The Australian Institute of International Affairs (AIIA) and the Australian Branch of the International Law Association (ILA (AB)) are pleased to present
PRAGUE - The GLOBSEC Forum, a major security conference now in its 20th year has just wrapped up its three-day
Since Brexit, support for Scottish independence has reached unprecedented levels—but the movement is more divided than ever. With no clear
This week in Australian foreign affairs: Marles in UK and Netherlands for NATO and Defence talks; new military support for
The second Trump administration is redefining the US commitment to NATO—not by exiting, but by coercively urging European allies to
Once the industrial heart of the Soviet Union, Ukraine is fast becoming a cornerstone of Europe’s defence future. Despite enduring
Serbia’s future hinges on how it navigates its competing loyalties. Its path forward depends on whether it chooses to lean
Poland’s new anti-EU and pro-Trump president is good news for neither Poland nor Europe. While currently Poland is a frontline
Since the 2023 presidential elections, Ankara’s fight against inflation is showing mixed results amid policy shifts, capital volatility, and business
By focusing on Stalin’s decision-making processes and the geopolitical manoeuvrings that defined Soviet-Finnish relations, Kimmo Rentola provides valuable insight into
Italy takes the helm of the G7 in 2024 against a backdrop of shifting global dynamics, amplified by the lingering
The persistent debate about NATO's role in the Ukraine conflict centres on Russia's longstanding objection to the alliance's expansion, which
Editing a book about the media and the war in Ukraine taught me first-hand lessons about censorship. It also confirmed
It’s an achievement for Adrian Karatnycky to analyse over three decades of Ukrainian independence and six presidents in 306 pages.
John J. Mearsheimer and Tom Switzer's arguments center on the simple acceptance of Vladimir Putin's rhetoric, which downplays the complexities