Strangers Next Door?: Indonesia and Australia in the Asian Century

دانلود کتاب Strangers Next Door?: Indonesia and Australia in the Asian Century

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کتاب غریبه های همسایه؟: اندونزی و استرالیا در قرن آسیایی نسخه زبان اصلی

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Strangers Next Door?: Indonesia and Australia in the Asian Century

نام کتاب : Strangers Next Door?: Indonesia and Australia in the Asian Century
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : غریبه های همسایه؟: اندونزی و استرالیا در قرن آسیایی
سری :
نویسندگان : ,
ناشر : Hart Publishing
سال نشر : 2018
تعداد صفحات : 567
ISBN (شابک) : 9781509918164 , 9781509918188
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 6 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


Preface\nContents\nNotes on Contributors\n1. Strangers Next Door?\n Future Prospects\n Conclusion\n2. A Rising Regional Neighbour of Increasing Importance\n Indonesia in a Changing Asia\n Economic Development and Trade\n Security and Diplomatic Relations\n People-to-People Relations\n Conclusion\n3. Perceptions and the Capacity to Persuade\n Australia’s Diplomatic Challenge\n And Now to Indonesia\n The Power of Perceptions\n Soft Power\n What Now?\n Conclusion\n4. President Joko Widodo’s Foreign Policy: Implications for Indonesia-Australia Relations\n Close Historical Ties\n Before Widodo: ‘Australia’s Best Friend’ Yudhoyono\n President Widodo: High Hopes and Reality\n Conclusion\n5. Ignorant and Ill-disposed?: Opinion Polling and Attitudes to the other between Australia and Indonesia\n The Evolution of Public Opinion Polling on Indonesia\n Attitudes to Indonesia\n Knowledge of Indonesia\n Is Australian Ignorance Wilful?\n ‘Australians Know Little about Indonesia and Consequently Have Negative Attitudes’\n Conclusion\n6. Through a Glass, Darkly: Bali, Bad News and Australia-Indonesia Relations\n Bad News from Bali\n Michelle Lesley\n The Second Bali Bombing\n A Dangerous Destination?\n Zero Tolerance or Harm Reduction?\n The Weight of Numbers\n Conclusion: Bali, Crime and the Bilateral Relationship\n7. Prospects for the Australia-Indonesia Defence Relationship\n A Transformation in Australian Strategic Thinking\n Positive and Negative Factors in the Relationship\n More than You Might Think: Recent Defence Cooperation\n The Agenda for Future Defence Cooperation\n Will any of this Really Happen?\n8. Big Fears about Small Boats: How Asylum Seekers Keep Upsetting the Indonesia-Australia Relationship\n The Howard Years: Megaphone Diplomacy and Cartoon Wars\n Labor Governments in Search of ‘Solutions’\n The Abbott Regime: Hitting Rock Bottom\n Conclusion\n9. Islam in Australia-Indonesia Relations: Fear, Stereotypes and Opportunity\n Historical Attitudes to Indonesian Islam\n Terrorism and the Reframing of Islam as a Threat\n Moderate Friends, Radical Enemies\n Moderating Aid\n Conclusion\n10. Indonesia, Australia and ASEAN\n Indonesia, ASEAN and Australia\n The ASEAN Way\n The ASEAN Way and Myanmar\n The ASEAN Way and the South China Sea\n Conclusion\n11. On the Periphery: Human Rights, Australia and Indonesia\n Setting the Stage: Human Rights in the Early Years of the Bilateral Relationship\n National Interests and Sovereignty: Human Rights under Indonesia’s New Order\n A Place for Human Rights? Challenges after East Timor\n Moving Forward?\n12. A Common Enemy: Police Cooperation between Australia and Indonesia\n Identity Clash\n The Police Union\n Terror Hits Home\n The Golden Era\n Breach of Trust\n New Opportunities, New Challenges\n Bureaucratic Subcultures\n13. Successful Justice Sector Collaboration: A Prerequisite for a Healthy Australia-Indonesia Relationship\n An Overview of the Bilateral Relationship\n Bilateral Relations in the Yudhoyono Era\n Justice Sector Collaboration between Indonesia and Australia\n Justice Sector Cooperation: AIPJ\n Conclusion\n14. Papua as a Multilateral Issue for Indonesia and Australia\n Papuan International Activism in Australia\n Papuan Diplomacy in the Pacific\n Conclusion\n15. Indonesia and Australia: Ties that Rarely Bind\n The Importance of Being Earnest\n Is Indonesia Punching Below its Weight—Or Above It?