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The Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation acknowledges the Wurundjeri, the Gunditjmara<br />

and the Wathaurong people, the traditional owners of the land upon which we work and<br />

meet.<br />

<strong>Cover</strong> <strong>image</strong> <strong>from</strong> <strong>left</strong>: <strong>Dr</strong> <strong>Hass</strong> <strong>Dellal</strong> <strong>OAM</strong>, Director Australian Multicultural Foundation; <strong>Dr</strong> Nicole Oke, Lecturer Victoria <strong>University</strong>;<br />

Professor Jane den Hollander, <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong> Vice-Chancellor; <strong>Dr</strong> Michele Lobo, Alfred <strong>Deakin</strong> Postdoctoral Research Fellow;<br />

Professor Fethi Mansouri, CCG Director, at the book launch for Migration, Citizenship and Intercultural Relations, and Intercultural<br />

Relations in a Global World. February 2012.<br />

Back cover: Professor Simon Tormey, Head of School, Social and Political Sciences, <strong>University</strong> of Sydney; <strong>Dr</strong> Daniel Bray, Lecturer,<br />

LaTrobe <strong>University</strong>; <strong>Dr</strong> Andrew Vandenberg, Senior Lecturer, <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, 2011.<br />

Below <strong>from</strong> <strong>left</strong>: Professor Jane den Hollander, <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong> Vice-Chancellor; Professor Fethi Mansouri, CCG Director and<br />

forum convener; <strong>Dr</strong> Jorge Sampaio, High Representative for the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations and the former President<br />

of Portugal; Senator the Hon Kate Lundy, Parliamentary Secretary for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Hon Nicholas Kotsiras<br />

MLA, Victorian State Minister for Multicultural Affairs and Citizenship; Mr Sam Afra, Chair of Ethnic Communities’ Council of<br />

Victoria at the CCG/UNAOC Integration: Building Inclusive Societies Forum, 2011.


TABLE OF CONTENTS<br />

DIRECTOR’S WELCOME<br />

BACKGROUND AND MISSION<br />

PARTNERSHIPS AND IMPACT<br />

RESEARCH THEMES<br />

ASIAN CULTURES AND POLITICS<br />

GOVERNANCE AND DEMOCRACY<br />

MIGRATION, CITIZENSHIP AND INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS<br />

PHILOSPHY, RELIGION AND SOCIETY<br />

EXTERNAL ADVISORY BOARD<br />

STAFF AND MEMBERSHIP<br />

EXECUTIVE PROFILES<br />

RESEARCH FELLOWS<br />

ASSOCIATE EDITOR<br />

RESEARCH ASSISTANT<br />

PHD CANDIDATES<br />

MAJOR RESEARCH PROJECTS<br />

POST DOCTORAL RESEARCH FELLOWS’ PROJECTS<br />

EVENTS IN PROFILE<br />

PUBLICATIONS AND RESEARCH ACTIVITIES<br />

BOOKS<br />

BOOK CHAPTERS<br />

JOURNAL ARTICLES<br />

CONFERENCE AND SEMINAR PRESENTATIONS<br />

MEDIA ENGAGEMENT<br />

The Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation<br />

Faculty of Arts and Education<br />

<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

221 Burwood Highway<br />

Burwood, Melbourne<br />

3125 Australia<br />

Tel: (03) 9244 6658<br />

Email: citglob@deakin.edu.au<br />

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www.deakin.edu.au.au/ccg<br />

Annual Report 2011<br />

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DIRECTOR’S WELCOME<br />

• Asian cultures and politics<br />

• Governance and democracy<br />

• Migration, citizenship and intercultural relations<br />

• Philosophy, religion and society<br />

The Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation (CCG) is a Strategic<br />

Research Centre at <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, with a long history of research<br />

collaboration, international connections and knowledge transfer.<br />

CCG’s research programs are concerned with the various<br />

manifestations of globalisation and citizenship. These diverse<br />

manifestations are reflected through a set of integrated research<br />

activities that are theoretically informed and cohere around projectbased<br />

and practice-oriented investigations. Members of the Centre<br />

are actively engaged in national and international research networks<br />

aimed at examining the diverse challenges posed by globalisation<br />

processes for citizens that reside in democratic and non-democratic<br />

polities.<br />

CCG’s major focus is on the changing discourses, sites, and practices<br />

of citizenship within and beyond the boundaries of nation states.<br />

The research activities undertaken revolve around many themes<br />

including:<br />

The Centre’s multifaceted research program aims to provide unique insights into conceptual, theoretical and<br />

empirical dimensions of citizenship and globalisation and to generate robust public debate and informed<br />

practice. Benchmarks for Australian university research are set increasingly within international standards,<br />

and therefore CCG locates its activities within international paradigms and discourses. Even when the<br />

immediate strategic application of a CCG research project is in Australia, such as where it influences policy<br />

directions or offers new insights into Australian history, for example, it is standard practice within CCG that<br />

our researchers engage with cutting edge international scholarship.<br />

The CCG is pro-active in developing new research agendas, providing new intellectual understandings,<br />

bringing together eminent scholars in symposia and conferences, and ensuring that its research ‘makes a<br />

difference’. As it continues to build national and international research partnerships, a key dimension of the<br />

Centre’s philosophy and approach is the dissemination and uptake of research findings.<br />

Professor Fethi Mansouri<br />

Director, Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation


BACKGROUND AND MISSION<br />

The nature of globalisation and its impact on the relationship between nation states and their citizens is one of<br />

the key issues confronting contemporary societies and polities. The Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation’s<br />

(CCG) mission is to explore the changing nature of citizenship in an increasingly globalised world and to<br />

assess the benefits and challenges of living in culturally diverse societies.<br />

Since its inception in the late 1990s, CCG has explored the complex and often contradictory meanings of<br />

citizenship and globalisation and their practical applications. CCG researchers adopt a multidisciplinary,<br />

cross-cultural, international perspective while paying particular attention to issues of social inclusion, gender,<br />

ethnicity and religion.<br />

Much of our research is undertaken in partnership with other academics, professional bodies, community<br />

organisations, corporations and governments. We provide timely and informative evidence-based research<br />

conducted by academic experts who objectively address issues and problems facing communities. This<br />

research is designed to inform the formation of policies and practices aimed at improving social conditions.<br />

CCG is currently the foremost multidisciplinary research centre studying citizenship and globalisation in<br />

Australia and one of the most significant internationally.<br />

Our aims are to:<br />

• contribute to the theoretical development of the concepts of citizenship and globalisation;<br />

• undertake research into the problems of citizenship and globalisation;<br />

• communicate theoretical, empirical and practical developments in citizenship and globalisation<br />

to both academic and public audiences;<br />

• identify how concepts of citizenship and globalisation can make a practical difference to<br />

society;<br />

• engage in dialogue on citizenship and globalisation with government, business, community<br />

and cultural groups outside the university;<br />

• increase awareness and implementation of our research by key local, national and<br />

international organisations;<br />

• develop and maintain a vibrant research culture;<br />

• allow our individual and team research projects to inform the teaching and learning programs<br />

of the Faculty of Arts and Education and <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>;<br />

• provide high quality research training through our higher degree programs.<br />

These aims are achieved by:<br />

• investigating the ways in which citizens participate in civil society and governance; and<br />

• considering the potential of an active and cosmopolitan citizenship as a key element in the<br />

resolution of local, national and global issues.<br />

CCG Lunchtime Seminar Series, 2012.<br />

ANNUAL REPORT 2011<br />

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Citizenship<br />

Citizenship is concerned with what it means to be a member of a society and how<br />

individuals, communities, political groups, public bodies and private corporations interact<br />

with, and maintain, membership of institutions and organisations within and beyond the<br />

nation state. Citizenship research investigates: how membership of society is defined;<br />

how people contribute to the making and remaking of society; how people are resourced<br />

by society within existing social contracts; and how policies and discourses conducive to<br />

social inclusion or exclusion may either reinforce or undermine such social contracts.<br />

Globalisation<br />

Globalisation refers to the multiplicity of linkages and interconnections that transcend<br />

nation states. It involves processes through which events, decisions and activities in<br />

one part of the world affect individuals and communities in another part of the world.<br />

Globalisation involves not only the creation of large-scale systems and processes, but also<br />

the transformation of local and individual experiences. Globalisation can simultaneously<br />

strengthen and weaken the powers of local communities. In so doing, it reshapes politics.<br />

It can have disorienting and disruptive effects on identity, the environment and cultural,<br />

social and economic relations. It can also provide new opportunities for global empathy<br />

and positive social change.


PARTNERSHIPS AND IMPACT<br />

Social Impact<br />

CCG’s research has had significant impact in the areas of social inclusion, public policy, and democratisation.<br />

Underpinning our exploration of contemporary issues associated with citizenship and globalisation is a<br />

commitment to research that is responsive and practical. Our research projects aim to make a difference to<br />

the ways in which we:<br />

• see and understand changing social and cultural environments;<br />

• develop and implement public policies;<br />

• participate in social, cultural and political institutions;<br />

• promote and recognise human rights;<br />

• reach decisions about governance arrangements and citizens' rights.<br />

Industry Impact<br />

CCG operates at the cutting edge of national and international research. CCG's scholars regularly produce<br />

research reports and act as consultants for a number of agencies. The insights offered by our researchers<br />

have had an impact well beyond academic circles in areas such as corporate responsibility, local and national<br />

government policies, non-government organisations, multicultural relations, intercultural dialogue, peace<br />

negotiations, and on international cultural agencies, particularly UNESCO and the UN Alliance of Civilizations.<br />

The international scope of the CCG’s activities has generated significant collaborative projects with these<br />

organisations.<br />

Research undertaken by CCG is intended to achieve maximum social, cultural, economic and political benefits<br />

by engaging with the broader community, disseminating our research to the general public, NGOs, corporations<br />

and governments. We also aim to sustain change beyond the life span of our initiatives by employing a<br />

participatory action research model in which our research findings inform policy recommendations,<br />

subsequent projects and future research in consultation with our local and international partners.<br />

Scholarly Impact<br />

CCG scholars are regularly invited to share their research findings at local, national and international<br />

conferences and symposia. They also regularly collaborate on major research projects with leading academics<br />

<strong>from</strong> other Australian and international universities.<br />

CCG members have received international peer recognition through their books and articles published<br />

in major international journals. They have also been recognised for their editorial work for international<br />

journals and foreign translations of their publications. CCG researchers hold leadership positions in a number<br />

of Australian and international academic associations.<br />

ANNUAL REPORT 2011<br />

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RESEARCH THEMES<br />

Research Themes<br />

CCG comprises experts <strong>from</strong> diverse and complementary disciplines including sociology, history, political<br />

science, political philosophy, international relations, political economy, and anthropology. They draw on both<br />

qualitative and quantitative methods to enhance their research and to produce innovative and accessible<br />

studies. CCG researchers are also specialising in a number of regions including Australia, China, India,<br />

Indonesia, Japan, Korea, North Africa, the Middle East and the United States.<br />

CCG’s research activities coalesce around a set of common themes, which encourage and enable crossdisciplinary<br />

and cross-cultural collaboration among leading and emerging CCG, <strong>Deakin</strong> and international<br />

scholars.<br />

Asian Cultures and Politics<br />

The Asian Cultures and Politics (ACP) thematic group seeks to answer the following questions:<br />

• What is understood by the term ‘Asia-literacy’?<br />

• How is the ‘Asian Century’ imagined and represented in the West?<br />

• Is it possible for one country to ‘know’ another and what does this knowing entail?<br />

• What motivates states in the Asia–Pacific to pursue regionalism?<br />

• How do regional bodies differ in prospective memberships: are they inclusive or exclusive?<br />

• Have different proposals for regionalism proven to be mutually compatible?<br />

• How effective have regional bodies been at preventing conflict among member states?<br />

• How effective have they been at preventing conflict between great powers?<br />

