Academic literature on the topic 'Indonesians Australia History'

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Journal articles on the topic "Indonesians Australia History"

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Choo, Christine. "The Impact of Asian - Aboriginal Australian Contacts in Northern Australia." Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 3, no. 2-3 (June 1994): 295–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/011719689400300218.

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The long history of Asian contact with Australian Aborigines began with the early links with seafarers, Makassan trepang gatherers and even Chinese contact, which occurred in northern Australia. Later contact through the pearling industry in the Northern Territory and Kimberley, Western Australia, involved Filipinos (Manilamen), Malays, Indonesians, Chinese and Japanese. Europeans on the coastal areas of northern Australia depended on the work of indentured Asians and local Aborigines for the development and success of these industries. The birth of the Australian Federation also marked the beginning of the “White Australia Policy” designed to keep non-Europeans from settling in Australia. The presence of Asians in the north had a significant impact on state legislation controlling Aborigines in Western Australia in the first half of the 20th century, with implications to the present. Oral and archival evidence bears testimony to the brutality with which this legislation was pursued and its impact on the lives of Aboriginal people.
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Margawani, K. Rini, Ian D. Robertson, and David J. Hampson. "Isolation of the anaerobic intestinal spirochaete Brachyspira pilosicoli from long-term residents and Indonesian visitors to Perth, Western Australia." Journal of Medical Microbiology 58, no. 2 (February 1, 2009): 248–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/jmm.0.004770-0.

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Brachyspira pilosicoli is an anaerobic spirochaete that colonizes the large intestine of humans and various species of animals and birds. The spirochaete is an important enteric pathogen of pigs and poultry, but its pathogenic potential in humans is less clear. In the current study, the occurrence of B. pilosicoli in faecal samples from 766 individuals in two different population groups in Perth, Western Australia, was investigated by selective anaerobic culture. Of 586 individuals who were long-term residents of Perth, including children, elderly patients in care and in hospital and individuals with gastrointestinal disease, only one was culture positive. This person had a history of diverticulitis. In comparison, faeces from 17 of 180 (9.4 %) Indonesians who were short- or medium-term visitors to Perth were positive for B. pilosicoli. The culture-positive individuals had been in the city for between 10 days and 4.5 years (median 5 months). Resampling of subsets of the Indonesians indicated that all negative people remained negative and that some positive individuals remained positive after 5 months. Two individuals had pairs of isolates recovered after 4 and 5 months that had the same PFGE types, whilst another individual had isolates with two different PFGE types that were identified 2 months apart. Individuals who were culture-positive were likely to have been either colonized in Indonesia before arriving in Perth or infected in Perth following contact with other culture-positive Indonesians with whom they socialized. Colonization with B. pilosicoli was not significantly associated with clinical signs at the time the individuals were tested, although faeces with wet-clay consistency were 1.5 times more likely (confidence interval 0.55–4.6) than normal faeces to contain B. pilosicoli.
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Abdullah, Anzar. "Diplomatic Relations between Indonesia-Australia Since Whitlam, Fraser, Until Hawke Era in An Attempt To Establish Political Stability in Southeast Asia." Jurnal Ilmiah Peuradeun 5, no. 2 (May 27, 2017): 237. http://dx.doi.org/10.26811/peuradeun.v5i2.135.

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Talking about foreign policy relations of a country, it cannot be explained without adapting to the changes that occur in the growing environment or situation of both countries. Adjustments to the environment and the situation, especially the foreign policy are done in order to maintain the physical, economic, politic and social culture of the country in the midst of the real conditions of the situation occurred, like the history of bilateral relations between Indonesia and Australia). This is a study of the history of Australian foreign policy towards Indonesia since Whitlam government in 1972 until Hawke. The goal of the study is to explain how the foreign policy of the Australian Prime Ministers during their reigns. Although in reality in the course of its history, Australian and Indonesian diplomatic relations were full of intrigues, turmoil and conflicts, but it did not severe the relation of the two nations. Eventually, the conclusion of this study explicitly states that Australia and Indonesia still need each other in an attempt to establish political stability, economic and security in Southeast Asia and the Pacific peacefully.
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Fredman, Nick. "Misreading the Crisis: Issues in Australian Media Representations of Indonesian Politics." Media International Australia 93, no. 1 (November 1999): 119–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x9909300112.

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This article critiques differing approaches to analysing Australian media representations of Indonesia, and argues that an analysis of ideology and language is key to understanding this discourse. Many mass media commentators have been caught by surprise at the rapid development and severity of the economic and political crisis in Indonesia, and there has been ongoing confusion in media accounts of the crisis. The article explains this in terms of the contradictions that representing an authoritarian political system has created for the Australian media, which is underpinned by liberal-democratic ideology. These contradictions were held in check by the creation of several myths around Indonesia's apparent economic successes, the possibilities of peaceful change and Australia's national interest. The onset of a major crisis, however, has brought these contradictions to breaking point. The article also suggests some connections between the liberal discourse of a closer engagement with Asia and Australia's racist history.
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Ch’ng, Huck Ying, Kashifa Aslam, Huong Nguyen, and Bradley Smith. "Asian Australian media representation of First Nations sovereignty and constitutional change." Australian Journalism Review 44, no. 2 (November 1, 2022): 191–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ajr_00103_1.

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This study explores levels of interest in and framing of Australian First Nations constitutional reform in minority ethnic media. A keyword search of mainstream English media in Australia and of media targeted at Chinese, Pakistani, Vietnamese and Indonesian Australian communities shows a relatively low level of interest in the publication of and government response to the Uluru Statement in the latter outlets compared to the English media. Framing analysis over an extended timeframe finds some interest in and broad support for Australian First Nations’ calls for constitutional reform in the Asian Australian media, as well as variation and suggestive correlations between framing and audience such as linking First Nations history to experiences of racism and exclusion of Chinese Australians. The study has implications both for any referendum for a First Nations Voice to Parliament and for scholarship on the role of minority ethnic media in the contemporary Australian public sphere.
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Abrar, Abrar. "Kurikulum Sejarah Jenjang SMA: Sebuah Perbandingan Indonesia-Australia." Jurnal Pendidikan Sejarah 4, no. 1 (August 18, 2017): 14. http://dx.doi.org/10.21009/jps.041.02.

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The purpose of this paper was to compare how the education system and curriculum history at secondaryschool level between Indonesia and Australia. The education system in Indonesia is not much differentfrom Australia. History curriculum in Indonesia philosophically is more multi dimensional thanAustralia which essentialism as priority. Indonesian history curriculum is more comprehensive intermsof content than Australia that is optional for students. The ability to interpret the history curriculum inAustraliais more prominent than Indonesia.
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Reid, Anthony. "The Indian Dimension of Aceh and Sumatra History." Journal of Maritime Studies and National Integration 4, no. 2 (December 24, 2020): 64–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.14710/jmsni.v4i2.8639.

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Indonesia’s maritime boundary with India, lying barely 100km from Banda Aceh, appears quiet and of little interest to policy-makers, in contrast to almost all the other contested boundaries with Malaysia, China, the Philippines, and Australia. India’s historical relations with Sumatra have also drawn less scholarly or popular attention than those with the Arab, Persian, and Turkish worlds, or with Java, the Peninsula, and China. It is one of the imbalances and justifying the “Indian Ocean’ in the title of International Centre for Aceh and Indian Ocean Studies. It is also supported by arguing that northern Sumatra’s most important historical relationship outside Sumatra itself was for long with India. The time must come when this neighbourly maritime relationship is normalised in the context of improving Indonesia-India ties.
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Koswara, Aang, and Syauqy Lukman. "Communication competence of Indonesian workers in intercultural interaction in Munich and Canberra." Jurnal Kajian Komunikasi 10, no. 2 (December 29, 2022): 199. http://dx.doi.org/10.24198/jkk.v10i2.41976.

