Monday 14 April 2014

Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies



The Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) is a division of Johns Hopkins University based in Washington, D.C., United States, with campuses in Bologna, Italy and Nanjing, China. It is generally considered the top graduate school for international relations in the world. The institution is devoted to the study of international affairs, economics, diplomacy, and policy research and education.

The school is regarded as a major center of political debate as it served as a base for a number of prominent political scientists and economists. Among them are political economy scholar Francis Fukuyama; former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski and military historian and former Counselor of the U.S. Department of State Eliot Cohen. Its students are selected from a large pool of applicants from all parts of the world.

The SAIS main campus is located on Massachusetts Avenue's Embassy Row, just off Dupont Circle and across from the Brookings Institution and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and next to the Center for Global Development and the Peterson Institute.

History
SAIS was founded in 1943 by Paul H. Nitze and Christian Herter and became part of The Johns Hopkins University in 1950. The school was established during World War II by a group of statesmen who sought new methods of preparing men and women to cope with the international responsibilities that would be thrust upon the United States in the postwar world.

The founders assembled a faculty of scholars and professionals (often borrowed from other universities) to teach international relations, international economics, and foreign languages to a small group of students. The curriculum was designed to be both scholarly and practical. The natural choice for the location of the school was Washington, D.C., a city where international resources are abundant and where American foreign policy is shaped and set in motion. When the school opened in 1944, 15 students were enrolled.

In 1955, the school created the Bologna Center in Italy, the first full-time graduate school located in Europe under an American higher-education system. By 1963, SAIS outgrew its first quarters on Florida Avenue and moved to one of its present buildings on Massachusetts Avenue. In 1986, the Hopkins-Nanjing Center was created in Nanjing, China, completing the school's global presence.

Organization and Academic Programs
SAIS is a global school with campuses in three continents. It has nearly 600 full-time students in Washington, D.C., 190 full-time students in Bologna, Italy and about 160 full-time students in Nanjing, China. Of these, 60% come from the United States and 37% from more than 70 other countries. Around 50% are women and 22% are from U.S. minority groups. The SAIS Bologna Center is the only full-time international relations graduate program in Europe that operates under an American higher-education system, and the Hopkins-Nanjing Center, which teaches courses in both Chinese and English, is jointly administered by SAIS and Nanjing University.

SAIS offers multi-disciplinary instruction leading to the degrees of Master of Arts, Master of International Public Policy (MIPP, a mid-career full-time degree), and Doctor of Philosophy. Approximately 300 students graduate from SAIS Washington, D.C. campus each year from the 2-year Master of Arts program in International Relations and International Economics. Unlike most other international affairs graduate schools that offer professional Master degrees, SAIS requires its Master of Arts candidates to fulfill the International Economics program along with their chosen functional or regional concentration; to complete a foreign language proficiency examination; and in lieu of a customary Master thesis, to pass a 1-hour capstone oral examination synthesizing and integrating knowledge from the student's regional or functional concentration and International Economics. The Oral Examination and International Economics requirements of the SAIS Master of Arts curriculum have been the signature aspects of the school's education.

Courses are taught in 20 programs, including International Economics, International Relations (IR/Conflict Management, IR/Energy, Resources and Environment, IR/Global Theory & History, IR/International Law and Organizations, IR/Strategic Studies), International Development, African Studies, American Foreign Policy, Asian Studies (Asia/China Studies, Asia/Japan Studies, Asia/Korea Studies, Asia/Southeast Asia Studies, Asia/South Asia Studies), European Studies, Middle East Studies, Russia & Eurasia Studies, Western Hemisphere Studies (Western Hemisphere/Canada Studies, Western Hemisphere/Latin America Studies), and 15 foreign languages.

SAIS also maintains formal joint-degree programs with the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania, the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College, INSEAD, the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, Columbia Law School, Stanford Law School, University of Virginia School of Law, Nanjing University, and the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University.

Reputation
A study conducted by the Institute for the Theory and Practice of International Relations[1] at the College of William & Mary examined graduate international relations programs throughout the United States, interviewing over 1,000 professionals in the field, with the results subsequently published in the November/December 2005 issue of Foreign Policy magazine. One of study's questions asked: "What do you consider the top five terminal masters programs in international relations for students looking to pursue a policy career?" From the study, 65% of respondents named Johns Hopkins University-SAIS as being the top-ranked program. SAIS received the most votes, followed by Georgetown University (Walsh), Harvard University (Kennedy), Tufts University (Fletcher), and Columbia University (SIPA). In 2007, Foreign Policy magazine produced the same study, and while SAIS remained one of the top-ranked programs, it moved to second position as Georgetown (Walsh) received the most votes.

Since 1990, SAIS and the Fletcher School have been the only non-law schools in the United States to participate in the prestigious Philip C. Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition. Competing against full-time law students, SAIS generalists have performed very well. SAIS has twice placed second overall out of 12 schools and advanced to the "final four" in its region. In head-to-head competitions, SAIS has defeated law schools such as Georgetown University, the University of Virginia, and the University of Maryland.

SAIS students have also demonstrated their versatility by successfully competing in the Sustainable Innovation Summit Challenge hosted by the Thunderbird School of Global Management in Glendale, Arizona. Two different SAIS teams won first place in both 2007 and 2008, besting teams of MBA students from some of the world's top business schools.

A joint team from SAIS and the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business received second place in the first "Global Challenge" competition, a first-of-its-kind competition that challenged teams of MBA and other graduate students to develop a public-private venture to support development and the tourism industry in Asia. The competition was organized in 2010 by the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).

Annual Theme
Since 2005, SAIS has dedicated a substantive theme for each academic year in order to encourage its students, faculty, academic programs, policy centers, and alumni to examine the role of the particular theme within international affairs. These specific themes provide opportunities for the school to review scholarship and exchange views through special lectures, conferences, and guest speakers. The annual themes also allow SAIS to enhance its fundraising with high-profile public events such as the lecture delivered by then Vice President of BP, Nick Butler, during "The Year of Energy at SAIS" in 2005.

2005/2006 - Year of Energy
2006/2007 - Year of China
2007/2008 - Year of Elections and Foreign Policy
2008/2009 - Year of Water
2009/2010 - Year of Religion
2010/2011 - Year of Demography
2011/2012 - Year of Agriculture

Research Centers
JHU Foreign Policy Institute
Bologna Institute for Policy Research (Italy)
Center for Canadian Studies
Central Asia-Caucasus Institute
Silk Road Studies Program
Center For Constitutional Studies And Democratic Development (Italy)
Center for Displacement Studies
Center for International Business and Public Policy
Center for Strategic Education
Center for Transatlantic Relations
Center on Politics and Foreign Relations
Cultural Conversations
Hopkins-Nanjing Research Center (China)
Grassroots China Initiative
Institute for International Research (China)
International Energy, Resources and Environment Program (ERE)
International Reporting Project
Philip Merrill Center for Strategic Studies
The Protection Project
Edwin O. Reischauer Center for East Asian Studies
Bernard L. Schwartz Forum on Constructive Capitalism
SME Institute
Swiss Foundation for World Affairs
U.S.-Korea Institute at SAIS
Global Energy and Environment Initiative
Global Health and Foreign Policy Initiative

Publications
In addition to the different books and periodicals edited by SAIS programs or research centers, several school-wide publications are to be mentioned:

38 North is a popular blog maintained by the U.S.-Korea Institute about North Korean affairs.
SAIS Review, founded in 1956, journal dedicated to advancing the debate on leading contemporary issues of world affairs.
SAIS Observer is a student-written, student-run newspaper.Founded in 2002, it is the official student newspaper of the global SAIS community.
SAISphere, published annually, features articles about current issues in international affairs, alumni class notes, as well as happenings at the school's campuses.
SAIS Reports, a newsletter published bimonthly from September through May, highlights new faculty, research institutes, academic programs, student and alumni accomplishments as well as major events at the school.
Bologna Center Journal of International Affairs, published annually and founded in 1994, is a student-run journal focused on scholarly contributions to international relations.
Centerpiece, Nanjing Center's alumni newsletter.
Guide To Experts in International Affairs, published every two years.
Working Paper Series, managed by the PhD students.

Notable Alumini
SAIS has over 15,000 alumni working in approximately 140 countries. Over 130 SAIS graduates have become Ambassadors throughout the world.