\n The Economic Ties that Should Bind\n The Agenda Ahead\n Conclusion\n16. Our Man in Indonesia\n Bombs, Beef, Bali, Boats\n New Technology, New Techniques\n Asylum Seekers\n Bali\n Chan and Sukumaran\n Lessons for Journalists\n17. Beyond Cultural Diplomacy: The Artistic Nuance in Australia-Indonesia Relations\n Australian Cultural Engagement in the Asian Century\n Indonesian Arts in the Post-New Order Era\n Shifting Perceptions\n Soft Diplomacy\n Other Significant Programs\n Indonesia’s Engagement with Australia: An Australian Cultural Centre?\n Conclusion\n18. Inside Indonesia: Taking on Australia’s Disinterest, Ignorance and Isolationism\n Origins\n Observing and Reporting Indonesia from Australia, 1974–1983\n Working Outside the Mainstream Media\n Unlocking the Potential of Australia’s Indonesia Expertise\n Content and Form\n People and Processes\n On Australia-Indonesia Relations: Issues and People\n Transitions\n Post-New Order, Independent East Timor and a Changing of the Guard\n The New Online Order\n Conclusion\n19. Friendship, Partnership, Action: Women and the Bilateral Relationship\n Phase One, WWII–1950: Initial Contacts\n Phase Two, 1950–1966: Building Nationhood\n Phase Three, 1970–1980s: Developing Indonesia: Developing Knowledge\n Phase Four, 1990–1998: Making Commitments Through Funding and Linkages\n Phase Five, 1998–2015: Partnership\n Phase 6, 2016—From Now On\n20. Language, Learning, and Living Together: Education as a Bilateral Barometer\n A Turbulent History\n Introducing Indonesian Language\n Indonesian’s Boom and Bust\n Education’s Place in Bilateral Relations\n The Politics of Studying Abroad\n Recent Australian Government Policy\n ‘Linguistic Diplomacy’?\n Conclusion\n21. Enhancing the Bond: Narratives of Indonesian Academics from Two Continents\n Narratives from Indonesia: Herb Feith and the UGM Story\n Alumni Engagement: Multiplying and Rebalancing Educational Ties\n Narrative from Down Under: The Flinders-UGM Story\n Personal Roles and Narratives\n Conclusion\n22. The Unexamined Gift: Australia’s Aid Relationship with Indonesia\n Australia’s Aid to Indonesia in Context\n Tiger, Terrapin, Terror: Aid Through Australian Eyes\n Cops, Carbon, Cattle: Aid Through Indonesian Eyes\n The Extravagant Gesture\n What goes up must Come Down: The Inevitable Correction\n Examining the Gift: Where to Next?\n Conclusion\n23. Economic Policy in the Australia-Indonesia Relationship: Unbound Potential, Everlasting Anticlimax\n Statistical Snapshot\n Framing the Challenge\n Opportunities and Challenges of the Indonesian Economy\n Policy Uncertainty: A Two-way Street?\n Economic Reform à la Widodo\n State of Play in the Bilateral Economic Relationship in 2017\n But What Can Be Done?\n Bilateral Economic Ties: Towards a More Informed Discourse\n Conclusion\n24. A Business Perspective\n25. Young and Connected: How Youth Programs and Organisations Build Links between Australia and Indonesia\n Public Diplomacy, Public Perceptions and the Importance of Youth Links between the People of Australia and Indonesia\n Youth: An Important Group in Building People-to-People Ties\n Understanding How Youth Organisations and Programs Facilitate People-to-People Links\n Eight Prominent Youth-led and Youth-focused Organisations and Programs\n Four Criteria for Assessing People-to-People Initiatives\n Conclusion\nTerminology\nGlossary, Acronyms and Abbreviations\nIndex




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