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Selected Bibliography
Abdullah, D. V. and Chee, K. (2010) Islamic Finance Why It Makes Sense: Understanding its Principles and Practises (Singapore: Marshall Cavendish International).
Acharya, A. (2011) “Asia Is Not One: Regionalism and the Ideas of Asia,” ISEAS Working Paper: Politics and Security Series, No. 1.
Acharya, A. (2009) Constructing a Security Community in Southeast Asia: ASEAN and the Problem of Regional Order (London: Routledge).
Acharya, A. (1997) “Ideas, Identity, and Institution-Building: From the ‘ASEAN Way’ to the ‘Asia-Pacific Way,’” The Pacific Review, vol. 10, no. 3, 319–346.
Acharya, A. (1991) “The Association of Southeast Asian Nations: ‘Security Community’ or ‘Defense Community’?” Pacific Affairs, vol. 64, no. 29, 159–178.
Akashi, Y. (1997) “An ASEAN Perspective on APEC,” Working Paper 240 (Indiana: Kellogg Institute), August.
Akkizidis, I. and Khandelwal, S. K. (2008) Financial Risk Management for Islamic Banking and Finance (New York: Palgrave Macmillan).
Al-Mawdudi, A. A. (1954) Al-Riba (Dimashq: Dar al-Fikr).Al-Misri, R. (1991) Al-Jami‘ fi Usul al-Riba (Beirut: al-Dar al-Samiya).Al-Omar, F. and Abdel-Haq, M. (1996) Islamic Banking: Theory, Practice and
Challenges (London: Oxford University Press).Anderson, K. and Garnaut, R. (1987) Australian Protectionism: Extent, Causes
and Effects (North Sydney: Allen & Unwin).Ang, B-L (2013) “Indonesia Makes Progress in Islamic Finance,” Investment
& Pensions Asia, September 27, see http://asia.ipe.com/asia/indonesia-makes -progress-in-islamic-finance_57744.php#.U13cea2SwtM [Accessed January 03, 2014].
Ariff, M. (1988) “Islamic Banking,” Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, vol. 2, no. 2, September, 46–62.
Asian Development Bank (ADB) (2013) Asian Development Outlook 2013: Asia’s Energy Challenge (Manila), see http://www.adb.org/publications /asian-development-outlook-2013-asias-energy-challenge [Accessed January 15, 2013].
ADB (2013) “Higher Education Phase 1 Report,” Comprehensive Education Sector Review (CESR) (Myanmar), see http://www.adb.org/projects/46369 -001/documents [Accessed April 29, 2014].
236 Selected Bibliography
ADB (2012) Counting the Cost: Higher Education for Inclusive Growth in Asia (Manila: Asian Development Bank).
ADB (2008) Education and Skills: Strategies for Accelerated Development in Asia and the Pacific (Manila: ADB).
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) (2012) ASEAN Human Rights Declaration (Phnom Penh, Cambodia), November 19, see http://www.asean .org /news/asean-statement-communiques/item/asean-human-rights -declaration [Accessed February 9, 2014].
ASEAN (2011) The ASEAN Charter, 12th reprint (Jakarta: The ASEAN Secretariat).
ASEAN (2007) ASEAN Convention to Counter Terrorism (Cebu, Philippines), January 13, http://www.aseansec.org/19250.htm (LINKS TO ASEAN ANTHEM) [Accessed April 26, 2014].
ASEAN (2007) Plan of Action to Implement the Joint Declaration on ASEAN Australian Comprehensive Partnership (Manila, Philippines) August 1, see http://www.asean.org/news/item/plan-of-action-to-implement-the-joint -declaration-on-asean-australia-comprehensive-partnership [Accessed January 26, 2014].
ASEAN (2005) Kuala Lumpur Declaration on the East Asia Summit (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia), December 14, see http://www.asean.org/news/item /kuala-lumpur-declaration-on-the-east-asia-summit-kuala-lumpur-14 -december-2005 [Accessed March 11, 2014].
ASEAN (2001) Declaration on Joint Action to Counter Terrorism (Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei), November 5, see http://www.asean.org/news/item/2001-asean-declaration-on-joint-action-to-counter-terrorism [Accessed January 25, 2014].
ASEAN (1998) Manila Declaration on the Prevention and Control of Transnational Crime see http://www.asean.org/communities/asean-political -security-community/item/manila-declaration-on-the-prevention-and -control-of-transnational-crime-1998-introduction [Accessed July 31, 2014].
ASEAN (1997) ASEAN Declaration on Transnational Crime (Manila), December 20, see ASEAN Declaration on Transnational Crime [Accessed July 31, 2014].
ASEAN (1995) Treaty on the Southeast Asia Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone (Bangkok, Thailand), December 15, see http://www.asean.org/news/item /treaty-on-the-southeast-asia-nuclear-weapon-free-zone [Accessed November 15, 2013].
ASEAN (1976) Treaty of Amity and Cooperation, February 24, see http://www .asean.org /component /zoo/item/treaty-of-amity-and-cooperation-in -southeast-asia-indonesia-24-february-1976-3?highlight=WyJhbWl0eSIsImNvb3BlcmF0aW9uIiwidHJlYXR5Iiwib2YiLCJ0cmVhdHkgb2YiXQ [Accessed April 24, 2014].
ASEAN–Australia–New Zealand Summit (2004) Joint Declaration of the Leaders at the ASEAN–Australia and New Zealand Commemorative Summit (Vientiane, Laos), November 30.
ARF (2009) ASEAN Regional Forum Vision Statement (Phuket, Thailand), July 23, see http://aseanregionalforum.asean.org/files/library [Accessed March 24, 2014].
Selected Bibliography 237
ARF (1997) The Hanoi Plan of Action, December 15, see http://www.asean.org /news/item/hanoi-plan-of-action [Accessed July 31, 2014].
ARF (no date) The ARF Concept Paper, see http://aseanregionalforum.asean .org/library/arf-chairmans-statements-and-reports/132 [Accessed April 26, 2014].
Australian Financial Markets Association (AFMA) (2011) “Tax Institute of Australia (TIA) and AFMA: Review of the Taxation Treatment of Islamic Finance” (ACT: AFMA).
AFMA (2010) “Taxation Review-Promoting the Development of an Islamic Finance Marker” (ACT: AFMA).
Ayub, M. (2007) Understanding Islamic Finance (London: John Wiley & Sons).
Babbage, R. (2008) “Learning to Walk Amongst Giants: The New Defence White Paper,” Security Challenges, vol. 4, no. 1, 13–20.
Bali Process (no date) “Regional Cooperation Framework,” see http://www .baliprocess.net/regional-cooperation-framework [Accessed February 9, 2014].
Baogang, H. (2011) “The Awkwardness of Australian Engagement with Asia: The Dilemmas of Australian Idea of Regionalism,” Japanese Journal of Political Science, vol. 12, no. 2, 267–285.
Beeson, M. (2009) Institutions of the Asia-Pacific: ASEAN, APEC and Beyond (London: Routledge).
Beeson, M. (2001) “Australia and Asia: Years of Living Aimlessly,” in D. Singh and A. Smith (eds) South East Asian Affairs (Singapore: Institute of South East Asian Studies (ISEAS)), pp. 44–55.
Beeson, M. (1999) Competing Capitalisms: Australia, Japan and Economic Competition in the Asia Pacific (London: Macmillan).
Beeson, M. and Islam, I. (2005) “Neoliberalism and East Asia: Resisting the Washington Consensus,” The Journal of Development Studies, vol. 41, no. 2, 197–219.
Better Regulation Office (2011) “Review of Regulatory Impediments to Islamic Finance in NSW” (Sydney: Government of NSW).
Betts, A. (2010) “The Refugee Regime Complex,” Refugee Survey Quarterly, vol. 29, no. 1, 12–37, p. 3.
Betts, A. (2009). Protection by Persuasion: International Cooperation in the Refugee Regime (New York: Cornell University Press).
Betts, A., Loescher, G. and Milner, J. (2012) UNHCR: The Politics and Practice of Refugee Protection, 2nd ed. (Oxon: Routledge).
Beyer, A. C. (2010) Counterterrorism and International Power Relations (London: I.B. Tauris)
Bidin, A. (2013) “Nuclear Law and Malaysian Legal Framework on Nuclear Security,” Presentation at Round Table C: Nuclear Governance Post-Fukushima, Singapore Energy Week (Singapore), October 31.
