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{{Short description|Australia-based scholarly journal published from 1967 to 2014}}
{{Short description|Australia-based scholarly journal published from 1967 to 2014}}
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{{refimprove|date=July 2021}}
{{Infobox journal
{{Infobox journal

Revision as of 19:39, 15 August 2021

Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
Publisher
  • University of Sydney (1967–2003)
  • Association for the Publication of Indonesian and Malaysian Studies (2003–2014)
 (Australia)
ISO 4Find out here
Indexing
ISSN0034-6594
OCLC no.310953014

The Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs was an Australia-based scholarly journal that ran from 1967 to 2014.[1] It is indexed in the Bibliography of Asian Studies. [2]

Indonesian teaching had begun at the University of Sydney in 1958, and ultimately led to the establishment of the journal.[3][4][5] Initially a "very modest, cyclostyled publication issued by the Department of Indonesian and Malaysian Studies" of the University of Sydney, the journal sought to "publish scholarly studies relating to societies and cultures, understood in the broadest terms, to be found in Indonesia, Malaysia and surrounding areas." From 2003, the journal was published by the "Association for the Publication of Indonesian and Malaysian Studies which was incorporated in the Australian Capital Territory."[6][7]

Further reading

  • Inglis, Christine. "Asian studies at the university of Sydney." Asian Studies Association of Australia. Review 4.3 (1981): 47-51.

References

  1. ^ "Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs". search.informit.org.
  2. ^ https://www.ebsco.com/products/research-databases/bibliography-asian-studies
  3. ^ Robson, S. (2008). Indonesian at the University of Sydney in the Early 1960s. Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs, 42(1), 185–189.
  4. ^ Fox, James J. "10. A Genealogy of Southeast Asian Studies in Australia: Scholars and Their Works." The Historical Construction of Southeast Asian Studies. ISEAS Publishing, 2013. 349-398.
  5. ^ Reid, Anthony. "«Alterity» and «Reformism»: The Australian Frontier in Indonesian Studies." Archipel 21.1 (1981): 7-18.
  6. ^ "Review of Indonesian and Malaysian affairs (RIMA)". March 21, 2015.
  7. ^ Macknight, Campbell. "Another transition for RIMA." RIMA (2014): 1-10.