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South Korea’s middle power diplomacy and the South China Sea disputes Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-04-14 Monica S. Jeong
The middle power concept is versatile enough to categorise any states in the middle range of the world order that display certain behavioural characteristics known as middle power behaviours. Meanw...
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The deterioration of Australia-China relations: what went wrong? Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-04-09 Katherine Lee, Elad Bruhl
Sino-Australia relations have experienced a rapid deterioration in the past half-decade. From genial ties centred around trade and exchange, the relationship has descended into mutual hostility, pr...
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Australia, we need to talk about solar geoengineering Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-04-07 Jonathan Symons, Courtney Fung, Dhanasree Jayaram, Sofia Kabbej, Matt McDonald
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Ahead of Print, 2024)
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Charting waters: the private sector’s evolving governance role in Southeast Asian maritime security Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-04-05 Aaron Magunna
Southeast Asian states are frequently viewed as jealously guarding their sovereignty and unwilling to delegate authority to multilateral organisations or private actors. In the contemporary respons...
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Growing India–US ties and what it means for India–Russia ties Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-03-07 Rupakjyoti Borah
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Ahead of Print, 2024)
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Beyond strategic convergence: defining Australia-France cooperation in the Indo-Pacific Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-03-05 Frederic Grare
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Ahead of Print, 2024)
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A dysfunctional family: Australia’s relationship with Pacific Island states and climate change Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-02-13 Liam Moore
I argue the instrumental, paternalistic strategic culture often adopted in Australian foreign policy circles is counter-productive, preventing Australia from having productive and sustainable relat...
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Asean’s inclusive regionalism: ambitious at three levels Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-02-13 Astanah Abdul Aziz, Anthony Milner
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Ahead of Print, 2024)
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Human rights in Australia’s early international relations: unity, prosperity, and the abolition of slavery Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-01-31 Renée Jeffery
For the most part, histories of Australia’s international relations locate the origins of its engagement with the international human rights regime in the 1940s. By then, however, debates about hum...
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Why the quad is not squaring off in the South China Sea: evaluating interests, objectives and capacity Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-01-28 John F. Bradford, Ralf Emmers
The Quad has formulated repeated statements confirming their shared interests and common commitment to maritime issues and highlighting the South China Sea as an area of strategic priority. However...
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Born of Fire and Ash Australian operations in response to the East Timor crisis 1999–2000 Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-01-28 Gordon Peake
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 78, No. 1, 2024)
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Unpacking the EU’s Indo-Pacific strategy: a testing case of strategic autonomy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-01-16 Weiqing Song, Ziqing Yang
In 2021, the European Union (EU) unveiled its first common Indo-Pacific strategy, demonstrating its emphasis on the Indo-Pacific region and plans to implement cohesive strategies as an autonomous a...
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Australia and the US nuclear umbrella: from deterrence taker to deterrence maker Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2024-01-11 Peter J. Dean, Stephan Fruehling, Andrew O’Neil
Historically, Australia's approach to extended nuclear deterrence can be seen as a consumer rather than contributor within the framework of its alliance with the United States. Despite invoking the...
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Introduction to the special section: reflecting on Allan Gyngell’s contributions to Australian foreign affairs practice, scholarship, and education Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Joanne Wallis, Tim Legrand
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 5, 2023)
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Racialised foreign policy and the prospects for Indigenous diplomacy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Henry Reynolds
First Nations peoples of Australia have long engaged in international diplomatic efforts as part of their political struggles in pursuit of rights that are now embedded in international law. Howeve...
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Yolŋu diplomacy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Gawura Waṉambi, Joy Bulkanhawuy, Ian Mongunu Gumbula, Brenda Muthamuluwuy, Yasunori Hayashi
This short account of Yolŋu Indigenous diplomacy has been collaboratively crafted by four Yolŋu Aboriginal Elders of Northeast Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory, Australia. Gawura Waṉambi, a le...
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Holding contradictions: toward the lawful carriage of Indigenous diplomacy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Morgan Brigg, Mary Graham
This reflective engagement with responses to the inaugural (2023) Coral Bell School Lecture on Indigenous Diplomacy considers and suggests a way of addressing conceptual and practical chasms associ...