Madeleine Albright - Former U.S. Secretary of State (attended SAIS, but did not earn degree)
Mahamat Ali Adoum - Former Foreign Affairs minister, Chad's Ambassador to the United Nations
Peter F. Allgeier - former Deputy U.S. Trade Representative and former acting U.S. Trade Representative
Cresencio S. Arcos - Former U.S. Ambassador to Honduras, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement, and former Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for International Affairs
Nancy Birdsall - Founding President of the Center for Global Development in Washington, D.C.
Robert O. Blake, Jr. - Former U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the Maldives and nominated to be U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs Department of State
Wolf Blitzer - CNN news anchor
Adam Boulton - Sky News political editor
Jeremy Bowen - BBC journalist and presenter
Gayleatha B. Brown - Former U.S. Ambassador to Benin and current Ambassador designee to Burkina Faso
R. Nicholas Burns - Former U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, former U.S. Ambassador to NATO and Greece
Rocco Antonio Cangelosi - Italian Diplomat, Diplomatic Advisor to the President of the Italian Republic
James Cason - Former U.S. Ambassador to Paraguay
Herman Jay Cohen - U.S. diplomat, former Ambassador to various countries in Africa
Jean-Maurice Dehousse - Former Belgian Minister-President of the Wallonia region, Former Mayor of Liege
John Caspar Dreier - Former U.S. Ambassador to the Organization of American States
Hermann Eilts - Former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia and Egypt, worked with Egyptian President Anwar el-Sadat throughout the Camp David Accords
Jessica Einhorn -former Dean of SAIS, member of the Board of Directors of Time Warner, former Director of the Council on Foreign Relations, and a former Managing Director of the World Bank
Ángeles Espinosa - Senior Middle-East Correspondent of El País
Peter A. Flaherty - Director Emeritus of McKinsey & Company
Robert Stephen Ford - Former U.S. Ambassador to Algeria
Pamela P. Flaherty - President and CEO of Citigroup Foundation and Chair of the Johns Hopkins University Board of Trustees
Alan H. Fleischmann - Co-Founder of ImagineNations Group and Senior Counselor and director of Albright Stonebridge Group
Jeffrey Garten - Former U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade, and former Dean of the Yale School of Management
Timothy F. Geithner - U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, former President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Gabriel Guerra-Mondragón - Former U.S. Ambassador to Chile
April Glaspie - American diplomat, first woman to be appointed U.S. Ambassador to an Arab country, best known as the U.S. Ambassador to Iraq in the run-up to the 1991 Gulf War
Geir H. Haarde - Former Prime Minister of Iceland
John J. Hamre - President and CEO of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), former U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense
Lawrence Hatheway - Chief Economist of UBS Investment Bank
John E. Herbst - Former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine and Uzbekistan, current Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization as a career member of the Senior Foreign Service[17]
James Howard Holmes - Former U.S. Ambassador to Latvia
Devinda Subasinghe - Former Sri Lankan Ambassador to the United States
Hans Hoogervorst - Netherlands former Minister of Public Health, former Minister of Finance
Tracey Ann Jacobson - Former U.S. Ambassador to Turkmenistan and Tajikistan
Angela Kane - U.N. Undersecretary General for Management
Malcolm Kerr - American University of Beirut President and Academic, assassinated
Bert Koenders - Dutch Minister of Development Cooperation, Member of the House of Representatives of the Netherlands
Ellen Laipson - President of the Stimson Center
Frank Lavin - U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade, former U.S. Ambassador to Singapore
Jim Leach - Chairman of National Endowment for the Humanities, former U.S. Representative from Iowa, former Chair of U.S. House of Representatives Banking & Financial Institutions Committee, former faculty and trustee at Princeton University
Lee Tae-sik - Former Republic of Korea's Ambassador to the United States
Samuel W. Lewis - Former U.S. Ambassador to Israel and U.S. Ambassador at the Camp David Accord talks in 1978
Baodong Li - Permanent Representative of China to the United Nations
Dennis P. Lockhart - President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Peter Magowan - Former owner of the San Francisco Giants and former CEO of Safeway (attended SAIS, but did not earn degree)
Sir David Manning - British Ambassador to Israel (1995–1998), Foreign Policy Adviser to former British Prime Minister Tony Blair (2001–2003), British Ambassador to the United States (2003–2007)
Maurizio Massari - Italian Diplomat, former Head of the Policy Analysis and Planning Unit of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
John E. McLaughlin - Former Deputy Director of Central Intelligence
Christopher Meyer - British Ambassador to the United States during the Second Gulf War
Marcia Miller - Former Vice-Chair and Commissioner of the U.S. International Trade Commission
Federico Minoli - Former CEO of Ducati Motor Holding
Ana Belen Montes - Spy for Cuba working at the Defense Intelligence Agency and arrested in 2001
Loretta Napoleoni, best selling author of Terror Incorporated and Insurgent Iraq. She is an expert on financing of terrorism and advises several governments on counter-terrorism
Andreas Nick (Politiker), Member of German Parliament (Mitglied des Deutschen Bundestages), Germany
Pat O'Brien - Television personality
John E. Osborn - Former commissioner, U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy; affiliate faculty in law and international studies, University of Washington; senior executive with life sciences companies Cephalon and Onyx Pharmaceuticals
Claudio Pacifico - Italian diplomat, Italian Ambassador to Egypt
Ronald D. Palmer - Former U.S. Ambassador to Malaysia
Gerhard Pfanzelter - Secretary General of the CEI, Former Permanent Representative of Austria to the UN, Ambassador of Austria to Syria, Senegal, Gambia, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mali and Mauritania
Nicholas Platt - Former U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan, Philippines, and Zambia; former President of the Asia Society
Charles P. Ries - Current U.S. Minister for Economic Affairs and Coordinator for Economic Transition in Iraq, former U.S. Ambassador to Greece
Marcie Berman Ries - Former U.S. Ambassador to Albania
William A. Reinsch - Member of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, former President of the National Foreign Trade Council, former Under Secretary of Commerce for Export Administration
Arturo Sarukhán - Mexico's Ambassador to the United States
David Shear - U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam
Gabriel Silva Luján - Colombia's twice Ambassador to the United States, and Minister of Defence
Bandar bin Sultan - Saudi Arabia's former Ambassador to the United States
Cui Tiankai - People's Republic of China's Ambassador to the United States of America, former Vice Foreign Minister
Roberto Toscano - Italian diplomat, former Italian Ambassador to India, and Iran
Lousewies van der Laan - Former leader of Democrats 66 in the House of Representatives of the Netherlands
Michael G. Vickers - Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence, Department of Defense
Cassandra D. Waldon - Chief, External Communications Office, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
Jacob Walles - U.S. Ambassador to Tunisia
Wang Guangya - People's Republic of China's Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the United Nation
Clifton R. Wharton, Jr. - Former U.S. Deputy Secretary of State
Jody Williams - Nobel Peace Prize recipient for her leadership of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines
Tomicah Tillemann - Senior Advisor to the U.S. Secretary of State for Civil Society and Emerging Democracies (MA, Ph.D.)
Irving A. Williamson - Commissioner of the U.S. International Trade Commission
Lois Wolk - member of the California State Senate
Anne E. Derse - U.S. Ambassador to Lithuania, SAIS'81
Andrew C. Kuchins - Director and Senior Fellow, Russia and Eurasia Program, Center for Strategic & International Studies (MA, Ph.D.)

