Output list
Conference presentation
Date presented 09/07/2025
HERDSA 2025 Annual Conference, 07/07/2025–10/07/2025, Perth, WA
Conference presentation
Redefining Student Evaluations: Navigating the Impact of SETS on Teaching Innovation
Date presented 08/07/2025
HERDSA 2025 Annual Conference, 07/07/2025–10/07/2025, Perth, WA
Conference presentation
Date presented 08/07/2025
HERDSA 2025 Annual Conference, 07/07/2025–10/07/2025, Perth, WA
Book chapter
Global Perspectives and Emerging Issues in Comparative Law
Published 2025
AI Decision Making In Corporate Governance: Navigating Board Duties Under The Australian Corporation Act, 347 - 361
This book is an essential resource for legal scholars, practitioners, and policymakers seeking a deeper understanding of how legal systems interact and evolve in an increasingly interconnected world. It provides a comparative analysis of key legal domains, exploring contemporary challenges such as digital governance, climate justice, intellectual property, and human rights.Featuring contributions from leading international experts, the book offers a nuanced examination of how different legal traditions respond to emerging global issues. It delves into the interplay between common law and civil law jurisdictions, the impact of international treaties, and the role of technology in shaping legal norms.Designed for both academic and professional audiences, this book serves as a vital reference for those engaged in legal research, cross-border litigation, or international policy-making. With real-world case studies and interdisciplinary insights, it is an indispensable guide to navigating the complexities of modern law.
Essay
Explainer: Managing the cost of living in Malaysia
Published 21/06/2023
New Naratif
New Naratif’s The Citizens’ Agenda Malaysia 2022 found that the cost of living in Malaysia is the most pressing issue for the country’s citizens. How should Malaysia manage this issue? What should the people in Malaysia demand from their government?
Podcast
Managing the Cost of Living in Malaysia
Date presented 07/06/2023
Southeast Asia Dispatches
In this episode, Bonnibel Rambatan and Greg Lopez will discuss the top three issues in The Citizens’ Agenda 2022: cost of living, employment and wages, and the economy, along with how the Malaysian government may address them through inclusive economic growth and all-inclusive social protection.
Book chapter
Chapter 1: Rethinking Regime Resilience in Malaysia and Singapore
Published 2022
Regime Resilience In Malaysia And Singapore, 1 - 15
In July 2015 the Wall Street Journal revealed that nearly $700 million dollars from the Malaysian government-owned development company 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) had been deposited into Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak’s personal bank account. Subsequent revelations pointed to $4.5 billion in questionable allocations, as part of one of the worst money-laundering scandals in history, in a company with nearly $11 billion in debt that was founded on a Malaysian government guarantee. Over two years later, Najib remains in office, having appeared to weather the allegations of corruption and kleptocracy. Within Malaysia he has been cleared of any wrong-doing, and while internationally 1MDB legal proceedings remain on-going, Najib remains in power. In fact, his coalition, Barisan Nasional (BN, National Front), seems poised to win re-election in 2018, returning his party, United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), to power. While Brazil and South Korea have seen their leaders jailed for corruption, in Malaysia the leader survives, and arguably has emerged in greater control of the levers of executive power than before the scandal. Najib has shown himself to be of the political resilience mould long honed by his political party — at least so far…
Book
Regime resilience in Malaysia and Singapore
Published 2022
Prominent scholars across the political divide and academic disciplines analyse how the dominant political parties in Malaysia and Singapore, United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) and the People's Action Party (PAP), have stayed in power. With a focus on developments in the last decade and the tenures of Prime Ministers Najib Tun Razak and Lee Hsien Loong, the authors offer a range of explanations for how these regimes have remained politically resilient.
Journal article
Published 2020
Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 34, 2, 181 - 183
Of the 12,299,514 out of 14,940,624 of Malaysia's registered voters (82.32 per cent), voted at Malaysia's fourteenth general elections (GE2018)...
Book chapter
Published 2020
Rebirth: reformasi, resistance, and hope on the road to new Malaysia