Zachary Abuza
- Name
- Title
- Professor, Department Chair
- Phone
- 617-521-2586
- Office
- 300 The Fenway - Main Building - E203F , MA
- zachary.abuza@simmons.edu
Tue & Thurs 11:00-11:30am, 2:00-3:00pm
Zachary Abuza, Professor of Political Science at Simmons College, Boston, specializes in Southeast Asian politics and security issues. He is a graduate of Trinity College and received his MALD and PHD from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. He is the author of Conspiracy of Silence: The Insurgency in Southern Thailand and its Implications for Southeast Asian Security (US Institute of Peace, 2009), Muslims, Politics and Violence in Indonesia (Routledge, 2006), Militant Islam in Southeast Asia (Lynne Rienner, 2003) and Renovating Politics in Contemporary Vietnam (Lynne Rienner, 2001). He has also authored two studies for the National Bureau of Asian Research, entitled Funding Terrorism in Southeast Asia: The Financial Network of Al Qaeda and Jemaah Islamiya, NBR Analysis (2003) and Uncivil Islam: Muslims, Politics and Violence in Indonesia, NBR Analysis (2004). His monograph, Balik Terrorism: The Return of the Abu Sayyaf Group was published by the US Army War College's Security Studies Institute in 2005. A study of Jemaah Islamiyah's overt strategy of engaging in social welfare and charitable works, entitled "Jemaah Islamiyah: Indonesia's Hezbollah," was published in the Winter 2009 edition of the journal Middle East Quarterly. He has completed a chapter on the disengagement and rehabilitation of terrorist suspects in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia, that will be published in a forthcoming book, Leaving Terrorism Behind: Disengagement from Political Violence, edited by John Horgan. His chapter on Singapore's Defense Policy During the Goh Chok Tong Years was recently published in Impressions of the Goh Chok Tong Years in Singapore, Bridget Welsh et. al. eds. He is currently finishing a major study of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which was supported by the United States Institute of Peace and the Smith Richardson Foundation. Professor Abuza authored the Vietnam chapters in the 2004 and 2006 Countries at the Crossroads annual reports for Freedom House; and from 2001-2003 he served as Vietnam country advisor for Amnesty International (USA). Dr. Abuza consults widely and is a frequent commentator on Southeast Asian politics and security issues in the press. He is a visiting guest lecturer at the Foreign Service Institute, US Department of State and at the Department of Defense's Joint Special Operations University. In 2005 he was a Senior Fellow at the United States Institute of Peace. He is a frequent contributor to the Jane's Intelligence Review, the Counterterrorism Blog and the Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Monitor. In 2007, he was appointed Senior Fellow at the Jebsen Center for Counter-Terrorism Studies at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.
In AY2008-2009, Professor Abuza will teach POLS 102 Intro to International Relations, POLS 225 The
International Politics of East Asia, POLS 245 The Politics of Newly Industrialized Countries: Indonesia,
Thailand, Malaysia and Vietnam, POLS 220 International Organizations and Law, and POLS 248
Terrorism.
Presentations and Lectures
Publications
- Abu Sayyaf still holds Philippines to ransom, Jane's Islamic Affairs Analyst, April 16, 2009
- Thailand's Failed Experiment? , New York Times, April 16, 2009
- Thai Democrats Can't See Insurgency For What It Is, The New Straits Times, March 2009
- New Government in Thailand Struggles to Defeat the Insurgency, CTC Sentinel, Feb 2009
- Jemaah Islamiyah Adopts the Hezbollah Model, Middle East Quarterly, Winter 2009
- CTC Sentinel, June 2008, The Demise of the Abu Sayyaf Group in the Southern Philippines
- Criminal gangs in the Southern Philippines, Jane's Intelligence Digest, April 10, 2008
- The Philippine Peace Process: Too Soon to Claim a Settlement with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front?, The Jebsen Center For Counter-Terrorism Studies Research Briefing Series, Feb 2008
- Philippines: Moro land deal leaves much unresolved, Oxford Analytica, 2008
- A Precarious Peace, The Wall Street Journal, November 22, 2007
- Mindanao Muddle, The Wall Street Journal, November 5, 2007
- The State of Jemaah Islamiyah: Terrorism and Insurgency in Southeast Asia Five Years After Bali, The Jebsen Center for Counter-Terrorism Studies Research Briefing Series, November 2007
- Shifting focus - Jemaah Islamiyah's long-term agenda towards Islamism, JANE'S INTELLIGENCE REVIEW - JULY 01, 2007
- Heading South, The Wall Street Journal -June 19, 2007
- Sectarian Bloodletting in Indonesia's Troubled Sulawesi and Maluku Provinces:, JANE'S INTELLIGENCE REVIEW - May 2007
- On the defensive: Rebels lose ground in southern Philippines, JANE'S INTELLIGENCE REVIEW, April, 01 2007