Reflections on Myanmar’s Parliament: From Past to Present

This seminar will draw on the speakers’s extensive expertise in Myanmar to reflect on the role of its parliament. Burma embarked on a decreed and acquiesced political transition to a “disciplined democracy” in 2010. It was preceded by the 2008 national constitutional referendum. The military ruling body, the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC), declared it as an overwhelming endorsement of their carefully-crafted 2008 constitution. However, the people simply voted for change: change from complete military rule to the promise of something else. They did not embrace the 2008 constitution, neither having seen it nor been included in any deliberations or design.

The nation-wide elections that followed the referendum was boycotted by Aung San Suu Kyi’s Party, the National League for Democracy (NLD), and major Ethnic Nationalities Parties that were formed in 1990, the year the NLD won a nation-wide election in a landslide. The rest is history, as the military dictatorship denied the outcome and systematically gaoled a large number of the Members-Elect of Parliament.

In 2012 the NLD ran in by-elections, again winning in a landslide. That feat was repeated by the NLD in the 2015 general elections. These changes ushered in two parliamentary periods, 2010-2015 and 2015 until the present day. The first parliamentary period was led by the quasi civilian-military party, the USDP. It is now led by the civilian party, the NLD. But there are 25% of seats reserved in Parliament for Armed Forces members, all anointed by the Commander-in-Chief.
This seminar is co-hosted by the Australian-Myanmar Constitutional Democracy Project and the UNSW Institute for Global Development.

Date of seminar: 15 March 2018

Time: 1-2pm

Venue: Boardroom, level 2, Law Faculty, UNSW, Kensington Campus

Registration: eventbrite


Bio of Speaker:
Janelle Saffin has been engaged with both parliaments and will give her accounting of parliamentary developments and parliamentary progress.

Janelle Saffin served in Australian State and Federal Parliaments. She chairs the Australian Labor Party’s International Party Development Committee. anelle maintains a law practice, is a migration agent, a teacher and Timor-Leste and Burma Expert. As Consultant to UNDP Myanmar, she works with the National, State and Region Parliaments. In the Australian Federal Parliament, Janelle was a Whip, a member of the Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade, the Defence sub-committee, Chair of the Trade sub-committee, the powerful Joint House Public Works Committee and an Acting Deputy Speaker. Significantly, Janelle served as Principal Policy Advisor (Political & Legal) to former President, Prime Minister, Minister for Foreign Affairs & Cooperation, and Minister for Defence, H.E. José Ramos-Horta.

Janelle founded the Australia-Myanmar Parliament Group and worked in co-operation with all Myanmar organisations, including the Ethnic Nationalities Organisations. Janelle conducted the first State Constitutional workshop (2001) with all Ethnic Nationalities organisations and advised on drafting State and Federal constitutions in a Federal system. She collaborated with the late Chao Tzang Yanghwe.

As Patron of the Australia-Myanmar Constitutional Democracy Project, she facilitated it as a first to Myanmar, gaining the support of the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw as sponsor (2013). She was a founding Patron of the Australia-Myanmar Chamber of Commerce. Janelle was a Special Policy Adviser to the Prime Minister Hon Kevin Rudd MP and drafted Australia’s policy on Myanmar (“Engagement & Expectations”).

Janelle was Co-Convenor for the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw-UNDP-IPU MPs’ induction programme for nearly 500 MPs in February 2016, conducted under the auspice of the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw and, under the same auspice, led the first ever Human Rights Programme in the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw in 2016. Janelle wrote and conducted professional development programmes called “How to be an MP – What MPs do?” for the SNLD MPs (and others) in Taunggyi and the then ANP (MPs and others) in Nay Pyi Taw and Sittwe.