Bisley, N. (2012) “No Hedging in Canberra: The Australia-US Alliance in the ‘Asian Century,’” Asia Pacific Bulletin, no. 157, April 3.
Blomqvist, H. C. (1993) “ASEAN as a Model for Third World Regional Economic Cooperation?” ASEAN Economic Bulletin, vol. 10, no. 1, July, 52–67.
Broinowski, A. (2003) About Face: Asian Accounts of Australia (Melbourne: Scribe).
238 Selected Bibliography
Bureau of Resources and Energy Economics (BREE) (2012) Energy in Australia (Canberra: BREE, Commonwealth of Australia), February, see http://bree .gov.au [Accessed November 17, 2013].
Button, J. (1994) Flying the Kite: Travels of an Australian Politician (Milsons Point: Random House).
Callen, V. J. (1983) “Anglo-Australian Attitudes toward Immigrants: A Review of Survey Evidence,” International Migration Review, vol. 17, no. 1, 120–137.
Camilleri, J. (2005) “East Asia’s Emerging Regionalism: Tensions and Potential in Design and Architecture,” Global Change, Peace and Security, vol. 17, no. 3, 253–261.
Capling, A. (2001) Australia and the Global Trade System: From Havana to Seattle (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
Chachi, A. (2009) “Origin and Development of Commercial and Islamic Banking Operations,” in S. Alvi and A. Al-Roubaie (eds) Islamic Banking and Finance (London: Routledge), pp. 61–84.
Chapra, M. U. (2000) The Future of Economics: An Islamic Perspective (Leicester: The Islamic Foundation).
Cheung, S. (2011) “Migration Control and the Solutions Impasse in South and Southeast Asia: Implications from the Rohingya Experience,” Journal of Refugee Studies, vol. 25, no. 1, 50–70.
Chow, J. T. (2005) “ASEAN Counterterrorism Cooperation since 9/11,” Asian Survey, vol. 45, no. 19, pp. 302–321.
Clode, M. (2002) “Regulatory Issues in Islamic Finance,” in S. Archer and R. A. A. Karim (eds) Islamic Finance: Innovation and Growth (London: Euromoney and Accounting and Auditing Organization for Islamic Financial Institutions), pp. 67–73.
Clyne, M. (2005) “The Use of Exclusionary Language to Manipulate Opinion: John Howard, Asylum Seekers, and the Re-Emergence of Political Incorrectness in Australia,” Journal of Language and Politics, vol. 4, no. 2, 173–196.
Corden, M. (1995) Protection and Liberalisation in Australia and Abroad, The Forty-Fourth Joseph Fisher Lecture in Commerce (Adelaide: University of Adelaide), September 26.
Crock, M. and Ghezelbash, D. (2010) “Do Loose Lips Bring Ships? The Role of Policy, Politics and Human Rights in Managing Unauthorised Boat Arrivals,” Griffith Law Review, vol. 19, no. 2, 238–287.
Davies, S. E. (2008) Legitimising Rejection: International Refugee Law in Southeast Asia (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers: Boston and Leiden).
Davies, S. E. (2006) “The Asian Rejection? International Refugee Law in Asia,” Australian Journal of Politics and History, vol. 52, no. 4, 562–575.
Davies, S. E. (2006) “Saving Refugees or Saving Borders? Southeast Asian States and the Indochinese Refugee Crisis,” Global Change, Peace and Security, vol. 18, no. 1, 3–24.
D’Cruz, J. V. and Steele, W. (2003) Australia’s Ambivalence towards Asia: Politics, Neo/Post-Colonialism, and Fact/Fiction (Melbourne: Monash Asia Institute, Monash University).
DFAT (2011) “Indonesia-Australian Paper: A Practical Approach to Enhance Regional Cooperation on Disaster Rapid Response,” see http://aid.dfat.gov
Selected Bibliography 239
.au/countries/eastasia/regional/Documents/enhance-cooperation-disaster -response.pdf [Accessed April 24, 2014].
DFAT (2004) ASEAN and Australia Celebrating 30 Years (Canberra: Australian Government), see http://www.dfat.gov.au/publications/asean30/ [Accessed April 14, 2014].
DFAT (2004) “Transnational Terrorism: The Threat to Australia” (Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia), see http://www.dfat.gov.au/publications /terrorism/ [Accessed April 26, 2014].
DFAT (1997) The National Interest Australian Government White Paper (Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia).
Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet (DPMC) (2012) Australia in the Asian Century, Australian Government White Paper, October 12.
Dermawan, A., Obidzinski, K. and Komarudin, H. (2012) Withering Before Full Bloom? Bioenergy Development in Southeast Asia (Bogor, Indonesia: Center for International Forestry Research [CIFOR]).
Dosch, J. and Mols, M. (1998) “Thirty Years of ASEAN: Achievements and Challenges,” Pacific Review, vol. 11, no. 2, 167–182.
Drysdale, P. (1991) “Open Regionalism: A Key to East Asia’s Economic Future,” Pacific Economic Papers, issue 197 (Canberra: Australia-Japan Research Centre).
El-Fadl, K. A. (2001) Speaking in God’s Name: Islamic Law, Authority and Women (Oxford: Oneworld).
El-Gamal, M (2007) “Mutuality as an Antidote to Rent-Seeking Shariah Arbitrage in Islamic Finance,” Thunderbird International Business Review, vol. 49, no. 2, 187–202.
El-Gamal, M. (2006) Islamic Finance: Law, Economics and Practice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
Emmers, R. and Tan, S. S. (2011) “The ASEAN Regional Forum and Preventive Diplomacy: Built to Fail?” Asian Security, vol. 17, no. 1, pp. 44–60.
Emmerson, D. K. (2012) “Is Indonesia Rising? It Depends,” in A. Reid (ed.) Indonesia Rising: The Repositioning of Indonesia’s Third Giant (Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies).
Espenilla, J. J. F. (2010) “Injustice Ignored: A Case Study of the Irregular Sea Migration of the Rohingyan Boat People,” Asia Europe Journal, vol. 8, 45–59.
Esposito, J. L. (1998) Islam: The Straight Path, 3rd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press).
Farrar, S. (2011) “Forum: Accommodating Islamic Banking and Finance in Australia” UNSW Law Journal, vol. 34, no 1, 413–442.
Fauzan, A.U. and Schiller, J. (2011) After Fukushima: The Rise of Resistance to Nuclear Energy in Indonesia (Essen, Germany: German Asia Foundation/Asia House).
FitzGerald, S. (1997) Is Australia an Asian Country? (Sydney: Allen and Unwin).Flood, P. (2011) Dancing with Warriors: A Diplomatic Memoir (North
Melbourne: Acradia).Ford, M., Lyons, L., and Palmer, W. (2010) “Stopping the Hordes: A Critical
Account of the Labor Government’s Regional Approach to the Management
240 Selected Bibliography
of Asylum Seekers,” Local-Global: Identity, Security, Community, vol. 8, 28–35.
Fraser, M. and Simons, M. (2010) Malcolm Fraser: The Political Memoirs (Melbourne: The Miegunyah Press).
Frost, F. (2013) “ASEAN and Regional Cooperation: Recent Developments and Australia’s Interest” (Parliament of Australia Research Papers Series 2013–14), November 8.
Funabashi, Y. (1995) Asia Pacific Fusion: Japan’s Role in APEC (Washington, DC: Institute for International Economics).
Ganesan, N (1995) “Rethinking ASEAN as a Security Community in Southeast Asia” Asian Affairs, vol. 21, no. 16, 210–26.
Garnaut, R. (1996) Open Regionalism and Trade Liberalization: An Asia-Pacific Contribution to the World Trade System (Singapore: ISEAS).
Gibney, M. J. (2007) “Forced Migration, Engineered Regionalism and Justice between States,” in S. Kneebone and F. Rawlings-Sanaei (eds) New Regionalism and Asylum Seekers: Challenges Ahead (Berghahn Books: New York and Oxford).
Glezer, L. (1982) Tariff Politics: Australian Policy-Making 1960–1980 (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press).
Goldring, J. (1984) Mutual Advantage: Report of the Committee of Review of Private Overseas Student Policy (Canberra: AGPS).
Goldsworthy, D. (ed.) (2001) Facing North: A Century of Australian Engagement with Asia, Vol. 1: 1901 to the 1970s (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press/DFAT).