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The discourse of intercultural communication competence is increasingly important in the globalized world. However, there need to be more studies reported on the communication competence of Indonesian workers in intercultural interaction, particularly in the host country Germany and Australia. This study investigates communication competence in the intercultural interaction of Indonesian workers in two cities, Munich and Canberra. It focuses on intercultural challenges encountered by Indonesian workers working at different corporations and organizations in Munich and Canberra. Using qualitative methods, we examine Indonesian workers' intercultural awareness, sensitivity, and language competence in the host cities. This ethnographic study is based on interviews and informal conversations with Indonesian workers in Munich and Canberra and observations through the engagement of the researchers in the various Indonesian Diaspora community in the two cities. Based on thematic analysis, two empirical findings are essential to everyday intercultural interaction. First, intercultural awareness and sensitivity explain the knowledge and experiences of Indonesian workers on local rules and regulations, culture, and history of the host cities. Second, language competence describes the ability of Indonesian workers to understand the accents and dialects (German Bavaria and English Australian) and to overcome language barriers in everyday work and community life. The study concludes that participants have different experiences implementing communication competence in everyday interaction. It depends on the intercultural interaction intensity of Indonesian workers with their colleagues and the local community.
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Lewis, Jeff, and Sonya de Masi. "Unholy Wars: Media Representations of the First Bali Bombings and Their Aftermath." Media International Australia 122, no. 1 (February 2007): 59–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x0712200111.

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Over the past three decades, the Indonesian tourist island of Bali has been appropriated into the Australian national imaginary. For Australians, Bali has become a neighbourhood playground and psycho-cultural land-bridge to Indonesia and the Asian region. With the emergence of a global ‘war on terror’, Bali has also become a primary battleground, dividing the symbolic claims of the Islamist militants against the Western economic and hedonistic empire. This divide becomes crystallised in the Australian news reporting of the Islamist attacks in Bali of 2002 and 2005. Our research has found a common frame of reference in the reporting of the attacks, most particularly as Australian journalists’ reference to a sense of national history, the ‘9/11 wars’ and Australia's adherence to US foreign policy and cultural hegemony. News reporting tended to subsume the details of ‘Islam’ and Islamic grievance within a more xenophobic rendering of Australian identity and an apocalyptic vision of good and evil.
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Rice, Alan. "In‐country and Australian‐based Indonesian programs." Asian Studies Review 18, no. 1 (July 1994): 44–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03147539408712979.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Indonesians Australia History"

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Tapsell, Ross. "A history of Australian journalism in Indonesia." School of History and Politics, Faculty of Arts, 2009. http://ro.uow.edu.au/theses/3028.

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This thesis examines the changing professional practice of Australian journalists since they began reporting in Indonesia from 1945. Existing literature on the Australian media in Indonesia has emphasised the problem of biased and troublesome Australian journalists who have deliberately caused bilateral relations disturbances between Australia and Indonesia. It is argued that the existing literature overstates the agency of Australian journalists, and downplays the attitudes and roles of governments and news forces in the shaping of journalists’ professional practice. This thesis will show how Australian journalists and their Indonesian staff have attempted to report what they saw as the ‘truth’ from the archipelago, yet have been subjected to numerous pressures and vii constraints that hinders their professional practice and limits their autonomy. In particular, Indonesian staff working for Australian news agencies have been subjected to numerous pressures from a hierarchical system of newsgathering and from their own government. The Indonesian Government and military have attempted to control the flow of news through often crude and violent tactics to hinder journalists’ professional practice. The Australian Government, which supports the notion of a free press, has also limited Australian journalists’ professional practice in Indonesia. The news system requirement for journalists to seek elite sources and the improvements in communications technology have also hindered the freedoms for Australian journalists as they operate from Indonesia. Thus, it is argued that Australian journalists in Indonesia and their local staff have worked under a range of constraints and have been pressured to serve a variety of competing masters in reporting from the archipelago. Their work has to be understood as a complex artefact crafted in response to this range of insistent and intrusive pressures.
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Karsono, Sony. "Setting History Straight? Indonesian Historiography in the new Order." Ohio : Ohio University, 2005. http://www.ohiolink.edu/etd/view.cgi?ohiou1127249724.

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Farreras, Morlanes Teresa. "East Timorese ethno-nationalism: search for an identity - cultural and political self-determination." Phd thesis, University of Queensland, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/267386.