ASEAN 360 by Asia Society

Join Asia Society Australia at King & Wood Mallesons in the week of the historic ASEAN-Australia Special Summit in Sydney for ASEAN 360°.  A comprehensive briefing covering the trade and investment, geopolitics and social issues facing the region.Delivered by business, government, academic and media experts based in ASEAN and Australia, this lunchtime panel discussion will provide a deep dive into the critical issues for Australia – ASEAN, for senior business and policy leaders’ shaping our engagement with the region.

Date: Monday 12 March
Time: 12.00 -2.00pm
Venue: King & Wood Mallesons, Level 61, Governor Phillip Tower, 1 Farrer Place, Sydney

This event is open to members of Asia Society Australia and invited guests only. If you are not a member and would like to attend, please contact programaustralia@asiasociety.org for more information. 

For more on the event see the official website.

Our Panel
Ambassador Chan Heng Chee, Asia Society Global Co-Chair &  Ambassador-at-Large, Singapore

Ambassador Chan chairs the Lee Kuan Yew Centre for Innovative Cities in the Singapore University of Technology and Design. She is Chairman of the National Arts Council, a Member of the Presidential Council for Minority Rights, a Member of the Constitutional Commission 2016 and Deputy Chairman of the Social Science Research Council. Ambassador Chan is a Member of the Board of Trustees of the National University of Singapore and a Member of the Yale-NUS Governing Board. She serves as a Member of the Advisory Council of Temasek Foundation Connects and also as a Member of the Executive Board of the China Cultural Centre. She is Global Co-Chair of Asia Society, and a Member of the International Advisory Panel, AXA Group, GIE AXA, Paris (France). 

Previously, she was Singapore’s Ambassador to the United States and Singapore’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations with concurrent accreditation as High Commissioner to Canada and Ambassador to Mexico.

Ambassador Chan received a number of awards including The Public Administration Medal (Gold); The Meritorious Service Medal; The Distinguished Service Order; Honorary Degrees of Doctor of Letters from the University of Newcastle, Australia; the University of Buckingham (United Kingdom); and an Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of Warwick (United Kingdom). When Ambassador Chan left Washington at the end of her appointment, she received the Inaugural Asia Society Outstanding Diplomatic Achievement Award, the Inaugural Foreign Policy Outstanding Diplomatic Achievement Award 2012 and the United States Navy Distinguished Public Service Award.


Dr Melissa Crouch, Senior Lecturer, UNSW 

Dr Melissa Crouch is a Senior Lecturer at the Law Faculty, the University of New South Wales, Sydney. Her research contributes to the field of Asian Legal Studies, with a focus on Comparative Constitutional Law; Law and Development; and Law and Religion. She is currently Chief Investigator on an ARC Discovery Grant on “Constitutional Change in Authoritarian Regimes” (2018-2020). Melissa is the author of Law and Religion in Indonesia: Conflict and the Courts in West Java (Routledge, 2014). She is the editor of several volumes including ‘Islam and the State in Myanmar: Muslim-Buddhist Relations and the Politics of Belonging’ (OUP 2016), and The Business of Transition: Law, Development and Economics in Myanmar (CUP 2017). Melissa leads the UNSW Law Southeast Asia engagement strategy, and is the Myanmar Academic Lead for the UNSW Institute for Global Development.


Anna Green CEO, ANZ Bank Philippines

Anna is a senior banker and qualified lawyer with over 15 years of experience working across a range of simple and complex financing projects in Asia, the Pacific, Europe and Australia, in both developed and developing markets.

Currently CEO for ANZ in the Philippines, Anna has held key advisory roles within the Bank, in private legal practice and in government, leading large cross-border global financing transactions.

Prior to this, Anna was Chief Executive Officer for ANZ Laos. With the deep cross-jurisdictional expertise she has built with respect to risk, compliance and regulatory specific issues, Anna is regularly called upon by industry and government leaders to speak on economic and risk related issues in the ASEAN region.

Before joining ANZ, Anna worked for large international law firms Clayton Utz and Shearman and Sterling in both Australia and the UK specialising in Corporate, Project and Commercial finance.

