A Guide to ILCAA 2011
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20Joint Research Projectsopportunity to meet each other and to exchange research information. In this sense, researchers from abroad will be welcome to exchange research information. The project will contribute to develop this eld of study.b. The project will create a synthesis of the studies. Although some excellent individual studies concerning these empires have been done in the past ten years, there has been little effort to create a synthesis. We will try to put these individual studies into a wider context.c. The project is designed as comparative study. The circumstances of Ottoman, Safavid and Mughal studies were quite different. The Ottoman studies are based on extensive archives, while the Safavid studies still rely on narrative sources such as court chronicles. New Safavid sources are edited and published constantly while Mughal sources are rarely published. However, these empires inherited a tradition of Turk-Mongol statecraft as well as a Persian system of bureaucracy. Therefore, information on one empire will help with analysis of the other empires.Multi-disciplinary Study on Islam and Cultural Diversity in Southeast AsiaProject term: April, 2011 – March, 2014Coordinator: TOKORO, Ikuya This project examines the inherent nature of Islam in Southeast Asia, which is becoming more socially inuential in local contexts as well as examining the effect of the transnational Islamic revival and other related trends in local culture and society by utilizing multiple elds/research methods (history, anthropology, political science, international relations, jurisprudence, and religious studies), by including specialists.

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