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This thesis is an examination of the development of ethnic, cultural and national identity among the East Timor people reaching Australia after the East Timor civil war of August 1975 . In the introduction I argue that ethnic and national identity, or ethno-nationalism, is not a natural phenomenon and that it can emerge at any moment in time owing to specific historical, socio-economic or political circumstances. I argue that during the 1974-1975 period the Portuguese- Timorese mestieo (racially mixed) elite of East Timer, principally those of Dili, of which the refugees are representative, began developing specific ethnic and nationalist ideologies in response to new political circumstances offering the people the opportunity to assert an all-embracing East Timorese identity. The chapters which follow present data and analysis in support of the initial argument and are directed to show that a combination of theoretical approaches offer a better rationale for the understanding of identity creation and development. In Chapters 2 and 3 I describe the refugees' historical, socio-economic and political background and assert that history is important for an understanding of the selective representation of myths, symbols, ideologies and instrumental tactics. In Chapters 4, 5 and 6 I examine the development of III identity against the interplay of social order, power and conflict. I direct the analysis towards the notion of negotiation of an identity within global and local political and social parameters. I examine political issues, contextual problems, personal and group motives and the re-creation and presentation of symbols, myths, ideas and beliefs. Chapter 7 shows how the search for the legitimization of an identity and political claims by nationalist individuals and the group are directed by the intelligentsia 1 s manipulation through the artistic media of specific nationalist ideologies aimed at resolving the problems of the present. In Chapter 8 I discuss the role of the Catholic Church in the politics of identity building, its position in relation to the people's demands of historical and cultural obligations, the dilemmas experienced by the Church in the face of its own tenets and the institutionalized order, and the people's teleological use of religion as techniques of political resistance. I conclude by reasserting that refugee populations such as the East Timorese in having to re-stablish their lives in an alien context would normally strive to function socially according to their perceptions of priority needs, creating in the process new subjective understandings. I stress that this also demonstrates that it is paramount to direct the analysis of ethno-nationalism through a combination of diverse theoretical approaches and that in this form one can better understand the whole set of the people's strategies for identity survival.
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Thabran, Yulhenli. "Humour in cross-cultural context : Indonesian and Australian responses to Indonesian political jokes." Thesis, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/150581.

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Books on the topic "Indonesians Australia History"

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O'Hare, Martin. Australia dan perjuangan kemerdekaan Indonesia. Jakarta: Gramedia Pustaka Utama, 1995.

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Hardjono, Ratih. The white tribe of Asia: An Indonesian view of Australia. Clayton, Vic: Monash Asia Institute, Monash University, 1992.

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Tapsell, Ross. By-lines, Balibo, Bali bombings: Australian journalists in Indonesia. North Melbourne, Vic: Australian Scholarly, 2014.

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Catley, Robert. Australian Indonesian relations since 1945: The garuda and the kangaroo. Aldershot, Hants, England: Ashgate, 1998.

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Austin, R. W. L. The shadow of the durian: Indonesia observed. [Nathan], Qld: Griffith University, Faculty of Asian and International Studies, Centre for the Study of Australia-Asia Relations, 1993.

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Poeze, Harry A. PKI SIBAR: Persekutuan aneh antara Pemerintah Belanda dan orang komunis di Australia, 1943-1945. Depok: Komunitas Bambu, 2014.

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Susan, Downie, and Kingsbury Damien, eds. The independence ballot in East Timor: Report of the Australian volunteer observer group. [Clayton], Vic: Centre of Southeast Asian Studies, Monash Asia Institute, Monash University, 2001.

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Matt, Cox, Galstyan Vigen 1981-, Groeneveld Anneke, Lacour Annabelle, Maxwell Anne 1951-, O'Hehir Anne, Protschky Susie, Supartono Alex, and National Gallery of Australia, eds. Garden of the East: Photography in Indonesia 1850s-1940s. Canberra: National Gallery of Australia, 2014.

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Cotton, James. East Timor, Australia and regional order: Intervention and its aftermath in Southeast Asia. London: RoutledgeCurzon, 2004.

