You are here: Home

Grounding Area Studies in Social Practice

2021.11.02_Bild Startseite.JPG

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

New Occasional Paper Series Publication by Judith Schlehe

Vice-Chair Person of the Southeast Asian Studies Program Judith Schlehe published the latest Issue of our Occasional Papers Series.

New Occasional Paper Series Publication by Judith Schlehe - Read More…

FRIAS Conference on "Alignments and Dealignments in global Southeast Asia", 24-26 June

The FRIAS focus program on Southeast Asia is organizing a conference on “Alignments and Dealignments in global Southeast Asia”, 24-26 June 2015.

FRIAS Conference on "Alignments and Dealignments in global Southeast Asia", 24-26 June - Read More…

FRIAS Lunch Lecture on Thursday, 11 June

The presentation of "Islamic (Inter)faces on the Internet" will be given by Dr. Martin Slama, Asian Studies & Cultural Anthropology, Austrian Academy of Science, Vienna

FRIAS Lunch Lecture on Thursday, 11 June - Read More…

Publications

TWCover.jpg

International relations 2.png

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

World development.png

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.