Gyngell, A. (2007) “Australia-Indonesia,” in B. Taylor (ed.) Australia as an Asia Pacific Regional Power: Friendship in Flux (Abingdon: Routledge), pp. 97–115.
Halse, C., Cloonan, A., Dyer, J., Kostogriz, A., Toe, D., and Weinmann, M. (2013) Asia Literacy and the Australian Teaching Workforce Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL) Report (Education Services Australia), see http://www.aitsl.edu.au/verve/_resources/Asia_Literacy__the_Australian_Teaching_Workforce.pdf [Accessed April 29, 2014].
Hamwi, B. (2009) “Islamic Finance: A Growing International Market” in S. Alvi and A. Al-Roubaie (eds) Islamic Banking and Finance (London: Routledge), pp. 23–34.
Harris, S. (1992) “Australia in the Global Economy in the 1980s,” in P. J. Boyce and J. R. Angel (eds) Diplomacy in the Marketplace: Australia in World Affairs 1981–90 (Melbourne: Longman Cheshire), pp. 30–50.
He, B. (2012) “A Concert of Powers and Hybrid Regionalism in Asia,” Australian Journal of Political Science, vol. 47, no. 4, 677–690.
He, B. (2011) “The Awkwardness of Australian Engagement with Asia: The Dilemmas of Australian Idea of Regionalism,” Japanese Journal of Political Science, vol. 12, no. 2, 267–285.
Henderson, D (2011) “Why Teaching about Asia Matters in Higher Education,” Asian Currents, March, pp. 3–5.
Herman, V. D. W. (1997) “The Influence of Banking on the Rise of Capitalism in North-West Europe, Fourteenth to Nineteenth Centuries,” in A. Teichova, G.
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Kurgan-van Hentenryk, and D. Ziegler (eds) Banking, Trade, and Industry: Europe, America, and Asia from the Thirteenth to the Twentieth Centuries (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 173–191.
Ibn Muhammad, A. S. M. (1992) Hulul li Mushkilat al-Riba (Bayrut: Dar al Jil);
Ibn Rushd, M. (1996) Bidaya al-Mujtahid wa Nihaya al-Muqtasid (Reading: Garnet Publishing Limited).
International Energy Agency (IEA) (2013) “World Energy Outlook Special Report 2013: Southeast Asia Energy Outlook,” World Energy Outlook Special Report (Paris: IEA), see https://www.iea.org/publications/freepublications /publication/name,43534,en.html [Accessed November 17, 2013].
Iqbal, Z. (2004) “The Development of Islamic Financial Institutions and Fuure Challenges,” in C. M. Henry and R. Wilson (eds) The Politics of Islamic Finance (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press), pp. 42–64.
Iqbal, Z. and Mirakhor, A. (2007) An Introduction to Islamic Finance: Theory and Practice (Singapore: John Wiley & Sons).
Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector (ICD) (2013) Mapping Global Islamic Finance Development, Islamic Finance Development Report (ICD Thomson Reuters), see http://www.zawya.com/files/islamic -reports/icd-islamic-finance-development-report-2013.pdf [Accessed April 15, 2014].
Jain, P. C. (2007) “Australia’s Attitude toward Asian Values and Regional Community Building,” Politics & Policy, vol. 35, no. 1, 26–41.
Johnson, C., Ahluwalia, P., and McCarthy, G. (2010) “Australia’s Ambivalent Re-Imagining of Asia,” Australian Journal of Political Science, vol. 45, no. 1, 59–74.
Johnston, A. I. (1999) “The Myth of the ASEAN Way? Explaining the Evolution of the ASEAN Regional Forum,” in H. Haftendorn, R. O. Keohane, and C. A. Wallander (eds) Imperfect Unions: Security Institutions Over Time and Space (New York: Oxford University Press), pp. 287–324.
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Jones, P. (1986) “Australia’s International Relations in Education,” Australian Education Review, vol. 23.
Jones, D. M. and Smith, M. L. R. (2007) “Making Process, Not Progress: ASEAN and the Evolving East Asian Regional Order,” International Security, vol. 32, no. 1, 148–184.
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Kahf, M. (2004) “Islamic Banks: The Rise of a New Power Alliance of Wealth and Sharia Scholarship,” in C. M. Henry and R. Wilson, R. (eds) The Politics of Islamic Finance (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press), pp. 17–36.
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Malik, M. (2006) “The East Asia Summit,” Australian Journal of International Affairs, vol. 60, no. 2.
McDougall, D. (2001) “Regional Institutions and Security: Implications of the 1999 East Timor Crisis,” in Tan, A. T. H. and Boutin, K. J. D. (eds) (2001) Non-Traditional Security Issues in Southeast Asia (Singapore: Select Publishing).
Meadows, E. (2011) “From Aid to Industry: A History of International Education in Australia,” in D. Davis and B. Mackintosh (eds) Making a Difference: Australian International Education (Sydney, UNSW Press), pp. 50–90.
Mediansky, F. A. (1988) “Australia and Southeast Asia,” in F. A. Mediansky and A. C. Palfreeman (eds) In Pursuit of National Interests: Australian Foreign Policy in the 1990s (Sydney: Pergamon Press), pp. 227–45.
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Contributors
Lina Gong is Research Associate at the Centre for Non-Traditional Security (NTS) Studies at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore. Her research interests include the localization of the Responsibility to Protect (RtoP) norm in the Asia-Pacific region, conflict resolu-tion, issues on internally displaced persons, energy security, and new trends within the ASEAN framework in addressing NTS issues. Gong holds a BA in English Language and Literature and an MA in Interpreting and Translation from Sichuan University, China. She also holds a master’s degree in International Relations from RSIS, NTU. She is now pursing her PhD at RSIS, NTU. Her master’s thesis was on the evolution of the RtoP from when it was introduced in 2001 to the 2009 United Nations report on its implementation. For her PhD, Gong focuses her research on China’s engagement with United Nations peacekeeping.
Baogang He is Chair of International Studies at Deakin University, Melbourne, and Head of the Public Policy and Global Affairs Program at NTU, Singapore. He has published four single-authored books and four co-authored books, 54 international refereed journal articles, 53 book chapters, and numerous Chinese publications. He received the Mayer prize from the Australia Political Studies Association in 1994 and has been awarded five ARC (Australian Research Council) Discovery Grants, and numerous grants from the Fulbright Commission, the Ford Foundation, and the National University of Singapore (amounting to a total of about AU $1,250,000). Professor He won the Dean’s Excellence in Research Award in 2008 and 2009. Professor He is a member of the editorial board of more than ten inter-national refereed journals and is an assessor for the ARC Professorial Fellowship and ERA in Australia.
250 Contributors
Sofiah Jamil is a PhD candidate at the Australian National University and Adjunct Research Associate at the Centre for NTS Studies at the RSIS, NTU, Singapore. She was previously Associate Research Fellow at the Centre for NTS Studies, where she co-led two programs, “Climate Change, Environmental Security and Natural Disasters” and “Energy Security.” Her publications include book chapters such as “Beyond Food for Fuel: The Little Red Dot in GCC-ASEAN Relations,” in Asia-Gulf Economic Relations in the 21st Century: The Local to Global Transformation (2013); “Energy and Non-traditional Security in East Asia” and “‘China’s Energy Efficiency Policies,” in Energy and Non-traditional Security in Asia (2012). Jamil’s research interests are contemporary Muslim politics, human security, and environmental issues.
Michael Leach is an Associate Professor in Politics and Public Policy and Chair of the Department of Education and Social Sciences at Swinburne University in Melbourne. He teaches in Comparative Politics, International Politics, and the Politics of the Pacific. His research interests include nation-building in the Asia-Pacific, the poli-tics of Timor-Leste, and comparative immigration and asylum pol-icy. Leach has published widely on Timor-Leste, most recently The Politics of Timor-Leste: Democratic Consolidation after Intervention (Cornell University Press, 2013) with Damien Kingsbury.
Imran Lum’s primary responsibility is building the Islamic finance capability for National Australia Bank’s (NAB) Product and Markets division. Prior to this, he was the National Product Manager for NAB’s multi-award winning Microenterprise Loans and set up the Qard Hassan: No Interest Loans Scheme (NILS) Program in Melbourne, Sydney, and Adelaide. He has taught Islamic finance at the University of Melbourne, is part of the Islamic Finance Working Committee of the Australian Financial Markets Association (AFMA), and is an Advisory Board Member of the Islamic Museum of Australia. Dr Lum has an undergraduate degree from the University of Adelaide, a mas-ter’s in Islamic Studies from the University of New England, and has completed his PhD in Islamic finance at the Melbourne Law School and the Asia Institute at the University of Melbourne.
Anthony Milner is Tun Hussein Onn Chair of International Studies at the Institute of Strategic and International Studies, Malaysia, 2014-2015; he is Basham Professor of Asian History at the Australian National University, Professorial Fellow at the
Contributors 251
University of Melbourne, and Adjunct Professor at the University of Malaya. He has held visiting appointments in the United States, Japan, Germany, Singapore, and Malaysia. He was previously Dean of Asian Studies at the ANU and Director of the Australia-Asia Perceptions Project of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. Among his books are The Malays (Wiley-Blackwell: 2007, 2011) and three edited volumes on “Australia in Asia” (Oxford University Press). He was coeditor (with Sally Percival Wood) of Our Place in the Asian Century: Southeast Asia as “The Third Way” (2012). He is a Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia.
Amy Nethery is a Lecturer in Politics and Policy Studies at Deakin University, Melbourne. She conducts research on migration and asy-lum policies in Australia and Asia, with a special interest in policy development and immigration detention. Recent publications include the coedited volume, with S. J. Silverman, Immigration Detention: The Migration of a Policy and its Human Impact (Routledge, 2015). Dr Nethery’s doctoral thesis titled Immigration Detention in Australia, on Australian asylum policy, won the Isi Leibler Prize in 2011. In 2013 she was a Visiting Scholar at the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford.
Math Noortmann holds a research professorship in Transnational Law and Non-State Actors with the Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations of Coventry University (UK). Before that he held a chair in International Relations and International Law at Oxford Brookes University (UK). He holds a PhD in International Law and a MSc in Political Science. His lectures and publications include such topics as ASEAN, human security, non-state actors, global governance, and inter-national legal and political theory. He initiated a book series on Non-state Actors in International Law, Politics and Governance, chairs the International Law Association’s Committee on Non-State Actors, and is a board member of the Terrorism and Political Violence Association. Professor Noortmann has coordinated and managed several interna-tional projects and studies for governments, international governmen-tal organizations, and nongovernmental organizations, in particular in Central and Eastern Europe and Asia. He has been a guest lecturer at several universities in Europe, China, Singapore, and Indonesia.
Claudine Ogilvie is the Chief Information Officer (CIO) and General Manager External Relations for Ridley Corporation and in 2012
252 Contributors
was a founding member of the Australian Food and Grocery Council (AFGC) Agribusiness Forum. She is a member of the National Association of Women in Operations (NAWO) and the Australian Agribusiness Association (AAA) industry reference group, and repre-sents Ridley at the National Farmers Federation (NFF). Ogilvie has authored a number of papers on manufacturing competitiveness, agri-business and food security and was an active contributor to the joint China Australia Government Food Security report (2012). She partici-pated in the Australia-ASEAN Emerging Leaders Program (2013) and the Asialink Leaders Program (2012). She has a Bachelor of Business degree from the University of Technology Sydney and a Diploma of Business Management from the Ecole Supérieur de Commerce Reims, France.
Jiro Okamoto is a Visiting Fellow at the Australian National University. Before taking up his current post, he was a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization. He received his PhD in Political Science and International Relations from the Australian National University. Dr Okamoto’s research interests lie in the areas of international relations of the Asia Pacific, regional integration in East Asia and policy processes of Asia Pacific countries especially Japan, Australia, and ASEAN members. He has written and edited a number of books, book chapters, and articles, including Whither Free Trade Agreements? Proliferation, Evaluation and Multilateralization (IDE-JETRO, 2003), Trade Liberalization and APEC (Routledge, 2004), Australia’s Foreign Economic Policy and ASEAN (ISEAS, 2010), and Engaging East Asian Integration: States, Markets and the Movement of People (ISEAS, 2012).
Sally Percival Wood is a Lecturer in Australian Studies, and Alfred Deakin Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation, Deakin University. Before joining Deakin, she worked for three years in Track Two diplomacy with Asialink at The University of Melbourne. She has published in scholarly jour-nals such as the Australian Journal of Politics and History, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, and Modern Asian Studies, as well as several book chapters on Australia’s relations with Asia, Asian for-eign policy, and the Bandung Conference. She coauthored Identity, Education and Belonging: Arab and Muslim Youth in Contemporary Australia with Fethi Mansouri (MUP, 2008) and in 2012 coedited the report Our Place in the Asian Century: Southeast Asia as “The Third Way” with Anthony Milner.
Contributors 253
Avery Poole is a Lecturer in International Relations in the School of Social and Political Sciences at The University of Melbourne. Her research focuses on the evolution of ASEAN norms, particularly in regard to the institutionalization of human rights. She also explores the changing regional and global role of Indonesia, and the relation-ship between domestic political circumstances and foreign policy in Indonesia. Dr Poole was educated at the University of Melbourne and the University of British Columbia.
See Seng Tan is an Associate Professor, Deputy Director of the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies, and Head of the Centre for Multilateralism Studies at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore. He is an elected member of the University Senate. A student of Asian security, he is the author/editor of nine books and has published over 40 scholarly papers and book chapters. His latest book is The Making of the Asia Pacific: Knowledge Brokers and the Politics of Representation (Amsterdam University Press, 2013). He has held vis-iting appointments at various universities and research institutes. He regularly consults for various international institutions and national governments (including Singapore’s). He received BA Honours (First) and MA degrees from the University of Manitoba and his PhD is from Arizona State University.
Anthony Welch is Professor of Education at the University of Sydney. A policy specialist, with extensive publications in numerous lan-guages, he has consulted to several state, national, and international governments and agencies, as well as US institutions and foundations, particularly on higher education reforms. Substantial project expe-rience includes East and Southeast Asia. A Fulbright New Century Scholar on higher education (2007–08), he has also been Visiting Professor in the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Japan, and Hong Kong (China). His most recent books are The Professoriate: Profile of a Profession (Springer, 2005), Education, Change and Society (Oxford University Press, 2007, 2010 and 2013), ASEAN Industries and the Challenge from China with Daryl S.L. Jarvis (Palgrave Macmillan, 2011), Higher Education in Southeast Asia: Blurring Borders, Changing Balance (Routledge, 2011), and Counting the Cost: Higher Education for Inclusive Growth in Asia (ADB, 2012). Professor Welch also directs the national research proj-ect, the Chinese Knowledge Diaspora.
A2ELP, 1, 8AADCP, 5AAECP, 129AANZFTA, 3, 6, 40, 56, 138, 140,
174, 197Abbott, Tony, 53Abbott Government, 179
Asia policies, 41foreign policy approaches, 28Indonesia priority, 58New Colombo Plan, 151, 230
Abdulgani, Roeslan, 19ACER. See Australian Council for
Education Research (ACER)Acharya, Amitav, 38ADMM, 99ADMM+, 3, 5, 13, 40, 99AFBA, 199AFMA, 213AFTA, 35, 134–7, 197AFTA-CER FTA, 135–6Agricultural Competitiveness
(2014), 190AgriFood, 9, 185–200
alternative energy sources, 195–6arable land per capita (1961–
2012), 186fAustralian domestic
consumption, 188bilateral and multilateral
agreements, 196–7capital investments for, 200
collaborative regional projects, 199–200
fertilizer consumption (2003–09), 192f
food production systems, 193GM food, 194–5irrigation and water technologies,
193, 200politics and impact on economies,
190–1production challenges, 185–6,
188–9regional frameworks, 187white papers, 199
Ahmed, Nafeez, 187AIFS Framework, 187, 198AIIA, 17, 226AIPRD, 152–3Alatas, Ali, 229AmBank Group, 211The Angkor Agenda, 136animal welfare and live cattle
exports, 191Animals Australia, 191ANZUS Treaty, 18, 21, 26, 27, 227,
231APC. See Asia Pacific Community
(APC)APEC. See Asia-Pacific Economic
Cooperation (APEC)APF. See Asian and Pacific ForumAPODETI, 68
Index
f denotes figures, t denotes table
256 Index
APT. See ASEAN+3 (APT)arable land per capita in ASEAN
and Australia, 186fARC, 160ARF. See ASEAN Regional Forum
(ARF)Arriens, Jan, 68, 69, 70ASDT, 68ASEAN. See Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN)ASEAN Agreement on Disaster
Management and Emergency Response, 176
ASEAN Charter, 19, 57, 99, 140ASEAN Communities, 6, 139–40
Economic Community (AEC), 6, 139, 179, 198
Security Community, 139Socio-cultural Community, 6,
139, 187ASEAN Defence Ministerial
Meeting (ADMM), 99ASEAN Defence Ministers
Meetings-Plus (ADMM+), 3, 5, 13, 40, 99
ASEAN Economic Ministers Meeting 2004, 137
ASEAN Food and Beverage Alliance (AFBA), 199
ASEAN Food Security Reserve (1979), 187
ASEAN Free Trade Agreement (AFTA), 35, 134–7, 197
ASEAN Human Rights Declaration, 111
ASEAN Integrated Food Security (AIFS) Framework 2009–13, 187, 198
ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights, 8
ASEAN Multi-Sectoral Framework on Climate Change: Agriculture and Forestry Towards Food Security, 187
ASEAN Nuclear Energy Safety Sub-Sector Network, 176, 178
ASEAN Post Ministerial Conference 1989, 132–3
ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), 3, 5, 13, 229
East Timor, 72–3formation of, 36, 72ISM on CT-TC, 97Measure against Terrorist
Financing and Prevention of Terrorism, 95
Rudd’s disenchantment with, 37terrorism concerns, 93–4, 95Vision Statement, 98
ASEAN Summit (1992), 134ASEAN Summit (2010), 55ASEAN+3 (APT), 5, 25, 26, 37, 51,
138, 228, 229–30economic cooperation
frameworks, 136nuclear safety forums, 174, 178
ASEAN-Australia Comprehensive Partnership, 6, 99–100, 140. See also Plan of Action
ASEAN-Australia Development Cooperation Partnership (AADCP), 5
ASEAN-Australia Dialogue Partnership, 14, 54, 88
economic relations, 127formalization, 3, 4, 23, 129
ASEAN-Australia Economic Cooperation Program (AAECP), 129
ASEAN-Australia Forum, 23, 56, 88
ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (AANZFTA), 3, 6, 40, 56, 138, 140, 174, 197
ASEAN-EEC and EU Ministerial Meetings, 72
Asia Education Foundation, 151Asia Pacific Community (APC), 27
Index 257
ASEAN responses, 34, 55, 229Rudd’s vision, 38–9, 140, 229Russia and United States, 40
Asialink, 226Our Place in the Asian Century:
Southeast Asia as “The Third Way,” 190
Asian and Pacific Council (ASPAC), 3, 15, 21, 22, 228
Asian and Pacific Forum (APF), 22–3, 28, 54
Asian Development Banks (ADB), 169Asian Development Outlook 2013, 169Asian Financial Crisis (1997–98),
13, 25, 37, 70, 135–6, 228Asian languages, 149–51Asian middle class, 148–9, 189Asian Peace Bloc, 17Asian regionalism, 15–16, 33–5, 36Asian Relations Conference (1947),
16–17, 227Asian Studies Coordinating
Committee, 149Asian-African Conference (1955),
18–19. See also Bandung Conference
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), 5, 15, 24–5, 35–6, 40, 51, 132, 229
Ministerial Meeting 1989, 133St Petersburg Declaration, 174
Asia-Pacific Group on Money-Laundering, 96
Asia-Pacific Leaders Malaria Alliance (APLMA), 53
ASIO, 79–80ASIS, 80ASPAC, 3, 15, 21, 22, 228Assembly of Greater East-Asiatic
Nations, 15, 16Association of Southeast Asia
(ASA), 20Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN), 3, 20, 134–5, 228
administrative impact on EAS, 56–7
Agreement on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters (2004), 88
AgriFood production, 185–6, 188–9
arable land per capita (1961–2012), 186f
Convention on Counter Terrorism (2007), 88, 99
Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance, 176
Coordinating Council Working Group, 78
Declaration on Joint Action to Counter Terrorism, 94
Declarations on Transnational Crime, 99
destabilizing factors, 140Dialogue Partners, 3East Timor, 71–4economic relations with
Australia, 128–30energy demands of, 168–70forced migration management,
110–11freshwater resources, 193IBF market, 206internal security, 90knowledge partners,
160–1Ministerial Meeting on
Transnational Crime, 99noninterference policy, 91terrorism threats response, 92–4,
98–9Timor-Leste’s membership,
76–8, 82trade disputes, 129–30US and China relations, 1, 51See also Treaty of Amity and
Cooperation (TAC)
258 Index
asylum seekers, 108, 111, 112, 120Pacific Solution, 117–19See also Nauru; Papua New
Guinea (PNG)Auchmuty Report (1970), 149Aung San, General, 17AusAID, 5, 152–3, 195Australia
aid budgets, 152–3arable land per capita in
(1961–2012), 186fASEAN ambassador, 56ASEAN state members view,
42–3bilateral agreements, 6, 117–19bilateral counterterrorism
projects, 97bilateral engagements, 79, 136–9collaborative publications and
citations (2000–11), 159tcommitment to ASEAN region,
226–7Comprehensive Economic
Partnership Agreement with Indonesia, 6
EAS limitations, 49–50economic relations with ASEAN,
128–36foreign economic policy reforms,
131–2founding memberships, 3, 5,
49, 228IBF initiatives, 210–13Indonesia relations, 58, 67–70knowledge indices (2012), 158tknowledge partners, 160–1migration policies, 148MoUs, 87–8, 95–7, 197peacekeeping roles, 23–4, 73,
74, 229RCF funding, 119Refugee Convention
signatory, 111regional clash with Malaysia, 228
relationship with China, 34–5, 59, 189–90
relationship with Southeast Asia in 1970s, 4
renewable energies, 173–4, 196security cooperation, 93tensions with Timor-Leste, 79–80terrorism threats, 87, 89–2, 96trading partners, 3, 14, 56,
148, 225United States alliance, 41–2, 58,
189–90, 227–8See also ASEAN-Australia
Dialogue PartnershipAustralia, New Zealand, United
States Security (ANZUS) Treaty, 18, 21, 23, 26, 27, 227, 231
Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ), 211
Australia as a Financial Centre–Building on our Strengths, 205, 212. See also Johnson Report
Australia in the Asian Century white paper, 2, 34, 41, 52, 140, 146, 150, 179, 205, 217
Australia Indonesia Partnership for Reconstruction and Development (AIPRD), 152–3
Australia-ASEAN Economic Cooperation Program (AAECP), 4–5
Australia-ASEAN Emerging Leaders Program (A2ELP), 1, 8
Australia-Indonesia Institute, 150Australia-Indonesia Youth
Exchange, 150Australian Centre for International
Agricultural Research’s Inquiry into Australia’s relationship with ASEAN, 195
Index 259
Australian Council for Education Research’s (ACER) Australia’s International Relations in Education, 149
Australian Development Scholarship, 152
Australian Education Council, 149Australian Federal Police (AFP), 13Australian Financial Markets
Association (AFMA), 213Australian Institute of International
Affairs (AIIA), 17, 226Australian Institute of Political
Science, 17Australian intelligence and
allegations of espionage, 79–80, 179
Australian Livestock Exporters’ Council (ALEC), 191
Australian Research Council (ARC), 160
Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS), 80
Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO), 79–80
Australian Trade Commission, 22Australia-New Zealand Closer
Economic Relations Trade Agreement (CER), 135–6, 137
Australia’s International Relations in Education, 149
Badawi, Abdullah, 26, 51Bainimarama, Voreqe, 76BAKIN, 69Bali bombings. See terrorist attacksBali Democracy Forum, 79Bali Process on People Smuggling,
Trafficking in Persons and Related Transnational Crime (Bali Process), 8, 80, 107, 119, 120, 229, 231
Ball, Macmahon, 227
Bandung Conference, 27Bandung Spirit–Unity in Diversity,
19–20Bangkok Declaration, 20, 119Bank Indonesia, 206bank interest. See riba (bank
interest)banking. See Islamic Banking and
Finance (IBF)Belo, Bishop Carlos Filipe
Ximenes, 69Betts, Alexander, 110, 115biofuels, 195, 200Bishop, Julie, 52, 57, 58Bisley, Nick, 41Blaxland, John, 14, 39Board of Taxation, 205, 212, 213Bolkiah, Prince Mohamed, 95Bowen, Chris, 212Brereton, Laurie, 70Brunei Darussalam, 16, 26, 206Buddhist ideals of peaceful
relations, 17–18Building Relationships through
Intercultural Dialogue and Engagement (BRIDGE) program, 150
Burma, 17–18. See also MyanmarBurton, John, 226Button, John, 24
Cairns Group, 229Cambodia, 16, 26, 196, 229The Canberra Times, 54Carden, David L., 56“Carnation Revolution” in
Portugal, 68Carr, Bob, 52, 57, 232Casey, Richard, 227Cattle Council of Australia, 191Cebu Declaration on Energy
Security (2007), 174Center for International Forestry
Research, 195
260 Index
Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), 69
CER, 135–6, 137Chifley, Ben, 16Chifley Government, 16China, 26, 40, 133
APT influence, 51Australian trading partner, 59bilateral disputes, 58civil nuclear energy, 171collaborative publications and
citations (2000–11), 159thigher education visas
granted, 156thydropower dams, 195–6international students, 155–6knowledge indices (2012), 158tknowledge partners, 160–1market reform policies, 192multilateral FTAs, 138–9R&D performance by
sector, 157tTimor-Leste, 80–1United States rivalry, 1, 58
CMATS, 79CNRT, 75coconut husk-charcoal exports,
176–7, 180Cold War, 16, 18, 21, 133, 227.
