Kyoto CSEAS Series on Asian Studies

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In recognition of the rapid growth of quality scholarship in East and Southeast Asia, this series was inaugurated in 2009, in order to promote and make this fine scholarly output available globally. Through the NUS Press network, the distribution is quite wide. Due to the width of the targeted audience, we aim to produce works that will make significant contribution to the field of Southeast Asian studies, with clear and concise arguments on relevant questions in the field. The refereeing process is overseen by both the publication committee at CSEAS and the NUS press, by a selection of top scholars in the field. The final production is done by NUS press.

Kyoto University Press:Yoshida-South Campus, Kyoto University, 69 Konoe-cho Yoshida, Sakyo-ku,
Kyoto 606-8315,  JAPAN
Tel: +81-75-761-6182  Fax: +81-75-761-6190
http://www.kyoto-up.or.jp/?lang=en

NUS Press: AS3-01-02 National University of Singapore 3 Arts Link Singapore 117569 REPUBLIC OF SINGAPORE
Tel: +65 6776-1148  Fax: +65 6774-0652
http://www.nus.edu.sg/nuspress/

Partly with Ateneo de Manila University Press: Ground Floor, Bellarmine Hall, Ateneo de Manila University, Katipunan Avenue, Loyola Heights, Quezon City, PHILLIPINES
Tel:+63-2-426-5984 Fax: +63-2-426-5909
http://www.ateneo.edu/ateneopress/index.php?route=common/home

19. Liberalism and the Postcolony: Thinking the State in 20th Century Philippines.
aaaLisandro E. Claudio. March, 2017.

18. Moral Politics in the Philippines: Inequality, Democracy and the Urban Poor.
aaaWataru Kusaka. February, 2017.

17. Central Banking As State Building: Policymakers and Their Nationalism in the Philippines, 1933-1964.
aaaYusuke Takagi. March, 2016.

16. Marriage Migration in Asia: Emerging Minorities at the Frontiers of Nation-States.
aaaSari K. Ishii, eds. February, 2016.

15. Catastrophe and Regeneration in Indonesia’s Peatlands: Ecology, Economy and Society.
aaaKosuke Mizuno, Motoko S. Fujita and Shuichi Kawai, eds. February, 2016.

14. Indonesian Women and Local Politics: Islam, Gender and Networks in Post-Suharto Indonesia.
aaaKurniawati Hastuti Dewi. March, 2015.

13. Identity and Pleasure: The Politics of Indonesian Screen Culture.
aaaAriel Heryanto. August, 2014.

12. The Chinese Question: Ethnicity, Nation, and Region in and beyond the Philippines.
aaaCaroline S. Hau. April, 2014.

11. Migration Revolution: Philippine Nationhood & Class Relations in a Globalized Age.
aaaFilomeno V. Aguilar Jr. May, 2014.

10. Living with Risk: Precarity & Bangkok’s Urban Poor.
aaaTamaki Endo. February, 2014.

9. Organising under the Revolution: Unions & the State in Java, 1945-48.
aaJafar Suryomenggolo. February, 2013.

8. Strong Soldiers, Failed Revolution: The State and Military in Burma, 1962-88.
aaYoshihiro Nakanishi. March, 2013.

7. Popular Culture Co-productions and Collaborations in East and Southeast Asia.
aaNissim Otmazgin and Eyal Ben-Ari, eds. November, 2012.

6. Industrialization with a Weak State:Thailand’s Development in Historical Perspective.
aaSomboon Siriprachai.
aaKaoru Sugihara, Pasuk Phongpaichit and Chris Baker, eds. August, 2012.

5. Questioning Modernity in Indonesia and Malaysia.
aaWendy Mee and Joel S. Kahn, eds. June, 2012.

4. China and the Shaping of Indonesia, 1949-1965.
aaHong Liu. November, 2011.

3. Traveling Nation-Makers: Transnational Flows and Movements in the Making of Modern Southeast Asia.
aaCaroline S. Hau and Kasian Tejapira, eds. February,  2011.

2. Populism in Asia.
aaKosuke Mizuno and Pasuk Phongpaichit, eds. September, 2009.

1.The Economic Transition in Myanmar after 1988: Market Economy versus State Control.
aaKoichi Fujita, Fumiharu Mieno and Ikuko Okamoto, eds. March, 2009.

 

 

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