Past and Present Faculty
Fouad Ajami - Professor of Middle Eastern Studies
Lucius D. Battle - Former U.S. Ambassador to Egypt, Assistant Secretary of State for the Near East and Africa, and President, Middle East Institute; founded SAIS Foreign Policy Institute
Peter Bergen - CNN terrorism analyst and author of Holy War, Inc
Zbigniew Brzezinski - Former National Security Advisor to President Jimmy Carter
Edward B. Burling - Partner of the law firm Covington & Burling
David P. Calleo - Director of European Studies, author of Rethinking Europe's Future
Marco Cesa - Professor of International Relations
Rajiv Chandrasekaran - Associate Editor, The Washington Post; former SAIS journalist-in-residence for the International Reporting Project, author of Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq's Green Zone
Eliot A. Cohen - Professor of Strategic Studies, former Counselor of the U.S. Department of State, author of Military Misfortunes: The Anatomy of Failure in War and Supreme Command: Soldiers, Statesmen, and Leadership in Wartime
W. Max Corden - Trade economist, developed Dutch disease model.
Francis Deng - Former Representative of the UN Secretary-General on Internally Displaced Persons
Luis Ernesto Derbez - Mexican Minister of Finance and Foreign Affairs
David Dodge - Former governor of the Bank of Canada
Eric S. Edelman - Former U.S. Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, former U.S. Ambassador to Finland and Turkey, visiting scholar at the Philip Merrill Center for Strategic Studies and Distinguished Fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments
Jessica Einhorn - Current Dean of SAIS, member of the Board of Directors of Time Warner, former Director of the Council on Foreign Relations, and a former Managing Director of the World Bank
Francis Fukuyama - Professor of International Political Economy, Director of the SAIS International Development program, and author of The End of History and the Last Man
Grace Goodell - Professor of International Development
Jakub J. Grygiel - George H. W. Bush Assistant Professor of International Relations
Daniel Hamilton (scholar) - Director of the Center for Transatlantic Relations
Christian Herter - Former U.S. Secretary of State and Governor of Massachusetts
Josef Joffe - German journalist
Majid Khadduri - Professor of Islamic Law and Middle East specialist
Kenneth H. Keller - Current Director of the SAIS Bologna Center, former President of the University of Minnesota system
Pravin Krishna - Chung Ju Yung Professor of International Economics and Business
Anne O. Krueger - Professor of International Economics, former First Deputy Managing Director of the IMF and World Bank Chief Economist; former President, American Economic Association
David M. Lampton - George and Sadie Hyman Professor of China Studies, Director of the China Studies Program, and Dean of Faculty
Paul Linebarger - Former Professor of Asian Studies, best known as a science fiction author under the pseudonym Cordwainer Smith
Marisa Lino - Former Director of the SAIS Bologna Center, former U.S. Ambassador to Albania, and former Assistant Secretary for International Affairs at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Michael Mandelbaum - Professor of American Foreign Policy
Mohamed Mattar - Executive Director of The Protection Project
John E. McLaughlin - Former Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution
Robert H. Mundell - Nobel Prize in Economics laureate, 1999
Kendall Myers - Former U.S. Foreign Service Officer and SAIS part-time faculty member who was arrested in 2009 on charges of 30 years of espionage on behalf of Cuba
Azar Nafisi - Iranian-American academic and author of Reading Lolita in Tehran and "Things I've Been Silent About"
Paul H. Nitze - Drafter of NSC-68 creating the U.S. Cold War strategy of containment
Don Oberdorfer - Journalist, Korea expert
Robert E. Osgood - Third Dean of SAIS, former Director of the American Foreign Policy program and co-director of the Security Studies program, and former member of the U.S. Secretary of State's Policy Planning Council from 1983 to 1985.[21]
Henry Paulson - Former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Bernard Schwartz Forum on Constructive Capitalism
Riordan Roett - Professor of Latin American Studies
Carlo Maria Santoro - Former Professor of International Relations
Stephen M. Schwebel - Former Edward B. Burling Professor of International Law and Organization at SAIS and former Judge and President of the International Court of Justice, currently leading international arbitrator and counsel in Washington, D.C.
András Simonyi - Former Ambassador of Hungary to the United States
Robert Skidelsky - Economist, biographer of John Maynard Keynes
R. Jeffrey Smith - Former journalist-in-residence, Pulitzer Prize winner
Dorothy Sobol - Former Vice-president of Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Stephen Szabo - Former Professor of European Studies, current Head of the Transatlantic Academy at the German Marshall Fund
Shirin R. Tahir-Kheli - Former Research Professor, former Special Assistant to the President and National Security Council Senior Director for Democracy, Human Rights and International Operations
Nate Thayer (Visiting Scholar) - Investigative journalist who interviewed Pol Pot and Kang Kek Iew
Dale C. Thomson - Director of the Center of Canadian Studies, author, Secretary/Advisor to Canadian Prime Minister, Louis St. Laurent
Robert W. Tucker - Former Professor of American Foreign Policy, and co-author of The Imperial Temptation: The New World Order and America's Purpose
David Unger - Journalist, Member of the New York Times Editorial Board, author of The Emergency State: America's Pursuit of Absolute Security at All Costs
Ruth Wedgwood - Edward B. Burling Professor of International Law and Diplomacy, and Director of the Program in International Law and Organizations; U.S. member of the United Nations Human Rights Committee
Paul Wolfowitz - Former President of the World Bank, former U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense, former Dean of SAIS
I. William Zartman - Former Professor and Director of the SAIS Conflict Management program
Alejandro Toledo (Visiting Scholar) - Former President of Peru.

E-Resource Centre Opening

E-book ေပါင္း (၄) သန္းေက်ာ္ပါ၀င္ေသာ Resource Center အား
International Center of Excellence တြင္တည္ေထာင္
(19-3-14)


ရန္ကုန္တကၠသိုလ္၊ သိပၸံေဆာင္တြင္ International Center of Excellence တြင္ iGroup မွ CEO ျဖစ္သူ Mr. Pote N. Lee မွ ပံ့ပိုးကူညီမႈျဖင့္ Resource Center ကို ၂၀၁၄ ခုႏွစ္ ဇန္န၀ါရီလတြင္ တည္ေထာင္ခဲ့ပါသည္။ အဆိုပါ Resource Center အား Korea International cooperation Agency (KOICA) မွလွဴဒါန္းထားေသာ IBM Server ျဖင့္ ခ်ိတ္ဆက္ထားေသာ ကြန္ပ်ဴတာ ၂၅ လံုးတပ္ဆင္ထားေသာ ICoE ၏ ကြန္ပ်ဴတာ ခန္းတြင္တည္ေထာင္ထားျခင္း ျဖစ္ပါသည္။ အဆိုပါ resource center တြင္ Online Data Base (O.D.B) စနစ္ကို အသံုးျပဳထားျပီး အဆိုပါ စနစ္တြင္ စာအုပ္ေပါင္း (e-book) ၂ သန္းေက်ာ္၊ စာတန္းျပဳစုသူမ်ား ေထာက္အကူျဖစ္ေစႏိုင္ေသာ ျပဳစုျပီးနမူနာ စာတန္းေပါင္း ၁ သန္းေက်ာ္ ႏွင့္ ရွားပါးစာအုပ္ေပါင္း ၁ သန္းေက်ာ္ စုစုေပါင္း ၄ သန္းေက်ာ္ပါ၀င္ပါသည္။
အဆိုပါ resource center ၏ ဖြင့္ပြဲအခမ္းအနား အား ၂၀၁၄ခုႏွစ္၊ မတ္လ (၁၉) ရက္ေန႔၊ ညေန (၅း၀၀) နာရီမွ (၆း၃၀) ခ်ိန္တြင္က်င္းပခဲ့ပါသည္။ အဆိုပါအခမ္းအနားတြင္ သူရဦးေသာင္းလြင္၊ ႏိုင္ငံေတာ္သမၼတရုံး ႏိုင္ငံေရးအၾကံေပး၊ ဦးကိုကိုလိႈင္ U.S Embassy မွ Deputy Chief of Mission Ms. Virginia Murray၊ USAID မွ Director for Myanmar ျဖစ္သူ Mr. Chris Milligan ၊ Johns Hopkins University၊ SAIS ၏ အေရွ႕ေတာင္အာရွ ေရးရာ Director ႏွင့္ International Center of Excellenc ၏ ဥကၠဌ ျဖစ္သူ Dr. Karl Jackson၊ ICoE ၏တြဲဖက္ဥကၠဌ ေဒၚယူဇာေမာ္ထြန္း၊ မဂၤလာျမန္မာမွ ဒါရိုက္တာျဖစ္သူ ေဒါက္တာဖုန္း၀င္းႏွင့္ ဖိတၾ္ကားထားေသာ ဧည့္သည္ေတာ္မ်ား စုစုေပါင္း (၆၀) ဦးတို႔တက္ေရာက္ခဲ့ၾကပါသည္။
အခမ္းအနားတြင္ ႏိုင္ငံေတာ္သမၼတ ႏိုင္ငံေရးအၾကံေပး၊ ဦးကိုကိုလိႈင္၊ International Center of Excellence ၏ ဥကၠဌ ျဖစ္သူ Dr. Karl Jackson၊ U.S Embassy ၏ Deputy Chief of Mission၊ Ms. Viginia Murray၊ iGroup မွ CEO ျဖစ္သူ Mr. Pote N. Lee တို႔မွ အသီးသီး အမွာစကားေျပာၾကားခဲ့ပါသည္။ ထိုေနာက္ e-resource center အသံုးျပဳပံုကို သရုပ္ျပသမႈ ကို ဧည့္သည္ေတာ္မ်ားမွ ၾကည့္ရႈေလ့လာခဲ့ၾကပါသည္။ ဧည္သည္ေတာ္မ်ားအား လက္ဖၻက္ရည္ျဖင့္ တည္ခင္း ဧည့္ခံ၍ အခမ္းအနားအားရုပ္သိမ္းခဲ့ပါသည္။




ရန္ကုန္တကၠသိုလ္ သိပၸံေဆာင္ရွိ International Center of Excellence (ICoE) တြင္ စာအုပ္ေပါင္း ၄ သန္းေက်ာ္ ဖတ္႐ႈႏိုင္မည့္ အီလက္ထရြန္းနစ္ စာၾကည့္တိုက္ Resource Center ကို ထိုင္းႏိုင္ငံ အေျခစိုက္ iGroup မွ အမႈေဆာင္အရာရွိခ်ဳပ္ Mr.Pote N. Lee ၏ ပံပိုးမႈျဖင့္ မတ္လ တတိယ အပတ္အတြင္း စတင္ ဖြင့္လွစ္လိုက္ေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။

