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Grounding Area Studies in Social Practice

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The University of Freiburg pursues a transdisciplinary concept of research on Southeast Asia. The disciplines involved include Political Science, Socio-cultural Anthropology, Economics, Geography, Islamic Studies and History. Southeast Asian Studies at Freiburg build on internationalized research and teaching and strive for knowledge production in circulation by enhancing innovative models of collaborative reciprocal research. Other program components such as regional, cross-cultural and global networking, the graduate program, field schools and methodology training, the alumni and fellowship program and knowledge transfer are closely linked with the research core (more ... ). Research in this program focuses on two topics:

1. Democratization and Institutional Change in South East Asia
2. Modes of World-Making in South East Asia

News & Events

Dr. Wawan Masudi will conduct a workshop in Freiburg, 7 December 2017.

Dr. Masudi of the Center for Southeast Asian Social Studies (PSSAT) at the Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, will be presenting his paper "Contestation between state-society in coastal-based economy in Local Indonesia." The presentation will take place in room 101 (Breisacher Tor), Thursday 7 December, 2 p.m.

Dr. Wawan Masudi will conduct a workshop in Freiburg, 7 December 2017. - Read More…

Anna Fünfgeld spoke at a conference in Bonn

She took part in the panel "A Coral-free Future? Renewable Energy and Post-Extractivism in the Southeast Asian Context" at the one-day conference: The politics of Climate Change in Southeast Asia.

Anna Fünfgeld spoke at a conference in Bonn - Read More…

Publications

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The ‘gold standard’ for labour export? The role of civil society in shaping multi-level Philippine migration policies.

 

Why Asian states cooperate in regional arrangements: Asian regionalism in comparative perspective.

 

Indonesians and Their Arab World: Guided Mobility among Labor Migrants and Mecca Pilgrims.

Subnational favoritism in development grant allocations: Empirical evidence from decentralized Indonesia.