2012年5月13日

Southeast Asian Studies, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University

Announcing launch of Southeast Asian Studies Website

In April 2012, CSEAS re-launches Southeast Asian Studies as an all-English journal. Intended for a regional as well as global readership, Southeast Asian Studies will be published three times a year. The new journal aims to promote excellent, agenda-setting scholarship and provide a forum for dialogue and collaboration both within and beyond the region. Southeast Asian Studies engages in wide-ranging and in-depth discussions that are attuned to the issues and debates within the region, while affirming the importance of learning and sharing ideas on a cross-country, global, and historical scale. An integral part of the journal’s mandate is to foster scholarship that is not just empirically grounded and multidisciplinary, but capable of bridging the continuing divide in area studies between the social sciences and humanities, on the one hand, and the natural sciences, on the other. To this end, the journal includes accessibly written articles that build on insights and cutting-edge research from the natural sciences.

                                          京都大学東南アジア研究所
                           Southeast Asian Studies 英文編集委員会
                                  『東南アジア研究』和文編集委員会


拝啓 時下ますます御清祥のこととお慶び申し上げます。
平素は当研究所の諸活動にご協力くださいましてありがとうございます。

さて、東南アジア研究所ではこのたび新英文誌Southeast Asian Studiesを創刊いたしました。
本誌は、社会科学・自然科学・人文学の分野より東南アジア研究に関する英語での論考および書評を掲載し、年3回(4月末日/8月末日/12月末日)刊行してまいります。
最新号および既刊号の全掲載論文および書評は、当誌のホームページ(http://englishkyoto-seas.org/) よりダウンロードできますので、広くご活用いただけましたら幸いです。

なお、これまで日本語及び英語による季刊として発行してまいりました『東南アジア研究』は、平成24年度より年2回 (7月末日/1月末日)刊行の和文誌に移行いたしました。詳しくはホームページ(http://kyoto-seas.org/ja/) をご参照ください。

投稿論文につきましては、両誌ともに常時受け付けております。
Southeast Asian Studiesへのご投稿は、english-editorial[atmark]cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp
『東南アジア研究』へのご投稿は、japanese-editorial[atmark]cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp
までお願いいたします。

Vol 1. No 1. of Southeast Asian Studies now available online
Southeast Asian Studies

CONTENTS

Articles

Caring for the Dead Ritually in Cambodia
・・・ John Clifford HOLT

State Recognition or State Appropriation?
Land Rights and Land Disputes among the Bugkalot/Ilongot of Northern Luzon, Philippines
・・・ Shu-Yuan YANG

Javanese Women and Islam: Identity Formation since the Twentieth Century
・・・ Kurniawati Hastuti Dewi

Research Report

Decision Support System Research and Development Network for Agricultural and Natural Resource Management in Thailand: A TRF-DSS Experience
・・・ Attachai JINTRAWET et al.

Book Reviews

Edward Aspinall and Gerry van Klinken, eds. The State and Illegality in Indonesia. Leiden: KITLV Press, 2010, 328 p, with bibliography and index.
・・・ Rommel A. CURAMING

Caroline S. Hau and Kasian Tejapira, eds. Traveling Nation-Makers: Transnational Flows and Movements in the Making of Modern Southeast Asia. Singapore: National University of Singapore Press in association with Kyoto University Press, 2011, 318 p.
・・・ Thanet Aphornsuvan

Paulin G. Djité. The Language Difference: Language and Development in the Greater Mekong Sub-Region. Bristol: Multilingual Matters, 2011, 264 p.
Andy Kirkpatrick. English as a Lingua Franca in ASEAN: A Multilingual Model. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2010, 236 p.
・・・ Nathan BADENOCH

Kate Lazarus, Nathan Badenoch, Nga Dao and Bernadette P. Resurreccion, eds. Water Rights and Social Justice in the Mekong Region. London and Washington, D.C.: Earthscan, 2011, 285 p.
・・・ CHEN Jianming

Michael R. Dove, Percy E. Sajise and Amity A. Doolittle, eds. Beyond the Sacred Forest: Complicating Conservation in Southeast Asia. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2011, 372 p.
・・・ Andreas NEEF

Lye Liang Fook and Chen Gang, eds. Towards a Liveable and Sustainable Urban Environment: Eco-Cities in East Asia. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing, 2010, 222 p.
・・・ Zhiqun ZHU

John Nery. Revolutionary Spirit: Jose Rizal in Southeast Asia. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2011, 280 p.
・・・ Erwin S. FERNANDEZ