Dr Aim Sinpeng, Lecturer in Comparative Politics at the University of Sydney

Aim’s research interests centre on the relationships between digital media, political participation and political regimes in Southeast Asia. She is particularly interested in the role of social media in shaping state-society relations and inducing political and social change. She is the co-founder of the Sydney Cyber Security Network and a Thailand country coordinator for the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre.

Aim has served as the Expert Contributor for Varieties of Democracy and Bartelsmann Transformation Index, which measure degrees and types of democracy, and is currently a Research Associate of the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto. In 2014, she was awarded a Young Southeast Asian Fellow by the prestigious Southeast Asia Research Group in recognition for her promising scholarship on Southeast Asia. Her previous works examine popular movements against democracy in democratizing states, particularly in Thailand.


Jewel Topsfield, Journalist 

Jewel was recently Fairfax’s Indonesia correspondent. She is an award-winning journalist who has been with Fairfax Media for 10 years. Most recently, she was education editor at The Age for five years. Prior to that, she was the launch deputy editor of the National Times, Fairfax’s online opinion site. She also spent three years in the Canberra Press Gallery covering immigration, education, the environment and water 


ASEAN Special Summit update

Simon Merrifield, Head of ASEAN-Australia Special Summit 2018 Taskforce

Simon Merrifield leads the Australian Government’s preparations for the ASEAN-Australia Special Summit, to be held in Australia in 2018. He is based in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet in Canberra. Until late 2016, he served for three years as Australia’s first resident Ambassador to the Asssociation of Southeast Asian Nations, based in Jakarta. He is a career diplomat and was previously Senior Spokesman for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade in Canberra. He has spent half his working life in South-East Asian countries, including the Philippines, Malaysia, Myanmar and Indonesia.

Constitutional Workshops in Myanmar

The past week I have been involved with a range of workshops for International IDEA in Myanmar. This included with the Supreme Court, Constitutional Tribunal, members of parliament and ethnic political parties. 

The workshop with the Constitutional Tribunal focused on the ‘The Process of Constitution Building: Constitutional Design and Constitutional Interpretation in a Federal System’. Coverage of a workshop with the Constitutional Tribunal appeared on national television (mrtv), and in the Myanmar-language daily newspaper (Kyemon), on 9 February 2018.


In the coming week, we have several workshops as part of the annual Australia-Myanmar Constitutional Democracy Project. This colaborative education initiative began in 2013. Since then, there have been multiple annual workshops with a wide range of stakeholders on matters of comparative constitutional law. This month the workshops will be held in Taunggyi and Yangon.

Democracy and Peace Frustrated in Myanmar: Remembering U Ko Ni


Acknowledgement: This article first appeared in The Interpreter, The Lowy Institute, 29 January 2018–

Today marks one year since U Ko Ni, a prominent lawyer and advocate for constitutional reform, was assassinated in Myanmar. This was just one of many incidents in 2017 that indicated a sharp decline in freedoms not only in Myanmar but across Southeast Asia. Ko Ni’s death is an example of how efforts towards democracy and peace are frustrated in Myanmar.

This calculated killing came as a shock because U Ko Ni was publicly known as a legal advisor to the National League for Democracy, the political party of Noble Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. His death was condemned globally, from Amnesty International to the pages of The New York Times.

The devastating tragedy exposed the revolutionary nature of the call for constitutional reform in Myanmar. Efforts to change the constitutional order pose a threat to the military and its role in governance in Myanmar.

U Ko Ni publicly and consistently called out the extreme difficulties of formally amending the Constitution and advocated for a new constitutional order. He was also involved in the creation of the Office of State Counsellor, a position tailor made for Aung San Suu Kyi. This position has legitimized her role as defacto leader of the government.
Despite this, Suu Kyi herself remained strangely silent for an entire month after his death. Persistent calls for an independent investigation have been ignored. Four men have been arrested and put on trial in connection with the assassination. A fifth man, allegedly the conspirator and a former military officer, remains at large. The trial in Yangon drags on with little hope that the real reason for U Ko Ni’s death will surface.