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Clark, Marshall. Macassan History and Heritage: Journeys, Encounters and Influences. Canberra: ANU Press, 2013.

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Book chapters on the topic "Indonesians Australia History"

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Reid, Anthony. "Crossing the great divide: Australia and eastern Indonesia." In Macassan History and Heritage: Journeys, Encounters and Influences. ANU Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mhh.06.2013.03.

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Cashman, Peter. "Civil Liability in Australia for International Human Rights Violations." In Human Rights Litigation against Multinationals in Practice, 140–67. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198866220.003.0006.

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Peter Cashman reviews the current state of play in Australia regarding the imposition of civil liability on multinationals for human rights abuses and environmental damage occurring overseas. He considers cases based on a direct tort law-based duty of care and the relevance in that regard of developments in English law and also environmental damage associated with the operations of Australian multinationals, in particular the historic OK Tedi litigation against BHP Billiton and the recent class action trial of the claim by Indonesian seaweed farmers arising from the Montara oil spill. Important aspects of the law on jurisdiction, forum non conveniens, and choice of law and the opt-out class action regime in federal and State courts are outlined. The rules relating to the running of cases by private law firms and third party litigation funders on the basis of contingency fee agreements are explained
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Fealy, Greg. "Jihadism and ‘The Battle of Ideas’ in Indonesia: Critiquing Australian Counterterrorism." In History as Policy: Framing the debate on the future of Australia’s defence policy. ANU Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/hp.12.2007.07.

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Adhuri, Dedi Supriadi. "Traditional and ‘modern’ trepang fisheries on the border of the Indonesian and Australian fishing zones." In Macassan History and Heritage: Journeys, Encounters and Influences. ANU Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/mhh.06.2013.11.

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Macknight, Campbell. "The joint Australian–Indonesian archaeological expedition to South Sulawesi in 1969 in context." In The Archaeology of Sulawesi: Current Research on the Pleistocene to the Historic Period, 9–16. ANU Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/ta48.11.2018.02.

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Conference papers on the topic "Indonesians Australia History"

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Zircon*, Indra, Robert Hall, and Benyamin Sapiie. "Late Neogene History of the Bird's Head Area, West Papua, Indonesia: An Insight From Detrital Zircon." In International Conference and Exhibition, Melbourne, Australia 13-16 September 2015. Society of Exploration Geophysicists and American Association of Petroleum Geologists, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1190/ice2015-2206292.

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Priyono, Sigit. "Perspektif Politik dan Keamanan Pembangunan Pusat Peluncuran dan Penyelenggraan Satelit dalam Kerangka Kemandirian Nasional." In Seminar Nasional Kebijakan Penerbangan dan Antariksa II. Bogor: In Media, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.30536/p.sinaskpa.ii.10.

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Secara historis perkembangan teknologi satelit di Indonesia mulai sejak diluncurkannya program satelit PALAPA. Program tersebut mengukuhkan Indonesia menjadi satu Negara berkembang pertama di dunia dan negara ke tiga didunia yang menggunakan teknologi satelit untuk keperluan komunikasi nasional komersial setelah Amerika Serikat dan Kanada. Secara faktual ada enam (6) persoalan yang dihadapi Indonesia dalam bidang antariksa. Salah satunya adalah bagaimana dengan pemanfaatan geografi Indonesia sebagai tempat peluncuran satelit yang bisa berdampak pada konstelasi Politik dan keamanan kawasan dan ekonomi nasional. Tulisan ini menjelaskan secara khusus dampak politik pembangunan Peluncuran di pulau Biak, Papua. Hasilnya adalah pembangunan bandar antariksa di Pulau Biak Numfor akan menciptakan Balancing Power dengan Hadirnya investor (Rusia, China dan negara lainnya) dapat menjadikan penyeimbang kekuatan terhadap perusahaan asing di Papua (PT. Freeport) (USA dan Australia). Di samping itu juga terdapat Deterrence Power dalam penguasaan tehnologi peluncuran satelit serta pengembangan dan penelitian satelit bagi Lapan. Selain itu, dari sisi ekonomi, Kesejahteraan Papua akan meningkat melalui mega proyek peluncuran satelit di Biak.
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Smith, Rebecca, Isla Castañeda, Jorijntje Henderiks, Beth A. Christensen, David De Vleeschouwer, Willem Renema, Jeroen Groeneveld, et al. "INDONESIAN THROUGHFLOW VARIABILITY AND ITS INFLUENCE ON THE CONTINENTAL CLIMATE HISTORY OF NW AUSTRALIA DURING THE PLIO-PLEISTOCENE." In 53rd Annual GSA Northeastern Section Meeting - 2018. Geological Society of America, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2018ne-310927.