ယင္းစာၾကည့္တိုက္ Resource Center တြင္ Online Data Base (O.B.D) ျဖင့္ ခ်ိတ္ဆက္ထားေသာ e-book ၂ သန္းေက်ာ္၊ စာတမ္း ျပဳစုသူမ်ား အေထာက္ကူ ျဖစ္ႏိုင္ေစသည့္ ျပဳစုၿပီး နမူနာ စာတမ္းေပါင္း ၁ သန္းေက်ာ္ႏွင့္ ရွားပါး စာအုပ္ေပါင္း ၁ သန္း စုစုေပါင္း စာအုပ္ ၄ သန္းေက်ာ္အား ဖတ္႐ႈႏိုင္မည္ ျဖစ္သည္။

သင္တန္းသားမ်ား အသံုးျပဳမႈ လြယ္ကူေစရန္ အတြက္ Resource Center ရွိ ကြန္ပ်ဴတာ ၂၅ လံုးတြင္ Database စနစ္ျဖင့္ ေဆာင္ရြက္ထားျခင္း ျဖစ္ၿပီး သင္တန္းသား တဦးခ်င္းစီအတြက္ Registering မ်ား ျပဳလုပ္ၿပီး ID ကတ္မ်ား အသံုးျပဳ ဖတ္ရႈရမည္ဟု သိရသည္။

iGroup သည္ အာရွ ပစိဖိတ္ ေဒသရွိ ပညာေရးႏွင့္ ပတ္သက္သည့္ ကိစၥရပ္မ်ားတြင္ အဓိကထား ကူညီပံ့ပိုးမႈမ်ား ေပးလ်က္ရွိသည့္ ကုမၸဏီ ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။ iGroup က Database မ်ား e-journal, e-book မ်ား အျပင္ စာၾကည့္တိုက္ဆိုင္ရာ အသံုးခ် သိပၸံပညာရပ္မ်ားႏွင့္ ပံုႏွိပ္ ထုတ္ေဝျခင္း ဆိုင္ရာမ်ားကို အဓိကထား ကူညီ ေဆာင္ရြက္လ်က္ ရွိသည္။

“သုေတသန ျပဳလုပ္ရာမွာ ဒီလိုမ်ိဳး အီလက္ထေရာနစ္ စာၾကည့္တိုက္ေတြ လိုအပ္တယ္။ ေလာေလာဆယ္ေတာ့ သူတို႔ရဲ႕ ရည္ရြယ္ခ်က္က ရန္ကုန္တကၠသိုလ္က Master နဲ႔ PhD ေက်ာင္းသားေတြ အတြက္ အဓိက စီစဥ္ထားတယ္။ သူတို႔ေတြ ရည္ၫႊန္း လုပ္ႏိုင္ေအာင္ ကိုးကား ႏိုင္ေအာင္လို႔ပါ” ဟု iGroup မွ ဦးေအာင္ေမာ္က ဧရာဝတီကို ေျပာသည္။

ယင္းစာၾကည့္တိုက္တြင္ IBM Server ျဖင့္ ခ်ိတ္ဆက္ထားေသာ ကြန္ပ်ဴတာ ၂၅ လံုး တပ္ဆင္ထားၿပီး အသံုးျပဳသူမ်ား အဆင္ေျပ လြယ္ကူေစရန္ ဖိုက္ဘာစနစ္ အင္တာနက္ ကြန္ရက္အား တည္ေဆာက္ထားေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။ Master တန္းႏွင့္ PhD သင္တန္းသားမ်ား အတြက္ တနလၤာမွ ေသာၾကာေန႔ အထိ နံနက္ ၈ နာရီမွ ညေန ၅ နာရီအထိ ဖြင့္လွစ္ေပးထားေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။

“အခုအလွဴရွင္ေတြ ထပ္ေပၚလာတယ္။ အင္တာနက္လိုင္းေတြ ပိုေကာင္းေအာင္ ခ်ိတ္ဆက္မယ္၊ လိုအပ္တဲ့ ပစၥည္းေတြ ထပ္ျဖည့္ ၿပီးရင္ေတာ့ ရန္ကုန္တကၠသိုလ္ထဲမွာ ရွိတဲ့ တျခားဌာနက ေက်ာင္းသားေတြ အားလံုး သံုးႏိုင္ေအာင္ လုပ္သြား ပါဦးမယ္” ဟု ဦးေအာင္ေမာ္က ဆိုသည္။

ယင္းစာၾကည့္တိုက္အား Mr.Pote N Lee (Myanmar Book Center) ၏ ကူညီမႈျဖင့္ ယခုႏွစ္ ဇန္နဝါရီလ အတြင္း စတင္ အေကာင္အထည္ ေဖာ္ခဲ့ျခင္း ျဖစ္ေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။

ဦးေအာင္ေမာ္က “ ဒီစာၾကည့္တိုက္မွာ တခ်ိဳ႕ စာအုပ္ေတြက ရွားပါး စာအုပ္ေတြ၊ စာတမ္းေတြ အကုန္ ရွိတယ္။ ႏိုင္ငံတကာမွာ ရွိတဲ့ ထုတ္ေဝသူေတြက ဒီလိုထြက္သမွ် စာအုပ္ေတြကို e-Book လုပ္ၿပီး၊ ႏိုင္ငံတကာမွာ ရွိတဲ့ ေက်ာင္းေတြ တကၠသိုလ္ေတြကို ေရာင္းတယ္။ အဲဒီကေန ျပန္ဝယ္ၿပီး ဒီလို စာၾကည့္တိုက္ ဖြင့္တာပါ။ ဒီအတြက္ ကုန္က်စရိတ္က တႏွစ္ကို ေဒၚလာ ေသာင္းဂဏန္းေလာက္ အထိ ကုန္က်စရိတ္ ရွိပါတယ္” ဟု ဆိုသည္။

“ဒီ Resource Center က အခုမွ ဖြင့္တယ္ဆိုေတာ့ သိပ္ၿပီး တြင္တြင္က်ယ္က်ယ္ေတာ့ မသံုးျဖစ္ေသးဘူး။ ဒါေပမယ့္ အရင္ကထက္ စာရင္ အမ်ားႀကီး အေထာက္အကူ ရမွာပါ” ဟု ႏိုင္ငံတကာ ဆက္ဆံေရး ဘာသာရပ္ ဘြဲ႔လြန္ မာစတာတန္း တက္ေရာက္ေနေသာ ေက်ာင္းသူတဦးက ဆိုသည္။

ယခင္ အစိုးရ လက္ထက္က ရန္ကုန္ၿမိဳ႕ IBC ခန္းမ အတြင္း အီလက္ထရြန္းနစ္ စာၾကည့္တိုက္ အေကာင္အထည္ ေဖာ္ခဲ့ေသာ္လည္း ကုန္က်စရိတ္ မ်ားျပားျခင္း၊ ပညာေရးဝန္ႀကီး ဌာနအေနျဖင့္ ဘတ္ဂ်တ္ေငြ ရရွိမႈ နည္းပါးမႈတို႔ေၾကာင့္ ဆက္လက္ လုပ္ေဆာင္ျခင္း မရွိခဲ့ေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။

ရန္ကုန္တကၠသိုလ္ရွိ International Center of Excellence ကို အေမရိကန္ႏိုင္ငံ အေျခစိုက္ John Hopkin တကၠသိုလ္ႏွင့္ ပညာေရး ဝန္ႀကီးဌာနတို႔ ပူးေပါင္း ဖြင့္လွစ္ထားၿပီး  ျမန္မာ တႏိုင္ငံလံုးရွိ တကၠသိုလ္ ဆရာ၊ ဆရာမမ်ားႏွင့္ စိတ္ပါဝင္စားသူ ၄၀ ဦးခန္႔ ေရြးခ်ယ္ကာ ႏိုင္ငံတကာ ဆက္ဆံေရး ဘာသာရပ္ သင္တန္းမ်ားကို ျပည္ပႏိုင္ငံမ်ားမွ ဆရာမ်ား ကိုယ္တိုင္ ေျခာက္လ တႀကိမ္ ႏွစ္စဥ္ ပို႔ခ်ေပးလ်က္ ရွိေနေၾကာင္း သိရသည္။
(http://burma.irrawaddy.org/news/2014/03/28/56824.html )

https://www.facebook.com/InternationalCenterofExcellence

The International Center of Excellence at Yangon University (ICOE)