• Is there an emergent hybrid regionalism in the Asia-Pacific region?<br />

The ACP group is well placed to analyse Asian cultures and politics in a variety of innovative ways. The group<br />

has already analysed some of the key themes in regionalism, including its varieties (economic, political,<br />

security), the perspectives of different classes of states (great powers, middle powers, smaller powers), and<br />

comparative regionalism (for example Asia versus Europe). This research offers great potential to provide and<br />

expand upon existing links between <strong>Deakin</strong> scholars and their counterparts overseas.<br />

Governance and Democracy<br />

Representative democracy has spread out across the world in the twentieth century and into the new<br />

millennium. Yet democracy remains highly contested as a concept, as a form of government and as a field of<br />

political practice. For example, how is the authenticity of democracy to be assessed? How can democracy be<br />

made more democratic?<br />

Political democracy shapes, at least to some extent, systems of governance. In recent scholarly and political<br />

discourse governance refers to the complex array of practices through which a degree of order and coordination<br />

is achieved across governmental and other organisations at local, national or supra-national levels.<br />

Issues of democracy and the democratisation of governance give rise to conceptual and empirical research and<br />

to a consideration of the aspirations for more equitable local, national and global societies. The Governance<br />

and Democracy (GD) thematic group investigates problems in this field, including:


• challenges to democratic theory posed by processes of democratisation and vice versa;<br />

• experiences of and prospects for democratisation in domains such as health, education, the<br />

media and the economy;<br />

• the expansion of political participation in non-Western democratic polities such as India, Indonesia<br />

and countries in West Asia and North Africa;<br />

• the potential for democratisation in authoritarian polities such as China;<br />

• the prospects for democratisation of regional, transnational and global governance.<br />

Migration, Citizenship and Intercultural Relations<br />

The Migration, Citizenship and Intercultural Relations (MCIR) thematic group aims to facilitate interactions<br />

among researchers and NGOs to effect positive change in policy and public debate relating to migrant<br />

settlement, refugee rights, treatment of asylum seekers and intercultural and interreligious relations.<br />

This thematic group investigates the following issues:<br />

• the extent to which key migration theories and concepts (such as transnationalism and hybridity)<br />

are adequate tools for understanding the migration experience;<br />

• the extent to which inter-disciplinary research informs methodological approaches to migration<br />

research;<br />

• the changing nature of citizenship in old and new immigrant countries;<br />

• intercultural contact between ethnic communities and indigenous people;<br />

• the impact of globalisation, in particular at the level of information technology, on migration<br />

experiences and the resulting intercultural and interreligious encounters;<br />

• the problematic Ethno-centric (Euro-centric) nature of migration research.<br />

The MCIR group also investigates the current debates around governance of cultural and religious diversity and<br />

intercultural and interreligious education. Many nations have encountered significant obstacles in adjusting<br />

to the challenges and opportunities presented by growing cultural and religious diversity in their societies.<br />

The MCIR thematic group seeks to compare existing models of governance of cultural and religious diversity<br />

in order to identify best practices. Their research includes analysis of policies, pedagogies and educational<br />

resources leading to more just and peaceful societies.<br />

Philosophy, Religion and Society<br />

Members of this group share a commitment to studying human values in society.<br />

Alongside research grounded in psychoanalysis, the Philosophy, Religion and Society (PRS) thematic group<br />

is active in the areas of contemporary European philosophy, the examination of the nature of subjectivity,<br />

the relationships between the individual and society, political philosophy, sociology of religion, philosophy of<br />

religion, applied ethics and understanding social and religious institutions and contemporary politics.<br />

The PRS thematic group considers social, religious, historical and psychological aspects in their research on<br />

contemporary issues and has four major foci:<br />

• Psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic studies;<br />

• Applied ethics;<br />

• Political and cross-cultural philosophy; and<br />

• Sociology and philosophy of religion.<br />

ANNUAL REPORT 2011<br />

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CENTRE FOR CITIZENSHIP AND GLOBALISATION<br />

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EXTERNAL ADVISORY BOARD<br />

Professor Ien Ang<br />

Professor of Cultural Studies and Australian Research Council Australian Professorial Fellow<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Western Sydney, Australia<br />

Professor Roland Axtmann<br />

Director of the Centre for the Study of Culture and Politics<br />

College of Arts and Humanities, Swansea <strong>University</strong>, United Kingdom<br />

Professor Boulou Ebanda de B’béri<br />

Founding Director of the Audiovisual Media Lab for the Study of Cultures and Societies<br />

Department of Communication, <strong>University</strong> of Ottawa, Canada<br />

Professor Ruth Fincher<br />

Professor of Geography<br />

The <strong>University</strong> of Melbourne, Australia<br />

Emeritus Professor Riaz <strong>Hass</strong>an AM, FASSA<br />

Australian Research Council Australian Professorial Fellow and Emeritus Professor<br />

Flinders <strong>University</strong>, Australia<br />

Professor Michael Humphrey<br />

Professor and Chair of Sociology, Department Sociology and Social Policy<br />

The <strong>University</strong> of Sydney, Australia<br />

Professor Paul James<br />

Director of the Global Cities Institute and Director of the United Nations Global Compact Cities Programme<br />

RMIT, Australia<br />

Professor Jeremy Moon<br />

Director of the International Centre for Corporate Social Responsibility<br />

Nottingham <strong>University</strong> Business School, United Kindgom<br />

Professor Claire Parfait<br />

Director of the Centre de Recherches Interculturelles Sur les Domaines Anglophones et Francophones<br />

(CRIDAF) <strong>University</strong> Paris 13, France<br />

Professor Bryan Turner<br />

Director of the Centre for the Study of Contemporary Muslim Societies<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Western Sydney, Australia<br />

Professor Philomena Essed<br />

Professor of Critical Race, Gender and Leadership Studies<br />

Antioch <strong>University</strong>, United States of America


STAFF AND MEMBERSHIP<br />

Director<br />

Professor Fethi Mansouri<br />

Deputy Director<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Vince Marotta<br />

Research Fellows<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Yoko Harada<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Benjamin Isakhan<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Michele Lobo<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Masa Mikola<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Alex Naraniecki<br />

Research Assistant<br />

Ms Libby Effeney<br />

Administrative Assistant<br />

Ms Cayla Edwards<br />

Editorial Assistant<br />

Ms Paula Muraca<br />

Academic Staff Membership<br />

Associate Professor Purushottama Bilimoria<br />

Professor Evelyne De Leeuw<br />

Associate Professor Ismet Fanany<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Yoko Harada<br />

Professor Baogang He<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> David Hundt<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Benjamin Isakhan<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Louise Jenkins<br />

Professor Sue Kenny<br />

Professor Douglas Kirsner<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Karen Lane<br />

Associate Professor Michele Langfield<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Costas Laoutides<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Michele Lobo<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Hans Lofgren<br />

Professor Fethi Mansouri<br />

Visiting Fellows<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Abe Ata<br />

Honorary/Visiting Fellow<br />

Australian Catholic <strong>University</strong>, Australia<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Steven Francis<br />

National Manager - Movement Relations & Advocacy<br />

Australian Red Cross, Australia<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Nicole Oke, Professor Fethi Mansouri and <strong>Dr</strong> Michele Lobo at the launch<br />

of Intercultural Relations in a Global World, and Migration, Citizenship and<br />

Intercultural Relations. 2012.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Vince Marotta<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Masa Mikola<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Alex Naraniecki<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Chengxin Pan<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Stephen Quinn<br />

Associate Professor Andrew Scott<br />

Professor Marian Simms<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Matthew Sharpe<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Steven Slaughter<br />

Professor Gary Smith<br />

Professor Geoff Stokes<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Sally Totman<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Andrew Vandenberg<br />

Professor Stan van Hooft<br />

Professor David Walker<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Grazyna Zajdow<br />

ANNUAL REPORT 2011<br />

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EXECUTIVE PROFILES<br />

Professor Fethi Mansouri<br />

Director, Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation<br />

Professor Fethi Mansouri, Director of the Strategic Research Centre for Citizenship<br />

and Globalisation, holds a Chair in Migration and Intercultural Studies, School of<br />

Humanities and Social Sciences, <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

He is the editor of the prestigious Journal of Intercultural Studies (Routledge) and an<br />

expert advisor to the United Nations (Alliance of Civilisations) on cultural diversity<br />

and intercultural relations.<br />

His recent publications include: Political Islam and Human Security (Cambridge<br />

Scholars Publishing, 2008); Islam and Political Violence: Muslim Diaspora and<br />

Radicalism in the West, (I B Tauris & Co Ltd, 2007); Identity, Education, and Belonging:<br />

Arab and Muslim Youth in Contemporary Australia (MUP, 2008); Youth Identity and<br />

Migration: Culture, Values and Social Connectedness (Common Ground Publishing,<br />

2009); Australia and the Middle East: A Frontline Relationship (Tauris Academic<br />

Studies, 2011, second edition); and Migration, Citizenship and Intercultural<br />

Relations: Looking Through the Lens of Social Inclusion (Ashgate, 2011). Muslim<br />

Diasporas and the Challenges of Representations and National Belonging (MUP,<br />

2012) and The Arab Revolutions in Context: Socio-Political Implications for the<br />

Middle East and Beyond (MUP, 2012). His forthcoming book is entitled Reframing<br />

Multiculturalism for the 21st Century (2013). His 2004 book Lives in Limbo: Voices<br />

of Refugees under Temporary Protection was short-listed for the 2004 Human Rights<br />

Medals and Awards.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Vince Marotta<br />

Deputy Director, Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Vince Marotta is Deputy Director of the Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation<br />

and is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Faculty of<br />

Arts and Education, <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Marotta’s main research interests include social theory, urban sociology,<br />

immigration, multiculturalism and cultural identity, cosmopolitanism and theories<br />

of the stranger. As Deputy Director of the Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation,<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Marotta has assisted in the leadership of the Centre and managing its team.<br />

He has also worked on the establishment and maintenance of collaborations with<br />

industry partners and community stakeholders.<br />

As Managing Editor of the Journal of Intercultural Studies (Routledge), <strong>Dr</strong> Marotta<br />

brings together a range of high quality research papers for publication. In addition,<br />

he has organised and edited the Citizenship and Globalisation Research Papers,<br />

an in-house CCG research paper series. In 2011 <strong>Dr</strong> Marotta sat on the organising<br />

committee of the CCG/UNAOC Integration: Building Inclusive Societies Forum. <strong>Dr</strong><br />

Marotta was also on the organising committee for the International Multicultural<br />

Symposium which took place in November 2011 at the <strong>University</strong> of Ottawa,<br />

Canada.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Marotta’s recent books include Intercultural Relations in a Global World<br />

(Common Ground Publishers, 2011) and Muslims in the West and the Challenges of<br />

Belonging (MUP, 2012).


