After the vote for independence on 30 August 1999, East Timor acquired the status of the world’s newest nation. The country is currently administered by the United Nations Transitional Administration for East Timor (UNTAET), the term for which will expire after elections bring in a new government with self-rule in 2002. Several challenges remain to be overcome, but perhaps the largest of these for the East Timorese is to draw a curtain on the terrible legacies of history and particularly the dreadful outcomes of the civil conflicts of the recent past
With the Indonesian invasion in late 1975, the self-determination conflict in East Timor gained inter...
The United Nations peacekeeping intervention into Timor Leste following September 1999 signalled a v...
Contents: Deliverance? -- A window of opportunity -- East Timor: time for change -- International ad...
After 274 years of Portuguese colonisation, with short interregnums by the Japanese, and 24 years of...
The island of Timor lies some 400 miles off the northwest coast of Australia, at the tip of the chai...
Starting with the premise that a change in the political status of East Timor is inevitable, and imm...
A United Nations Transitional Authority in East Timor (UNTAET) was established in October 1999 follo...
Contents: Autonomy not automatic -- Tomorrow's leaders -- The Mandela of Timor -- Winds of change --...
1999, East Timor acquired the status of the world’s newest nation. The country is currently administ...
The Politics of Timor-Leste explores the critical issues facing the Asia-Pacific\u27s youngest natio...
The majority of authors writing on Timor-Leste, and international organisations who publish indices ...
Started 1998, Indonesia faced political instability due to the social unrest and the step down of In...
Contents: A new beginning -- Rising from the ashes -- Chronology -- From resistance to reconstructio...
Contents: New steps to independence -- Bring them home -- East Timor: nation in waiting -- Women hav...
"This paper uses a political settlement lens to argue that the United Nations Transitional Administr...
With the Indonesian invasion in late 1975, the self-determination conflict in East Timor gained inter...
The United Nations peacekeeping intervention into Timor Leste following September 1999 signalled a v...
Contents: Deliverance? -- A window of opportunity -- East Timor: time for change -- International ad...
After 274 years of Portuguese colonisation, with short interregnums by the Japanese, and 24 years of...
The island of Timor lies some 400 miles off the northwest coast of Australia, at the tip of the chai...
Starting with the premise that a change in the political status of East Timor is inevitable, and imm...
A United Nations Transitional Authority in East Timor (UNTAET) was established in October 1999 follo...
Contents: Autonomy not automatic -- Tomorrow's leaders -- The Mandela of Timor -- Winds of change --...
1999, East Timor acquired the status of the world’s newest nation. The country is currently administ...
The Politics of Timor-Leste explores the critical issues facing the Asia-Pacific\u27s youngest natio...
The majority of authors writing on Timor-Leste, and international organisations who publish indices ...
Started 1998, Indonesia faced political instability due to the social unrest and the step down of In...
Contents: A new beginning -- Rising from the ashes -- Chronology -- From resistance to reconstructio...
Contents: New steps to independence -- Bring them home -- East Timor: nation in waiting -- Women hav...
"This paper uses a political settlement lens to argue that the United Nations Transitional Administr...
With the Indonesian invasion in late 1975, the self-determination conflict in East Timor gained inter...
The United Nations peacekeeping intervention into Timor Leste following September 1999 signalled a v...
Contents: Deliverance? -- A window of opportunity -- East Timor: time for change -- International ad...