Notes
1. Other initiatives of the same kind included the Southeast Asian Regional Exchange Program, Asian Fellowship Program, Asian Public Intellectuals – all aimed at supporting inter‐Asian research and exchanges.
2. Hilmar Farid, one of the proponents of oral history of the 1965 victims, contributed an essay in the journal. See Farid (Citation2005).
3. See Inter‐Asia Cultural Studies, Volume 5, Issue 2; Volume 9, Issue 3; Volume 10, Issue 4.
4. See Inter‐Asia Cultural Studies, Volume 7, Issue 2; Volume 8, Issues 1 and 4.
5. See Inter‐Asia Cultural Studies, Volume 9, Issue 4.
6. See Inter‐Asia Cultural Studies, Volume 5, Issue 3.
7. See Inter‐Asia Cultural Studies, Volume 7, Issue 4.
8. See Inter‐Asia Cultural Studies, Volume 9, Issue 1.
9. See Inter‐Asia Cultural Studies, Volume 6, Issue 3.
10. Based on the topics of published articles up to March 2009, the countries represented were as follows (consecutively from the most to the least represented): Taiwan, Korea, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Thailand, Malaysia, China, Indonesia, the Philippines, India, Bangladesh, Ceylon, Cambodia, Vietnam, Pakistan.
11. Similar problems can be found in each Asian country. In Indonesia, cultural studies scholarship is produced mostly in big cities in Java, Sumatra and Bali. The rest of the country is still marginalized in terms of higher education. The non‐reviewed section of the IACS journal serves as a strategic space for giving voice to marginalized pockets through translation of local materials, including photo essays.
12. See the ASAA Journal ranking list (Citation2007).