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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].
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).
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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.