Professor Evelyne de Leeuw<br />

Chair in Community Health Systems and Policy<br />

Evelyne de Leeuw is professor of Community Health Systems and Policy. Her research<br />

and teaching involve health policy development, public health development,<br />

healthy cities, and international, transnational and global health.<br />

Professor de Leeuw has a wide array of research interests stemming <strong>from</strong> a<br />

curiosity about health decision-making. Applying theories, methods and tools <strong>from</strong><br />

the social, political and health sciences, she is involved in the following projects in<br />

Australia and overseas:<br />

• Quantitative sociological network mapping and analysis for local health<br />

policy development and implementation (Netherlands, Australia);<br />

• Network mapping of community engagement in pharmaceutical policy<br />

development (Australia);<br />

• The nexus between research, policy and practice (VicHealth, Victoria);<br />

• Healthy Cities, local Agenda 21, community action and policy development<br />

(previously WHO/EURO, currently WHO/WPRO);<br />

• Global health; the interface between global and local health development,<br />

and in particular the mapping of healthscapes for policy purposes;<br />

• Development and implementation of the UDE (Utility-<strong>Dr</strong>iven Evidence)<br />

(Denmark, Netherlands, Australia).<br />

Professor Baogang He<br />

Chair in International Studies<br />

Professor Baogang He is the author of The Democratization of China (Routledge,<br />

1996), The Democratic Implication of Civil Society in China (Macmillan, 1997),<br />

Nationalism, National Identity and Democratization in China (Ashgate, 2000),<br />

Balancing Democracy and Authority: An Empirical Study of Village Elections in<br />

Zhejiang, (Central China Normal <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002), Multiculturalism in Asia<br />

(Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press, 2005), The Search for Deliberative Democracy (Palgrave,<br />

2006), and Federalism in Asia (Edward Elgar, 2007). He has co-authored and cotranslated<br />

several books in Chinese (including John Rawls's A Theory of Justice), and<br />

has published 29 book chapters and more than 34 international refereed journal<br />

articles in English.<br />

Professor He has established an international reputation as an authority on<br />

Chinese democratisation, NGOs and local governance, and has gained international<br />

recognition in the fields of international relations and Asian studies. Much of his<br />

empirical research has been linked to broader theoretical concepts such as civil<br />

society and democracy, and has attempted to test, modify and develop theoretical<br />

hypotheses.<br />

ANNUAL REPORT 2011<br />

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Associate Professor Hans Lofgren<br />

Associate Head of School (Community Engagement)<br />

Associate Professor Hans Lofgren teaches Politics and Policy Studies. His research<br />

interests include Indian politics and the political economy of pharmaceuticals<br />

and biotechnology in Australia, India and globally. He has published many journal<br />

articles and book chapters on these themes. Other publications include H. Lofgren &<br />

P. Sarangi (eds) The Politics and Culture of Globalisation: India and Australia (Social<br />

Science Press, 2009) and H. Lofgren, M. Leahy & E. de Leeuw (eds) Democratizing<br />

Health: Consumer Groups in the Policy Process (Edward Elgar, 2011).<br />

Professor Geoff Stokes<br />

Associate Dean (Research)<br />

Professor Geoffrey Stokes is Professor of Politics and Associate Dean (Research) in<br />

the Faculty of Arts and Education, <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>. He is also an Adjunct Professor<br />

at the Hebei <strong>University</strong> of Science and Technology, Shijiazhuang. China. Professor<br />

Stokes is an international authority on theories of citizenship and democracy. His<br />

most recent book, co-edited with Roderic Pitty and Gary Smith, was Global Citizens<br />

(Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press, 2008). He has co-edited with April Carter, Democratic<br />

Theory Today (Polity, 2002). His book Popper (Polity, 1998) has been translated<br />

into Portuguese and Italian. Professor Stokes is a major scholar of Australian<br />

politics, most recognised for his work on Australian political thought, Aboriginal<br />

politics and Australian democracy. He is on the editorial boards of the journals<br />

Contemporary Political Theory, the Australian Journal of Politics and History, and<br />

the International Journal of Diversity in Organisations, Communities and Nations.<br />

He is also a member of the National Advisory Board of the Globalism Institute at<br />

RMIT. His research projects have included Deliberative Democracy and Citizenship:<br />

A Study of Deliberative Polling and Participatory Budgeting in China (ARC Discovery),<br />

Rethinking Indigenous Self-determination: Politics, Land and Law in Australia,<br />

Canada and Scandinavia (ARC Discovery) and Unions, Globalisation and Networked<br />

Computers (ARC Linkage). He also contributed entries to B. Galligan and Winsome<br />

Roberts (eds) The Oxford Companion to Australian Politics (Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press,<br />

2007).


Professor David Walker<br />

Professor in Australian Studies<br />

David Walker is Professor of Australian Studies at <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>. He has research<br />

interests in Australian social and cultural history. He is currently researching<br />

Australian perceptions of Asia <strong>from</strong> the mid-nineteenth century to the present. The<br />

first of three volumes on this subject was published under the title Anxious Nation:<br />

Australia and the Rise of Asia, 1850 to 1939 (<strong>University</strong> of Queensland Press, 1999).<br />

The book won the Ernest Scott prize for History in 2001. Anxious Nation has been<br />

translated into Chinese and published by China Renmin <strong>University</strong> Press, Beijing in<br />

2009. An Indian edition published by SSS publishing, New Delhi, was published in<br />

the same year.<br />

Professor Walker has extensive experience in the development of Australian Studies<br />

programs in PR China, India, Japan and Indonesia and held the Distinguished<br />

Visiting Chair of Australian Studies at the <strong>University</strong> of Copenhagen in their 2010<br />

Spring semester. He is a Visiting Professor in the School of Foreign Studies, Renmin<br />

<strong>University</strong>, Beijing.<br />

His latest book entitled Not Dark Yet, examines sight, memory, family and history<br />

and has been published by Giramondo Publishing in 2011. Essays on this subject<br />

have appeared in Heat Magazine. Professor Walker is a Fellow of the Academy of<br />

the Social Sciences in Australia and the Australian Academy of the Humanities.<br />

Professor Walker is currently finalising a manuscript that examines Australian<br />

representations of Asia <strong>from</strong> the 1930s to the 1970s. The book examines the growth<br />

of Pacific consciousness, the various programs and initiatives designed to improve<br />

Australia’s <strong>image</strong> in Asia (and knowledge of Asia in Australia) and the responses<br />

to Australia by various visitors <strong>from</strong> the region. The book addresses the question<br />

of cultural change in a society that by the late 1930s was commonly regarded as<br />

insular and either indifferent or hostile to the region.<br />

In early 2012, Professor Walker was awarded the title of Alfred <strong>Deakin</strong> Professor by<br />

<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong> Council. This award is the highest that the <strong>University</strong> can bestow<br />

upon academic staff in recognition of their calibre and achievements.<br />

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RESEARCH FELLOWS<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Benjamin Isakhan<br />

Research Fellow<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Benjamin Isakhan’s primary research interests are democracy in Iraq, Orientalism<br />

and the media, the history of democracy and Middle Eastern politics and history. <strong>Dr</strong><br />

Isakhan is the author of Democracy in Iraq: History, Politics and Discourse (Ashgate,<br />

2012) and the co-editor of The Secret History of Democracy (Palgrave Macmillan,<br />

2011) and The Edinburgh Companion to the History of Democracy (Edinburgh<br />

<strong>University</strong> Press, 2012), both with Professor Stephen Stockwell. In addition, <strong>Dr</strong><br />

Isakhan has authored several publications including book chapters in Islam and<br />

the Australian News Media (Melbourne <strong>University</strong> Press, 2010). He is also the<br />

author of refereed articles in the journals Middle East Policy, International Journal<br />

of Contemporary Iraqi Studies, Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication,<br />

Global Media Journal, Journal of Sociology, Australian Journalism Review, Media/<br />

Culture, Transformations and the Bulletin of the Royal Institute for Inter-Faith<br />

Studies. He has presented around 20 refereed conference papers in the United<br />

States, Jordan, Australia and New Zealand.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Isakhan has also given guest lectures at The Centre for Middle Eastern Studies<br />

and The Oriental Institute at the <strong>University</strong> of Chicago as well as The Middle East<br />

Institute at Columbia <strong>University</strong> (New York) as sponsored by The American Academic<br />

Research Institute in Iraq (TAARII).<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Isakhan has recently won several major awards including a Discovery Early Career<br />

Researcher Award (DECRA) for his project ‘Measuring the Destruction of Heritage<br />

and Spikes of Violence in Iraq’ which starts in 2012.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Yoko Harada<br />

Post Doctoral Research Fellow<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Yoko Harada is an Alfred <strong>Deakin</strong> Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Centre for<br />

Citizenship and Globalisation. She is originally <strong>from</strong> Tokyo but spent her childhood<br />

also in Vancouver, Sydney and Osaka.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Harada’s primary research interest is in Australia – <strong>from</strong> politics, history, public<br />

policies, social problems, and sports to popular music. Comparing Australian issues<br />

with the situation in Japan always fascinates her. She is now focusing on the whaling<br />

dispute between the two countries.


<strong>Dr</strong> Michele Lobo<br />

Post Doctoral Research Fellow<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Michele Lobo joined the Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation in April<br />

2010, working as a Research Fellow on the ARC Discovery research grant, ‘Local<br />

Governance, Multiculturalism and Active Citizenship: The case of the Arab-Muslim<br />

Diaspora in the West’. <strong>Dr</strong> Lobo’s main research interest is the cultural experience<br />

of marginalised groups and the implications for social inclusion in Australian cities.<br />

She has worked as a lecturer and researcher in India and Australia. She lectured for<br />

several years at the Department of Geography, Loreto College, Calcutta <strong>University</strong>,<br />

India.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Lobo has recently published several books including Reimagining Citizenship<br />

(LAP Lambert Academic Publishing, 2010) Intercultural Relations in a Global World<br />

(Common Ground Publishing, 2011) and Migration, Citizenship and Intercultural<br />

Relations (Ashgate, 2011).<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Maša Mikola<br />

Research Fellow<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Maša Mikola has a PhD in intercultural studies and a background in journalism,<br />

communication and migration studies. Her doctoral work focused on migration,<br />

diversity rhetoric and the issues of space, place and social interaction in Melbourne.<br />

She is currently a research fellow on an ARC Linkage project: ‘Social Networks,<br />

Belonging and Active Citizenship among Migrant Youth in Australia’.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Miklola’s research interests are in urban anthropology, space, place, citizenship,<br />

identity politics and the politics of emotions.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Alexander Naraniecki<br />

Post Doctoral Research Fellow<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Alexander Naraniecki’s current research project is titled ‘New Foundations for<br />

Multiculturalism’ and he is currently working on various publications focusing on<br />

the development of multiculturalism in Australia as well as the role of recognition<br />

and dialogue in promoting intercultural relations. <strong>Dr</strong> Naraniecki is also actively<br />

involved in building bridges between the Polish and broader Australian community<br />

through dialogue and intercultural events as a member of the Australian Institute<br />

of Polish Affairs.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Naraniecki’s research interests include integrative multiculturalism, liberalism,<br />

post-secularism, philosophy of religion, research methods, epistemology, Karl<br />

Popper, history of Australian sociology and the, European history of ideas particularly<br />

German and Central European thought.<br />

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VISITING RESEARCH FELLOWS<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Abe Ata<br />

Visiting Research Fellow<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Abe Ata’s teaching and research interests focus on the relationship between<br />

cultural and religious diversity and the impact of this on social relationships,<br />

wellbeing, social attitudes and social distance.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Ata’s background is in cross-cultural training which has led him to embrace<br />

multidisciplinary and culturally sensitive approaches when conducting and<br />

interpreting a wide range of research projects. This is evident in his publications of<br />

15 books and 102 articles.<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Ata’s recently edited Catholics and Catholicism in Contemporary Australia:<br />

Challenges and Achievements (David Lovell Publishing, 2012).<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Steve Francis<br />

Visiting Research Fellow<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Steve Francis, National Manager – Movement Relations & Advocacy, Red Cross<br />

Australia, is a Visiting Fellow to the Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation.<br />

Steve has a PhD in Anthropology <strong>from</strong> the <strong>University</strong> of Melbourne and is an<br />

Honorary Fellow with the School of Anthropology, Philosophy and Social Theory<br />

at the <strong>University</strong> of Melbourne. His anthropological interests include a focus on<br />

transnationalism, movement and migration in Oceania. He has written papers,<br />

chapters and monographs on these areas of interest and presented at conferences<br />

in many parts of the world.<br />

He is currently a partner investigator on two Australian Research Council (ARC)<br />

Linkage Grants: ‘Social Networks, Belonging and Active Citizenship among<br />

Migrant Youth in Australia’ (a partnership between <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, <strong>University</strong><br />

of Queensland, Australian Red Cross and the Centre for Multicultural Youth) and<br />

‘Australian Diasporas and Brain Gain: Exploring Current & Potential Transnational<br />

Linkages’ (a partnership between Victoria <strong>University</strong>, <strong>University</strong> of Adelaide,<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Western Australia, Victorian Multicultural Commission, Australian<br />

Vietnamese Women’s Welfare Association, Embassy of the Republic of Macedonia,<br />

and the Council for International Trade and Commerce).


