Output list
Magazine article
Is security trumping democracy?
Published 08/09/2023
Inside Story
Australia’s foreign policy is falling victim to domestic conflicts between conservatism and social democracy
Newspaper article
WA uni mergers: collaborative or predatory and cynical? These are divergent paths
Published 19/11/2021
WAToday
Not surprisingly, we are seeing yet another call for the amalgamation of public universities in Western Australia...
Journal article
Published 2018
Journal of Contemporary Asia, 49, 5, 1 - 2
At almost 500 pages and 25 chapters, this is a lengthy and densely packed edited collection. Such a format has advantages. It enables the editors to cover a vast range of topics. We can find assessments of political, economic and military relations between Australia and Indonesia and insights into specific areas of collaboration in policing, military, youth, women and justice. There are also chapters that focus on difficult aspects of the relationship where the potential for misunderstanding and disagreement is high. Among these are chapters on Bali, asylum seekers and people smuggling, Islam, Papua and human rights. We also find assessments of surveys of Australian attitudes towards Indonesia and narratives of academics from both countries...
Book chapter
The emergence of the middle classes in southeast Asia and the Indonesian case
Published 2018
Social Change in South East Asia: New Perspectives, 60 - 77
It was only two decades ago, in the 1960s and 1970s, that popular Western images of Southeast Asia were dominated by rice fields and peasants, military coups and generals. In many ways this was not an unreasonable representation of the social and political realities of the times. However, it is some measure of the rapidity with which changes have taken place in the intervening period that these old icons have been replaced almost entirely by new ones in which factory workers and businessmen, politicians and traffic jams are the central images, at least in Australia, which is the most sensitive barometer of the Asian region in the so-called West.
Journal article
Indonesia: A tale of misplaced expectations
Published 2017
The Pacific Review, 30, 895 - 909
Few countries have been burdened with such great expectations as Indonesia and have failed to meet them in the ways expected. Economists have persistently predicted that Indonesia could be an economic giant in the region, challenging the state-led economies of Northeast Asia on the basis of free market policies. After the fall of Soeharto in 1998, pluralist political scientists saw Indonesia as a shining light for democratic transition. More recently, Indonesia has been hailed as a model for how democracy might work in a Muslim-majority country. Yet, we are still waiting for a new economic giant to emerge while democracy has not been able to resolve growing concentration of power and wealth in Indonesian society or to stem growing social resentment. Reactionary Islamic populism has often threatened Indonesia's reputation for religious moderation. Why have so many analysts had such great expectations of Indonesia and how have they explained the seeming disappointments? We propose that the institutions of markets and democracy are not a good starting point for explaining things. The problem lies in the way economic and social power is constructed and in the interests of powerful oligarchies that continue to dominate the political and economic landscape.
Journal article
Competing populisms in post-authoritarian Indonesia
Published 2017
International Political Science Review, 38, 4, 488 - 502
Populist politics have become more prominent in Indonesia. On the one hand, this is indicated by the presidential elections of 2014, when two rival candidates brandished somewhat different nationalist populist ideas. On the other hand, historically rooted secular nationalist and Islamic-oriented forms of populism have become entangled within elite conflicts. The context is discontent about perceived systemic injustices unaddressed in nearly two decades of decentralised democracy after a prior three decades of centralised authoritarian rule. In the absence of liberal and Leftist challenges to the entrenched oligarchy, politics is becoming characterised by competition between different populisms. But rather than being transformative, these populisms are harnessed to the maintenance of oligarchic domination.
Book
Political economy and the aid industry in Asia
Published 2014
The international aid industry's experimentation with political economy analysis is on the road to nowhere, so long as major assumptions remain unchallenged; namely, that development is a public good and reform comes from experts and enlightened reformers working in partnership on new institutions, whilst development failures are the result of information failures or perverse incentives, as collective action problems. This book provocatively argues that donor efforts to think and work more politically have not adequately addressed, to date, the structural dimensions of power and interests and the political economy of the aid industry itself. The authors address these 'elephants in the room' via a lively critique of technical and agency-focused political economy approaches and the sustained application of an original typology for evaluating the commitments of reform actors and strength of their alliances with donors. Highlighting the need for donors to engage more tactically and opportunistically to achieve incremental improvements in the lives of the poor, this book will be a valuable resource for development practitioners and scholars of international political economy and international development.
Other
Fatal attraction: Is our relationship with Indonesia worth the trouble?
Published 2014
The Conversation
The decision by the Australian government to turn asylum seeker boats back into Indonesia’s territorial waters and its ports was always a high-risk game. It is no surprise that it has ended in a serious confrontation with Indonesia, particularly following the admissions that Australian naval vessels have made incursions into Indonesian territorial waters.
Indonesia retaliated with some heavy rhetoric from foreign minister Marty Natalegawa and other officials, and dispatched its own naval vessels to the areas where incursions have taken place. Indonesia’s media have been full of these events, together with the recent spying scandals. Frantic telephone calls and requests for meetings by Australian ministers have drawn cold responses from their Indonesian counterparts.
This may be a simple case of huffing and puffing. But coming hard on the heels of the acrimonious exchanges over spying by Australia’s intelligence agencies, it would seem that the relationship between the two countries is in for a rough ride.
Book
Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Politics
Published 2012
Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Politics
Now available in paperback, this Handbook provides a comprehensive analysis of the major themes that have defined the politics of Southeast Asia. It provides a comprehensive and cutting-edge examination of this important subject. The introductory chapter provides an overview of the theoretical and ideological themes that have dominated the study of the region's politics and presents the different ways the complex politics of the region have been understood. The contributions by leading scholars in the field cover a range of broad questions about the dynamics of politics. The Handbook analyses how the dominant political and social coalitions of the region were forged in the Cold War era, and assesses the complex processes of transition towards various forms of democratic politics. How institutions and systems of governance are being forged in an increasingly global environment is discussed and whether civil society in Southeast Asia has really evolved as an independent sphere of social and political activity. The Handbook examines how national governments are dealing with growing tensions within the region as matters such as labour, human rights and the environment spill beyond national boundaries, and how they are establishing a place in the new global framework. By engaging the Southeast Asian experience more firmly with larger debates about modern political systems, the Handbook is an essential reference tool for students and scholars of Political Science and Southeast Asian studies.
Book chapter
Interpreting the politics of Southeast Asia: debates in parallel universes
Published 2012
Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Politics, 5 - 22
Among the critical questions that have defined debates about the politics of Southeast Asia, three have been especially enduring. One of these asks why liberal politics has proven so fragile across the region and why various forms of authoritarianism or electoral politics based on one-party rule or money politics have been so pervasive. A second question is concerned with the relationship between market capitalism and political institutions and ideas; in particular why various forms of interventionist state and predatory systems of governance have survived and flourished despite the embrace of market capitalism. A third is concerned with more recent patterns of decentralization of authority, the spread of democratic reforms and the participation of social movements and local actors in the political arena. It is a matter of contention whether these developments signal the long-awaited rise of a progressive and self-reliant civil society or the consolidation of new social and economic oligarchies and mechanisms for control on the part of the state. This chapter examines how these important questions have been addressed within different schools of thought and how they have themselves been consolidated and transformed over time.