Since the late 1980s, Joan has been busy as a consultant to a number of bilateral and multilateral aid agencies. She has retired as a university teacher, but served for several years as an active member of the advisory board of a Bandung-based research organization, AKATIGA. She has also served since its inception in early 2001 on both the Board of Trustees and the Advisory Board of the Jakarta-based research group, The SMERU Research Institute. The editors are pleased that four chapters in this volume have been contributed by staff of these two institutions. Joan continues to be an active member of the SMERU boards, and in her advisory role, she has always stressed that SMERU should focus on what it does best, namely conducting solid research on the problems of poverty, social protection and unemployment, rather than engaging in policy advocacy. She worked very hard editing the institute’s first international publication, Poverty and Social Protection in Indonesia, which was published by the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore in 2011. Joan has often regretted the fact that so few Indonesian social scientists publish internationally, and has assisted a number of scholars over the years to turn their research findings into publishable papers in English-language outlets.
Like many Indonesians in her age group, Joan has at times been disappointed that the country’s macroeconomic progress over the last four decades has not yet achieved the elusive goal of a just and prosperous society. To friends, she can be at times very critical of the performance of politicians and senior bureaucrats, both during the Suharto era and subsequently. But she would be the last to deny that some progress has been made. She continues to visit Australia on a regular basis, but Bandung remains her home, and she remains steadfast in her love for, and commitment to, the people of Indonesia.
Anne Booth is Professor of Economics with reference to Asia at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. She has published extensively on Southeast Asian economic development, both in the colonial and the post-independence eras. Her recent research has focused on the comparative development experiences of Asia and Africa in the twentieth century.
Chris Manning is an Advisor with SEADI in Jakarta and an Adjunct Fellow at the Arndt-Corden Department of Economics, Australian National University. He was previously Associate Professor and Head of the Indonesia Project in that department. He has published extensively on labour issues in East and Southeast Asia, with particular reference to Indonesia.
Thee Kian Wie served for many years on the research staff of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI), and is currently a senior economist in the Economic Research Centre at LIPI. He is also a member, Commission for the Social Sciences, Indonesian Academy of Sciences. He has published extensively on Indonesian economic development with special focus on economic history, industrialization and foreign investment.