Archives

Two rounds or one?

Simon Butt analyses the likelihood of Indonesia's presidential election going to a second round.

Assortative mating and the election

Ariane Utomo wonders whether love can conquer campaign divides?

A better bureaucracy?

Ross McLeod finds unexpected hope in the presidential candidates' policies on public sector reform.

Sabah – UMNO’s fixed deposit?

Engage two of Sabah's most prominent politicians as they discuss Sabah and Malaysia's future

Returning to the 1945 Constitution: what does it mean?

Why we should be worried that one candidate promises to roll back constitutional reforms.

ANU event on Thai coup

Next week the Australian National University will host a discussion of the Thai coup and its implications

Indonesia’s democracy is in danger

Ed Aspinall says a Prabowo win 'carries major risks of serious authoritarian regression'.

Indonesia’s Elections: The View From Next Door

Election, what election? Farish Noor wonders why Indonesia's neighbours just don't seem to care.

Mr. Heinecke cannot have his coup and eat it too

David Streckfuss argues that William Heinecke's letter backing the coup exposes at best remarkable naiveté or, at worst, cynical insensitivity.

Ominous signs for migrant workers in Thailand

Charlie Thame argues that Thailand ought to wake up quickly and recognise that migrants are an asset

The decline of Lao civil society

While donors strive to build a more visible face for Lao civil society, they may be contributing more to the destruction of its foundations.

Rohingya: denied the right to be human

Witnesses to long standing acts of oppression are complicit in the unfolding genocide of Rohingya. It is time to act.