In many ways the reasons are all too obvious. U Ko Ni’s death was a targeted campaign against those most visibly involved in advocating for the end of military rule through constitutional change.
U Ko Ni had often been asked whether Myanmar’s Constitution can be changed and if so how. In his writings and public speeches, he spoke at length of the impossibility of substantially amending the Constitution.

Constitutional amendment in Myanmar effectively requires the consent of the military members of parliament. His death was a warning to legal advocates involved in constitutional reform to back down. No challenge to the military’s Constitution will be tolerated.
U Ko Ni’s affiliation with the NLD and pro-democratic actors means that his death was also a warning to them. It was a stark reminder that the NLD government remains vulnerable without the protection of the police or military.

His identity as a Muslim lawyer in this majority-Buddhist country did not go unnoticed. His assassination was felt deeply by minorities, both Muslims and other religious and ethnic minorities who know only too well the force of local Buddhist extremism. U Ko Ni’s death was aimed at silencing those seeking to advocate for greater equality and protection for minorities.

He also made a major contribution to both democracy and peace in Myanmar. In the lead up to the 2015 elections, he was one of few to publicly disagree with the NLD. A scare campaign against the NLD played the anti-Muslim card to discredit the party and its chances of winning. The NLD chose not to include any Muslims in their Central Executive Committee and failed to field any Muslim candidates.

Over 1 million people who previously held temporary identity cards, most Rohingya, were excluded from voting or running for office. This was blatant mass disenfranchisement. For U Ko Ni, this was not a free and fair election. The Constitution offers no guarantees of a right to vote. Democracy was deeply compromised.

U Ko Ni also made a major contribution to peace in Myanmar. Implicitly, by calling for constitutional reform, he was advocating for legal change, rather than political violence.

He, like many others, wanted to believe that this time law mattered. This time, the authority of law should trump resort to political violence. Given the histories of conflict and insurgency in Myanmar, this is a radical call.

Of course, Aung San Suu Kyi and the president continue to suggest that constitutional reform is immanent. But one wonders at what cost.

Another horrific spate of conflict has left an estimated 6,700 Rohingya dead in northern Rakhine State. Another 650,000 people have fled, constituting the largest displacement of people in the region in recent history. Entire villages burnt to the ground. The alleged threat of terrorism cannot justify such atrocities].

The suspicious arrest of journalists investigating the Rakhine conflict raises ongoing concerns about media freedom. U Ko Ni would never have sanctioned a deal for constitutional change at such a cost to the lives of so many vulnerable people. Like many of us, perhaps he is looking on through grief, pain and tears.

This year the struggle for democracy and peace in Myanmar will be carried on by others. Too many people’s lives depend upon it not to.


——–

Tributes to U Ko Ni’s life can be found here or an extended memorium here (also available in Burmese).

One year on: Tribute to U Ko Ni

Tomorrow marks one year since the assassination of U Ko Ni. Below is a rerun of the article I wrote following that tragedy:
This week people in Myanmar were forced to confront the kind of country that it is becoming. On 29 January 2017, U Ko Ni, a prominent lawyer and legal advisor, was tragically assassinated at Yangon International Airport. He was returning from a trip to Indonesia with the Information Minister U Pe Myint. U Ko Ni was outspoken in his advocacy for law reform and was also a well-known Muslim in majority-Buddhist Myanmar.

His untimely death is an unspeakable loss for the country.
Ko Ni was born near Katha in Saigang Division in 1953, and was the son of a Muslim father and a Burmese Buddhist mother. This was not unusual for the time. In the early 1900s, his father came to Burma through his work with the British Indian army. Burma at the time was considered to be part of the British Indian colonial empire. His mother was a Burmese Buddhist, although she herself was also the daughter of a Muslim father and a Buddhist mother.