ASSOCIATE EDITOR<br />

RESEARCH ASSISTANT<br />

PHD CANDIDATES<br />

• Mr Michael Aitkinson<br />

• Mr Saleem Aljebori<br />

• Mr Munjed Farid Al-Qutob<br />

• Mr Raman Apsingikar<br />

• <strong>Dr</strong> Joyce Arnold<br />

• Ms Libby Effeney<br />

• Mr Tristan Galloway<br />

• Mr Richard Gehrmann<br />

• Mr Ahmed <strong>Hass</strong>in<br />

• Mr Jarrod Hingston<br />

• Mr Leigh Hunter<br />

• Mr Rory Jeffs<br />

Ms Paula Muraca<br />

Associate Editor, Journal of Intercultural Studies<br />

Paula has worked within the Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation as the Associate<br />

Editor of the Journal of Intercultural Studies (Routledge).<br />

Ms Libby Effeney<br />

Research Assistant<br />

Libby joined the Centre in December 2010 as a Doctoral candidate and research<br />

assistant. Her PhD project is entitled, ‘Exploring the Potential for a Cosmopolitan<br />

Ethic in Australia: the Case of Iraqi Asylum Seekers’. She is also involved in the<br />

Centre’s ARC Linkage Project, ‘Social Networks, Belonging and Active Citizenship<br />

among Migrant Youth in Australia.’<br />

In 2009, Libby graduated with a Masters of Middle East Studies <strong>from</strong> Middle East<br />

Technical <strong>University</strong> in Ankara, Turkey. Her thesis in political anthropology was<br />

entitled ‘Political Identities of Kurdish Youth in Ankara, Turkey’. Libby enjoys<br />

learning languages and spending time outdoors.<br />

• Mr Robert Kong<br />

• Ms Jenny Lee<br />

• Ms Alexia Maddox<br />

• Ms Adrienne Margarian<br />

• Mr Dylan Nickelson<br />

• Ms Katsamaporn Rakson<br />

• Ms Chelsea Rodd<br />

• Mr Eko Saputro<br />

• Mr Walter Struve<br />

• Ms Belinda Townsend<br />

• Mr Benjamin Walters<br />

• Ms Jane Weisner<br />

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MAJOR RESEARCH PROJECTS<br />

Australia’s Asian Futures: A Cultural History, 1972 to the Present<br />

Australian Research Council Discovery Project (2009-2011)<br />

Alfred <strong>Deakin</strong> Professor David Walker<br />

Relations with Asia are vital to Australia's prosperity and security. This project placed in historical context<br />

evolving understandings of what the 'region' has meant to Australians <strong>from</strong> the 1970s to the present. It<br />

clarified the processes by which Australia has adapted to Asia, and points of resistance to engagement. By<br />

examining the representations of politicians, journalists, Asianists, and travel writers, this study sought to<br />

explain how threats to security have been perceived over time, and the interplay between popular and elite<br />

representation. An analysis of how threats <strong>from</strong> political Islam have been understood, informed a wider<br />

history of threat perceptions extending <strong>from</strong> the mid-nineteenth century to the present.<br />

Social Networks, Belonging and Active Citizenship Among Migrant Youth in<br />

Australia<br />

Australian Research Council Linkage Project (2009-2012)<br />

Research Team:<br />

Professor Fethi Mansouri, Professor Zlatko Skrbis, <strong>Dr</strong> Steve Francis, and Ms Carmel Guerra.<br />

Collaborating/Partner Organisations:<br />

The Australian Red Cross, The Centre for Multicultural Youth Issues (CMYI).<br />

This project focuses on youth <strong>from</strong> three Australian migrant communities at the centre of recent debates<br />

about migrant integration, intercultural conflict and social cohesion. The study is investigating the role of<br />

formal and informal social networks in creating a sense of belonging to mainstream society among migrant<br />

youth. The project redresses a critical gap in popular and official understandings of the social fabric of Australia<br />

and will provide benchmark data for improved government and community services for migrant youth.


Deliberative Democracy in China<br />

Australian Research Council Discovery Project (2009-2013)<br />

Professor Baogang He<br />

The democratisation of a rising China that is emerging onto the world stage is significant not only for the<br />

welfare of the Chinese people, but also for the security and prosperity of the Asia-Pacific region and beyond.<br />

This multidisciplinary research program of a deliberative model of local democratisation in China aims to apply<br />

the theory of deliberative democracy to China and democratisation studies; advance deliberative theory<br />

through identifying and defining the electoral versus deliberative models of democratisation; generate new<br />

knowledge through a testing and refining of deliberative polling techniques, and offer practical advice for<br />

improving existing deliberative institutions.<br />

Many things will be achieved through this program including an increased effort to promote deliberative<br />

democracy in China; a continuing refinement of deliberative techniques; a series of political experiments<br />

and social science research; a training program for students, and capacity building for the sustainable<br />

development of deliberative democracy. The study involves peoples <strong>from</strong> different disciplines and will lead to<br />

the publication of several books and journal articles and especially policy reports that will affect the process<br />

of deliberative democratisation on the ground.<br />

Below: Professor Baogang He speaking at the Fulbright Symposium, 2011<br />

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MAJOR RESEARCH PROJECTS AWARDED IN 2011<br />

Heritage Destruction and Spikes in Violence<br />

Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) (2012-2014)<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Benjamin Isakhan<br />

Since the invasion of 2003, Iraq has suffered an unprecedented era of both heritage destruction and<br />

devastating spikes in violence. The core aim of this project is to empirically test the assumption that a<br />

significant relationship exists between these two phenomena. To do this, the project will develop the world’s<br />

first database of heritage destruction in Iraq. The database that <strong>Dr</strong> Isakhan creates will then be correlated<br />

with existing measures of violence in Iraq to determine the precise nature of their relationship. This will set<br />

the precedent for studies of both heritage and violence and enable policy formation aimed at minimising<br />

heritage destruction and spikes in violence during times of conflict.<br />

Religion and Political Thought<br />

Australian Research Council Discovery Project (2012-2014)<br />

Research Team:<br />

Associate Professor Marion Maddox, Associate Professor Roland Boer, <strong>Dr</strong> Christopher Hartney, <strong>Dr</strong><br />

Geoffrey Boucher and <strong>Dr</strong> Matthew Sharpe.<br />

Why do so many Australian political leaders increasingly profess religious belief, while the public becomes<br />

more secular? What does this mean for our politics? Religion and Political Thought (RAPT's) rigorous<br />

interdisciplinary analysis contributes both to a large international project (Asia, Europe and North America)<br />

and to developing an Australian tradition of political theory.<br />

Using Museums to Counter Racism and Increase Acceptance of Diversity Among<br />

Young People<br />

Australian Research Council Linkage Project (2012-2014)<br />

Research Team:<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Yin Paradies, <strong>Dr</strong> Naomi Priest, <strong>Dr</strong> Emma Kowal, Associate Professor Margaret Kelaher, Professor<br />

Fethi Mansouri, <strong>Dr</strong> Moya McFadzean, Ms Carolyn Meehan, and Ms Linda Sproul.<br />

Collaborating/Partner Organisations:<br />

Museum of Victoria, Victorian Health Promotion Foundation.<br />

Racism is a significant issue for young Australians. This project will reveal how high school students and their<br />

teachers understand racism, diversity and identity. It will also determine how museum programs can reduce<br />

racism and increase acceptance of diversity among high school students and their teachers.


POST DOCTORAL RESEARCH FELLOWS’ PROJECTS<br />

Enquiry into the Fight of the Century: The Whaling Dispute Between Australia<br />

and Japan<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Yoko Harada<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Harada is interested in why and how Australia and Japan, countries that are normally in a stable and sound<br />

relationship, have come to take such different positions on whaling. By untangling this complicated dispute<br />

(which is currently deadlocked), <strong>Dr</strong> Harada is attempting to understand the fundamental positions dividing<br />

the two nations on this issue. Initially, her research focuses on Australia’s whaling history and on compiling<br />

a concise history of whaling in Australia.<br />

Exploring Intercultural Encounters in the Darwin-Palmerston Urban Area<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Michele Lobo<br />

This project focuses on the role that multi-sensory experiences of place play in understanding urban sociality<br />

and belonging in a north Australian city. It is anticipated that this research, which uses innovative qualitative<br />

techniques, will provide a better understanding of the politics and poetics of place. The project will build on<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Lobo’s doctoral research, ‘Reimagining Citizenship in Suburban Australia’, which focused on the everyday<br />

experiences of negotiating ethnic difference in the City of Greater Dandenong, one of the most culturally<br />

diverse suburban areas in Melbourne, and indeed Australia.<br />

New Foundations of Multiculturalism<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Alexander Naraniecki<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Naraniecki is currently working on the history of the theoretical development of multiculturalism in<br />

Australia, with particular attention to the relationship between Christian thought and multiculturalism. <strong>Dr</strong><br />

Naraniecki is also investigating the 'Kantian' aspects of Karl Popper's epistemology.<br />

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EVENTS IN PROFILE<br />

The Arab Revolutions in Context: Socio-Political Implications<br />

for the Middle East and Beyond<br />

3 June 2011, Elisabeth Murdoch Theatre, <strong>University</strong> of Melbourne<br />

This event brought together many of Australia’s leading experts in the field of Middle East Studies to address<br />

recent events in the region.<br />

During late 2010-early 2011, weeks of mass protests and civil unrest in Tunisia and Egypt led to the ousting<br />

of long serving dictators such as Ben Ali and Mubarak. In Libya, Colonel Gaddafi used his entire arsenal in an<br />

attempt to quash the resistance, sparking a brutal civil war and Western military intervention. Meanwhile,<br />

citizens across the region continue to stage (mostly) peaceful protests that have been met with a mixture of<br />

brutal suppression and modest political and economic reforms.<br />

This complex set of events posed a number of critical questions that needed urgent and in-depth scholarly<br />

attention. This Forum sought to discuss the unfolding events in the Arab world by situating them within a<br />

larger conceptual and socio-political framework.<br />

Fulbright Symposium: Australia-US Relations and the Rise<br />

of China: From Bilateralism to Trilateralism?<br />

11-12 August 2011, Sofitel Melbourne<br />

The rise of China is one of the most important contemporary issues in international politics and presents a<br />

significant challenge to the relationship between Australia and the United States. China’s rising power has<br />

complicated the strategic relationship between Australia and the US and has prompted difficult questions<br />

about the future of the alliance. This symposium offered an overview of Australian, Chinese, and American<br />

perspectives on trilateralism with a detailed discussion of Australian debates. It aimed to provide the<br />

intellectual background to triangular dialogues so as to facilitate and deepen debates and to facilitate better<br />

management of the Australia-US bilateral relationship.<br />

Convened by Professor Baogang He, sponsored by the Australian-American Fulbright Commission and<br />

organised by <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, this high-profile event was the first time that leading scholars and policy<br />

makers <strong>from</strong> Australia, the United States, and China had come together to discuss their views of the Australia-<br />

US alliance in the context of China’s rise.<br />

The Australian-American Fulbright Commission’s mission is “promoting mutual understanding between the<br />

peoples of the United States and Australia through educational and cultural exchange”. The Symposium was<br />

intended to improve the knowledge of policy makers, scholars and the public about key issues for Australia-<br />

US relations in the context of the rise of China. By bringing together scholars and policy makers <strong>from</strong> the<br />

three countries the Symposium aimed to provoke an open and vigorous debate and focus attention on these<br />

issues. At the same time, the discussion enabled scholars to develop a more sophisticated understanding<br />

of power transition theories and their implications for the future of the region. Improving the knowledge<br />

of policy makers, scholars and the public about how their country’s alliance partner is likely to respond to<br />

changing circumstances and the reasons behind those responses will deepen mutual understanding between<br />

Australia and the US, facilitate better management of the bilateral relationship, and help to avoid potentially<br />

dangerous misunderstandings in the future.


