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THE INCOMPLETE PROCESS OF INDONESIAS DEMOCRATIZATION Paskal Kleden
Masyarakat Indonesia Vol 37, No 1 (2011): Majalah Ilmu-Ilmu Sosial Indonesia
Publisher : Kedeputian Bidang Ilmu Sosial dan Kemanusiaan (IPSK-LIPI)

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.14203/jmi.v37i1.611

Abstract

The two editors of the book, Edward Aspinall and Marcus Mietzner havebeen actively researching Indonesian politics since their adolescence.Aspinall lived previously for several years in Malang and Mietznerconducted his initial research on Indonesia in Ambon. The two editors,now scholars at the Australian National University in Canberra, belongto the new generation of Indonesian experts.The two Australia based scholars represent a shift from the dominanceof the American based experts from the earlier generation such asGeorge McTurnan Kahin (Cornell University), Benedict Anderson(Cornell University), and Daniel S. Lev (Washington University), whoresearched Indonesia during the Cold War period. At that time Indonesiawas considered as a country threatened by the domino effects ofcommunism that already swept China, North Korea, Vietnam, Laos,and Cambodia, leading to increased funds for Indonesian studies in theUS, and therefore contributing to in depth political analysis producedamong others by the Cornell Modern Indonesia Project (CMIP).However, the importance of Indonesia in particular and Asian studiesin general (Ellings & Hathaway 2010: 2) abated in the post Cold Warperiod as attention is drawn further to more severe con?ict areas.Therefore, with this book the two editors aim at bringing Indonesiaback to the international political discourse. They argue that most ofthe comparativists, for instance like the Washington DC based Freedomhouse, have treated Indonesia only as one country among many others212 | Masyarakat Indonesiain their quantitative analyses. A number of important work on Indonesiahave also been published by junior scholars, unfortunately they lackin?uence for triggering a larger international debate on Indonesia.
Preventing The Climate Crisis: Testing Our Commitments Paskal Kleden
Masyarakat Indonesia Vol 36, No 1 (2010): Majalah Ilmu-Ilmu Sosial Indonesia
Publisher : Kedeputian Bidang Ilmu Sosial dan Kemanusiaan (IPSK-LIPI)

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.14203/jmi.v36i1.619

Abstract

Al Gore received a degree in government from Harvard University in 1969. Afterwards, he worked as a congressman and as a senator. In 1993 Gore was elected as the 45th vice president of the United States, and served for eight years. On top of all that, he and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Price in 2007. That is quite a CV.In Our Choice he powerfully argues that we have all the required technologies to prevent climate change. The only thing that is lacking is political will. The chapters of this book demonstrate Gores technical understanding of the climate crisis. His explanations cover energy sources, living systems, ways to use energy efficiently, the obstacles we need to overcome, and a solution of how to effectively address the crisis. Shortly said, the readers of this book will be fascinated by Al Gores knowledge in biology, engineering, economics, demography and of course politics.One aspect that might not commonly be mentioned in a scientific review but I believe is unique of this book is the format. The book combines text - book style presentations of data with textual explanations of complex phenomena. It also includes hundreds of photographs with the quality rivaling that of the National Geographic.