Nia Deliana earned a Ph.D. from the Faculty of Human Sciences, International Islamic University of Malaysia (IIUM). Her dissertation concentrates on precedent historical foreign relations between Indians and Indonesia. She has published on numerous issues. Before Joining UIII, she taught global Muslim civilization and historical international relations of Indonesia in Malaysia and Turkey. Her latest works include a chapter on the Rohingya during the Pandemic, in an edit work titled CoronAsur: Asian Religions in the Covidian Age by Emily Zoe Hertzman, et all (University of Hawai’i Press 2023).
Her research interests include Indonesia’s classical and contemporary foreign affairs across the Indian Ocean and Indonesia, multilateralism between South India and the Malay Peninsula, and the making of race, knowledge and identity politics. Currently, Dr. Deliana is working on a research project on the shape of international affairs across the Indian Oceans before the nation-state era. She teaches methods and theories in politics and international relations in the faculty of social sciences at Indonesia International Islamic University, Depok, West Java.
Please follow her works here: https://niadeliana.com/