The International Center of Excellence at Yangon University (ICOE) was founded on 10 January 2013 in collaboration with the Ministry of Education of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar.The ICOE as the primary center designated by the Myanmar government for post-graduate education in Lower Myanmar, the ICOE facilitates student and faculty development and collaborative research opportunities.
ICOE has an Advisory Board.  Members of the Advisory Board are representatives from the Office of the President of Myanmar, the Ministry of Education and Yangon University; Professor Karl Jackson and Dr. Jae Ku of SAIS, Johns Hopkins University; professors from Chang Ang University; and leaders from Myanmar.
The Ministry of Education is in the process of refurbishing the Science Building on the Yangon University campus to house the ICOE. The ICOE building will serve as an incubator for other international inputs to higher education, offering under its own authority, office space and teaching facilities to incoming programs.
The ICOE will offer courses to current faculty and graduate students and to seek funding to send junior faculties abroad for training.  Initial courses and workshops sponsored by the ICOE will concentrate on public policy and political economy as well as workshops in law, technology, and medicine.
In the spring of 2013, the International Center of Excellence at YU began course instruction in International Relations and Development.  On January 21, 2013, a SAIS/Chung Ang University-organized and KOICA funded collaboration of American and Korean university professors been teaching a series of sixteen graduate level courses in “International Relations and Development Studies“ at Yangon University.
The ICOE will encourage joint research projects between visiting scholars and faculty and graduate students from selected departments of Yangon University as well as other universities affiliated with ICOE.
A sample of the courses to be taught over the next year include: International Relations; Principles of Economics; the Asian Growth Model; International Security, and Foreign Policy Analysis.
The ICOE is an open-architecture designed to attract different universities, private companies, foundations, and NGOs bound together only by the desire to increase the quality of higher education in Myanmar.
( http://www.google.com.mm/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=international%20center%20of%20excellence%2C%20yangon%20university&source=web&cd=1&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CCkQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.yufund.org%2Findex.php%2Fabout-yu%2Finternational-collaboration%2Ficoe&ei=a6tLU_PhGoGJrAeEkYCQCw&usg=AFQjCNEUARB6vnEi91pgyC986XOowpuYAQ&bvm=bv.64542518,d.bmk  )

Graduate Program Breathes New Life Into Rangoon University

Rangoon University will be accepting a broad range of applicants for a new graduate-level program in international relations this fall, in a trilateral partnership breathing new life into Burma’s once-suffocated higher education system.
The university’s International Center of Excellence (ICOE) was started in conjunction with the Ministry of Education and is run entirely by US-based Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) and South Korea’s Chung-Ang University.
Karl Jackson, the head of the ICOE, as well as the director of Asian and Southeast Asian studies programs at SAIS, told The Irrawaddy recently that the program would be free from interference by the government, which has a long history of tightly controlling Burma’s universities.
“The guarantee from the minister of education was that we’d have complete academic freedom and autonomy,” he said, adding that this has also been true for the entirety of the program’s first run, when classes have been “indistinguishable from the kinds of interactions you would have had from teaching the same course at SAIS.”
The one-year program first started in January 2013 with 35 fellows, recruited from junior faculty members at universities around Rangoon. This upcoming academic year, for the first time, administrators will be recruiting applicants on a wider scale for the program that is set to begin in November.
Once one of the most prestigious universities in the region, Rangoon University was the scene of intense protests and subsequent crackdowns during decades of military rule. Junta authorities shuttered the university for long periods of time, eventually allowing in only graduate students and sending undergraduates to satellite campuses in far-off places to limit the ability of students to gather and protest en masse. In the process, the quality of Burma’s academic programs deteriorated dramatically.
The center was created in an attempt to bring in outside knowledge and input to the university, which was for decades the victim of government neglect and outright suppression of academic freedom.
“What we hope to do,” Jackson said, “is to get enough people exposed to amounts of knowledge from the outside world, so that they can then train the next generation of students. The concept is to train the trainers.” He explained that, in potentially two years, ICOE would mainstream the international relations program back to the university and move on to other subjects.
On a recent campus visit, fellows were fanned out across classrooms and a new computer lab donated by South Korea’s International Cooperation Agency (KOICA), hard at work on theses whose topics ranged from ethnic conflict in Burma to changes in international relations education in the country.
When asked how classes might differ from those they have had in the past, one fellow who wished to remain anonymous remarked, “Some past times, we were not allowed to talk about whatever we thought. All our thoughts were like imprisoned,” but in the ICOE classes, she continued, “We can express whatever we think and we can discuss whatever we have in our minds.”
Although they do have state-of-the-art machines to work on, Peter Birgbauer, a consultant for SAIS who is facilitating the thesis process at the ICOE, said the computers alone were not always enough.
“High-speed Internet is a problem for us,” he said. The painstakingly slow connection has been crippling students’ ability to download and print academic articles, as well as hampering the center’s plans to build a virtual library.
Because all current and future fellows must already have a degree to apply, the center does stand the risk of excluding people who have been denied higher education in Burma for political reasons, as well as those who did not wish to attend military-backed higher education programs. When asked to comment on that risk, Jackson said the center would remain open to people who were qualified.
“Let’s hope that the future of higher education in Myanmar will also have a place for those people who’ve missed a step on the escalator, so to speak, so that they can get back in the game,” he said.
Access to the campus has been restricted for years, especially to foreign visitors who are usually turned away at the gate. Although the ICOE says interested individuals are now allowed on campus, including foreign ones, this journalist was denied entry on one out of two attempts to visit the main campus.
The ICOE is offering a certificate degree in international relations. The 12-course program, with classes on everything from economics to theories of international relations, is meant to provide a graduate-level education in international relations, and is housed in the old science center on campus, recently refurbished by the Ministry of Education.
Internet troubles and long hours aside, Jackson said the program is well worth the effort.
“It is just exciting as hell to watch a great institution begin to get to its feet again,” he said, adding, “If Myanmar can push through over the next couple of years and really open up society and build capacity in its universities, then it will join the ranks of Asian tigers.  It should have been there to begin with.”
( http://www.irrawaddy.org/z_education/graduate-program-breathes-new-life-rangoon-university.html )
https://www.facebook.com/InternationalCenterofExcellence

Friday 4 April 2014

ရင္တြင္းမွ ပိေတာက္ပန္း ( တကၠသိုလ္ ဘုန္းနုိင္ )






“ကိုယ့္ဘဝ…..

ပြင့္လာရ ခ်စ္ဦးလႊာ။

ပိေတာက္ကို ပမာခိုင္း

ႏိႈင္းခ်င္ရဲ႕ ေမာင့္သက္လ်ာ

တစ္သက္တြင္ သည္တစ္ခ်စ္

တစ္ခ်စ္သည္ တစ္ေယာက္ထည္း

မေဖာက္လႊဲပါတဲ့ ခိုင္သစၥာ

ေမတၱာႏွစ္ သၾကၤန္ပန္း။


ဪ…..မဆင္ျငင္းရင္လွ

ပင္မင္းမွာ မာလာသုဥ္းသည္သို႕

ဘဝမွာ ပိေတာက္တုံးေပလိမ့္

ဆံထုံးေနာင္ မျပင္နဲ႕

တာသဘင္ တစ္ၾကိမ္သစ္မည္က

သံသရာ ဟိုတစ္ေခတ္မွာမို႕

(ကြယ္) လြမ္းရစ္ေတာ့ မငိုတမ္း….”




တကၠသိုလ္ဘုန္းႏိုင္ (ပိေတာက္ပြင့္ဆဲ လသာဆဲဝယ္)

ပစ္တိုင္းေထာင္ (ဆရာႀကီး - ဇ၀န )

 
 
 


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ပစ္တုိင္းေထာင္ေလး ပုတိုတုိ

မ်က္ႏွာ ျပံဳးခ်ိဳခ်ိဳ

ပစ္ခ်င္သလို ပစ္လို႔ခ်

က်ရာ ေထာင္လို႔ထ။

သူ႕ဘ၀ႏွင့္ သူ႕ျဖစ္ေထြ

အံ့ၾသေလာက္ပါေပ

ေျခေတြ လက္ေတြ မရွိပဲ

ကိုယ္ထူ ကုိယ္ထျမဲ။

အခက္အခဲ သူရင္ဆိုင္

စိတ္ဓာတ္ မယိမ္းယိုင္

အႏုိင္မခံ ရံႈးမေပး

အေျပး ျပိဳင္ခ်င္ေသး။
 

ပိေတာက္ဦး --- ( ဒဂုန္တာရာ )



-

အို လွလိုက္ထာ

ကိုင္းငိုက္ယိုယီး၊ တြဲေလာင္းစီး၍

ေ႐ႊသီး၀ါေသြး၊ ႁပြတ္သိပ္ေလးေအာင္

ၫြတ္ေကြး႐ြ႐ြ၊ လွ...လွ...လွ...သည္

ပထမ ပိေတာက္ ပြင့္စဥ္က။

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"ေဟာ ေဟာ ပြင့္ၿပီ"