See also Asian and Pacific Council (ASPAC)
Colombo Plan, 146, 151, 153, 229Commonwealth Scientific and
Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), 194–5
Community of Portuguese Language Nations (CPLP), 74–5
Comprehensive Plan of Action (CPA), 108, 114–17
Comprehensive Safeguards Agreements and Additional Protocols, 179
Conference to Combat Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing, 96
convention refugees, 108Convention Relating to the Status
of Refugees (Refugee Convention), 107–8, 111, 112–14
Article 1, 114, 116Council for Security Cooperation
in the Asia Pacific (CSCAP), 226, 229
counterterrorism, 89–90, 94, 96, 97bilateral and multilateral, 88,
100–1countries of first asylum, 115CPA. See Comprehensive Plan of
Action (CPA)Crean, Simon, 212Crescent Wealth, 211–12CSCAP, 226, 229CSIRO, 194–5
Davies, A. F., 229“Decade of EU funded GMO
research: 2001–2010,” 194Declaration of ASEAN Concord II
(2003), 139Declaration of the Seventh EAS
on Regional Responses to Malaria Control and Addressing Resistance to Antimalarial Medicines, 53
Declaration on Joint Action to Counter Terrorism, 94
Declaration on the ASEAN Economic Community Blueprint, 140
Declaration on Transnational Crime, 92, 99
Defence Cooperation Program, 79Department of Foreign Affairs and
Trade (DFAT), 50, 52, 56, 57, 151
Dermawan, Ahmad, 195
Index 261
development indicators of selected Southeast Asian states, 146t
DFAT, 50, 52, 56, 57, 151Dili Consensus, 76Downer, Alexander, 27, 40, 70, 87,
97, 230Drysdale, Peter, 35Dulles, John Foster, 18Dunn, Jim, 70Dupont, Alan, 73
EAS. See East Asia Summit (EAS)East Asia Economic Caucus
(EAEC), 24–5, 50–1, 228, 230
East Asia Summit (EAS), 3, 5, 13, 26, 27, 35–6, 40, 50–1, 138, 230
ASEAN’s administrative impact on, 56–7
Australia’s prioritization, 49Cebu Declaration on Energy
Security (2007), 174Connectivity Forum, 54Energy Cooperation Task
Force, 174Energy Ministers meeting, 174Environment Ministers
Meeting, 53membership, 50, 51power and mandate, 59–60priority areas, 53–4Seventh (2012), 58TVET, 53Workshop on Rapid Disaster
Response, 53East Timor, 68, 74
Santa Cruz massacre, 69, 72UN intervention in, 71, 73See also Timor-Leste
Economic Statement of May 1988, 131
education aid, 53, 151–3. See also Colombo Plan; New Colombo Plan
Energy Cooperation Task Force, 174
espionage allegations, 79–80, 179Esposito, John, 207European Atomic Energy
Community (Euratom), 178European Union (EU), 24, 133Evans, Gareth, 24, 33, 34, 39,
132, 229Evatt, Herbert Vere, 16, 17Expert Working Group (EWG) on
Maritime Security, 99Exporter Supply Chain Assurance
Scheme (ESCAS), 191
FDI. See Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) destinations
FDPA, 3fertilizer consumption (kgs/ha of
arable land 2003–09), 192ffiqh (Islamic jurisprudence), 207First Grindlays Mudaraba
(FGM), 211Five Power Defence Arrangements
(FPDA), 3, 27, 230Five Principles of Peaceful
Coexistence, 16Flinders University, 149Flood, Philip, 24food security in ASEAN region, 195
collaborative opportunities, 200–1
economic and political stability, 187
food trade tensions during Asian Financial Crisis, 191
frameworks, 198–9genetically modified food, 194–5priority commodities, 188
forced migration, 107, 108–9, 117–21
Ford, Gerald, 69Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers
Act 1974 (FATA), 216Foreign Affairs Council, 229
262 Index
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) destinations, 133, 200
Foreign Investment Policy, 216Foreign Investment Review Board
(FIRB), 190, 200Fourth High-Level Seminar on
Environmentally Sustainable Cities (2013), 53
Framework for Security Cooperation, Agreement on the (2006), 97
Fraser, Malcolm, 23Fraser Government, 23, 129–31Free Trade Agreements (FTAs),
2, 135–8, 197–8. See also AANZFTA; AFTA-CER FTA; MAFTA; SAFTA, TAFTA
FRETILIN, 68Frost, Frank, 25Fukushima nuclear plant disaster, 9,
168, 171Furlonger, Bob, 68
G-7+ and Dili Consensus, 76G20, 140Garnaut, Ross, 35General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade (GATT) XIX, 130genetically modified (GM) food,
193–5Geneva Conference, 18Gillard, Julia, 35, 52, 53, 80,
167, 189Gillard Government
foreign policies, 28relationship with US, 42support for IBF, 212–13uranium export, 167See also Australia in the Asian
Century white paperGlobal Financial Crisis (2008),
128, 205Goh, Chok Tong, 72Goldring Report (1984), 148, 154–5
Golkar Party, 69Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity
Sphere, 15–16Guam Doctrine, 227Gulf Cooperation Countries
(GCC), 214Gunn, Geoffrey, 72Gusmão, Xanana, 76, 79, 81
Habibie, Dr B. J., 70–1, 73Hasluck, Paul, 21Hawke, Bob, 23, 35, 36Hawke-Keating Government, 5
bilateral relations with Vietnam, 23–4
reform of domestic economy, 131Hayden, Bill, 23higher education
Australian export sector, 155barriers to implementation, 161post-colonial era, 146–7private overseas, post-secondary
students (1976–84), 154tregional research frameworks,
159–60scholarships, 147–8visas granted, 156tSee also Asian languages;
international educationHigh-Level Task Force’s The
Angkor Agenda, 136Holt, Harold, 21Holt Government, 21, 28Howard, John, 26, 74Howard Government, 70,
73, 229AFTA support, 135, 136–7TAC (Treat of Amity and
Cooperation), 26–7US for security, 42
hydroelectricity, 195–6, 200
IA-CEPA, 137IBF. See Islamic Banking and
Finance (IBF)
Index 263
IMF, 228Inall, David, 191India, 16, 26, 171Indonesia
Bandung Conference, 18–19bilateral counterterrorism
projects, 97bilateral relations, 58, 78biofuels targets, 195civil nuclear energy, 171collaborative publications and
citations (2000–11), 159tComprehensive Economic
Partnership Agreement, 6development indicators, 146tEast Timor independence, 74forced migration programs,
118–21fossil fuel exports, 169–70higher education students in
Australia (1976–84), 154thigher education visas
granted, 156tindependence from colonial
rule, 16invasion of East Timor, 69, 70knowledge indices (2012),
158tkonfrontasi policies, 20, 91live cattle imports, 191middle class, 148MoUs, 95–7Operation Clean Sweep, 71R&D performance by
sector, 157treformasi (reforms), 70State Intelligence Agency
(BAKIN), 69Timor-Leste for ASEAN
membership, 77–8Indonesia-Australia Comprehensive
Economic Partnership Agreement (IA-CEPA), 137
Indonesia-Australia Specialised Training Program, 153
Indonesian language programs, 150–1
Industry Policy Statement of 1991, 131
Inquiry into Australia’s relationship with ASEAN, 195
Intercultural Studies Project, 149INTERFET, 7, 13, 73–4INTERFET Trust Fund, 74Intergovernmental Asia-Pacific
Consultation on Refugees, Displaced Persons and Migrants (APC), 119
internally displaced people, 108, 109–10
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), 171, 179
International Court of Justice, 80international education, 147–8,
153–6International Energy Agency (IEA)
Redrawing the Every-Climate Map 2013, 170
Southeast Asia Energy Outlook, 169, 170
International Finance Corporation (IFC), 211
International Force for East Timor (INTERFET), 7, 13, 73–4
International Monetary Fund (IMF), 228
