Dr Nurdin Abdullah, Governor of South Sulawesi, believes that universities should be the laboratory for the planning and policy making of business and government.
AIC
AIC Associate Fellows Anis Wulandari and Dr Muhammad Farid Dimjati Lusno give an overview of the first days of their PAIR research journey in South Sulawesi.
These topics are areas of focus for PAIR, the Partnership for Australia-Indonesia Research, currently underway in South Sulawesi.
Monash University and the AIC congratulate President and Vice-Chancellor, Professor Margaret Gardner, who has been appointed a Companion of the Order of Australia (AC) in the 2020 Australia Day Honours.
AIC Senior Fellow Prof Nyoman Pujawan, has achieved the highest number of Google Scholar citations at the Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember (ITS).
“I will carry out this mandate by continuing to give the best of my performance, with all humility and sincerity, dedication, integrity, and optimism,” Prof. Reini said.
Ibu Mari will be the second Indonesian woman to serve as a World Bank Managing Director.
“PAIR represents the future of this relationship, as an important vessel for collaboration between our two countries” – Ambassador Gary Quinlan
The speech by AIC and PAIR Program Director Dr Eugene Sebastian at the official launch of PAIR, the Partnership for Australia-Indonesia Research, in Makassar
‘We tell ourselves stories in order to live’ wrote Joan Didion. It is also true that we can tell stories in order to live more harmoniously with each other.
The 2019 ReelOzInd! Australia Indonesia Short Film Festival was launched in both Melbourne and Bandung this past weekend, screening a shortlist of films from both countries.
Indonesian Vice-President Jusuf Kalla received the AIC Board in September, discussing on the AIC’s role in supporting Indonesia’s human capital development.
The 11 newly appointed Senior Fellows, each from a different university and area of expertise, convened in Melbourne for their induction into PAIR, which they will lead until the end of 2022.
Morwell locals had a rare chance for a cross-cultural exchange with Australia’s closest northern neighbour when a group of 25 Indonesian financial regulators came to town.
This is an effort to evaluate how infrastructure development will affect communities, people [including] economic effects, impact on people’s mobility, their patterns of interaction…
Latrobe Valley women are being invited to have a yarn with Indonesian financial regulators about financial independence for women and how these ideas can be shared in Indonesia.