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Australia's relationship with Indonesia is one of its most
important and contentious bilateral relationships, characterized by
sharply differing social and cultural mores and by periodic crises
and mutual distrust, but also by significant person-to-person
contacts in many fields. Recent developments, including the tsunami
tragedy, the policies of a new Indonesian president and the Corby
affair, have demonstrated both the best and the worst in the
relationship. The Corby affair revealed high levels of ignorance
and prejudice about Indonesia in some quarters in Australia. On the
other hand, the tsunami that wrecked Indonesia's Aceh province led
to an outpouring of sympathy and support from Australia. Following
President Yudhoyono's visit to Australia in early 2005, official
relations, though fragile, were better than they had been for many
years. Australia's management of its most important regional
relationship also has implications for its relations with other
countries in the region, through issues such as Australia's
presence and role in regional organizations, and policy responses
to the rise of China. This book examines the wide range of factors
and approaches that are involved in meeting the bilateral and
regional challenges, including government links, public images and
mutual perceptions, regional organizations, the role of Islam, the
aid relationship, security and counterterrorism, economic and
business relations, and the student market. The articles by the
authors in this book reflect a complex, many-sided relationship
that is not susceptible to simplistic formulas or stereotypes.
Contributors include former Australian ambassador to Indonesia
Richard Woolcott; former Indonesianambassador to Australia S.
Wiryono; Noke Kiroyan, president of the Indonesia-Australia
Business Council; K. Kesavapany, director of the Institute of
Southeast Asian Studies; Paul Kelly of The Australian newspaper;
Scott Dawson of the Australia-Indonesia Partnership for
Reconstruction and Development; Hugh White and Jamie Mackie of the
Australian National University; and David Reeve of the University
of New South Wales.
First published in 2013. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Nobleman, writer, adventurer and inspiration for the swashbuckling
gun runner in the "Adventures of Tintin," Henri de Monfried lived
by his own account "a rich, restless, magnificent life" as one of
the great travellers of his or any age. His name is inextricably
linked to the Red Sea and the raffish ports between Suez and Aden
in the early years of the twentieth century. This is a compelling
account of how de Monfried seeks his fortune by becoming a
collector and merchant of the fabled Gulf pearls, then is drawn
into the shadowy world of arms trading, slavery, smuggling and
drugs. Hashish was the drug of choice, and de Monfried writes of
sailing to Suez with illegal cargos, dodging blockades and pirates.
This book is a unique and detailed portrayal of a colorful and
dangerous world that has now disappeared. It allows us to share in
the exhilarating adventures of a legend whose love for the sea and
zest for life runs across every page.
A boxed set in four volumes, each volume in the series represents a
core sample of the firm at this moment in time, highlighting a
grouping of four major projects that share a common theme but not
necessarily the same typology or program. The themes are threads
that weave the work together and as a whole define the design
philosophy of the firm. The firm's emphasis on sustainability is a
current that runs through the narrative of each book. Each book
focuses on design process and collaboration. Each project is
presented in depth and will underscore the methodology, aesthetics,
techniques and ethos of the firm. With future volumes planned,
these sets will track the progression of ideas that evolve over
time through the work that enacts the ideas, and informs the work
to come.
FUSE - Blurring the boundary between landscape and building. From
the scale of the building to the scale of the city, these projects
integrate architecture, building systems thinking and natural
systems. This philosophy takes the landscape and ecological forces
that are the context and incorporates them within the design of the
building, urban planning, and infrastructure design.
EVOLVE - Repositioning and Adaptive Re-Use of existing buildings.
These projects investigate buildings as artifact and re-construe
them for a new life as the original architecture degrades and the
mission of the buildings change. Analysis of original design
intent, construction methods, ornamentation and the cultural
processes that have been enacted on the building over time form the
basis of design. Fundamental architectural relationships, building
envelope and circulation are re-thought and restructured to create
new uses and relationships, completely transforming these spaces.
FILTER - Integration of culture and climate into sustainable
architecture. FX Fowle practices a contemporary language of
modernism, one that contrasts sharply from the original ethos of
universalism and the tabula rasa. The specificities of climate and
culture impact the design of form and program in FX Fowle
buildings. The lenses of culture and climate are necessarily
specific to the location and cultural values of each project and
ultimately create an integral sustainability.
FLEX - Derived from a programmatic interpretation that re-thinks
building mission, function and performance in office buildings,
education, cultural institutions. FXFOWLE's process begins with
finding the values of the institution, identifying its community,
and then working to embody this in the architecture. The design
achieves this through form finding, envisioning new types of
interior circulation that encourages particular kinds of
interactions, and creating gathering spaces that are fine tailored
to the institution. The architecture sets the stage for
interactions of the community and ultimately works to develop a new
relationship between the individual and the institution
Hamengku Buwono IX, the late Sultan of Yogyakarta Special Province,
is revered by Indonesians as one of the great founders of the
modern Indonesian state. He leaves a positive but in some ways
ambiguous legacy in political terms. His most conspicuous
achievement was the survival of hereditary Yogyakartan kingship,
and he provided rare stability and continuity in Indonesia's highly
fractured modern history. Under the New Order, Hamengku Buwono also
helped to launch the Indonesian economy on a much stronger growth
path. Although remembered as the epitome of ""political decency"",
he faded from power and influence as Vice President in the 1970s,
and the repressive and anti-democratic features of Suharto's New
Order seemed to contradict much of what Hamengku Buwono originally
stood for. This biography seeks to explain his political
standpoint, motivations, and achievements, and set his career in
the context of his times.
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