In the town where he grew up, he recalls a small Muslim community, of perhaps 180 families or 1,000 people. He completed his schooling in Katha and passed his matriculation by the early 1970s. His schooling was in Burmese (not English) because this was largely during the socialist period.

When I asked him why he decided to become a lawyer, his response was that his mother told him to become one because he was good at arguing. His great oratory skills were clearly developing at an early age. He also met a lawyer in Katha who he recalls was a true gentleman and who had earned the respect of many people in town. He became interested in studying law because of this man and the encouragement of his mother.

Ko Ni entered Yangon University in the early 1970s. He resided at Ava Hall, one of the dormitories on campus for students. He completed a four-year BA degree and then a one year LLB course, as was the common path to study law at the time. There were about 180 students in his BA course, and about 50-60 of them were women. His favourite subjects were civil law and evidence. He said that his favourite professor was U Tin Ohn, the Head of Department.

When asked about whether particular professors were an inspiration to him, he recalls two kinds of teachers. There were the permanent staff, most of them women, who were admired by the students for their dedication and tireless service to their students. The other type of lecturers were part-time and included many famous lawyers, retired judges or retired officials from the Attorney General’s Office who gave up their time to lecture to students.

U Ko Ni was in his fourth year of study when the socialist government introduced the 1974 Constitution. He recalls the 1972 referendum to approve the draft socialist constitution. From his memory, most of the students objected to the draft Constitution that would see the country shift from parliamentary democracy to a one-party, unicameral parliament and socialist-military state. On the day of voting he remembers that polling booths were set up around the campus with a black box with a cross for ‘no’ votes, and a white box for ‘yes’ votes. Many of the students put their votes in the black box. Yet by the evening, the socialist regime had announced that most of the students had voted in favour of the 1974 Constitution. This was clearly false, he said.

When contemplating what to do after his degree, a university teacher suggested he work for U Ko Yu, a famous criminal lawyer and a former lecturer at the university. In the late 1970s, he did just that and recalls the strong influence U Ko Yu had on him. He learnt two things from him – how to teach and how to be a good lawyer.

His chamber master U Ko Yu contributed to the Bar Council statement regarding the 1988 democracy uprisings and he was at one time a Central Executive Committee member of the National League for Democracy. I never asked U Ko Ni how much his own political ideas had been influenced by the example of U Ko Yu. U Ko Ni became qualified as a Higher Grade Pleader and became a member of the Yangon Bar Association in 1978. During that time U Ko Ni also worked as a teacher at the Yangon University of Distance Education. He recalls learning closely from other senior lawyers at the time such as U Maung Maung Aye.

Before 1988, he moved from U Ko Yu’s office and established his own small chambers in his house, mostly focusing on civil law. In 1994, he established Laurel Law Firm with seven lawyers. He would become a highly popular Advocate (senior lawyer) and chamber master himself. In 2014, he told me that he had supervised over 100 chambers students.

We talked only briefly about 1988, the pro-democracy uprising that was brutally crushed by the military in Myanmar. He did once mention his involvement in a political party at the time, which was later banned by the military regime. He mentioned that he had young children at the time and felt the responsibility as a father of having to earn a living and care for his family.

U Ko Ni was a frequent commentator on legal affairs in the media, and lectured to a range of audiences from young lawyers to senior members of parliament. He was outspoken on a wide range of legal issues from the need for constitutional change, the right to peaceful protest, to the thorny issue of hate speech. He also part of group of lawyers who demonstrated to protest the government’s proposed sale of the High Court and the Police Commissioners Office that was rumoured to be turned into a hotel.

He was even of the view that the parliament could suspend section 59(f) of the Constitution, the provision that is regarded as barring Daw Aung San Suu Kyi from becoming president. This was one demonstration of his deep understanding of constitutional issues from the 1950s, when a provision of the 1947 Constitution was suspended.