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Affandi, Yuyun, M. Suryadilaga, and Musthofa Musthofa. "Australian Ulama Response to Ash-Shabuny's View on Sexual Abuse against Women." In Proceedings of the First International Conference on Islamic History and Civilization, ICON-ISHIC 2020, 14 October, Semarang, Indonesia. EAI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.14-10-2020.2303854.

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Lazuardi, H. "Burial History, Hydrocarbon Generation, and Migration in the Upper Paleogene Petroleum System of the Offshore North Sumatra Basin: Insights from 1D and 2D Basin Modeling." In Indonesian Petroleum Association 44th Annual Convention and Exhibition. Indonesian Petroleum Association, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29118/ipa21-sg-270.

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One-dimensional and two-dimensional basin modeling can be used to infer the burial history, hydrocarbon generation, and migration of hydrocarbon. In this paper, the study focuses on 1D and 2D basin modeling in North Sumatera Offshore as one of the prolific deep-water basins in Indonesia. The data consists of 5 exploration wells and 2D seismic data that are vitrinite reflectance, rock-eval data, and bottom-hole temperature. Well data’s have been used to calibrate heat flow and thermal evolution of the basin, while 2D seismic data have been used to support the basin modeling. Based on the result, the basin formed by the collision of the Australian Plate with the Eurasian Plate evolved due to block faulting that caused a pull-apart basin. In the Early Oligocene, changes in the movement of the Indian plate also changed tectonics from subduction to strike-slip fault resulting in Andaman Sea rifting. The southern part of the research area was affected by the Andaman Sea rifting, which caused unconformities in the Middle Miocene. The main generating source rock is the Bampo, Belumai, and Baong Formation, which is predominantly consist of Type III kerogen (gas prone) in the north and Type II/III (mix oil and gas prone) in the South. The timing of petroleum generation may have occurred is in the Early Pliocene. The Early oil generation which occurred simultaneously with the seal rock and may have been migrated to the Middle and Late Miocene reservoir through the faults as a vertical migration pathway. The results of this study allow us to improve the hydrocarbon prospect and reduce exploration risks.
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Clark, S. "Regional Tectonics & Structural Framework of Offshore Aceh's Andaman Sub-Basin, Northern Sumatra, Indonesia." In Indonesian Petroleum Association 44th Annual Convention and Exhibition. Indonesian Petroleum Association, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29118/ipa21-g-30.