က်ဴးရင့္ေအာ္ၾက၊ တံခါး၀မွ

လွစ္ဟဆိုကာ၊ ေျပးထြက္လာၿပီး

၀င္း၀ါပိေတာက္၊ သစ္ပင္ေအာက္၀ယ္

လုေကာက္ ေႂကြသည့္ ပြင့္မ်ားကို။

-

ငမ္းငမ္းတက္၍

လုယက္ခုန္တက္၊ ဓားလက္နက္ျဖင့္

ခ်ိဳးဖ်က္႐ြက္ကိုင္း၊ ခုတ္ထစ္စိုင္း၍

ပိုင္းပိုင္းျဖတ္ေႁခြ၊ ယူၾကေလေသာ္

ေရာေထြ ႐ုန္းရင္း ဆန္ခတ္တည္း။

-

လုဖ်က္မႈန္းေၾကာင့္

ေၾကျပဳန္းလဲက်၊ ဒဏ္ရာရႏွင့္

႐ြက္ျမျပာၫို၊ သစ္ငုတ္တိုသာ

ဖ႐ိုဖရဲ က်န္ရစ္၏။

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ငါ့စိတ္တြင္ကား

ေမခင္ႏွမ၊ ဆံေကျမထက္

လွလွကေလး၊ ကိုယ္တိုင္ေ႐ြး၍

ဆင္ေပး ထံုးခ်င္ လွေသာေၾကာင့္။

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က်ိဳးပဲ့ေနေသာ

ပင္ေျခေအာက္တည့္၊ ငါရပ္ၾကည့္၍

ႂကြင္းသည့္တပြင့္၊ ေကာက္မည္လင့္ေသာ္

"အို.....႐ွင့္....က်မ -

ဗုဒၶျမတ္ထံ၊ လႉကပ္ရန္" ဟု

လုျပန္အတင္း၊ ဆိုကာခ်င္းေသာ္

လက္ခ်င္းဆံု၍ ေနသတည္း။ ။

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ဒဂုန္တာရာ
[တာရာ မဂၢဇင္း၊ ၁၉၄၇]

Wednesday 2 April 2014

Professor Richard Robison

 

Emeritus Professor Richard RobisonPh.D, M.A. Hons (University of Sydney)

 

I am currently Emeritus Professor in the Asia Research Centre at Murdoch University. Among my previous positions I have been Professor and Director of the Australian Research Council’s Special Centre for Research on Politics and Society in Contemporary Asia (1994 – 1999). I was Professor of Political Economy at the Institute for Social Studies in The Hague, Netherldans, from 2003 to 2006. I have held a Fulbright Senior Scholar’s Award (1989) and a Leverhulme Trust Award in 2001/2002 as Visiting Professor at the University of Warwick.

Awards and grants

Fellowships, Awards and Visiting Appointments
2009 – Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences Australia
2001/2002 – Leverhulme Trust Award, Professorial Fellowship, Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalism, University of Warwick
2001 – Visiting Professor, City University of Hong Kong, June, July
1989 – Visiting Fellow, Institute for Development Studies, University of Sussex
1988  Fulbright Foundation, Senior Scholar Award.
1985 -  Visiting Fellow, Cornell Modern Indonesia Project, Cornell University, September-December.
1981 – Visiting Fellow, Department of Political and Social Change, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University, 3 months.
Grants
2009: AUSAID, Australian Development Research Awards; ‘Achieving Sustainable Demand for Governance: Addressing Political Dimensions for Change’, $289,000
2007: Australia Indonesia Governance Research Partnership, AUSAID and Crawford School of Governance, ANU, (Governance and the Problem of Informal Security and Protection Regimes in Indonesia) A$ 65,000.
2005/06: European Union, Framework Six Network of Excellence Programme.
(Global governance and North-South Development Issues). €102,000 (A$ 180,000)
2004/05: Innovation Research Fund grant, Institute of Social Studies, The Hague, Netherlands (Neo-Liberalism: the end of an epoch?). €39,000 (A$ 75,000)
2002 – 2003: Australian Research Council, Discovery Grant: A$125,000. (Responses to Neo-liberal reform agendas in Asia after the Economic Crisis).
1999: Australian Research Council, Special Initiatives Grant: (Political Change in Indonesia and Implications for Australian Foreign Policy). A$30,000
1998/99: Australia-Korea Foundation Grant: (The Politics of Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis) A$20,000.
1998/99: Japan Foundation Grant: (The Politics of Markets in the Wake of the Asian Economic Crisis) A$10,000.
1997 – 99: Australian Research Council: Special Research Centre on Social, Political and Economic Change in Asia (Principal Researcher). A$1.4 million.
1991-1996: Australian Research Council, Special Research Centre on Social, Political and Economic Change in Asia (Co-Principal Researcher). A$5.2 million.
1986: Australian Research Council: Australian Research Grant Scheme Award: (Politics of Structural Adjustment in South East Asia) A$15,500

Publications

Books

  • Robison, R., (2001),The Political Economy of South-East Asia: Conflict, Crises and Change,,Oxford University Press.

Chapters

  • Robison, R., (2009),Strange Bedfellows: political alliances in the making of neo-liberal governance,In: Governance and the Depoliticization of Development, Routledge, pages -.
  • Hout, W., Robison, R., (2009),Development and the politics of governance framework for analysis,In: Governance and the Depoliticization of Development, Routledge, pages 1 - 12.
  • Robison, R., (2002),What sort of democracy? Prredatory and neo-liberal agendas in Indonesia,In: Globalization and Democratization in Asia: The construction of identity, Routledge, pages 92 - 113.
  • Robison, R., Hadiz, V., (2002),Oligarchy and Capitalism:The Case of Indonesia,In: East Asian Capitalism Conflicts Growth and Crisis, Fondazione Giangiacomo Feltrinelli, pages 37 - 74.
  • Robison, R., Rosser, A., (2000),Surviving the Meltdown: Liberal Reform and Political Oligarchy in Indonesia,In: Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis, Routledge, pages 171 - 191.
  • Robison, R., (1998),Indonesia after Soeharto: More of the same, descent into chaos, or a shift to reform,In: The Fall of Soeharto, Crawford House, pages 219 - 230.
  • Robison, R., (1997),The emergence of the middle classes in Southeast Asia and the Indonesian case',In: Social Change in Southeast Asia, Addison Wesley Longman, pages 60 - 77.
  • Robison, R., (1997),Politics and Markets in Indonesia's Post Oil Era,In: The Political Economy of Southeast Asia, Oxford University Press, pages 29 - 63.

Journals

  • Hadiz, V., Robison, R., (2013), The Political Economy of Oligarchy and the Reorganisation of Power in Indonesia, Indonesia, , 96, pages 35 - 57.
  • Robison, R., (2004), Neoliberalism and the Future World: Markets and the end of Politics, Critical Asian Studies, 36, , pages 405 - 423.
  • Robison, R., Rosser, A., (1998), Contesting Reform: Indonesia's New Order and the IMF, World Development, 26, 8, pages 1593 - 1609.
  • Robison, R., (1998), Currency Meltdown: The End of Asian Capitalism?, NIAs Nytt: Asia insight, 2, , pages 1 - 7.
  • Robison, R., (1997), Building Markets: the confusion behind Indonesia's economic reform, Harvard Asia Pacific Review, 2, 1, pages 89 - 91.
Editorship of international book publication series:
  •  The New Rich in Asia Series, 6 volumes, Routledge, 1994 – 2000.
  • Asian Capitalisms Series, 3 volumes, Routledge, 1998 – 2002.
  • Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian Politics, 2012
Authored Books, Edited Collections and Monographs:
  • Southeast Asia: The Political Economy of Structural Change (edited with Richard Higgott), Routledge and Kegan Paul (London, 1985), pp. 340
  • Indonesia: the Rise of Capital, Allen & Unwin, (Sydney 1986), pp. 425
  • Second Printing, September 1986
  • Third Printing, April 1987
  • Translated into Japanese and published by San’ichi, (Tokyo, 1987)
  • South East Asia in the 1980s: The Politics of Economic Crisis, (edited with Kevin Hewison and Richard Higgott), Allen & Unwin, (Sydney, 1987), pp. 243
  • Power and Economy in Suharto’s Indonesia, Journal of Contemporary Asia Press, (Manila, 1990), pp. 207
  • Southeast Asia in the 1990s: Authoritarianism, Democracy and Capitalism (edited with Kevin. Hewison and Garry Rodan), Allen & Unwin, (Sydney, 1993), pp. 249 Second Printing, June 1993
  • The New Rich in Asia: Mobile Phones, McDonalds and middle-class revolution, (edited with David Goodman), Routledge, (London, 1995), pp. 253
  • Pathways to Asia: The Politics of Engagement (edited), Allen & Unwin, (Sydney, 1996), pp. 270
  • The Political Economy of Southeast Asia (edited with Kevin Hewison and Garry Rodan), Oxford University Press (Melbourne, 1997), pp. 299
  • The Crisis in Southeast Asia: Origins and Outcomes, The Emirates Center for Strategic Studies and Research (Abu Dhabi 1998), pp. 56
  • Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis (edited with Kanishka Jayasuriya, Mark Beeson, Hyuk Rae Kim), Routledge (London 2000) pp. 373.
  • The Political Economy of Southeast Asia: Conflict, Crises and Change (edited with Garry Rodan and Kevin Hewison), Oxford University Press (Melbourne 2001) pp. 306
  • Reorganising Power in Indonesia: The Politics of Oligarchy in an Age of Markets (co-authored with Vedi Hadiz), Routledge (London, 2004) pp. 301.
    The Neoliberal Revolution: Forging the Market State (edited) Palgrave (International Political Economy Series) (London 2006), pp. 287.
  • The Political Economy of Southeast Asia: Markets, Power and Contestation, (co-edited with Garry Rodan and Kevin Hewison), Oxford UP (Melbourne 2006), pp. 336
  • East Asia and the Trials of Neo-Liberalism (co-edited with Kevin Hewison), Routledge (London 2006) pp. 156.
  • Governance and the Depoliticisation of Development (co-edited with Wil Hout), Routledge (London, 2009)
  • Handbook of Southeast Asian Politics, Routledge (London 2012) pp. 378