Yet he could never escape the fact that he was Muslim. Since 2012, anti-Muslim violence had spread from Rakhine State to many major towns in Myanmar. A new radical Buddhist movement had emerged, inciting further anti-Muslim sentiment. It was in this context that things became increasingly difficult and politicised for many Muslims in Myanmar, including for U Ko Ni.

In February 2014, U Ko Ni was prevented from giving a public speech at an NLD event in North Okkalapa township, after monks demanded that he and another Muslim, Ko Mya Aye (a leader of the 88 Generation) should not be allowed to speak.
In 2015, in the lead-up to the historic elections in Myanmar, things took a turn for the worse for the Muslim community, particularly for the Rohingya in Rakhine State. White card holders (those with ‘temporary’ identity cards) were barred from running for political office or from voting. Many white card holders are Muslim. This ran contrary to political practise, as white card holders had been allowed to vote and run for public office in the 1990 elections and the 2010 elections. U Ko Ni was critical of the Constitutional Tribunal’s ruling on this matter.

In addition, U Ko Ni was outspoken against the NLD for what he perceived to be its decision not to field any Muslim candidates and not to appoint any Muslim candidates to the Central Executive Committee. I recall the deep frustration and despair with which he spoke about this issue at the time. He was under no illusions that this may have been because of the intimidation tactics of radical Buddhist monks.

While the international media have often labelled him as a ‘Muslim lawyer’ and as a legal advisor for the National League for Democracy, he needs to be remembered as so much more than that. I often recall him emphasising that he saw himself as independent, and he became more emphatic about this as the NLD caved to pressures of radical Buddhist groups in recent years.

U Ko Ni was a regular at our Australia-Myanmar Constitutional Democracy Project events on constitutionalism from 2013 to the present. The learning, however, was very much mutual. We are deeply indebted to the time he gave us and his expertise added immeasurably to our workshops on constitutional democracy. His patience and support of our endeavours was sincerely appreciated.
Over the years, he leant support to a range of lawyers’ organisations and advocacy causes. He more recently become involved in the Myanmar Muslim Lawyers Association, although it seems that he did so only out of a sense of necessity and the need to defend the basic rights of Muslims.

In August 2016, U Ko Ni was particularly concerned when I spoke to him on the phone about the current situation. I had never heard him talk in such pessimistic tones before, his concern for people’s safety, human rights and security paramount. He warned that it was not safe for locals to be talking in public forums about constitutional or human rights issues, but encouraged us to continue to do so.

In November 2016, myself and colleagues visited U Ko Ni at his new office. He was so proud to welcome us and we discussed many constitutional issues at great length that day.

It has been a privilege and honour to sit at the feet of great legal minds such as U Ko Ni. More than once he would go out of his way to buy books for me that he knew I was looking for.

There are many other things that can be said about U Ko Ni. He was also a devoted family man, husband, father and grandfather. He was not only concerned about the future for his children, but also for the future of Myanmar as a country.

When preparing the book Islam and the State in Myanmar, I briefly profiled several prominent Myanmar Muslim figures of the past who made substantial contributions to the history of Burma, such as U Raschid (who served in several government positions during the period of parliamentary democracy 1948-1962 before being imprisoned twice for several years during the socialist era) and U Razak (who was assassinated along with General Aung San on 19 July 1947).

I did not mention contemporary figures such as U Ko Ni, despite him becoming a key voice in the period of democratisation in Myanmar. It seems far too early to have to write a tribute for a man who should have been a voice for legal reform in Myanmar for many years to come.

U Ko Ni needs to be remembered alongside some of the great legal minds and Muslim public figures in Myanmar’s history. He was a respected and prominent legal advisor who knew the personal risks that speaking out entails in a majority-Buddhist country emerging from decades of military rule.

Now more than ever, Myanmar needs more voices like U Ko Ni.
This tribute is based on my audio recordings and field notes of in-depth interviews with U Ko Ni over the past few years.

Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Myanmar

Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Myanmar (Hardback) book cover

The Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Myanmar has recently been published, edited by Adam Simpson, Iain Halliday and Nicholas Farrelly. It was great to be a part of this collaborative effort. Abstract as follows: This timely Handbook describes the political, economic, and cultural dimensions of this crucial period of transition in Myanmar. It presents explanations for contradictory trends, including those that defy some of the early narratives about the comprehensive transformation of Myanmar. The Handbook also considers the impact of major environmental, strategic, and demographic trends which help underscore that Myanmar’s development will be an ongoing task. In addition to introductory and concluding chapters by the editors, the body of the Handbook is divided into seven core sections:
• Fundamentals
• Spaces
• Cultures
• Living
•  Governance
• International
• Challenges

Written by an international team of scholars, with a mix of world-leading established academics and talented emerging researchers, the Handbook provides a rigorous scholarly overview of Myanmar’s politics, economics, and society. As Myanmar opens to Western businesses and government agencies, this is an invaluable reference book that will provide a foundation for further research and offer the first port of call for scholars, students, and policy makers working on Myanmar and Asia.

Introducing the Association for Mainland Southeast Asia Scholars (AMSEAS)

A New Year, a new academic association!
Looking to connect with an interdisciplinary group of academics who work on Mainland Southeast Asia? The new Association for Mainland Southeast Asia Scholars (known by the acronym AMSEAS) is now accepting applications for membership.

AMSEAS is the first academic association in Australia and New Zealand to focus specifically on Mainland Southeast Asia. It is affiliated with the Asian Studies Association of Australia.

AMSEAS seeks to foster and facilitate opportunities for the advancement of research and knowledge relevant to Mainland Southeast Asia. Recognising the benefits of adopting a multidisciplinary approach and encouraging dialogue between scholars of the individual countries, we promote and support the study of Mainland Southeast Asia. While the primary base of AMSEAS is Australian and New Zealand universities, we also welcome membership from academics, students and researchers from abroad.

AMSEAS is pleased to introduce its Interim Committee that includes:

How do I join?
Membership is currently free. There is a simple online registration form. Once you sign up as a member, we will keep you informed of future AMSEAS events and activities There is also a new facebook page /AMSEASAustralia/ you can follow to connect with other members and share news on new publications, events and activities.

What next?
AMSEAS will be officially launched at the upcoming conference of the Asian Studies Association of Australia (ASAA), to be held at the University of Sydney on 3-5 July 2018. AMSEAS will be hosting a keynote speech at the conference, as well as facilitating a number of panels. We encourage you to attend this event and meet the AMSEAS board and members.


Any inquiries can be directed to the Secretary at amseas.scholars@gmail.com

UNSW Southeast Asia Events

A Review of 2017
Looking back on 2017, its been a busy year for UNSW Law and its events in/at/on Southeast Asia. Here’s a brief overview:

January
Faculty member, Co-teaching Stream on ‘Law and Society in Southeast Asia’, Harvard Law School’s Institute for Global Law & Policy Workshop, 5-12 January, Bangkok, Thailand.

February
Lecturer, Course on Principles and Processes of Constitution-Making, International IDEA, Yangon, Myanmar (intensive course, 30 students from government and civil society)Invited Chair, Myanmar/Burma Update, panel on Religion and the State, Canberra

March
Seminar on The Future for Justice Sector Reform in Myanmar, World Bank, Yangon, Myanmar
Seminar by Guest Speaker Thaw Thant Kaung on ‘Books and Publication Trends in Myanmar’, at UNSW Law

April/May/July
Facilitator & lecturer, Professional Legal Education on Commercial and Corporate Law, part 1, Yangon, Myanmar (intensive course, 38 legal practitioners)Facilitator & lecturer, Professional Legal Education on Commercial and Corporate Law, for the Union Attorney General’s Office, Naypyidaw, Myanmar (40 participants)

