http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/03/11/sipri-seeks-work-with-ri-s-think-tanks.html
IPRI seeks to work with RI’s think tanks
Veeramalla Anjaiah, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | World | Mon, March 11 2013, 
11:56 AM 
A- A A+ 
Paper Edition | Page: 12




A delegation from Sweden’s well-known think tank, the Stockholm International 
Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), will visit Indonesia this week to foster 
deeper cooperation and build new research networks with its counterparts in 
Indonesia, a Swedish diplomat has said.

“The aim of SIPRI’s visit is to establish deeper forms of international 
cooperation and research exchanges and ultimately build new areas of research 
with an international impact within SIPRI and its regional counterparts in 
Indonesia,” Swedish Ambassador to Indonesia Ewa Polano said in a press release 
sent to The Jakarta Post on Saturday.

SIPRI is one of the world’s top think tanks, which mainly focuses on research 
on conflict, armament, arms control and disarmament. Every year it publishes 
the well-known SIPRI Yearbook.

SIPRI’s six-member delegation visit comes at the right time as most of 
Indonesia’s think tanks face a crisis due to little encouragement and proper 
funding for their activities. Indonesia, like most developing countries, spends 
little on research and development. Many university graduates consider research 
to be a an unattractive profession.

Higher education in Indonesia is very expensive, but no Indonesian university 
has ever found itself among the world’s top 50. 

According to Trade Minister Gita Wirjawan, Indonesia — a country of 240 million 
— can only produce 600-800 Ph.D holders per year. As of 2011, Indonesian 
universities had produced only 14,000 Ph.Ds, half of them in religious studies. 

Think tanks in Indonesia also face a similar fate. According to the University 
of Pennsylvania’s 2012 Global Go To Think Tank Rankings, Indonesia has only 21 
think tanks, much lower than Zimbabwe’s 24. Indonesia ranked second from bottom 
among G20 members in terms of the total number of think tanks in each member 
country. Saudi Arabia, a G20 member, has only four think tanks, while the US 
has 1,823 and South Africa 86.

But there was some consolation for Indonesia. The Centre for Strategic and 
International Studies (CSIS) was the best think tank in Southeast Asia with a 
global ranking of 74, much higher than Singapore’s Institute of Defense and 
Strategic Studies (78), the Singapore Institute of International Affairs (82) 
and the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (88). SIPRI ranked fourth best in 
the survey after the Brookings Institution from the US, the UK’s Chatham House 
and the US’ Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. 

With 21 think tanks, Indonesia has the highest number out of all countries in 
Southeast Asia. The Philippines is second with 20 think tanks and Malaysia is 
third with 18. They are followed by Cambodia (10), Vietnam (9), Thailand (8), 
Singapore (6) and Laos (3). Myanmar and Brunei Darussalam do not have any think 
tanks.

During their four-day visit (March 11-14) to Jakarta, SIPRI executives, led by 
SIPRI chairman Goran Lennmarker and its director Tilman Bruck, will visit a 
number of research institutions and think tanks and have talks with 
researchers, academics and government officials on security and foreign policy.

“The delegation [is scheduled] to arrive in Jakarta on Sunday night and is 
scheduled to meet Defense Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro, prominent scholar 
Juwono Sudarsono and others. It will also meet with executives of CSIS,” the 
Swedish Embassy’s political officer Per Herrmansson told the Post on Sunday.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke