barriers in International Legal Cooperation in Criminal Matters
between Indonesia and Australia
Law
Fenwick
Stewart
of Post-Suharto Indonesia
Law
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 53
Graydon
Carolyn
Domestic Violence in Timor-Leste: Is there a Place for
53
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
Law
Rulliadi
Dudi
The Transformation of Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) in
Infrastructure: The Case of Indonesia
Law
Triana
Windy
Schooling Judges: The Education of Religious Court Judges
in Indonesia
Law / School of Historical and Philosophical
Studies
Schmulow
Andrew
Problems Associated with Prudential Regulatory Enforcement
in the Indonesian Banking Sector
School of Historical and Philosophical
Studies/Law
Chan
Faye
Control and Resistance: The Social and Legal Regulation of
Indonesian Chinese Women, 1930-2009
School of Historical and Philosophical
Studies (History)
Craze
Sarah
Piracy as a Manifestation of Failed States
School of Historical and Philosophical
Studies (History)
Loney
Hannah
Women’s Experiences of the Indonesian Occupation of
Timor-Leste
School of Historical and Philosophical
Studies (History)
Melvin
Jess
Mechanics of Mass Murder: How the Indonesian Military
Initiated and Implemented the Indonesian Genocide, The
Case of Aceh
School of Historical and Philosophical
Studies/ Gender Studies, School of Social
and Political Sciences
Yulianti
Lily
Representing Gender in the Indonesian Media: Coverage of
Megawati Sukarnoputri’s Presidential Candidacies in PostSuharto Elections, 1999, 2004 and 2009
School of Historical and Philosophical
Studies/ School of Social and Political
Sciences
Yulindrasari
Hani
Negotiating Masculinities: Male Teachers in Early Childhood
Education in Indonesia
School of Languages and Linguistics
Establishing Reliable Criteria for DCT and Role Play for
Assessment of L2 Indonesian Language Pragmatics
School of Social and Political Sciences
Asmorowati
Sulikah
Bureaucratic Reform for Development: The Place of
Bureaucracy in Inclusive Development, Case Study of
Bureaucratic Reform and the Community Driven Development
(CDD) Approach in Indonesia.
School of Social and Political Sciences
Chung
Anastasia
In the Name of Development: Women Non-Governmental
Organisation Workers in Indonesia
Sciences/ Melbourne Energy Institute
Alwendra
Yogi
Thermal Structure of the Central Sumatra Basin and the
Potential for Unconventional Geothermal Resources
54
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 54
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
APPENDIX 4:
Indonesia-related theses completed at the University of Melbourne in 2013
Surname
Given Name
Degree
Topic
Dirou
Peter
Law
Food security, Development and Law: Insights from the Indonesian
Experience
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Sexual and Reproductive Health Education for Young People
Karta Lanuma Eddy
Emmy
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Indonesian Interns Experiences in the Transition to Independent
Murni
Department of Paediatrics
Practice
Indah Kartika
Reducing Nosocomial Infection and Improving Rational Antibiotic Use
in Children in Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Pausacker
Helen
Law
Morality and the Nation: Law, Pornography and Indonesia’s Islamic
Defenders Front
Putu Ariastuti
Ni Luh
Nossal Institute for Global Health
Spagnoletti
Belinda
Nossal Institute for Global Health
a District in Bali
Understanding Young Women’s Knowledge and Use of Emergency
Contraception (EC) in Indonesia.
Pulungan
Rheny
Law
Wahyuni
The Shortcomings of the International Law of Piracy and Maritime
Terrorism: Options for Strengthening Maritime Security in the Malacca
Strait
Tan
Felix Thiam
Asia Institute
Contextualising Political Islam in Malaysia and Indonesia
Department of Paediatrics
A Prospective Evaluation of Symptom Based Screening for Child
Kim
Triasih
Rina
Contact Screening and Management of Tuberculosis in Yogyakarta,
Indonesia.
APPENDIX 5:
Indonesia-related Honours Theses and Masters Minor Theses completed in 2013
Surname
Given Name
Thesis
Topic
Hoogervorst
Tom
Archaeology
The Spread of Names for Edible Plants and Spices in the Indian
Ocean: A Historical Linguistic Approach
(For thesis completed between 1954 and 2006, please visit our website, www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au/. In some instances, theses in
this list were completed prior to 2013, but not reported in previous annual reports.)
www.indonesiaforum.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 55
55
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
APPENDIX 6:
Preliminary 2013 Indonesian Student Enrolments by Level and Faculty
PG
Faculty
First Half
Second Half
Full Year Total
Architecture, Building and Planning
21
23
26
Arts
68
74
88
Business and Economics
70
75
87
Engineering
58
60
74
Law
27
25
38
Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences
46
48
51
Melbourne Business School
5
7
8
Melbourne Consulting and Custom Programs
4
1
4
Melbourne Graduate School of Education
10
10
13
Melbourne School of Land and Environment
20
26
26
Science
21
22
24
VCA and MCM
0
0
0
Veterinary Science Faculty
3
2
3
PG Total
353
373
442
Architecture, Building and Planning
47
49
54
Arts
55
57
66
Business and Economics
193
210
240
Engineering
24
15
24
Law
0
0
0
Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences
39
35
39
Melbourne Consulting and Custom Programs
24
26
50
Melbourne Graduate School of Education
0
0
0
Melbourne School of Land and Environment
3
2
5
Science
188
193
210
VCA and MCM
6
7
7
Veterinary Science Faculty
1
0
1
UG Total
580
594
696
Grand Total
933
967
1138
UG
Note:
First Half: includes enrolments in subjects with census dates between 1 Jan and 30 Jun.
Also includes summer and year-long subjects.
Second Half: includes enrolments in subjects with census dates between 1 Jul and 31 Dec.
Full Year total: this is not the sum of First Half and Second Half but the total number of unique students enrolled in subjects with census date
between 1 Jan and 31 Dec 2013. Table shows enrolment count- if a student enrols in 2 courses, they are counted twice (total reduced to 1,117
based on headcount).
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 56
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 57
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 58
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 59
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM
www.unimelb.edu.au
IF_Annual Report_2013_v20150114.indd 60
20/01/2015 1:45:17 PM