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The three-way collision of the Indo-Australian, Eurasian and Pacific plates have resulted in Southeast Asia being the most tectonically complex region on Earth. This is particularly true for Offshore Aceh’s Andaman Sub-Basin, which has undergone complex late Eocene-Recent evolution. Despite a long history of hydrocarbon exploration and production, data scarcity in the offshore means that the Sub-Basin’s regional tectonics and structural framework have been poorly understood. Pre-1996 2D seismic data were low-fold and low-offset, however the 2019 PGS (NSMC3D) regional 3D survey imaged the entire Cenozoic sequence, enabling the delineation of a high-resolution tectonic framework for the first time. Integration of interpretations drawn from geophysical datasets with a 2019 biostratigraphy study has refined the ages of critical sequence boundaries and advanced the understanding of major structural elements. GEM™, the Geognostics Earth Model, has been used to place these interpretations in a regional tectonic and kinematic context using a series of high resolution plate animations. Andaman Sub-Basin formation initiated in response to the northward motion of India and collision with Eurasia, suturing the West Burma and Sibumasu Terranes through the middle-late Eocene. Continued northward motion of the Indo-Australian Plate resulted in further subduction along the Sunda Trench with associated oblique back-arc extension in present-day onshore and offshore Java and Sumatra. Concurrent rotation of Sundaland, with sinistral strike-slip motion along the Ranong and Khlong Mauri fault zones, resulted in the two rifting phases within the late Eocene (~40Ma) to early Oligocene in the Andaman Sub-Basin. Significant inversion events at 30Ma and 23Ma formed in response to dextral transpression associated with rotational extrusion of Indochina and Sundaland. Rapid subsidence followed the 30Ma inversion, resulting in a switch to post-rift sag and bathyal conditions during which turbidites infilled seabed topography. The onset of dextral strike slip between the West Burma Terrane along the Saigang fault system occurred at ~26Ma, causing transtension in the Andaman Sub-basin that terminated at 23Ma. At approximately 5Ma inversion and toe thrusts developed along the Sub-Basin’s southern margin due to uplift within the Barisan mountains. Refinement of the tectonic model, integrated with updated biostratigraphic and geochemical models, resulted in a revised tectono-stratigraphy for the Andaman Sub-Basin, which provides a predictive depositional model in which paleogeography and structural reactivation can be understood in a regional context.
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Xie, Jinyang, Luo Zuo, Bing Hou, Yifan Dai, Jiaxin Li, Li Zhuang, and Derek Elsworth. "Influencing Factors of Acid Etching Fracture Conductivity of Tuff Reservoir in Northeastern Sichuan Block." In 56th U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium. ARMA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.56952/arma-2022-1007.

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ABSTRACT: With the continuous depth breakthrough of two ultra-deep exploration wells in northeastern Sichuan block, tuff reservoir was finally discovered at the depth of 6700-7300 m. It belongs to ultra-deep tight gas reservoir with low brittle mineral content and high clay content. Hydraulic fracturing is hard to be reformed this special reservoir, easy to appear hydration expansion and other problems. However, the research and development of such tight tuff reservoir with high temperature and high pressure are relatively low in the domestic and overseas until now. Therefore, it is of great significance to carry out experimental research on relevant reservoir reconstruction methods of such rocks and explore the factors of fracture conductivity here. In this study, the influence of acid type, sanding concentrations, proppant size was research by a new experimental installation. The factors of fracture conductivity are analyzed by experimental data and the reconstitution of fracture surface. The results show that before the abnormal point, the acid etching effect of crosslinked acid on tuff is better than that of gelling acid. At the condition of closure pressure is lower 30 MPa, the higher sanding concentrations, the higher fracture conductivity, then narrowed the gap among them. Meanwhile, the larger proppant size, the higher fracture conductivity in low closure pressure. With increasing closure pressure, fracture conductivity of smaller size proppant decreased slowly. In conclusion, it is also convenient for the field operation to choose the best acid and proppant parameters. 1. INTRODUCTION As an important new field of exploration and development of oil and gas resources in the world, igneous reservoir have gradually received extensive attention from geological and petroleum researchers all over the world. The exploration and research on the igneous reservoir has a history of more than 130 years. Now, some igneous reservoir have been exploited in the United States, Indonesia, Japan, Brazil, Australia and other countries (Tang, et al. 2020). Its oil and gas mainly come from athrogenic rock reservoir. Athrogenic rock is a transitional type between magmatic rocks and sedimentary rocks, and it is also one of the important reservoir rock types. It has the advantages of thick pay information and large reserves (Li, et al. 2015). The tuff reservoir is very complex and special and has both lithologic characteristics in terms of petrophysics and diagenesis (ZHANG, et al. 2012). The low degree of development of original porosity and poor connectivity of pore throats indicate that such reservoir is tight reservoir (Zeng, et al. 2021). At present, the well known athrogenic rock reservoir in the world including East Anatolia Basin in Turkey (Gecer-Buyukutku, et al. 2005), Bohai Bay in China (Zhao, et al. 1996), Erlian (Guo, et al. 2013) and Hailar (Yu, et al. 2013) basins.
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