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Negotiating meanings and processes: ‘same, but different’ in contemporary Aboriginal diplomacy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Toni Bauman
Can Aboriginal diplomacy influence the Australian nation-state in the ways that Mary Graham and Morgan Brigg suggest in the inaugural Coral Bell School lecture on Indigenous Diplomacy? While there ...
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Relational Wiradyuri approaches to diplomacy: from Country, on Country, for a nation? Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 James Blackwell
The question of how to live well and with respect in a world worth living in is posed by many Wiradyuri elders to our people. For Wiradyuri people, our relationality is something that comes from ou...
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Philosophical vectors of oceanic diplomacy and development: the Samoan wisdom of restraint meets the Australian indigenous relationalist ethos Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Upolu Lumā Vaai
In the inaugural Coral Bell School lecture on Indigenous Diplomacy, Mary Graham and Morgan Brigg challenge dominant Western ways of thinking by explicating the relationalist ethos. This ethos reson...
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Correction Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 6, 2023)
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Fractal politics and diplomacy: religion, governance, and conflict management in classical Aboriginal Australia Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Paul Memmott
Through a discussion of the overall patterning of religion and law, and using examples from Central Australia and Southeast Queensland, this response to the inaugural Coral Bell School lecture on I...
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Australia’s indigenous diplomacy and its regional resonance in Oceania Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Salā George Carter, Greg Fry
Mary Graham and Morgan Brigg’s philosophical approach to Indigenous political ordering and inter-polity relations breaks new ground for scholarly and practice deliberations about Indigenous diploma...
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Indigenous Australian diplomacy and the United Nations declaration on the rights of Indigenous peoples Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Madeleine Pugin
The Australian National University’s inaugural Coral Bell Lecture on Indigenous Diplomacy introduced philosophical perspectives that could underpin Indigenous Australian diplomacy. This piece uses ...
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Faces of ‘not knowing’ in International Relations Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 J. Marshall Beier
That Indigenous diplomacies remain largely unknown to states and to disciplinary International Relations is, ultimately, a matter of choices made by those privileged in terms of the power to (re)pr...
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Indigenous international relations: old peoples and new pragmatism Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Mary Graham, Morgan Brigg
This lightly edited transcript of the inaugural (2023) Coral Bell School Lecture on Indigenous Diplomacy sketches the foundations of Aboriginal Australian socio-political ordering and inter-nation ...
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Indigenous foreign policy: the challenges of survivalism before and after the era of Western dominance Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Andrew Phillips
Mary Graham and Morgan Brigg advance a timely and provocative call to incorporate a relationalist ethos into Australian foreign policy, informed by Indigenous Australian worldviews and diplomatic p...
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Perspectives from Melanesia: Aboriginal relationalism and Australian foreign policy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Meg Taylor, Priestley Habru, Solstice Middleby, Anna Naupa, Jope Tarai
The Coral Bell School’s inaugural lecture in Indigenous Diplomacy considers Aboriginal relationalism and suggests implications for Australian foreign policy and diplomacy. Revealing a multi-polar a...
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Toward principled pragmatism in Indigenous diplomacy in the Indo-Pacific Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Rory Medcalf
Mary Graham and Morgan Brigg provide a compelling foundation for developing Indigenous diplomacy for Australia, pointing to principled pragmatism and the integrity of a ‘relationalism’ grounded in ...
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Approaching First Nations diplomacy from the Australian continent Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Morgan Brigg, Mary Graham
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 6, 2023)
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Can International Relations (IR) learn? The politics of ‘doing understanding’ Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-15 Martin Weber
This short response considers some challenges that may be faced by learners keen to engage with ‘Indigenous International Relations’ following the lecture by Mary Graham and Morgan Brigg. I sketch ...
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Remembering Allan Gyngell as a foreign policy educator Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Benjamin Day
This reflection examines Allan Gyngell’s underappreciated influence as a foreign policy educator. The article begins by describing how the final chapter of Gyngell’s long and distinguished career c...