International Organization for Migration (IOM), 118, 119
international refugee law, Asia’s rejection of, 113
International Science, Technology and Innovation Centre for South-South Co-Operation, 160
International Stabilisation Force, 81international students, 148, 153–6Inter-Sessional Meeting on Counter-
Terrorism and Transnational Crime (ISM on CT-TC), 97
Iran, 109
264 Index
irrigation and water technologies, 193, 200
Iskan Finance, 211Islamic Asset Management, 206Islamic banking, cultural sensitivity
regarding, 9Islamic Banking and Finance (IBF),
205–10, 231Australia as growth market,
210–13mortgage market, 211–12murabaha contracts, 214tax and legal constraints, 212–17See also sukuk (Islamic bonds)
Islamic banking laws. See sharia (Islamic) banking laws
Islamic Capital Markets, 206, 211Islamic Cooperative Finance
Australia (ICFA), 211Islamic Development Bank
(IDB), 210Islamic Financial Institutions
(IFIs), 205Islamic jurisprudence. See fiqh
(Islamic jurisprudence)ISM on CT-TC, 97
Jackson Report, 154–5Jakarta Centre for Law
Enforcement Cooperation (JCLEC), 97
Japan, 15, 26bilateral FTAs, 2, 138East Timor peacekeeping, 74relations with Southeast
Asia, 225Jayasuriya, Kanishka, 160Jemaah Islamiyah, 90–2Johnson Report, 205, 217Joint Committee on Foreign Affairs’
Report on Australia’s Foreign Aid, 151
Joint Declaration for the Cooperation to Combat International Terrorism, 88
Joint Declaration on the ASEAN-Australia Comprehensive Partnership (2007), 56
Jones, Phillip, 149Joyce, Barnaby, 190
Kampuchea. See CambodiaKeating, Paul, 25, 36, 41–2, 228, 230Khazanah Nasional, 211Khoman, Thanat, 20Kissinger, Henry, 69Knowledge Economy Index (KEI),
Knowledge Index (KI), and Related Indices in Selected Countries 2012, 158t
Koh, Tommy, 38Korea. See Republic of Korea
(ROK)Kotelawala, Sir John, 17, 18Kuala Lumpur Declaration on the
East Asia Summit 2005, 51Kuwait Finance House (KFH), 211
Labor Governments. See also Gillard Government; Hawke-Keating Government; Rudd Government; Whitlam Government
Labor Party, 19, 22, 70La’o Hamutuk, 77Laos, 16, 26, 196Latham, Mark, 26LaTrobe University, 150Laurel, Jose P., 15, 16, 19Learning Assistance program for
Islamic Schools, 152Lee, Kuan Yew, 42Legislative Council (Victoria), 214Liberal Coalition Governments.
See Abbott Government; Howard Government
Liberal Governments. See Fraser Government; Holt Government; Menzies Government
Index 265
Lini, Walter, 72, 75Lombok Treaty (2006), 118
madhhabs, 207madrassahs, 152–3Malaysia
bilateral agreements, 6biofuels targets, 195collaborative publications and
citations 2000–11, 159tdevelopment indicators, 146tEast Timor peacekeeping, 73–4food production practices, 193fossil fuel exports, 170higher education students in
Australia (1976–84), 154thigher education visas
granted, 156tIBF investments and growth,
206, 210independence from colonial
rule, 16knowledge indices (2012), 158tmiddle class, 148nuclear energy, 173, 175Pilgrims Administration Fund
(Tabung Haji), 206, 210R&D performance by
sector, 157tregional clash with Australia, 228See also Mohamad, Mahathir
Malaysia-Australia Free Trade Agreement (MAFTA), 137
Malaysia-Philippines territorial dispute, 20
Management and Care of Irregular Immigrants Project (MCIIP), 118
Manila Process, 119Maphilindo, 20Marriott Hotel bombing, 96McDougall, Derek, 98Measure against Terrorist
Financing and Prevention of Terrorism, 95
MEDSEA, 4, 129Mekong Delta, 9Mekong River Commission (MRC),
196Melanesian Spearhead Group, 76Mello, Sergio Vieira de, 115Menzies, Robert, 3, 18Menzies Government, 17, 18, 19Merrifield, Simon, 56, 57middle class. See Asian middle classmigration, 148. See also forced
migrationMilner, Anthony, 14, 42, 56, 57, 58, 74Ministerial Conference for
Economic Development of Southeast Asia (MEDSEA), 4, 129
Ministerial Meeting on Transnational Crime, 99
Mit Ghamr banking experiment, 210Mohamad, Mahathir, 24–5, 42,
50, 73–4, 226, 228. See also East Asia Economic Caucus (EAEC)
Monash Malaysia, 155Monetary Authority of Singapore
(MAS), 206Moody’s, 210Mountbatten, Louis Lord, 4mudaraba, foreign-backed, 211murabaha contracts, 214Muslim Community Cooperative of
Australia (MCCA), 211Mutual Legal Assistance in
Criminal Matters, Agreement on (2004), 88
Mutual Recognition Agreements (MRAs), 199
Myanmar, 26, 109, 111, 170, 193Myer Foundation, 150
NAFTA, 24, 35, 133National Australia Bank’s (NAB)
Qard Hasan No Interest Loan Scheme, 211
266 Index
National Council of Timorese Resistance (CNRT), 75
National Credit Core (NCC), 214National Food Plan, 190National Health and Medical
Research Council Grants, 160
The National Interest (1997), 93NATO, 18natural disaster management, 53,
176–7natural disasters
aid packages, 152impact on displacement of
population, 109Nauru, 117–18Nawasawat, Thamrong, 17Nehru, Jawaharlal, 16, 18, 19, 227New Colombo Plan, 53, 151, 156New Zealand. See AANZFTA;
ANZUS Treaty; CERNewly Industrializing Economies
(NIEs), 130Nguyen, Tan Dung, 53Nobel Peace Prize winners, 69Non-Aligned Movement, 72North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA), 24, 35, 133
North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), 18
Nu, U, 17, 18nuclear energy, 168, 170–3, 180
challenges, 177–9disaster management, 176economic interests, 173–4nontraditional security
concerns, 175–7political-security considerations,
174–5Nuclear Supplier’s Group, 179
O’Neil, Andrew, 55OPEC petroleum cartel, 191open regionalism, 35
Operation Lotus, 69Organisation for Rice Exporting
Countries, 191Organisation of Islamic Conference
(OIC), 210Our Place in the Asian Century:
Southeast Asia as “The Third Way,” 190
Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC), 226, 228, 229
Pacific Island Development Forum (PIDF), 76
Pacific Islands Forum (PIF), 67, 75Pacific Solution, 117–19Pakistan, 26, 109Papua New Guinea (PNG), 117Paris Agreement (1991), 229Pathet Lao, 17peacekeeping missions, 7, 13, 73–4Peacock, Andrew, 23PECC, 226, 228, 229people smuggling forums, 8,
80, 118Pereira, Agio, 79Philippines
biofuels targets, 195collaborative publications and
citations 2000–11, 159tdevelopment indicators, 146tEast Timor peacekeeping, 73higher education students in
Australia (1976–84), 154thigher education visas
granted, 156tknowledge indices (2012), 158tR&D performance by
sector, 157tterritorial disputes, 20
PIDF, 76PIF, 67, 75Pilgrims Administration Fund
(Tabung Haji), 210Pires, Mario Lemos, 68
Index 267
Pitsuwan, Surin, 73Plan of Action (2008–2013), 56,
99–100Political and Security Community, 6Portugal, 68, 71, 78Post Ministerial Conferences
(PMC)+1, 56Preston, Christopher, 194Public Private Partnerships, 196
Qard Hasan No Interest Loan Scheme, 211
Quayle, Dan, 25Quran, 207, 208
Rahman, Tengku Abdul, 20Ramadan, Tariq, 207Ramos-Horta, José, 69, 70,
72, 75, 77Ravenhill, John, 88, 93RCA, 118RCEP, 40, 52, 197, 198RCF, 8, 108, 119–21, 231Red Cross, 196Redrawing the Every-Climate Map
2013 report, 170Refugee Convention. See
Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (Refugee Convention)
refugee protection. See Comprehensive Plan of Action (CPA)
