Take a look at the 2023 ACICIS Annual Report!
The report provides details on the composition of the consortium’s student cohort in 2023, our first full year return of the in-country programs .Download the 2023 Annual Report here: acicis.edu.au/acicis-annual-…
We're gearing up for something big, and we can’t wait to share it with you. Stay tuned for a brand new experience that’s set to elevate everything you know about us✨
Get ready to explore a fresher look and seamless experience. Keep your eyes peeled 👁️👁️
#ACICIS#NCP
The Australian Consortium for 'In-Country' Indonesian Studies (ACICIS) is recruiting for a Consortium Operations Manager. Details can be found at: vist.ly/3mk88p9
Australian universities are not yet very good at getting domestic undergraduates up to the Indo-Pacific for semester and full-year study. Out of a domestic undergrad population of ~800,000, we managed to send ~1,800 students (0.22%) to do so in 2019.
Fingers crossed the recently established NCP External Advisory Group receives lots of other good ideas for ways the @NewColomboPlan might be reconfigured to better serve the Government’s new objectives for the program: dfat.gov.au/.../new.../exter…)
**ACICIS is hiring**
A relatively high-level job opportunity has arisen in the @ACICIS national secretariat at @uwanews in Perth. We're looking for a full-time [Level 8] Consortium Operations Manager:
external.jobs.uwa.edu.au/...…...
If you're passionate about the Australia-Indonesia relationship, have experience managing people and organisations, and would like to apply these attributes to helping to run @ACICIS, then we'd like to hear from you.
Application deadline is Sunday, 24 November 2024. Get on it.
Buku Mbak @sweethellena patut dibaca untuk memahami praktik media kontemporer di Indonesia. Hasil risetnya memberikan sumbangsih teoretis penting dalam konteks ekonomi-politik media Indonesia. Ulasan saya untuk buku Hellena telah terbit di @MPEjournal.
tandfonline.com/eprint/NNGKW…
It’s a little ironic, though unsurprising, that it has taken a Belgian cultural historian—writing in Dutch—to write a popular history of the Indonesian National Revolution for a general English-speaking audience.
...and its achievements were so thoroughly memory-holed under the 30 years of military dictatorship that followed. @Davidvanrey has done a great service here in excavating this period of recent history, knocking off the dirt a little...
...and burnishing the features of Indonesia’s creation as a modern nation state so that we in Australia and the broader English-speaking world can apprehend them anew.
Score: Many stars.