Transcript Slide 1

Our role in International
Studies, I believe, is not to
sanitise and not to dramatise
the issue, but to be objective in
relaying what can and should
be, an emotive case study for
our students.
In analysing East Timor
it is important to
understand, but not to
judge the people for
the state of their land.
Teaching East Timor in International Studies:
Andrew Masterton, Caulfield Grammar School
Teaching East Timor:
A brainstorm
What an amazing set of concepts we can teach using this case study.
•What is a state?
•Where is East Timor?
•How does the world create a new
state?
•Why does East Timor exist?
•Colonialism/ Decolonisation
•The Cold War
•Human Rights
•Refugees
•Culture
•History
•The people – their stories
•The viability of small states
•Fascism/ Communism / Socialism
•Grassroots Action
•Neo-colononial / Neo-imperial
•Indonesia
•The Dutch / Portuguese
•The United Nations
•Power
•The national interest
•Sovereignty
•Security
•Nationalism
•Sacrifice
•The Cold War
Five key stages
 1600’s
A Portuguese colony.
 1975
The Indonesian invasion.
 1975-1999 Indonesian occupation
 1999
The gaining of independence
 2006
Political difficulties.
How did East Timor succeed in
becoming an independent state?
3 FACTORS:
•The armed resistance
•The civil resistance
•The international diplomatic front
http://www.nicholsoncartoons.com.au/cartoon_47.html
http://www.nicholsoncartoons.com.au/cartoon_2077.html
Country profile: East Timor
East Timor's road to
independence achieved on 20 May
2002 - was long and
traumatic.
The people of the first
new nation of the
century suffered some of
the worst atrocities of
modern times.
An independent report
has said at least 100,000
Timorese died as a result
of Indonesia's 25-year
occupation, which ended
in 1999.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/country_profiles/1508119.stm
Timeline: East Timor
A chronology of key events:
1600s - Portuguese invade Timor, set up trading post and use island
as source of sandalwood.
1942 - Japanese invade, fighting battles with Australian troops. Up to
60,000 East Timorese are killed. Japan in control until 1945.
1974 - Anti-Fascist revolution in Portugal leads to promise to free
colonies, encouraging parties to prepare for new future.
1975 December - Indonesia invades, using its fight against
communism as a pretext. It annexes territory as its 27th province,
a move not recognised by the UN. Strong resistance to
Indonesian rule followed by repression and famine in which
200,000 people are thought to have died.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/country_profiles/1504243.stm
RESOURCES ON THE NET
Inside Indonesia – www.insideindonesia.org
A special issue on East Timor No. 71 July-Sept 2002.
Some of the articles include:
•Timor's women: After the brutal occupation, gender violence remains a
reality
•Born in the wrong era: Amidst globalisation, can East Timor still be a
people's alternative?
•The forgotten of West Timor: Poverty, refugees, militias, and too many
soldiers
http://www.timorseajustice.org/
The campaign
News
Take action
FAQs
Background
Resources in dispute
International law
Press releases
Media Coverage
Contacts
Links
Events
Empathy piece:
Imagine the following scenario. It is December 1999 and the United Nations
international peacekeeping force, INTERFET, has been in East Timor since
September. The UN has also set up an interim government, UNTAET, to
administer East Timor until it has set up its own government. Time magazine
has flown over two of its best journalists to report on the situation. Each
journalist must report on a different aspect of the conflict. Their briefs are as
follows:
Journalist One:
Focus on the background to the conflict in East Timor. This report must
provide a brief summary of East Timor's history from around 1520 onwards.
It should pay particular attention to the years 1974 to 1976 and should
explain the aims of the East Timorese political parties which were formed
during this time.
Journalist Two:
Focus on the involvement of the United Nations and the INTERFET Force.
Our readers will be particularly interested in the guidelines INTERFET are
supposed to follow and in the governing role played by the United Nations.
This will include information on the temporary administration, UNTAET, set
up by the UN.
http://www.globaleducation.edna.edu.au/archives/secondary/casestud/east-timor/1/history-in-making-1.html
International Politics –
Throughout Units 1 and 4, it is possible for East Timor to be
the key case study from which many concepts are
researched and compared from the vantage point of the
struggle of a nation over the last 30 years.
Unit 1: Politics, power and people
This unit introduces students to the study of politics by
considering key concepts and ideas including representation,
citizenship, power and democracy.
Unit 1: Politics, power and people
AREA OF STUDY 1
Democracies and dictatorships
In researching East Timor as a democracy students will realise how
fragile a concept and reality it actually is. That it takes time, effort and
unity to keep an impoverished state together. What makes East
Timor so special in the international community? Students would
learn the underlying values, ideologies, political structures and
processes that define nation states. They would need to consider the
historical, social and political context of each system, structures of
government, the means of exercising power, representation and the
extent of popular participation.
Students could compare East Timor with the military dictatorship of
Burma (Myanmar)
Unit 1: Politics, power and people
AREA OF STUDY 2
Leading people
Students are to consider the impact of a political leader.
Xanana Gusmao comes immediately to mind. Students would
consider his contribution to national and international political
life, and would develop an understanding of the context in
which he has been able to exercise power. They would analyse
factors that have contributed to promoting or undermining his
power and influence: for example, social movements, popular
support and the military. Xanana’s struggle for East Timor’s
independence and the current crisis would provide plenty of
material.
Compare the leadership of Aung Sang Sui Kyi and her struggle
to lead her nation.
Unit 2: The global picture
This unit focuses on the nature of contemporary international relations and
the events that shaped them. There is an opportunity to look at the role of
the United Nations, globalisation, refugees, human rights Other concepts
include power
AREA OF STUDY 2
The international community
Students have the opportunity to analyse the way in which the international
community works together … or not. How did to bring peace and
independence to East Timor. How did it manage the conflict and instability.
The issue of the UN, the UNSC, peacekepers, human rights, NGOs and
refugees are raised. The role of ASEAN brings the concept of regions and
organisations.
Compare this with the War Against Terror and the situation in Iraq or the
humanitarian crisis in Darfur, Sudan.
International Studies
Unit 3: Global issues and conflicts
•AREA OF STUDY 1
Globalisation and internationalism
While East Timor would not be a major case study, references to human rights,
the UN, peacekeepers and the way in which internationalism proposes to resolve
instability allows for students to have concrete examples.
Unit 4: International relations
•AREA OF STUDY 2
Australian foreign policy
Australia’s relations with both Indonesia and East Timor can be a significant case
study in this Unit. What was Australia’s response in 1975 and why? What events
lead to Australia’s shift in 1999? And consequently, Australia’s response in 2006.
An investigation into Australia’s economic negotiations with East Timor over the
oil and gas adds another dimension to a student’s understanding of how Australia
moves within the region.
East Timor allows the students to understand the way in which foreign policy
changes over time while the foundation of foreign policy does not – the pursuit of
a state’s national interest.
For a student that has followed units 1 through to 4, a
course that has significantly used East Timor and related
comparisons as a case study clearly allows these students
to gain a sold appreciation, not just for a significant state in
our region, but for the major concepts of International
Politics.
Thank you
For a copy of this powerpoint please email:
[email protected]
http://www.gtav.asn.au/Materials/e_timor.htm