|
original article |
Journal |
Date |
Title |
Authors All Authors |
1 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2023―Oct―17 |
Precarious frontier and the handling of COVID-19 in Indigenous communities in Borneo |
Imam Ardhianto, Indrawan Prasetyo |
2 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2023―Mar―27 |
Chinese students in Australia: motivations and mobility in the face of COVID-19 |
Yu Hao, Anthony Pym, Yizhou Wang |
3 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2023―Mar―14 |
What motivates students to study Chinese at Australian universities and did this change during the COVID-19 pandemic? |
Tracy Huahua Hong, Hui Huang |
4 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2023―Mar―07 |
Gender equity reversals and women’s responses to COVID-19 in rural Indonesia |
Rachael Diprose, Ken M.P. Setiawan, Bronwyn Beech Jones |
5 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Nov―23 |
Adapting to the ‘new normal’: Chinese NGOs during COVID-19 |
Di Wu |
6 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Sep―05 |
COVID-19 and the rise of the surveillance state in China |
Kevin Lo |
7 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Sep―05 |
Growing green? South Korea’s approach to the COVID-19 economic recovery |
Theo Mendez |
8 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Sep―05 |
COVID-19 mental health challenges and responses in Hong Kong. |
Paul Yip |
9 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Sep―05 |
INTERVIEW: From a public health crisis to a ‘police state’: China during and beyond COVID-19 |
Murong Xuecun |
10 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Sep―05 |
Chinese students in Australia during the COVID-19 pandemic |
Jun Ohashi |
11 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Sep―05 |
Reimagining human mobility in Asia Pacific after COVID-19: the challenge of expanding human rights-based entry and stay pathways |
Pia Oberoi |
12 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Sep―05 |
Pandemic racism and sexism in Australia: responses from Asian migrant women |
Sylvia Ang, Jay Song, Qiuping Pan |
13 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Sep―05 |
How Indian students told to ‘go home’ by Australia at the start of the pandemic used WhatsApp for advocacy |
Surjeet Dhanji, Mousumi Mukherjee |
14 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Sep―05 |
Chinese social workers during the pandemic: Stuck between the government and the people |
Leiheng Wang |
15 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Jul―06 |
Fortress North Korea and the battle against COVID-19 |
Jasmine Barrett |
16 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2022―Mar―21 |
Indonesia’s pandemic foreign policy: Between pragmatism and Jokowi’s legacy |
Muhamad Arif |
17 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―Dec―13 |
Vietnam and COVID-19: From Marx to Mark (Zuckerberg) and back again |
Adam Fforde |
18 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―Oct―11 |
COVID-19 and China’s attempts to build a health silk road to Myanmar |
Nyi Nyi Kyaw |
19 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―Sep―12 |
COVID-19 has intensified existing intergenerational and gender tensions in China’s cities |
Bin Wang, Ilan Wiesel |
20 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―Aug―20 |
The necessity of teaching online during the COVID-19 pandemic could result in better Japanese language teaching |
Yasuhisa Watanabe |
21 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―Aug―20 |
COVID-19 underlines the importance of learning languages via emerging technologies |
Grace Yue Qi |
22 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―May―13 |
How Kong’s civil society networks have contributed to the containment of COVID-19 |
Sophie Chen, Chris Chan |
23 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―May―13 |
The COVID-19 pandemic and possibilities for Arab ‘risk society’ |
Larbi Sadiki, Layla Saleh |
24 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―May―04 |
#MaskUp in Australia: How social norms in a pandemic are formed |
Jun Ohashi |
25 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―Feb―24 |
State-society relations in a pandemic: an Asian Australian perspective. |
Haina Lee, Jay Song |
26 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―Feb―17 |
What our survey found about effective COVID-19 communications in Asian Australian communities |
Wonsun Shin, Jay Song |
27 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2021―Jan―06 |
Suicide, underemployment and poverty: The gendered impacts of COVID-19 in Japan |
Nana Oishi |
28 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Dec―21 |
COVID-19 in the Middle East: A perfect storm |
Ian Parmeter |
29 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Dec―08 |
The influence of elite interests are crucial to understanding Indonesia’s response to COVID-19 |
Inaya Rakhmani, Panji Permana |
30 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Nov―12 |
Quarantine, masks and dis/ease: social discourses of COVID-19 in Japan and Korea |
|
31 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Nov―12 |
COVID-19 lockdown in Chinese villages: Radical measures positively received |
Xiao Tan, Mark Yaolin Wang, Yao Song, Tianyang Liu |
32 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Nov―04 |
Vietnam and COVID-19: More Mark (Zuckerberg) than Marx |
Adam Fforde |
33 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Oct―25 |
How South Korea has kept the impact of COVID-19 on jobs in check |
Kyoung-Hee Yu |
34 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Oct―09 |
South Korea’s prospects for a middle-power alliance in the era of COVID-19 |
Taekyoon Kim |
35 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Oct―08 |
Governance or social resilience: Learning from Southeast Asia’s experience with COVID-19 |
Asia Institute |
36 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Oct―07 |
As COVID-19 escalates in Indonesia, responses are fractured and fractious |
Rebecca Meckelburg, Charan Bal |
37 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Oct―07 |
Pandemic politics in South Asia: Muslims and democracy |
Matthew Nelson |
38 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Aug―26 |
COVID-19 media reporting in Taiwan: A proxy war over foreign relations? |
Jasmine Chang |
39 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Aug―26 |
COVID-19, women and digitised food networks in Jakarta: Inequality and resilience |
Inaya Rakhmani, Ariane Utomo, Catherine Phillips, Diahhadi Setyonaluri |
40 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Aug―26 |
COVID-19: The politics of local responses in Indonesia |
Trissia Wijaya |
41 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Aug―25 |
COVID-19 and Belt and Road: Some of the issues impacting business and human rights |
Surya Deva |
42 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Aug―25 |
India and Australia’s federal systems have responded fairly well to COVID-19. But the US system hasn’t |
Niranjan Sahoo |
43 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Aug―25 |
Pandemics, politics and principles: business and human rights in Southeast Asia in a time of crisis. |
Andrew Rosser, Kate McDonald, Ken MP Setiawan |
44 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Jun―29 |
Great Power Blame Game: The Ongoing War of Words Over COVID-19 |
Melissa Conley Tyler, Tiffany Liu |
45 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Jun―29 |
COVID-19 is accelerating trends towards a more polarised world |
Hoo Tiang Boon |
46 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Jun―29 |
COVID-19 will set back the cause of women’s rights in Indonesia |
Atnike Nova Sigiro |
47 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Jun―24 |
COVID-19 and China’s Five-Year Plan to create a ‘xiaokang’ society |
Craig Smith |
48 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Jun―24 |
Indonesia is exploiting the COVID-19 crisis for illiberal purposes |
Rafiqa Qurrata A’yun, Abdil Mughis Mudhoffir |
49 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Jun―24 |
Singapore’s massive COVID-19 oversight |
Sow Keat Tok |
50 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―May―22 |
Lost in Translation: COVID-19 and China’s ‘Wet Markets |
Delia Lin |
51 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―May―11 |
American Bioweapon or the ‘China Virus’? The War of Words over COVID-19 |
Melissa Conley Tyler, Tiffany Liu |
52 |
[GO] |
Melbourne Asia Review |
2020―Apr―28 |
The biggest cost of the COVID-19 virus in China could be freedom |
Delia Lin |