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The Charteris Oration, Australian Institute of International Affairs, Sydney 29 November 2017 Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Allan Gyngell AO
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 5, 2023)
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Farewell to Allan Gyngell AO FAIIA Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Heather Smith, Bryce Wakefield
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 5, 2023)
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Passing of Allan Gyngell AO Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Penny Wong
This is a ministerial statement of condolence by Senator the Hon Penny Wong in remembrance of Allan Gyngell AO, FAIIA: eminent Australian foreign policy analyst and adviser to successive Australian...
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What would Allan think? Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Rory Medcalf
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 5, 2023)
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The voice of Allan Gyngell in Australian foreign policy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Michael Wesley
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 5, 2023)
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Allan Gyngell's podcasting contribution to Australian foreign policy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Darren J. Lim, Walter Colnaghi
This article analyses Allan Gyngell's contribution to Australian foreign policy through his podcast, ‘Australia in the World'. We outline two mechanisms. First, we explore how the unique features o...
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Taking statecraft seriously: Allan Gyngell’s legacy in reimagining Australian foreign policy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Hugh Piper, Melissa Conley Tyler
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 5, 2023)
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Quad 2.0 in flux, how possible? A study of India’s changing ‘significant other’ Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Lai-Ha Chan, Pak K. Lee
When the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) was resuscitated in November 2017, it was framed as a minilateral grouping of liberal democratic countries to build a free and open Indo-Pacific in t...
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Democracy, firms, and cyber punishment: what cyberspace challenge do democracies face from the private sector? Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Nori Katagiri
I explore four sets of explanations on what makes it hard for democracies to penalise hackers for their digital actions. My analysis reveals that of the four challenges, two are more compelling tha...
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When political apology becomes a source of soft power: a case of South Korea and its Vietnam War experience Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-12-10 Chenjun Wang
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 5, 2023)
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Middle-power behaviours: Australia’s status-quoist/Lockean and Indonesia’s reformist/Kantian approaches to crises of legitimacy in the Indo-Pacific Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-11-19 Christian Harijanto
This article maps the behaviours of two middle powers, Australia and Indonesia, as a response to the emergence and evolution of the Indo-Pacific concept. The background for this analysis is the eme...
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Spies and scholars in the cyber age: researching intelligence in Australian policy and regional security Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-11-09 David Schaefer
The limited treatment of intelligence by IR and strategic studies academics in Australia distorts the scholarly research and public understanding of policymaking in Canberra. This article provides ...
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Intermediary structure of paradiplomacy: examining sister-city links in Japan Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-09-04 Hiroaki Mori
Recently, subnational-level international engagement, referred to as paradiplomacy, has garnered widespread attention globally. Many cities worldwide recognise paradiplomacy as an effective tool fo...
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Reflections on the three pillars of the responsibility to protect, and a possible alternative approach Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-08-09 Rebecca Barber
This commentary reflects on the 3-pillar strategy for the implementation of the R2P, put forward by the UN Secretary-General in 2009. It outlines three problems with the 3-pillar strategy. First, f...
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The future of the U.S. alliance Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-08-02 Luke Gosling
One of the most successful defence pacts in history, Australia’s alliance with America is becoming ever more central to our strategic policy. This is a bipartisan trend that has been supported by p...
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Middle power legitimation strategies: the case of Indonesia and the ASEAN Outlook on the Indo-Pacific Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-07-02 Irfan Ardhani, Randy W. Nandyatama, Rizky Alif Alvian
This article examines how middle powers develop their strategies for influencing other members of international society. This research is important as the literature on middle powers assumes that t...
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Helpem Fren: Australia and the regional assistance mission to Solomon Islands Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-06-28 Jack Corbett
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 4, 2023)
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Global values or national interest? Public opinion towards foreign aid in Australia Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-06-16 Danielle Chubb, Ian McAllister
This article examines Australian attitudes towards foreign aid and the intersection of these attitudes with broader debates around the purpose and level of the aid program. Drawing on surveys condu...