Edited Special Editions of Journals
  • The Australian – Indonesian Relationship; a Current Assessment (edited), Canberra, Australian Institute of International Affairs (special edition of Australian Outlook, Vol. 40, No. 3, December 1986), pp. 131-179
  • The New Rich in Asia: Affluence, Mobility and Power (co-edited with David Goodman), special issue of Pacific Review 5 (4) 1992, pp. 321-401
  • Politics and Economics in the Twenty-first Century: Is there an Asian Model (edited), Special Issue of Pacific Review, Volume 9, Number 3, 1996, pp. 305-441
  • East Asia and the Trials of Neo-liberalism (edited with Kevin Hewison) special issue of Journal of Development Studies, 41 (2) February 2005, pp. 183-350
Articles in Academic Journals
  • `Towards a Class Analysis of the Indonesian Military Bureaucratic State’ Indonesia, (Cornell) No.25, April, 1977, pp.17‑40
  •  Translated into Chinese – Collection of Translated Writings on Southeast Asia, Monograph Series No.3, Centre for the Study of Southeast Asia, Xiamen University, China, 1979, pp. 28 – 50
  • Translated into Malay – ‘Menuju Suatu Analisis Kelas Terhadap Negara Birokrat Tentara Indonesia’, Jurnal Ekonomi Malaysia, No.5, June 1982, pp. 106 – 136
  • Translated into Indonesian – Negara Birokrasi Militer Indonesia: Suatu Analisis Kelas, Amsterdam, Yayasan Nusantara, 1983
  • ‘Culture, Politics and Economy in the Political History of the New Order’ Indonesia, (Cornell) No.31, April 1981, pp. 1 – 31
  • Translated into Indonesian – Politik Kultur, Politik dan Ekonomi Dalam Sejarah Politik Orde Baru, Amsterdam, Dialogue Nusantara, Monograph No.2, 1982, pp. 1 – 48 (with an introduction by the editors)
  • Republished in – Benedict Anderson & Audry Kahin, (eds), Interpreting Indonesian Politics, Thirteen Contributions to the Debate, Ithaca, NY, Cornell Modern Indonesia Project, 1982, pp.131 – 148
  • Translated into Korean – Published in Dongnam A Jeong’chi Wa Sa Hwae (Politics and Society in Asean), Seoul, Hanwool Academy, Korean Association of Southeast Asian Studies, 1992, pp. 157-202
  • ‘Struktur Kapitalisme Indonesia dan Faktor – factor Yang  Mempengaruhinya’, Prisma, (Institute for Economic & Social Research,  Jakarta) No.1, 1982, Year XI, pp.51 – 60
  • ‘The Transformation of the State in Indonesia’ Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, (Colorado), Vol.14, No.1, 1982, pp. 48 – 61
  • Translated into Indonesian – ‘Transformasi Negara: Kasus Indonesia’ in Dialog Nusantara No.2, 1983, pp. 7 – 25
  • ‘Kesenjangan Antara Modal Golongan Ekonomi Kuat dan Lemah di Indonesia’, Prisma, No. 5, l985, pp. 79 – 85
  • ‘Explaining Indonesia’s Response to the Jenkins Article: Implications for Australian – Indonesian Relations’ Australian Outlook, Vol. 40, No. 3, December 1986, pp. 132 – 138
  • ‘Authoritarian States, Capital-owning Classes, and the Politics of Newly Industrialising Countries: the Case of Indonesia’, World Politics (Princeton University, Centre of International Studies), Vol. XLI, No. 1, October 1988, pp. 52 – 74
  • ‘Structures of Power and the Industrialisation Process in Southeast Asia’, Journal of Contemporary Asia, No. 19 (4), 1989, pp. 371 – 397
  • ‘Economic Restructuring and the Reform of the Higher Education System in Australia’, Politics (Journal of Australian Political Science), No. 25 (1), 1990, pp. 21 – 36 (with Garry Rodan)
  • ‘Etats Autoritaires, classes possedantes et politique des nouveaux pays industriels: le cas de l’Indonesie, Tiers Monde, (L’Institute d’Etude du Development Economique et Social, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique – Université de Paris), No. 124, 1990, pp. 853 – 876
  • ‘Introduction: The New Rich in Asia: Affluence, Mobility and Power’ (with David Goodman), Pacific Review, No. 5 (4), 1992, pp. 321 – 327
  • ‘Indonesia: An Autonomous Domain of Power?’ Pacific Review, No. 5 (4), 1992, pp. 338 – 350
  • ‘Deregulation or the Reorganisation of Dirigisme? Indonesian Economic Policy in the 1990s’, Canadian Journal of Development Studies, December 1993 (with Vedi Hadiz), pp. 13 – 32
  • ‘The Politics of Asian Values’, Pacific Review, No. 9 (3), 1996, pp. 309 – 327
  • ‘Contesting Reform: Indonesia’s New Order and the IMF’ (with Andrew Rosser), World Development, Vol 26, No. 8, 1998, pp. 1593 – 1609
  • ‘Looking Back at the Asian Crisis: The Question of Convergence’ Asian Journal of Social Science, 31, 2, 2003, pp. 162 – 67.
  • ‘Back to Business: Democracy and Markets in Indonesia’ Harvard International Review, vol 24, issue 4, 2003.
  • ‘Neoliberalism and the Future World’ Critical Asian Studies, 36 (3) (2004), pp. 323-354.
  • Ëast Asia and the Trials of Neoliberalism’ (with Kevin Hewison), Journal of Development Studies, 41, 2, February, 2005, pp. 183-196.
  • Neoliberal Reforms and Illiberal Consolidations: the case of Indonesia’ (with Vedi Hadiz) Journal of Development Studies, 41, 2, February 2005, pp. 220-241.
  • ‘How to Build Market Societies: The Paradoxes of Neo-liberalism’ New Political Economy, 10 (2) June 2005: 247-257
  • ‘Rescuing the US Political Science of Southeast Asia: Is it just a Problem of Methodology?’ Journal of East Asian Studies, 10 (2), August 2010, pp. 190-196 (Roundtable Review Article).
  • ‘Fighting on All Fronts: Chalmer’s Johnson’s Forty Year Intellectual Odyssey and his Legacy’, Pacific Review, forthcoming 2011 (Commentary).
  • ‘Political Economy and Islamic Politics: Insights from the Indonesian Case’ (with Vedi Hadiz), New Political Economy(April 2012).
Book Chapters
  • ‘Theories of Development and Underdevelopment: Implications for the Study of Southeast Asia’ (with Richard Higgott, Garry Rodan and Kevin Hewison) in Higgott & Robison, (eds.), Southeast Asia: the Political Economy of Structural Change, 1985, pp.16 – 62
  • ‘State and Class in Indonesia’ in Higgott & Robison (eds.), Southeast Asia: the Political Economy of Structural Change, 1985, pp.296 – 335
  • ‘Crisis in Economic Strategy in the 1980s: the factors at work’ (with Kevin Hewison and Richard Higgott) in Robison, Hewison and Higgott (eds), Southeast Asia in the 1980s: the Politics of Economic Crisis, Allen & Unwin, (Sydney 1987), pp. 1 – 15
  • ‘After the Goldrush – the Politics of Economic Restructuring in Indonesia in the 1980s’ in Robison, Hewison and Higgott (eds), Southeast Asia in the 1980s: the Politics of Economic Crisis, Allen & Unwin, (Sydney 1987), pp. 16 – 51
  • ‘Resisting Structural Adjustment: Conflict over Industrial Policy in Indonesia’ in J. Carlsson, and T. Shaw, (eds.), Newly Industrialising Countries and the Political Economy of South – South Relations, MacMillan, (London 1988), pp. 23 – 47
  • ‘The Transformation of the State in Indonesia’ in John Taylor and Andrew Turton (eds), The Sociology of Developing Societies: Southeast Asia, London, MacMillan and New York, Monthly Review Press, 1988, pp. 48 – 68
  • ‘Problems of Analysing the Middle Class as a Political Force in Indonesia’ in Richard Tanter and Ken Young (eds), The Politics of Middle Class Indonesia, Centre of Southeast Asian Studies, Monash University, 1990, pp. 127 – 137
  • ‘Structures of Power and Development Strategies in Southeast Asia’ in Rajeshwari Ghose (ed), Design and Development in South and Southeast Asia, Centre of Asian Studies, University of Hong Kong, 1990, pp. 17 – 36