Integration: Building Inclusive Societies Forum<br />

Co-hosted by the Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation and the United Nations<br />

Alliance of Civilizations<br />

6-7 October 2011, Melbourne Town Hall<br />

CCG was pleased to host Australia’s first ever UN Forum on Social Inclusion on the 6 and 7 of October 2011.<br />

The forum was convened by CCG’s Director Professor Fethi Mansouri and ECCV Director Mr Ross Barnett.<br />

Under the auspices of the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations (UNAOC), and in partnership with a number<br />

of agencies, the event brought together political leaders, civil society organisations and distinguished scholars<br />

to address the key question – how to build inclusive societies.<br />

The event included presentations <strong>from</strong> <strong>Dr</strong> Jorge Sampaio, the High Representative for the UN Alliance of<br />

Civilizations and the former President of Portugal, and Australia’s then Minister for Foreign Affairs, Kevin Rudd.<br />

The pair spoke at a pre-forum briefing on Thursday 6 October about the global need for quality intercultural<br />

dialogue and understanding and also discussed Australia’s engagement with the UN.<br />

The forum proceedings began with a panel of three experts exploring issues and debates surrounding<br />

multiculturalism, citizenship, migrant integration, identity and social inclusion.<br />

In his keynote address <strong>Dr</strong> Sampaio framed his vision of multiculturalism and set the tone for the day’s<br />

proceedings by saying:<br />

“Multiculturalism involves a<br />

strong system that enshrines<br />

equality namely through a social<br />

inclusion agenda that takes into<br />

consideration cultural and racial<br />

issues and a culture of tolerance<br />

and dialogue that promotes social<br />

and community engagement and<br />

prevents intolerance, prejudice and<br />

discrimination”.<br />

- <strong>Dr</strong> Jorge Sampaio, 2011.<br />

From <strong>left</strong>: The Hon Kevin Rudd MP; <strong>Dr</strong> Jorge Sampaio, High Representative<br />

for the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations, 2011.<br />

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From <strong>left</strong>: Professor Jane den Hollander, <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong> Vice Chancellor; Professor Fethi Mansouri, CCG Director and forum convener; <strong>Dr</strong><br />

Jorge Sampaio, High Representative for the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations and the former President of Portugal; Senator the Hon Kate<br />

Lundy, Parliamentary Secretary for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs; Hon Nicholas Kotsiras MLA, Victorian State Minister for Multicultural<br />

Affairs and Citizenship; Mr Sam Afra, Chariperson Ethnic Communities’ Council of Victoria.<br />

In his address, the Hon Nicholas Kotsiras made an impassioned overture for all those present to make inclusive<br />

practices part of their everyday lives. The day was one of celebration with many success stories of social<br />

inclusion. However, participants were also reminded of the many continuing challenges facing increasingly<br />

diverse societies. These challenges require creative thinking and cooperation if we are to work towards a<br />

collectively more positive future.<br />

The event included breakout sessions which addressed the four main themes of action of the UNAOC:<br />

education, youth, migration and media. Each of these sessions stimulated debate and interaction and bore<br />

testament to the animated nature of Australia’s culturally plural society. These discussions also highlighted<br />

the need for continuing improvement and interaction in diverse societies at both the political and individual<br />

level.<br />

The forum showcased the varied and<br />

passionate debate shaping attitudes to<br />

cultural and religious diversity in Australia.<br />

Participants represented a wide range of<br />

perspectives, <strong>from</strong> grass-roots practitioners<br />

to federal government officials. As part of<br />

the forum, the Integration: Building Inclusive<br />

Societies (IBIS) website was launched by<br />

<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>’s Deputy Vice-Chancellor<br />

(Research) Professor Lee Astheimer (pictured<br />

right). The website is a platform developed<br />

within the UNAOC that aims to facilitate the<br />

sharing of resources and best practices in the<br />

area of social inclusion.


Youth Leaders Forum<br />

22 October 2011, Melbourne Multicultural Hub<br />

In October 2011 CCG hosted the Youth Leaders<br />

Forum in Melbourne as part of the ‘Social Networks,<br />

Belonging and Active Citizenship among Migrant<br />

Youth in Australia’ Linkage project. This event brought<br />

together young leaders <strong>from</strong> Arabic speaking, Torres<br />

Strait Islander and African migrant backgrounds in<br />

order to foster discussion on the issues and challenges<br />

facing young migrants. The participants emphasised<br />

the importance of communication and engagement<br />

and highlighted the difficulty of challenging community<br />

stereotypes, particularly those portrayed by the<br />

mainstream media.<br />

Left: Participants at the Youth Leaders Forum, 2011.<br />

Democratising Governance Forum<br />

17-18 November 2011, <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

Over the course of the twentieth century and into the new millennium, representative democracy has spread<br />

across the world. As a result, many questions have been raised about ways of making democracy more<br />

democratic. Traditionally, this has entailed a focus on the mechanisms and institutions that have sprung up<br />

around democracy. These have included the need for competitive elections and election monitoring bodies,<br />

a critical and engaged media landscape, a robust civil society sector, an independent judiciary, and political<br />

diversity and opposition. Today, such factors are generally understood to be the standards by which we<br />

measure any claim to a functioning democracy.<br />

However, only very recently has attention been paid to whether or not governance itself should be more<br />

democratic. Governance is here understood as the complex array of practices that provide a degree of<br />

order and coordination at a local, national or supra-national level. Governance involves governments but<br />

increasingly also other organisations and entities. Today, the extent to which governance can or is being<br />

organised democratically is an issue of significant debate with implications for both conceptual and empirical<br />

research within contexts ranging <strong>from</strong> the local to the global.<br />

Democracy faces many core issues in our times. This affects the way in which governance is – or ought to<br />

be – structured.<br />

Right: Professor Simon Tormey, Head of School, Social<br />

and Political Sciences, <strong>University</strong> of Sydney, speaking at<br />

Democratising Governance Forum, 2011.<br />

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Reframing Multiculturalism for the 21st Century’s Realities<br />

21-22 November 2011, <strong>University</strong> of Ottawa, Canada<br />

Professor Mansouri speaking at the <strong>University</strong> of Ottawa, 2011.<br />

Citizens of multicultural nations often struggle to realise and<br />

establish an identity that bridges both their complex past with<br />

the uniqueness of their multiple cultural connections as well as<br />

their (trans)national belongings. Multiculturalism, as a political<br />

structure based on institutionalising social justice and social<br />

equality is being challenged, not merely because politics for<br />

equality and social justice have failed to establish their main<br />

objectives, but because the ideal of such politics must not<br />

disregard the human capacity to resist, negotiate or embrace.<br />

This international workshop on multiculturalism followed a<br />

symposium that took place at <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong> in November<br />

2010. The focus of this edition was to outline the “challenges”<br />

for and “reframing” of multiculturalism for the 21st Century’s<br />

realities and global knowledge-economy.<br />

Professor Kevin McDonald delivering his seminar, ‘Social Movements in the 21st Century: Reconfiguring Democracy and<br />

Citizenship’, 2012.


LUNCHTIME SEMINAR SERIES<br />

10 March Anthony Ware Context Sensitivity in International Development<br />

24 March Jill Bamforth The Untold Stories of Migrant Women and Australian Law<br />

7 April Linda Young The Construction of National Heroes in House Museums<br />

21 April Geoff Robinson American Liberalism and the Problem of Capitalism <strong>from</strong> the Long<br />

Boom to the Panic of 2007<br />

6 May Benjamin Isakhan Targeting the Symbolic Dimension of Baathist Iraq: Cultural<br />

Destruction, Historical Memory and National Identity<br />

19 May David Hundt Contesting Neo-Liberalism in Korea: Financial Crisis and Beyond<br />

9 June Douglas Lorman The Multicultural Debate: Deja Vu All Over Again<br />

23 June Steven Slaughter Does Minilaterialism Matter? The G20 and Legitimacy in Global<br />

Governance<br />

7 July Abe Ata Attitudes of Non-Muslim Australian Senior Students to Muslims<br />

and Islam: A National Survey<br />

21 July Yin Paradies Understanding and Addressing Racism in Australia<br />

11 August Leonie Rutherford & Multiplatform Innovation and Participatory Citizenship: The<br />

Adam Brown Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Digital Children’s Television<br />

Projects<br />

25 August Yoko Harada What Australian's Are Missing: Exploration into the Japanese<br />

Theatre of the Whaling Dispute<br />

8 September Adam Possamai Religious Profile of Aborigines, Pacific Peoples and Maoris in<br />

Australia & New Zealand: An Analysis of the 2001 & 2006 Censuses<br />

22 September Alexander Naraniecki The Origins of Australian Multiculturalism: Jerzy (George) Zubrzycki<br />

and Integrative Pluralism<br />

6 October Damien Two Steps Forward, One Step Back: Indonesia’s Arduous Path of<br />

Kingsbury Reform<br />

20 October David Walker Not Dark Yet: Writing a Personal History<br />

SPECIAL SEMINAR SERIES<br />

7 March Paul Morris Where Does a ‘No’ to Multiculturalism Leave Us? Reflections of<br />

European and Antipodean Realities<br />

28 September Syed K Aljunied Muslim Revivalism and Failed Secularism in Southeast Asia<br />

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PUBLICATIONS AND RESEARCH ACTIVITIES<br />

Books<br />

Isakhan, B., & Stockwell, S. (eds) (2011). The Secret History of Democracy. London: Palgrave Macmillan.<br />

Lobo, M., Marotta, V., & Oke, N. (eds) (2011). Intercultural Relations in a Global World. USA: Common Ground.<br />

Lofgren, H., de Leeuw, E., & Leahy, M. (2011). Democratising Health: Consumer Groups in the Policy Process.<br />

Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.<br />

Mansouri, F., & Lobo, M. (eds) (2011). Migration, Citizenship and Intercultural Relations. London: Ashgate.<br />

van Hooft, S. (2011). Hope. Durham: Acumen Publishing.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). Not Dark Yet: A Personal History. NSW: Giramondo Publishing.<br />

Book Chapters<br />

Bilimoria, P. (2011). ‘Extra-sensorial Laisons of 4D Yogins: Enigma Extolled By Nyaya; Impeachable To<br />

Mimamsas’. In C.K. Chapple, S. Shastri, I. Malek, D. Charan, & D. Sri Prashant (eds), World of Philosophy : A<br />

Harmony. pp. 58-68. Delhi, India: Shanti Prakashan.<br />

Bilimoria, P. (2011). ‘Nyaya and Navyanyaya’. In K.A. Jacobsen, H. Basu, A. Malinar, & V. Narayanan, (eds),<br />

Brill's Encyclopedia of Hinduism. pp. 657-671. Netherlands: Brill, Leiden.<br />

Grigg, R., & Sharpe, M. (2011). ‘In the Name of the Father: Understanding Monotheism and Fundamentalism’.<br />

In G. Oppy, & N.N. Trakakis (eds), The Antipodean Philosopher. pp. 81-87. Lanham: Lexington Books.<br />

Harada, Y. (2011). ‘Australia, Japan, Inferiority Complex and Orientalism: Examining Common Symptom of<br />

‘Natural Partners’’. In A. Tokita et.al. (eds), Outside Asia: Japanese and Australian Identities and Encounters in<br />

Flux. pp. 35-45. Japanese Studies Centre, Monash <strong>University</strong>.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘Blue Book (2011): Asian and Chinese Economic Model to Adjust’. pp. 103-119. Beijing: Social<br />

Sciences Academic Press.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘Cittadinanza Mondiale e Attivismo Transnazionale’. In A. Carnevale, & S. Strazzeri, (eds), Lotte,<br />

Riconoscimento, Diritti, (Morlacchi Editore), pp. 421-454.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘La Questione del Multiculturalismo in Cina’. In E. Pfost, (ed), Multiculturalismo e Democrazia,<br />

(Apes Editrice). pp. 111-125.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘Kevin Rudd's Proposal for an Asia-Pacific Community’. In L. Xiangyang (ed) Annual Report on<br />

Development of Asia-Pacific, China’s Social Sciences Press. pp.103-119.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011). ‘What is so ‘Primitive’ About ‘Primitive Democracy’? Comparing the Ancient Middle East<br />

and Classical Athens’. In B. Isakhan, & S. Stockwell (eds), The Secret History of Democracy. pp. 19-34. London:<br />

Palgrave Macmillan.<br />

Isakhan, B., & Stockwell, S. (2011). ‘Conclusion: Democratising the History of Democracy’. In B. Isakhan, & S.<br />

Stockwell (eds), The Secret History of Democracy. pp. 219-224. London: Palgrave Macmillan.<br />

Isakhan, B., & Stockwell, S. (2011). ‘Introduction: Democracy and History’. In B. Isakhan & S. Stockwell (eds),<br />

The Secret History of Democracy, pp. 1-16. London: Palgrave Macmillan.