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Ukraine, Afghanistan and the failure of deterrence Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-06-01 William Maley
Published in Australian Journal of International Affairs (Vol. 77, No. 4, 2023)
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The end of the ‘lucky country’? Understanding the failure of the AUKUS policy debate Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-05-31 Richard Dunley
ABSTRACT The Australian debate over AUKUS, and its strategic policy more generally, has been notable for its disjointed and incoherent nature. This article seeks to explain why, arguing that Australia has been the beneficiary of a remarkably benign strategic situation for nearly 80 years, something that has distorted our understanding of the underlying landscape.
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The changing value of Antarctica to Australia’s security policy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-05-24 Isabelle Bond, James Mortensen
ABSTRACT Antarctica is a crucial regulator of the world’s climate, and as environmental security permeates global security, using Antarctic science to better understand climate is becoming increasingly pressing. Although the Australian Government has recognised that climate change poses ‘a current and existential national security’ threat and has acknowledged Antarctica’s importance regarding the earth’s
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The case for UN-supported, ASEAN-led negotiations on Myanmar Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-04-23 Rebecca Barber
ABSTRACT Two years following Myanmar’s attempted military coup, the situation is at a stalemate. Little progress has been achieved against ASEAN’s Five Point Consensus, hailed as a major breakthrough in April 2021. Egregious human rights violations continue, and the military is reportedly losing ground but showing little inclination to negotiate. Facing internal political constraints, ASEAN has requested
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Craig stockings’ fiery official history of the East Timor crisis Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-04-11 John Blaxland
Abstract This is a review of Professor Craig Stockings' fiery official history of the East Timor crisis and the Australian led intervention. It spans the diplomatic, historical, cultural, geographic and political background to the Indonesian occupation in 1975, the 1999 ballot and the part played by the UN Assistance Mission East Timor (UNAMET) as well as the subsequent Australian led intervention
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Global IR and the middle power concept: exploring different paths to agency Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-03-31 Charalampos Efstathopoulos
ABSTRACT The premise of Global IR for greater pluralism and inclusivity allows for reconsidering the relevance of established concepts in the IR discipline. This article discusses how Global IR can contribute to rethinking the question of agency in the middle power concept. While the concept has been used in a Western and non-Western context, there is a tendency to adopt a binary distinction between
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Australia, Korea and the entangled language of common strategic interests Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-03-27 Jeffrey Robertson
ABSTRACT During the South Korean president’s state visit to Australia in December 2021, the Australian Government and in turn the Australian media sustained a narrative that the two countries held ‘common strategic interests’. Over the past ten years, the notion of common strategic interests became a ‘naturalized narrative’ in Australia – a narrative, which through entrenched repetition becomes both
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The bioinformational dilemma: where bioinformational diplomacy meets cyberbiosecurity Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-01-31 Thom Andrew Dixon
ABSTRACT Bioinformational diplomacy is a field of practice that emerges from the politics of biological information exchange during global public health emergencies. Cyberbiosecurity is a field of practice that emerges from the need to secure material at the interface of the digital and biological worlds from misuse and exploitation. Bioinformational diplomacy arises from the intersection of biologically-derived
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Climate change and Australia’s national security Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-01-25 Tobias Ide
ABSTRACT Climate change can undermine human, national and planetary security in various ways. While scholars harve explored the human security implications of climate change and climate security discourses in Australia, systematic scientific assessments of climate change and national security are scarce. I address this knowledge gap by analysing whether climate change impacts the national security
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Australia's AUKUS ‘bet’ on the United States: nuclear-powered submarines and the future of American democracy Australian Journal of International Affairs (IF 1.656) Pub Date : 2023-01-04 Brendon O’Connor, Lloyd Cox, Danny Cooper
ABSTRACT The AUKUS agreement to facilitate Australia's acquisition of nuclear-powered submarines has been described by its critics as a ‘bet' on the U.S. This bet entails serious risks for Australia. These risks include uncertainty around construction of the submarines; uncertainty around the U.S.'s long-term commitment to the region; and uncertainty about the future political trajectory of the U.S