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Contributors
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Contributors contributors Barbara Watson Andaya is Professor of Asian Studies at the University of Hawai‘i. She has held positions at the University of Malaya, the Australian National University, the University of Auckland, Universiti Sains Malaysia and the National University of Singapore, and was President of the American Association for Asian Studies, 2005–2006. Her specific area of expertise is the western Malay-Indonesia archipelago on which she has published extensively. Her most recent book is The Flaming Womb: Repositioning Women in Southeast Asian History, 1500–1800 (2006). Her current project is a history of the localization of Christianity in Southeast Asia, 1511–1900. Azyumardi Azra is Professor of History and the Director of the Graduate School at Syarif Hidayatullah State Islamic University (UIN), Jakarta, Indonesia. He was a former Rector of the same university for two terms, 1998–2002, and 2002–2006. He has written 21 books and many chapters in internationally published books. Among his latest works are: Indonesia, Islam and Democracy: Dynamics in a Global Context (2006); Islam in the Indonesian World: An Account of Institutional Development (2007); and as contributing co-editor, Islam beyond Conflict: Indonesian Islam and Western Political Theory (2008). Earlier, he published his best-known work, The Origins on Islamic Reformism in Southeast Asia: Networks of Malay-Indonesian Ulama (2005). On August 15, 2005, he received the Bintang Mahaputera Utama from Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono for his dedication to Indonesian education. Francis R. Bradley completed his doctorate in History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2010 with a dissertation entitled, “The Social Dynamics of Islamic Revivalism in Southeast Asia: The Rise of the Patani School, 1785–1909.” He has also published his work in Oxford Islamic Studies Online, the Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, and is nearing completion of a book that analyzes Islamic reform networks linking Southeast Asia and the Contributors Middle East in the 19th century. He currently teaches at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. Numan Hayimasae is a lecturer in the Malay Studies Section, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Prince of Songkhla University, Pattani, Thailand, and is a license holder of the Panyabhat Pittaya School also in Pattani. He received his MA and PhD in Islamic Civilization and History respectively from Universiti Sains Malaysia. His research interests are Muslim intellectual history, Patani-Haramayn intellectual networks, and the history of madrasah in Southeast Asia. He is co-author of New Theories for Islamic Educational Institutions in Southern Thailand: The Unrevealed Truth (2010, in Thai). Christopher Joll is a New Zealand anthropologist who has lived and worked in Thailand’s Malay-dominated southern provinces for ten years. Since completing his doctorate from the Centre for the Study of the Malay World and Civilization (ATMA) at the National University of Malaysia (UKM) in 2009, he has held visiting research fellowships at Chulalongkorn University and Victoria University of Wellington. He is the author of Muslim Merit-Making in Thailand’s Far-South. He is currently working on a project concerned with the Ahmadiyyah-Qadariyyah and Ahmadiyyah-Shadhliyya sufi orders in central and southern Thailand. Patrick Jory (editor) is a Senior Lecturer in Southeast Asian History at the University of Queensland. Between 2001 and 2009, he worked as coordinator of the Regional Studies Program at Walailak University in southern Thailand. His research interests are in Thai cultural history and ethnic relations in southern Thailand. He is co-editor of Thai South and Malay North: Ethnic Interactions on a Plural Peninsula (2008). Philip King works at Murdoch University and was awarded his PhD from the University of Wollongong, Australia. He currently serves as the Resident Director of the Australian Consortium for “In-Country” Indonesia Studies. His research interests are Peninsula history and the Indonesian tertiary education sector. His recent publications include “Penang to Songkhla, Penang to Patani: Two Roads, Past and Present,” in Penang and its Region: The Story of an Asian Entrepôt, ed. Yeoh Seng Guan et al. (2009). Iik A. Mansurnoor is an Associate Professor in History and Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at the University of Brunei [44.200.77.59] Project MUSE (2024-03-29 02:02 GMT) Contributors Darussalam. His research interests focus on Islam, globalization and modern history. He is the author of Islam in an Indonesian World: Ulama of Madura (1992), and Living Islamically in the Periphery: Muslim Discourse, Institution, and Intellectual Traditions in Southeast Asia (2011). Duncan McCargo is Professor of Southeast Asian Politics at the University...