Jörg-U, K., Leibner, M., & Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Teaching’. In Pienemann, M., & K Keßler, J. (eds), Studying<br />

Processability Theory: An Introductory Textbook. pp. 148-155. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing<br />

Company.<br />

Leahy, M., Lofgren, H., & de Leeuw, E. (2011). ‘Introduction: Consumer Groups and the Democratization of<br />

Health Policy’. In M. Leahy, H. Lofgren, & E. de Leeuw (eds), Democratising Health: Consumer Groups in the<br />

Policy Process. pp. 1-14. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.<br />

Lobo, M. (2011). ‘Whiteness and Australian Suburbia’. In F. Mansouri & M. Lobo (eds), Migration, Citizenship<br />

and Intercultural Relations: Looking Through the Lens of Social Inclusion. pp. 91-102. Aldershot , England:<br />

Ashgate.<br />

Lobo, M., Marotta, V. & Oke, N. (2011). ‘Intercultural Relations in a Global and Transnational World’. In M.<br />

Lobo, V. Marotta, & N. Oke, (eds), Intercultural Relations in a Global World. pp. 1-10. Champaign, Ill: Common<br />

Ground Publishing LLC.<br />

Leahy, M., Lofgren, H., & de Leeuw, E. (2011). ‘From Activism to State Inclusion: Health Consumer Groups in<br />

Australia’. In M. Leahy, H. Lofgren, & E. de Leeuw (eds), Democratizing Health: Consumer Groups in the Policy<br />

Process. pp. 177-192. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.<br />

Mansouri, F., & Lobo, M. (2011). ‘Introduction: Social Inclusion: Exploring the Concept’. In F. Mansouri & M.<br />

Lobo (eds), Migration, Citizenship and Intercultural Relations: Looking Through the Lens of Social Inclusion.<br />

pp. 1-12. Aldershot , England: Ashgate.<br />

Mansouri, F., Lobo, M., & Latrache, R. (2011). ‘Negotiating Norms of Inclusion: Comparative Perspectives<br />

<strong>from</strong> Muslim Community Leadership in the West’. In F. Mansouri & M. Lobo (eds), Migration, Citizenship<br />

and Intercultural Relations: Looking Through the Lens of Social Inclusion. pp. 129-139. Aldershot , England:<br />

Ashgate.<br />

Marotta, V. (2011). ‘The Idea of the in-between Subject in Social and Cultural Thought’. In M. Lobo, V. Marotta,<br />

& N. Oke, (eds), Intercultural Relations in a Global World. pp. 179-199. Champaign, Ill: Common Ground<br />

Publishing LLC.<br />

Marotta, V. (2011). ‘Home, Mobility, and the Encounter with Otherness’. In F. Mansouri, & M. Lobo, (eds),<br />

Migration, Citizenship, and Intercultural Relations: Looking Through the Lens of Social Inclusion. pp. 193-209.<br />

Aldershot: Ashgate.<br />

Pan, C. (2011). ‘Shu and the Chinese Quest for Harmony: A Confucian Approach to Mediating Across<br />

Difference’. In M. Brigg, & R. Bleiker (eds), Mediating Across Difference: Oceanic and Asian Approaches to<br />

Conflict Resolution. pp. 221-247. Honolulu: <strong>University</strong> of Hawaii Press.<br />

Sharpe, M., & Townsend, D. (2011). ‘Strauss’s Nietzche’. In A. Woodward (ed), Interpreting Nietzsche:<br />

Reception and Influence. pp. 131-18. New York: Continuum International Publishing Group.<br />

Simms, M. (2011). ‘Diary of an Election’. In Simms, M., & Wanna, J. (eds), Julia 2010: The Caretaker Election.<br />

pp. 11-32. Canberra ACT: ANU E Press.<br />

Simms, M. (2011). ‘Westminster Norms and Caretaker Conventions: Australian and New Zealand Transition<br />

Debates’. in P. t’ Hart, & J. Uhr, (eds), How Power Changes Hands: Transition and Succession in Government.<br />

pp. 94-107. Hampshire, U. K: Palgrave Macmillan.<br />

Simms, M., & Wanna, J. (2011). ‘The Caretaker Election of 2010: ‘Julia 10’ Versus ‘Tony 10’ and the Onset of<br />

Minority government’. In M. Simms, & J. Wanna (eds), Julia 2010: The Caretaker Election. pp. 1-7. Canberra<br />

ACT: ANU E Press.<br />

Slaughter, S. (2011). ‘Globalisation and its Critics’. In R. Devetak et al (eds), Introduction to International<br />

Relations. (2nd edn) Cambridge: Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press.<br />

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van Hooft, S. (2011). ‘Commitment and the Bond of Love’. In A.L. McEvoy (ed), Sex, Love, and Friendship:<br />

Studies of the Society for the Philosophy of Sex and Love: 1993-2003. Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi.<br />

(reprinted <strong>from</strong> the Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Vol 74, No 3, September 1996, pp. 454-466.<br />

Vitry, A. & Lofgren, H. (2011). ‘Health Consumer Organizations and the Pharmaceutical Industry: Is<br />

Transparency the Answer?’ In H. Lofgren, E. de Leeuw & M. Leahy (eds), Democratizing Health: Consumer<br />

Groups in the Policy Process. pp. 239-254. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). ‘Marvelous Melbourne, 1880- 1895’. In P. Thwaites (ed), The New Percy Grainger<br />

Companion. pp. 123-129. London: Boydell & Brewer.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). ‘Naming and Locating Asia: Australian Dlemmas in its Regional Identity’. In L. Yew (ed)<br />

Alterities in Asia: Reflections on Identity and Regionalism. pp. 65-88. London and New York: Routledge.<br />

Journal Articles<br />

Bilimoria, P. (2011). ‘The Idea of Hindu Law’. Journal of Oriental Society of Australia, vol. 43, pp. 103-130.<br />

Boucher, G., & Sharpe, M. (2011). ‘Financial Crisis, Social Pathologies, and ‘Generalized Perversion’:<br />

Questioning Žižek's Diagnosis of the Times’. New Formations: A Journal of Culture/Theory/Politics, vol. 72,<br />

no. 2, pp. 64-79.<br />

de Leeuw, E. (2011). ‘Do Healthy Cities Work? A Logic of Method for Assessing Impact and Outcome of Healthy<br />

Cities’. Journal of Urban Health, pp. 1-15.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘Authoritarian Deliberation: The Deliberative Turn in Chinese Political Development’. Perspectives<br />

on Politics, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 269-289.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘Barry Hindess and the Critique of Democracy’. Alternatives: Global, Local, Political, vol. 36, no.<br />

1, pp. 17-24.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘Can Zhengyou Become a Diplomatic Principle or a Part of Global Culture?’ The Twenty-First<br />

Century, no. 2, pp. 68-80.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘Civic Engagement through Participatory Budgeting in China: Three Different Logics at Work’.<br />

Public Administration and Development, vol. 31, no. 2, pp. 122-133.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘Cross-border Mergers and Acquisitions Also Need Public Diplomacy’. Public Diplomacy<br />

Quarterly, no. 6, pp. 14-21.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘On the Participatory Budget Experiment of Chinese Local Governments’. Guizhou Social<br />

Sciences, no. 6, pp. 27-32.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘The Awkwardness of Australian Engagement with Asia: The Dilemmas of Australian Idea of<br />

Regionalism’. Japanese Journal of Political Science, vol.12, no.2, pp. 267-285.<br />

He, B. (2011). ‘The Dilemma of China’s Political Science in the Context of the Rise of China’. Journal of Chinese<br />

Political Science, vol. 16 no. 3, pp. 257-277.


He, B., & Inoguchi, T. (2011). ‘Introduction to Ideas of Asian Regionalism’. Japanese Journal of Political Science,<br />

vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 165-177.<br />

He, B., & Yuhua, X. (2011). ‘Wal-Mart’s Trade Union in China’. Economic and Industrial Democracy, vol. 32,<br />

no. 3.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘Issues in Australian Foreign Policy: July to December 2010’, Australian Journal of Politics<br />

and History, vol. 57, no.2, pp. 270-282.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘Korea–Australia Relations: An Evolving Partnership’. Sogang IIAS Research Series on<br />

International Affairs.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘Middle Powers and the Building of Regional Order: Australia and South Korea Compared’,<br />

The Korea Observer, vol. 32, no. 1, pp. 69-94.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘Towards a Security Community in the Asia–Pacific Region? The Evolution of Korean–<br />

Australian Relations’. Multicultural Coexistence Project working paper series, vol. 10, pp. 1-25.<br />

Hundt, D., & Kim, J. (2011). Competing notions of regionalism in South Korean politics, Japanese Journal of<br />

Political Science, vol. 12, no.2, pp. 251-266.<br />

Hundt, D., & Kim, J. (2011). ‘US Policy Toward Rogue States: The Bush Administration's Policy Toward Iraq and<br />

North Korea Compared’. Asian Perspective, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 239-57.<br />

Hundt, D., & Vandenberg, A. (2011). ‘Corporatism, Crisis and Contention in Sweden and Korea in the<br />

1990s’. Economic and Industrial Democracy. http://eid.sagepub.com/content/early/2011/10/14/014383<br />

1X11419688.full.pdf+html, pp. 1-22.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011). ‘Targeting the Symbolic Dimension of Baathist Iraq: Cultural Destruction, Historical<br />

Memory and National Identity’. Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication, vol. 4, no. 3.<br />

Joseph, D. (2011). ‘Early Career Teaching: Learning to be a Teacher and Staying in the Job’. Australian Journal<br />

of Teacher Education, vol. 36, no. 9, pp. 1-14.<br />

Kim, J., & Hundt, D. (2011). ‘U.S. Policy Towards Rogue States: the Bush Administration’s Policy Towards Iraq<br />

and North Korea Compared’. Asian Perspective, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 239-257.<br />

Lofgren, H. (2011). ‘Guest Editorial: The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: A Threat to Affordable Medicines<br />

and Public Health’. Southern Med Review, vol. 4 no. 2, pp. 2-3.<br />

Lofgren, H. (2011). ‘Health Consumer Activism in Australia: The Downside of State Inclusion’. Health Issues,<br />

vol. 107, pp. 9-10.<br />

Lofgren, H. (2011). ‘India’s Parliamentary Communism’. Arena Magazine, vol. 112, pp. 32-35.<br />

Lofgren, H., & Benner, M. (2011). ‘A Global Knowledge Economy? Biopolitical strategies in India and the<br />

