Muslim Southeast Asia and the Iraq War: The Politics of Backlash with Dr. Donald Emmerson, Senior Fellow, Institute for International Studies

In Muslim-majority Indonesia and Malaysia, initial reactions to the American war in Iraq were overwhelmingly negative. Nor could support for American action be found among Muslim minorities in the Philippines, Singapore, or Thailand. But Southeast Asian Muslims were not equally or uniformly outraged. Complex and distinctive local contexts and agendas shaped Muslim anger and the responses to it. Dr. Emmerson will highlight these Southeast Asian settings and analyze the politics of anti-American backlash along a critical periphery of the Muslim world.

 
Date and Time:
 Wednesday, May 21, 2003.  7:30 PM.
Approximate duration of 2:00 hour(s).
Location:
Room 180, Stanford Law School, Alvarado and Nathan Abbott Way  [Map]
Audience:
Category:
Lectures/Readings
Sponsor:
The Southeast Asia Forum at the Asia/Pacific Research Center with the World Affairs Council of Northern California and the Stanford Center on Conflict and Negotiation
Contact:
Admission:
Members of the World Affairs Council: $5.00 Non-members: $8.00 Students with ID: Free To make a reservation, please contact the World Affairs Council at 415-293-4600.
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Last Modified:
May 14, 2003