refugees, 108, 109, 110, 114, 116, 121
Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), 40, 52, 197, 198
Regional Cooperation Arrangement (RCA), 118
Regional Cooperation Framework (RCF), 8, 108, 119–21, 231
religious ideals of peaceful diplomatic relations, 17–18
renewable energy, 173–4
Republic of Korea (ROK), 2, 21, 26, 171, 225
research and development in ASEAN countries, 156–9
knowledge indices (2012), 158tR&D performance by
sector, 157tresearcher mobility programs, 160
Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor (FRETILIN), 68
riba (bank interest), 208–9Ripoll, Bernie, 212, 213RMIT Vietnam, 155Rodan, Garry, 55Royal Society, 159RSPCA, 191Rudd, Kevin, 27, 34, 37–9, 52–3,
54–5, 140, 229Rudd Government
credit for EAS, 35–6ties with Indonesia, 58US security, 42
Russia, 5, 26, 36, 38
SAFTA, 136–7Salic, 211Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS)
requirements, 200Sastroamidjojo, Ali, 18SEANWFZ Treaty, 175SEATO, 3–4, 18–19, 228security, 89, 93Severino, Rodolfo, 20sharia (Islamic) banking laws,
206, 207Sherry, Nick, 212Singapore, 16
bilateral agreements, 6, 136–7East Timor peacekeeping, 73Fourth ASEAN Summit
1992, 134IBF investments and growth, 206Internal Security Department
(ISD), 92
268 Index
Singapore—ContinuedR&D spending, 158Rudd’s disconnect with
ASEAN, 38Timor-Leste’s ASEAN
membership, 78Singapore-Australia Free Trade
Agreement (SAFTA), 136–7Singh, Bilveer, 92Smith, Stephen, 37solar energy, 173–4South China Sea disputes, 58, 161South Pacific Forum, 75Southeast Asia
Australia–US alliance, 231–2coconut husk-charcoal
exports, 176–7economic growth rate, 169higher education in post-colonial
era, 146–7independence from colonial
rule, 16R&D performance by
sector, 157tterrorism threats, 91–4, 96
Southeast Asia Energy Outlook report, 169
Southeast Asia League, 17Southeast Asia Nuclear Weapon-
Free Zone (SEANWFZ) Treaty, 175
South-East Asia Treaty Organisation (SEATO), 3–4, 18–19, 228
Southeast Asia Working Group of the Global Counterterrorism Forum (2012), 97
Southeast Asian Friendship and Economic Treaty, 20
Southeast Asian tsunami, 109SPA-FS, 187, 188Sri Lanka’s affinity with Southeast
Asia region, 17–18St Petersburg Declaration, 173stamp duty, 213–14
Strategic Plan of Action on Food Security (SPA-FS), 187, 188
Suharto, General, 24, 54, 69, 70, 91Sukarno, President, 69sukuk (Islamic bonds), 206, 211,
214–17structure of, 215f
Sunarso, Colonel, 68–9Sundram, Pushpanatham, 198Sydney University’s Intercultural
Studies Project, 149
Tabung Haji, 206, 210TAC, 5, 15, 25–7TAFTA, 137Taiwan, 21The Talibanization of Southeast
Asia (Singh), 92Tao, Song, 195Tax Institute of Australia
(TIA), 213Taylor, Brendan, 57, 58Technical and Vocational Education
and Training (TVET), 53Tentara Nasional Indonesia
(TNI), 71terrorism, 90–7. See also
counterterrorism; transnational terrorism
terrorist attacks9/11, 94–6Australian Embassy
(Indonesia), 96Australian High Commission
(Singapore), 91Bali bombings, 87, 89–90, 96
Thailand, 16bilateral agreements, 6biofuels targets, 195civil nuclear energy, 171collaborative publications and
citations (2000–11), 159tcommunist movements, 17development indicators, 146tEast Timor peacekeeping, 73
Index 269
higher education students in Australia (1976–84), 154t
higher education visas granted, 156t
INTERFET involvement, 74knowledge indices (2012), 158tmiddle class, 148MoUs, 97nuclear energy socialization
programs, 172R&D performance by
sector, 157tThailand-Australia Free Trade
Agreement (TAFTA), 137Thakur, Ramesh, 43third countries of resettlement, 115Thomson Reuters Islamic Finance
Indicator Report (2013), 206, 212
Timorese Democratic People’s Association (APODETI), 68
Timorese Democratic Union (UDT), 68
Timorese Social Democratic Association (ASDT), 68
Timor-LesteASEAN
benefits of membership, 76–8observer nation to ASEAN
2002, 76pro-ASEAN stance, 75–6
bilateral relations, 78, 82cultural and political affinities,
74–5diplomatic missions, 78foreign policy approaches, 67multilateral commitments, 81–2peacekeeping intervention, 7, 13,
73–4relationship with China, 80–1Special Observer of the
PIF 2002, 75tensions with Australia, 79–80
Timor-Leste Police Development Program, 79
Tjan, Harry, 69TNI, 71Tokyo Electric Power
Company, 168Towle, Richard, 116TPP, 52, 140, 197trade blocs, 24, 35, 133–7, 197trade liberalization, 24trade protectionism, 23, 131Trans ASEAN Gas Pipeline
Project, 170Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), 52,
140, 197transnational terrorism, 90–4, 96
religious, 92–4security cooperation approaches,
93–4Transnational Terrorism: The
Threat to Australia (2004), 90, 96
Treaty of Amity and Cooperation (TAC), 5, 15, 25–7
Treaty on Certain Maritime Arrangements in the Timor Sea (CMATS), 79
UDT, 68UN Conference on Sustainable
Development, 76UN Counter-Terrorism
Committee, 96United Nations, 70, 229
INTERFET, 7, 13, 73, 74United Nations Charter’s Articles
2(4) and 51, 94United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), 160
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), 108, 112, 117, 119
United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC), 13, 24
270 Index
United States9/11 attacks, 94–6APC (Asia Pacific
Community), 40ASEAN ambassador, 56ASEAN perspective, 115bilateral negotiations for nuclear
exports, 174–5China rivalry, 1, 58EAS membership, 5, 36, 38
United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), 158
University Mobility in Asia and Pacific, 160
UNTAC, 13, 24uranium exports, 167, 173, 177,
178–9. See also nuclear energy
Varghese, Peter, 50, 52, 57Victorian Legislative Assembly, 214Victorian Tax Act, 214Vientiane Action Programme 2004,
139, 140, 187Vietnam, 26, 133
civil nuclear energy, 171, 174–5collaborative publications and
citations 2000–11, 159tdevelopment indicators, 146tfood production practices, 193growing middle class, 148higher education students in
Australia (1976–84), 154thigher education visas granted,
156thydropower dams, 196independence from colonial
rule, 16knowledge indices (2012), 158tnuclear energy socialization
program, 172R&D performance by
sector, 157t
refugees from Vietnam War, 114relations with ASEAN states, 115
Vietnam Mekong Delta study, 196Vietnamese Agency for Radiation
and Nuclear Safety, 172
Weatherbee, Donald, 20, 89Wen, Jiabao, 51West Papua, 75Westpac’s Islamic Commodity
Trading Facility, 211White, Hugh, 39White Australia Policy, 153white papers, 199
Agricultural Competitiveness (2014), 190
Australia in the Asian Century (2012), 2, 34, 41, 52, 140, 146, 179, 205, 217
The National Interest (1997), 93
Transnational Terrorism: The Threat to Australia (2004), 90, 96
Whitlam, Gough, 4–5, 22, 50Whitlam Government, 23, 28,
69, 227. See also Asian and Pacific Forum (APF)
foreign policy reforms, 22–3, 128–9
relationship with Southeast Asia, 4–5, 54
Woodside Petroleum, 79Woolcott, Richard, 24, 37World Bank Group, 211World Food Security, 186–7
Yudhoyono, Susilo Bambang, 79
Zone of Peace, Freedom and Neutrality (ZOPFAN), 5. See also Treaty of Amity and Cooperation (TAC)