European Union’. Journal of Sociology, vol. 47, no. 2, pp. 163-180.<br />

Lofgren, H., Leahy, M., & de Leeuw, E. (2011). ‘Health Activism to Health ‘Consumers’. Arena Magazine, no.<br />

109, pp. 32-35.<br />

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Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Creating an Inclusive National Australian Identity’. Australian Mosaic, no. 27 pp. 32-34.<br />

Mansouri, F., & Piestsch, J. (2011). ‘Local Governance and the Challenge of Religious Pluralism in Liberal<br />

Democracies: An Australian Perspective’. Journal of Intercultural Studies, vol. 32, no. 3.<br />

Marotta, V. (2011). ‘Is the Virtual Ethnic Subject Real?’ Journal of Intercultural Studies, vol. 32, no. 5, pp.<br />

459-464.<br />

Marotta, V. (2011). ‘New Online Ethnicities and the Politics of Representation’. Journal of Intercultural Studies,<br />

vol. 32, no. 5, pp. 539-553.<br />

Naraniecki, A. (2011). ‘Multicultural Thought in Australia: The Legacy of Jerzy Zubrzycki’. Citizenship and<br />

Globalisation Research Papers, vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 66-84.<br />

Pan, C. (2011). ‘Is the South China Sea a New Dangerous Ground of the U.S.-China Rivalry?’ East-Asia Forum<br />

Quarterly, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 1-3.<br />

Rane, H., Nathie, M., Isakhan, B., & Abdalla, M. (2011). ‘Towards Understanding what Australia’s Muslims<br />

Really Think’. Journal of Sociology, vol. 47, no. 2, pp. 1-21.<br />

Sharpe, M. (2011). ‘In the Court of a Great King: Some Remarks on Leo Strauss Introduction to the Guide for<br />

the Perplexed’. Sophia, vol. 50, no.1, pp. 141-158.<br />

Sharpe, M. (2011). ‘Pierre Hadot (1922-2010)’. Internet Encyclopaedia of Philosophy, http://www.iep.utm.<br />

edu/hadot/. pp. 1-14.<br />

Sharpe, M. (2011). ‘Reading Campus with, or after, Levinas: Rebellion and Primacy of Ethics’, Philosophy<br />

Today, vol. 55, no. 1, pp. 141-158.<br />

van Hooft, S. (2011). ‘Author Response’. Nursing Ethics: An International Journal for Health Care Professionals,<br />

vol. 18, no. 2, pp. 262-263.<br />

van Hooft, S. (2011). ‘Book Review: The Practices of the Self by Charles Larmore’. Metapsychology Online<br />

Reviews, vol. 15, no. 17, pp. 1-4.<br />

van Hooft, S. (2011). ‘Caring, Objectivity, and Justice: An Integrative View’. Nursing Ethics: An International<br />

Journal for Health Care Professionals, vol. 18, no. 2, pp. 149-160.<br />

van Hooft, S. (2011). ‘Humanity or Justice?’ Journal of Global Ethics, vol. 7, no. 3, pp. 291–302.<br />

Zajdow, G. (2011). ‘Outsourcing the Risks: Alcohol Licensing, Risk and the Making of the Night Time Economy’.<br />

Current Issues in Criminal Justice, vol. 23, no. 1, pp. 73-84.<br />

Zajdow, G. (2011). ‘Producing the Market for Alcohol: The Victorian Example’. Journal of Australian Studies,<br />

vol. 35, no. 1, pp. 83-98.


Conference and Seminar Presentations<br />

Ata, A. (2011). ‘Attitudes of non-Muslim Australian Senior Students to Muslims and Islam: A National Survey’.<br />

CCG Seminar Series. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Bilimoria, P. (2011). ‘The Idea of Hindu Law’. Australian National Sanskrit Conference. Canberra: ANU.<br />

Bilimoria, P. (2011). ‘Why is there likely Nothing Rather than Something? – Conversations With The Avatar of<br />

Richard Syvan (Alais Routley)’. Hell’s Logicians’ Conference. Melbourne: Melbourne <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Harada, Y. (2011). ‘What Australian’s are Missing: Exploration into the Japanese Theatre of the Whaling<br />

Dispute’. CCG Seminar Series. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Harada, Y. (2011). ‘Yet Another “Galapagos Syndrome”?: Japan, the Whaling Dispute and Australia’. ANU’s<br />

Joint Seminar Series in History, Literature, Religion and Philosophy. Canberra: Australian National <strong>University</strong>.<br />

He, B. (2011). Presenter at Fulbright Symposium. ‘Australia-US Relations and the Rise of China: From<br />

Bilateralism to Trilateralism?’ Melbourne: Sofitel Melbourne.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘America and Australia: Forever Great and Powerful Friends?’. Canberra: Department of<br />

Foreign Affairs and Trade.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘An Eagle for the 21st Century: America’s Future in the Asia–Pacific’. Canberra: Department<br />

of Foreign Affairs and Trade.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘Contesting Neo-Liberalism in Korea’. Presented to Australian Political Studies Association<br />

Conference. Canberra: Australian National <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘Contesting Neo-Liberalism in Korea: Financial Crisis and Beyond’. Association of Korean<br />

Studies in Europe Biennial Conference. Moscow: Moscow State <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘Editing Political Science in Australia’. Academic Publishing Workshop. Australian Political<br />

Studies Association Conference. Canberra: Australian National <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘Editing Political Science: the Inside Story’. Publishing Workshop. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong>.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘(Six) Party Time Again? Towards Non-Proliferation in Northeast Asia’. Canberra: Department<br />

of Foreign Affairs and Trade.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘Stepping Away <strong>from</strong> Autocracy in China’. U3A. Melbourne.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011). ‘What Editors Want: Political Science Journals in a Decade of Change’. Postgraduate<br />

Workshop, Australian Political Studies Association Conference. Canberra: Australian National <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011). ‘Iraq and the Arab Revolutions: Protesting the Failure to Democratise Governance’.<br />

Democratising Governance Forum. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011). ‘Manipulating ‘Islam’ and ‘Democracy’ in Iraq’s ‘Anti-authoritarianism’’. Spirited Voices<br />

<strong>from</strong> the Muslim World: Islam, Democracy and Gender Rights. Sydney: The Sydney Democracy Initiative.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011). ‘Succeeding and Seceding Iraq’. The 150 Years’ Crisis: Revising Territorial Separatism in<br />

World Politics Forum. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

ANNUAL REPORT 2011<br />

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Isakhan, B. (2011). ‘Targeting the Symbolic Dimension of Baathist Iraq: Cultural Destruction, Historical<br />

Memory, and National Identity’. CCG Seminar Series. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Lofgren, H. (2011). ‘Communism in West Bengal: Explaining the Longevity of the Left Front Government’.<br />

Seminar at Vidyasagar <strong>University</strong>. Midnapore: Vidyasagar <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Lofgren, H. (2011). ‘From Activism to State Inclusion: Health Consumer Groups in Australia’. Consumers<br />

Reforming Health conference. Melbourne: Melbourne Exhibition & Convention Centre.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Australia’s Approach to Asylum Seekers and Refugees’. Leongatha: Leongatha Secondary<br />

College.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Cases of Intercultural Tensions and the Strive for Multidimensional Intervention<br />

Strategies’. UN Alliance of Civilisations Forum. Doha.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Cultural diversity and Intercultural Relations in South Asia’. Foundation for Global<br />

Dialogue ‘Unity in Diversity Conference’ organised under the auspices of the United Nations Alliance of<br />

Civilisations. Kerala: India.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Egypt’s Revolution and Democracy in the Middle East’. International Solidarity<br />

Organization. Melbourne: <strong>University</strong> of Melbourne.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Forced Immigration <strong>from</strong> Conflict Zones in Africa/Asia and the Middle East’. Presented<br />

to the International EOTO World Online Conference.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Islam and Muslim Diaspora Seen <strong>from</strong> the West and Australia’. UNESCO Forum on<br />

Religion and Identity. Tunisia.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Multiculturalism and the Sustainability Debate’. The Australian Social Policy Conference.<br />

Sydney: UNSW.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Muslim Religiosity, Social Inclusion and the Secular State’. Keynote address to the Annual<br />

Iftaar Dinner Function co-hosted by the Australian Intercultural Society and <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>. Melbourne.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Perspectives on an 'Education and Youth' Research Agenda: Current Trends, Existing<br />

Gaps and Conceptual Challenges’. United Nations <strong>University</strong>, at the UNU-IIAOC Scoping Conference.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Political Islam and the Arab spring’. Religion and the Nation Workshop. Melbourne:<br />

<strong>Deakin</strong> Prime.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Raising the Political Temperature: What Does the Future Hold for the Arab Revolution?’<br />

Monthly Argument. Melbourne.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Revolution in Egypt and Tunisia and the Prospects for Change in the Arab World’. Sidney<br />

Myer Asia Centre. Melbourne: <strong>University</strong> of Melbourne.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Social Networks, Belonging and Active Citizenship Among Migrant Youth in Australia’.<br />

Plenary paper presented to the Second International Symposium on Multiculturalism Research. Ottawa:<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Ottawa.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘The Arab Spring’. The Melbourne Writer’s Festival. Melbourne: The Wheeler Centre.


Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘The Arab Spring at the Cross Roads: Current Challenges and Future Prospects’. Institute<br />

for Post-Colonial Studies. Melbourne.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘The Fall Out <strong>from</strong> the Egyptian revolution’. The Wheeler Centre, Melbourne.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘Transnational Ties, Multiculturalism and Local Inclusion in Émigré Societies’ . Public<br />

Lecture, hosted by The Audiovisual Media Lab for the study of Cultures and Societies (LAMACS). Ottawa:<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Ottawa.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011). ‘What is Cohesive Diversity All About?’ UN Alliance of Civilisations Forum. Doha.<br />

Mansouri, F., and Lobo, M., (2011). ‘Social Sustainability and the Challenge of Living with Ethnic Diversity in<br />

the 21st Century City’. Institute of Australian Geographers Conference, Wollongong.<br />

Marotta, V. (2011). ‘The Multicultural, the Intercultural and the Transcultural: Different Modes of Interacting<br />

with Otherness?’ International Symposium on Multiculturalism: Reframing Multiculturalism for the 21st<br />

Century’s Realities. Ottawa: <strong>University</strong> of Ottawa.<br />

Mikola, M. (2011). ‘Cosmopolitan Futures’. The Australian Centre. Melbourne: <strong>University</strong> of Melbourne.<br />

Naraniecki, A. (2011). ‘George Smolicz and ‘Stable’ Multicultural Governance in Australia’. Democracy and<br />

Governance Symposium. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Naraniecki, A. (2011). ‘Dilemmas of Australian Multiculturalism’. Symposium on Migration and Multiculturalism<br />

Today: Australian and European Perspectives. Melbourne: Monash European and EU Centre (MEEUC),<br />

Embassy of the Republic of Poland, Australian Institute of Polish Affairs (AIPA).<br />

Naraniecki, A. (2011). ‘George Smolicz and ‘Stable’ Multicultural Governance in Australia’. International<br />

Symposium on Multiculturalism: Reframing Multiculturalism for the 21st Century’s Realities. Ottawa:<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Ottawa.<br />

Naraniecki, A. (2011). ‘Polish-Jewish Dialogue in Australia’. The Centre for Dialogue. Melbourne: La Trobe<br />

<strong>University</strong>.<br />

Naraniecki, A. (2011). ‘The Origins of Multiculturalism: Jerzy (George) Zubrzycki and Integrative Pluralism’.<br />

CCG Seminar Series. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Naraniecki, A. (2011). ‘Zubrzycki and Multicultural Governance in Australia’. Religion and the Nation Workshop.<br />

School of International and Political Studies. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Pan, C. (2011). Presenter at Absent Asia: Reviewing Australia’s Asian Pasts. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong> and<br />

