The Najib government needs to win new legitimacy at GE14 if it's to juggle Malay, Islamic, and royal claims, amid a restive East Malaysia.
Documentation, Restoration, and Repatriation? Reflections on a dance film screening for the ‘Bali 1928’ project
Nien Yuan Cheng reflects on the film screening and lecture, "Gender, Crossdressing and Androgyny in Balinese Dance", conducted by ethnomusicologist Edward Herbst under the aegis of the Bali 1928 repatriation project.
‘Aku nak Islam lama balik’: a look at one kampung in Sabah
Dina Zaman on how the religious tensions of Peninsular Malaysia are being imported to Sabah.
Southeast Asia’s middle classes and the spectre of authoritarianism
Geopolitics is a factor in the resilience of authoritarianism in the region. Often ignored, though, is the enduring pull of anti-democratic politics for the middle class.
Cambodia haunted by mistakes of interventions past
What we see today in Cambodia is a direct outcome of the events of 1997, and the world’s feeble response then.
Funding an opposition’s manifesto is all about politics
Pakatan Harapan's policy promises will sound great to many voters, but how would a PH government pay for them?
The twilight of 1Malaysia, the dawn of another
GE14 is more than just a barometer of electoral sentiment. Whoever wins, Malaysia will be a different country afterwards.
Civil society and the media after Hun Sen’s crackdown
A discussion about how civil society organisations and the media are adapting to growing authoritarianism in Cambodia.
The Sufi poet and the peculiar whale (part one)
Hamzah of Barus was the foremost Malay poet of the 16th century, whose work draws deeply from Sufi imagery and philosophy.
Jokowi shares the blame for MD3 debacle
The MD3 saga lays bare not only the DPR's attempt to shield itself from public accountability, but the dysfunctionality of governance under Jokowi.
Lee Morgenbesser on Hun Sen
A quick interview with a scholar of authoritarianism on what's over the horizon for Cambodia after Hun Sen's 2017 crackdown on the opposition.
From battlefield to marketplace on the Thai–Myanmar border
Thai–Myanmar relations are on the up. But what happens to the large and still-marginalised migrant communities in Thai border towns like Mae Sot?
Perspectives on the Past at New Mandala
Welcoming the University of Sydney's Southeast Asian history bloggers to New Mandala.
What should the region do about Cambodia’s crackdown?
A discussion on how Australia, ASEAN, and the world might support democracy and human rights in Cambodia.
Claudio Sopranzetti on ‘Owners of the Map’
New Books in Southeast Asian Studies talks to Claudio Sopranzetti about his monograph on the political role of Bangkok's motorbike taxi drivers.
Gareth Evans on confronting Hun Sen
Read the former Australian foreign minister's remarks made at the "Cambodia on the Brink" conference in Canberra.
Bulldozers and palms in Aceh
Snapshots of the new socio-ecological dynamics in post-reconstruction Aceh.
10 steps to start a kick-ass postgrad group
PoP's archaeologist shares his experience about starting a successful postgraduate reading and research group.
Perspectives on the Philippines
The highlights of PoP's two-month special series on the Philippines.
The “orang gila” scare in Indonesia
What's behind a fresh panic about attacks on Islamic figures at the hands of "crazy people"?
Indonesia’s Constitutional Court and public opinion
Data suggest public opinion and civil society do influence judges. That's both good and bad for the quality of their decisions.
Hunting the Secrets of the Philippines
What makes the Philippines tick, and what's the one piece of art, object or artefact that could provide an answer?
Cambodia on the Brink: Towards the 2018 Elections
Special forum in Canberra brings together scholars and civil society to survey the effects of Hun Sen's crackdown.
Indonesia’s minority report
Indonesian law recognises both international human rights norms and 'religious values'. The latter are increasingly taking precedence.
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