  • ‘Industrialisation and the Economic and Political Development of Domestic Capital: the Case of Indonesia’ in Ruth McVey (ed), Southeast Asian Capitalists, Southeast Asia Programme, Cornell University, 1992, pp. 65 – 88
  • ‘Introduction: Changing Forms of State Power in Southeast Asia’ (with Garry Rodan and Kevin Hewison) in Kevin Hewison, Richard Robison and Garry Rodan (eds), Southeast Asia in the 1990s: Authoritarianism, Democracy and Capitalism, (Sydney), Allen & Unwin, 1993, pp.2 – 8
  • ‘Political Power in Industrialising Capitalist Societies: Theoretical Perspectives’ (with Garry Rodan and Kevin Hewison) in Kevin Hewison, Richard Robison and Garry Rodan (eds), Southeast Asia in the 1990s: Authoritarianism, Democracy and Capitalism, (Sydney), Allen & Unwin, 1993, pp.9 – 38
  • ‘Indonesia: Tensions in State and Regime’ in Kevin. Hewison, Richard Robison and Garry Rodan (eds), Southeast Asia in the 1990s: Authoritarianism, Democracy and Capitalism, (Sydney), Allen & Unwin, 1993, pp.39 – 74
  • ‘Organising the Transition: Indonesian Politics in 1993/94’ in Ross McLeod (ed.), Indonesia Assessment 1994: The Importance of Financial Institutions in Indonesia’s Economic Development, Singapore, Institute for Southeast Asian Studies, 1994
  • ‘Australia and the New World in Asia: the Economic Dimension’ (with Andrew Rosser) in Tim McDonald (ed), Australia and Indonesia: Diverse Cultures, Converging Interests, Jakarta, Centre for Strategic and International Studies, 1994
  • ‘The New Rich in Asia: economic development, social status and political consciousness’ (with David Goodman) in Richard Robison and David S. G. Goodman (eds), The New Rich in Asia, London, Routledge, 1995, pp. 1 – 18
  • ‘The Middle Class and the Bourgeoisie in Indonesia’ in Richard Robison and David S. G. Goodman (eds), The New Rich in Asia, London, Routledge, 1995, pp. 79 – 104
  • ‘Authoritarian States, Capital-owning Classes, and the Politics of Newly Industrialising Countries: the Case of Indonesia’, in John Ravenhill (ed), The Political Economy of East Asia, Cheltenham, Edward Elgar, 1995
  • ‘Looking North: Myths and Strategies’ in Richard Robison (ed), Pathways to Asia: The Politics of Engagement, Sydney, Allen & Unwin, 1996, pp. 3 – 28
  • ‘Introduction’ (with Garry Rodan and Kevin Hewison) in Kevin Hewison, Richard Robison and Garry Rodan (eds), The Political Economy of Southeast Asia, Oxford Melbourne, 1997, pp. 1 – 28
  • ‘Politics and Markets in Indonesia’s Post Oil Era’ in Kevin Hewison, Richard Robison and Garry Rodan (eds), The Political Economy of Southeast Asia, Oxford Melbourne, 1997, pp. 29 – 63
  • ‘The emergence of the middle classes in Southeast Asia and the Indonesian case’ in J. Dragsbaek Schmidt, J. Hersh and N. Fold (eds), Social Change in Southeast Asia, Addison Wesley Longman, (London 1997), pp. 60 – 77
  • ‘Indonesia After Soeharto: more of the same, descent into chaos or a shift to reform?’ in Geoff Forrester & R.J May (eds), The Fall of Soeharto, Crawford House Publishing and C. Hurst and Co (Bathurst and London 1998), pp. 219 -230
  • ‘From Fragility to Utility’ in Idris F Sulaiman, G Hanafi Sofyan and Shannon Luke Smith (eds) Bridging The Arafura Sea: Australia-Indonesia Relations In Prosperity And Adversity Development Issues No 10. National Centre for Development Studies (Canberra 1998), pp.40 – 46
  • ‘A slow metamorphosis to liberal markets’ in Eward Aspinall, Herb Feith and Gerry van Klinken (eds) The last days of President Suharto Monash, Asia Institute, Melbourne, 1999, pp. 2 – 4
  • ‘A suspect pedigree’ in Eward Aspinall, Herb Feith and Gerry van Klinken (eds) The last days of President Suharto Monash, Asia Institute, Melbourne, 1999, pp. 126 – 128
  • ‘Introduction: Intrerpreting the Crisis’ (with Mark Beeson), in Richard Robison, Kanishka Jayasuriya, Mark Beeson, Hyuk Rae Kim (eds), Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis Routledge (London 2000).
  • ‘Surviving the Meltdown: Liberal Reform and Political Oligarchy in Indonesia’ (with Andrew Rosser), in Richard Robison, Kanishka Jayasuriya, Mark Beeson, Hyuk Rae Kim (eds), Politics and Markets in the Wake of the Asian Crisis Routledge (London 2000), pp. 171 – 191.
  • ‘Indonesia: Crisis, Oligarchy and Reform’ in Rodan, Garry, Kevin Hewison and Richard Robison (eds), The Political Economy of Southeast Asia: Conflict, Crises and Change (Melbourne 2001), Oxford University Press.
  • ‘What Sort of Democracy? Liberal and Predatory Agendas in Indonesia’ in Catarina Kinvaal and Kristina Jonsson (eds), Globalisation and Democracy, Routledge (London 2002).
  • ‘The Politics of Financial Reform: Recapitalising Indonesian Banks’ in Geoffrey R. D. Underhill and Xiaoke Zhang (eds) International Financial Governance under Stress: Global Structures versus National Imperatives, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2003, pp. 119-140.
  • ‘Global Governance and Development: New Problems in an Age of Security’ in William Wallace and Young Soogil (2004) (eds) Asia and Europe: Global Governance as a Challenge to Co-operation, Council for Asia-Europe Co-operation, Japan and Brookings Institute Press, Washington, pp. 167-188.
  • ‘Fragmentation or Nation-Building: Indonesia’ in Peter Burnell and Vicky Randall (2005) (eds) Politics in the Developing World, Oxford, Oxford University Press, pp. 255-263
  • (with Garry Rodan and Kevin Hewison) ‘Transplanting the neo-liberal state in Southeast Asia’ in Richard Boyd and Tak Wing Ngo (2005) (eds) Asian States: Beyond the Development Perspective, London, Routledge, pp. 172-198.
  • ‘Fragmentation or Nation-Building: Indonesia’ in Burnell, Peter and Vicky Randall (eds), Politics in the Developing World, (Oxford 2005), Oxford University Press, pp. 255-264.
  • “Neo-Liberalism and the Market State: What is the Ideal Shell?” in, Richard Robison (ed), The Neo-Liberal Revolution: Building the Market State (London 2006), Palgrave, pp.3 – 19.
  • “Neoliberalism and the Future World: Markets and the End of Politics” in Garry Rodan, Kevin Hewison (eds), Neo-liberalism and Conflict in Asia After 9/11, Routledge, (London 2006) pp. 27-45.
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  • (with Vedi Hadiz) ‘Neo-Liberal Reforms and Illiberal Consolidations: The Indonesian Paradox’ in Kevin Hewison and Richard Robison (eds) East Asia and the Trials of Neo-Liberalism, London 2006, Routledge, pp. 24-45.
  • ‘The Reordering of Pax Americana: How Southeast Asia Fits In’ in Vedi R. Hadiz (ed) Empire and Neo-Liberalism in Southeast Asia, London, Routledge 2006, pp. 52-68.
  • ‘Development and the Politics of Governance: A Framework for Analysis’ (with Wil Hout) in Wil Hout and Richard Robison (eds)Governance and the Depoliticisation of Development (London, Routledge 2009), pp. 1 – 13.
  • ‘Strange Bedfellows: Political Alliances in the Making of Neo-Liberal Governance’ in Wil Hout and Richard Robison (eds)Governance and the Depoliticisation of Development (London, Routledge 2009), pp15 – 29
  • ‘Where to Now? The End of Good Governance as a Policy Agenda’ in Wil Hout and Richard Robison (eds)Governance and the Depoliticisation of Development (London, Routledge 2009), pp 197-201
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