Monash <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Ross S. & Coldicott D. (2011). ‘Mutually Assured Destruction or Co-Dependence? The G20 and the UN’. 6th<br />

European Consortium for Political Research General Conference. Iceland: <strong>University</strong> of Iceland.<br />

Slaughter, S. (2012). ‘Citizens of an Emerging World Polity? Transnational Democratisation and Republican<br />

Citizenship. How can Theories of Global Justice and Democracy Get Real?’ Problems of Power and Domination<br />

in Normative International Political Theory Workshop. Melbourne: Monash <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Slaughter, S. (2011). ‘Citizens of an Emerging World Polity? Transnational Democratisation and Republican<br />

Citizenship’. Democracy and Governance Symposium. Melbourne: <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

ANNUAL REPORT 2011<br />

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Slaughter, S. (2011). ‘Debating the International Legitimacy of the G20’. POLSIS Research Seminar. Brisbane:<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Queensland.<br />

Slaughter, S. (2011). ‘Discussant to Professor James Bohman’s paper “Domination, Global Harms and the<br />

Priority of Injustice: Expanding Transnational Republicanism”.’ Conference on Global Democracy. Canberra:<br />

Australian National <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Slaughter, S. (2011). ‘The G20 and Legitimacy in Global Governance’. ISA Asia-Pacific Regional Conference.<br />

Brisbane: <strong>University</strong> of Queensland.<br />

Slaughter, S. (2011). ‘Who Secures Humanity?’ ISA Asia-Pacific Regional Conference. Brisbane: <strong>University</strong> of<br />

Queensland.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). ‘A Controversial Figure: General Cariappa as High Commissioner to Australia’. Lecture at<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Delhi. New Delhi: <strong>University</strong> of Delhi.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). ‘Australia and the Rise of Asia, 1890 to 1920’. Seminar at <strong>University</strong> of Copenhagen.<br />

Denmark: <strong>University</strong> of Copenhagen.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). ‘Cheap Books for Asia. Public Diplomacy in Theory and Practice: Culture, Information and<br />

Interpretation in Australian-Indian Relations’. New Delhi: Alfred <strong>Deakin</strong> Research Institute.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). ‘Memoir as History: Writing Not Dark Yet’. Kathleen Fitzpatrick Lecture. Melbourne:<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Melbourne.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). ‘Rethinking the Asian Dimension of Australian History’. Keynote address presented to<br />

History Teachers’ Association of Australia Annual Conference. Adelaide: Loreto College.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). ‘The Australian Response to Japan before World War 2’. Keynote address presented to<br />

Japan in Sydney Conference. Sydney: <strong>University</strong> of Sydney.<br />

Walker, D. (2011). ‘Writing Not Dark Yet’. <strong>University</strong> of Adelaide Seminar. Adelaide: <strong>University</strong> of Adelaide.<br />

Media Engagement<br />

Harada, Y. (2011, April 8). ‘Whales and Whaling’. ABC Radio Melbourne.<br />

Hundt, D. (2011, May 24). ‘North Korea/China Relations’. ABC Radio National.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011, March 17). ‘Australia's Mideast Relationship is Easy as 1,2,3’. ABC Unleashed.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011, April 4). ‘Secret History of Democracy’. ABC Radio Melbourne.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011, April 13). ‘Return of Mahdi Army’. Radio 2SER.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011, May 30). ‘The Middle East Should Not Adopt Western Democracy’. The Punch.<br />

Isakhan, B. (2011, June 8). ‘Blackwater Video Game and Iraq’. ABC Radio Melbourne.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, January 17). ‘The Popular Revolution in Tunisia’. SBS Arabic Language Program.


Mansouri, F. (2011, February 9). ‘Impact of Social Media on Political Protests in Egypt and Tunisia’. ABC 7:30<br />

Report.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, February 11). ‘The Political Situation in Cairo’. Bloomberg TV.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, February 22). ‘In People Power, There is Hope Yet for the Middle East’. Crikey.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, February 24). ‘Muslim Australia post-9/11’. ABC Compass.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, February 25). ‘There is Hope Yet for the Middle East’. The Geelong Advertiser.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, March 8). ‘UN Migration Talks’. The Age.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, March 24). ‘Youth and the Arab Revolution’. The Wire.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, March 24). ‘Arab Revolutions Across the Region’. ABC Compass.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, March 28). ‘UN Talks about Millennium Development Goals in the Area of Migration and<br />

Youth’. SBS Arabic Language Program.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, April). ‘Creating an Inclusive National Identity’. Mosaic.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, April 24). ‘Migration and Politics in the Wake of the Arab Revolutions’. Deutsche Welle Tv<br />

(DW-TV).<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, May 5). ‘Role of Civil Society in Political Transformations’. Ash-Sharaq Newspaper (Qatar).<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, May 12). ‘The Future of Arab Revolutions’. The Monthly Argument.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, June 6). ‘Social Inclusion and International Development Within the UN System’. SBS<br />

Arabic Language Program.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, June 13). ‘Australia’s Immigration Policy and Asylum Seekers. ABC Radio.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, June 14). ‘What is Missing in the UN Millennium Development Goals?’ The Age.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, July 5). ‘Cutting State’s Culture’ The Hume Leader.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, July 5). ‘Migrants Big Losers (of State Government Funding Cuts)’ The Hume Leader.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, October 3). ‘Social Inclusion’. SBS Radio.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, October 7). Social Inclusion’. SBS Radio.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, October 20). ‘Arab Spring’. SBS Arabic Language Program.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, October 21). ‘The Death of Gaddafi and its Implications for Post-revolutionary Libya’. Al-<br />

Jazeera English TV.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, October 26). ‘Arab Spring’. Panorama Youth Radio (RMIT).<br />

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Mansouri, F. (2011, October 28). ‘Democracy in Tunisia’. ABC Radio Melbourne.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, November 1). ‘UNESCO Decision to Accept Palestine’s Membership’. ABC Radio Melbourne.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, November 10). ‘Multiculturalism, Migration and a Sustainable Australia’. ABC Radio<br />

National.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, November 17). ‘Diversity, Multiculturalism and Immigration Debates in Australia and<br />

Canada’. Ottawa Community Radio.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, November 19). ‘Reasonable Accomodation, Public Law and Cultural Diversity’. The Ottawa<br />

Citizen.<br />

Mansouri, F. (2011, November 22). ‘Raising Refugee Awareness’. Great Southern Star Newspaper.


JOURNALS<br />

CCG sponsors two major journals, alongside our Research Paper Series.<br />

Journal of Intercultural Studies<br />

The Journal of Intercultural Studies showcases innovative scholarship about<br />

emerging cultural formations, intercultural negotiations and contemporary<br />

challenges to cultures and identities.<br />

Journal of Intercultural Studies welcomes theoretically informed articles <strong>from</strong><br />

diverse disciplines that contribute to the following discussions:<br />

• reconceptualising notions of nationhood, citizenship and racialisation;<br />

• questioning theories of diaspora, transnationalism, hybridity and<br />

'border crossing' and their contextualised applications;<br />

• exploring the contemporary sociocultural formations of ethnicity,<br />

postcolonialism and indigeneity;<br />

• examining how past and contemporary key scholars can inform<br />

current thinking on cross-cultural knowledge, multiculturalism, race<br />

and cultural identity.<br />

The Journal of Intercultural Studies is an international, interdisciplinary journal that particularly<br />

encourages contributions <strong>from</strong> scholars in cultural studies, sociology, gender studies, political science,<br />

cultural geographers, urban studies, race and ethnic studies.<br />

It is a peer-reviewed, critical scholarly publication that features articles, review essays and book<br />

reviews. Regular special issues provide stimulating, focused engagement with topical political, social<br />

and theoretical questions. The most recent issues include ‘Virtual Ethnicities’ (October 2011) and ‘A<br />

New Era in Australian Multiculturalism’ (December 2011).<br />

Editorial Team<br />

Managing Editor:<br />

• <strong>Dr</strong> Vince Marotta (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

Editor:<br />

• Professor Fethi Mansouri (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

Book Review Editor:<br />

• <strong>Dr</strong> Ajaya K. Sahoo (<strong>University</strong> of Hyderabad, India)<br />

Associate Editor:<br />

• Ms Paula Muraca (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

Assistant Editors:<br />

• Associate Professor Sirma Bilge (Universite de Montreal, Canada)<br />

• Ms Melissa Phillips (The <strong>University</strong> of Melbourne, Australia)<br />

ANNUAL REPORT 2011<br />

41


CENTRE FOR CITIZENSHIP AND GLOBALISATION<br />

42<br />

Australian Journal of Political Studies<br />

Editorial Team<br />

Editors:<br />

The Australian Journal of Political Science (Routledge) aims to be a premier<br />

academic journal publishing quality peer-reviewed, refereed articles in all areas<br />

of political studies. It is the official journal of the Australian Political Studies<br />

Association.<br />

The editorial team, based at <strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, is supported by an Editorial<br />

Board and an Editorial Advisory Committee of eminent Australian and overseas<br />

specialists covering the major sub-disciplines of political science<br />

The Journal publishes articles at the cutting edge of the discipline, characterised<br />

by conceptual clarity, methodological rigour, substantive interest, broad appeal,<br />

and originality. Shorter articles may be published as research notes.<br />

The book review section includes reviews of major books in the field of political<br />

studies, and especially books written by academics based in Australia and New<br />

Zealand and/or dealing with relevant Australian and New Zealand subjects. The<br />

Journal also publishes longer review essays.<br />

• Professor Geoffrey Stokes (RMIT, Australia)<br />

• Professor Marian Simms (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

Associate Editors:<br />

• <strong>Dr</strong> Hans Lofgren (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

• <strong>Dr</strong> David Hundt (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

Review Editor:<br />

• <strong>Dr</strong> Peter Haeusler (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

Editorial Assistant:<br />

• Ms Marina Cominos (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)


Research Paper Series<br />

The Citizenship and Globalisation Research Papers are peer-reviewed online and print publications that<br />

promote original and scholarly research on all aspects of citizenship and globalisation. The topics covered are<br />

diverse and represent the breadth of research excellence in this multidisciplinary academic field.<br />

Editorial Team<br />

Editors:<br />

• Professor Fethi Mansouri (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

• <strong>Dr</strong> Vince Marotta (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

• <strong>Dr</strong> David Hundt (<strong>Deakin</strong> <strong>University</strong>, Australia)<br />

In 2010-2011, articles were published covering topics such as:<br />

Refugees’ Labour Market Access in Australia: A Case Study of Eritrea African Immigrants<br />

Late Mr <strong>Hass</strong>an Ibrahim, Prof. Pasquale Sgro, Prof. Fethi Mansouri and <strong>Dr</strong>. Christine Jubb<br />

Contextualisation of International Development Principles to Difficult Contexts: A Case<br />

Study of Myanmar<br />

Mr Anthony Ware<br />

Humanity or Justice?<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Stan van Hooft<br />

Preliminary Remarks on the Institutional Structures of Secessionist Movements: The<br />

cases of PKK, Iraqi Kurdistan, and Transnistria<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Costas Laoutides<br />

Migrant Women and Discrimination in Australia: a Tiered Narrative Study<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Jill Bamforth<br />

Independent Documentary-Film Production in the Context of the War on Terrorism<br />

<strong>Dr</strong> Tuba Boz<br />

Multicultural Thought in Australia: The Legacy of Jerzy Zubrzycki<br />

<strong>Dr</strong>. Alexander Naraniecki<br />

Multiplatform Innovation and Participatory Citizenship: The Australian Broadcasting<br />

Corporation's Digital Children's Television Projects<br />

<strong>Dr</strong>. Leonie Rutherford and <strong>Dr</strong>. Adam Brown<br />

ANNUAL REPORT 2011<br />

43


www.deakin.edu.au/ccg

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