July
Seminar on Law and Development in Myanmar, RMIT, Law Faculty, Melbourne

August
Facilitator, Judicial Colloquium on Commercial Law, roundtable for High Court and District Court judges, with the Federal Court of Australia and the Union Supreme Court of Myanmar, Naypyidaw (25 judges participated, 4 foreign judges attended)
Keynote Speaker ‘Legal Culture in Indonesia, Law Faculty, Trisakti University, Jakarta, Indonesia
Workshop on Electoral Accountability in Indonesia, in Jakarta, organized in collaboration with Dr Fritz Siregar

October
Invited Speaker at Workshop on ‘Implementing New Constitutions’, University of Chicago Law School, Chicago. My Paper: ‘Constitutional Transformation or Authoritarian Straightjacket in Myanmar?’
Invited Speaker, The Struggle for Constitutional Rights and Administrative Accountability in Asia, Windsor Law School, Canada
Invited Speaker, The Rakhine State Humanitarian Crisis, Windsor Law School, Canada
Keynote Speaker, Security and Humanitarian Concerns in Rakhine State, Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, ANU
Establishment of Association for Mainland Southeast Asia Scholars (AMSEAS) 

November
UNRESOLV Fellowship, Law Faculty, University of Indonesia, Jakarta
Seminar on The Rakhine State Crisis in Myanmar at Jentera Law School, Jakarta
Seminar on Judicial Independence in Indonesia at the University of Indonesia Faculty of Law
Invited Chair, Workshop on “Religion and Constitutional Practices in Asia”, International Centre for Ethnic Studies (ICES), Sri Lanka,
Speaker at Workshop between UNSW Law and Jindal Global Law School, New Delhi, India, on ‘Constitutional Rights and Accountability in Asia’
Seminar on Judicial Independence and Accountability in New Democracies, Union Supreme Court, Naypyidaw, Myanmar (20 judicial staff)
Seminar on Constitution-making, with International Relations Committee of the Union Parliament, Naypyidaw, Myanmar (15 members of parliament)

December
Distinguished Guest Seminar by Dr Chit Win on ‘Understanding Myanmar’s Parliament’ at UNSW Law
Myanmar Development Roundtable, Institute for Global Development, at UNSW

New Academic Association on Mainland Southeast Asia

In October 2017, scholars of Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam in Australia and New Zealand established the Association of Mainland Southeast Asia Scholars (AMSEAS). It is a sub-regionally focused academic association affiliated with the Asian Studies Association of Australia, Australia’s peak body for the scholarly study of Asia. AMSEAS seeks to advance research relevant to Mainland Southeast Asia at a time of rapid change in the region and globally. It recognises the benefits of adopting a multidisciplinary approach and encouraging dialogue between scholars of the individual countries. The association will promote and support the study of Mainland Southeast Asia in Australian and New Zealand universities, as well as work to enhance the general public’s knowledge of the region.
AMSEAS is the first Mainland Southeast Asia-focused academic association in Australia. AMSEAS’ role is to strengthen the community of Mainland Southeast Asia scholars. Our activities include:

  • Providing a platform for information dissemination and knowledge exchange to academics, students and other audiences with an interest in Mainland Southeast Asia.
  • Identifying research clusters and research themes that encourage country-specific analyses and cross-country collaborative research, including on broad, regional-scale trends of social, political, legal, economic, and environmental change.
  • Providing financial support for keynote presentations on Mainland Southeast Asia at ASAA’s biennial conference.
  • Facilitating Mainland Southeast Asia-focused panels at the ASAA’s biennial conference and other events.
  • Serving as a contact point for scholars of Mainland Southeast Asia beyond Australia.
  • Serving as a cross-sector platform between academia, industry, the media and national governments for shared action and learning on Mainland Southeast Asia.

To apply for membership, please complete the application form  and sign up at our Facebook page.
Upcoming events: From 3-5 July 2018, AMSEAS will be facilitating a number of panels and hosting a keynote speaker at the Asian Studies Association of Australia conference held at the University of Sydney.