Know more. Understand more. Engage more.

Join Australia's largest open conversation on international affairs.

Upcoming Events

Australian Medical Aid to Ukraine: the view from the ground

Teresa Lachowicz, Australian Federation of Ukrainian Organisations; Dr Andrew Dobrotwir, Future Medical Imaging Group

Jul 17, 2025 17:30 - Jul 17, 2025 19:00
356 Collins Street, Melbourne; Hybrid event
Do we have a Putin or a Russia problem?

Dr Matthew Sussex, Griffith Asia Institute; Peter Tesch, University of Queensland

Jul 22, 2025 17:30 - Jul 22, 2025 19:00
Hemmant's List Centre, Brisbane; Hybrid event
Rising Tensions, Regional Choices: What Geopolitical Complexity Means for Southeast Asia

Penny Burtt FAIIA, Boeing

Jul 22, 2025 18:00 - Jul 22, 2025 19:30
Glover Cottages, Miller's Point, Sydney, Chatham House Rule
Navigating a World of Revisionist Powers

Professor Evelyn Goh FAIIA, The Australian National University

Jul 24, 2025 17:30 - Jul 24, 2025 19:00
Stephen House, Canberra, Hybrid Event
The Path to Net Zero – Investing in Ambitious NDCs for Growth & Development

Sydney Climate Talk, co-hosted by the German and French Embassies in Australia in partnership with AIIA

Jul 29, 2025 17:30 - Jul 29, 2025 20:00
Glover Cottages, Millers Point, Sydney; Hybrid
AIIA QLD Annual Dinner with the Hon. Malcolm Turnbull AC

Hon. Malcolm Turnbull AC, 29th Prime Minister of Australia

Aug 20, 2025 18:00 - Aug 20, 2025 21:00
Tattersalls Club, Grand Ballroom, Brisbane; In person
International Careers Conference

Save the date!

Sep 10, 2025 09:00 - Sep 10, 2025 17:00
La Trobe University, City Campus, 360 Collins Street, Level 2, Melbourne; In person
AIIA National Conference

Save the date!

Nov 17, 2025 09:00 - Nov 17, 2025 21:00
Canberra

Video and Audio

23 May 2025
Ep. 162: Israel attacks Iran; no Albo-Trump meeting
28:10
08 Jul 2025
Is the Age of Empathy Over? | Dr Claire Yorke
03 Jul 2025
Adventures in Representation in Japan and External Affairs’ first fatality | Emeritus Professor James Cotton
03 Jul 2025
Closing Down Hong Kong: 5 Years of the National Security Law | Kevin Yam
Towards the AIIA Centenary

100 Years of International Affairs

The AIIA was founded in 1933 by member organisations that date back to the 1920s. The AIIA as a whole celebrates those founding branches as they reach 100 years of advancing knowledge and exchange on international affairs.

Australian Outlook

This week in Australian foreign affairs: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in China for annual leaders meeting; new initiatives on tourism and decarbonisation with China; Marles discusses Talisman Sabre, and more.
18 Jul 2025
Although the Antarctic Treaty System has successfully worked as a model of international cooperation for over six decades, recent developments have raised doubts about its capacity to respond to urgent
18 Jul 2025
France and New Caledonian stakeholders have agreed to start a one-year process that may reconfigure France’s relation to its former colony. However, materialising its goals will require a lot of political manoeuvring.
Eight years after the devastating siege of Marawi, thousands remain displaced, uncompensated, and without answers about missing loved ones. As the city struggles to rebuild, meaningful peace and reconciliation depend
16 Jul 2025
Hugh White’s latest essay warns that Australia must urgently prepare for a post-American regional order shaped by great power rivalry and nuclear deterrence. Rooted in realist theory, the piece challenges

Get in-depth analysis sent straight to your inbox

Subscribe to the weekly Australian Outlook mailout

Publications

Baogang He, David Hundt, Danielle Chubb (eds)
Support Our Work

Help us help Australia to know more, understand more, and engage more in international affairs.

Discover the ways your organisation can support the AIIA beyond membership.

AIIA News

13 Jul 2025

BRISBANE – The Queensland branch of the Australian Institute of International Affairs (AIIA QLD) has officially announced its highly anticipated 2025 Annual Dinner, scheduled for Wednesday, 20 August, at the prestigious […]

The Australian Institute of International Affairs (AIIA) and the Australian Branch of the International Law Association (ILA (AB)) are pleased to present the Peter Nygh Hague Conference Internship. The award will support […]

01 Jul 2025

CANBERRA – The Australian Institute of International Affairs is pleased to announce the appointment of the Honourable Paul Lucas, current president of AIIA Queensland and former deputy premier of Queensland, […]

17 Jun 2025

WELLINGTON – AIIA National Programs and Publications Manager Emily Mosley spoke at the 2025 New Zealand Institute of International Affairs (NZIIA) National Conference, delivering remarks on a panel titled “Trump […]

17 Jun 2025

CANBERRA – As part of its ongoing commitment to youth engagement, the AIIA National Office partnered with the ANU Asia Pacific Week Conference to host a careers panel focused on […]

14 Jun 2025

PRAGUE – The GLOBSEC Forum, a major security conference now in its 20th year has just wrapped up its three-day agenda of events. Started as a university conference in Bratislava, […]

11 Jun 2025

WARSAW – From 7-11 June, AIIA Chief Executive Officer Dr Bryce Wakefield engaged in discussions with Polish government officials at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Defence, and the National […]

12 May 2025

MELBOURNE – The AIIA has honoured its National Vice President Zara Kimpton OAM FAIIA, who will be stepping down from the board on 1 July after a 15-year tenure. Kimpton […]

AIIA in the Media

14 July 2025
AIIA CEO Dr Bryce Wakefield quoted in the Nightly: “Orban, along with Slovakia’s Robert Fico, will continue to be the European leader most sympathetic to the MAGA cause,” Dr Wakefield said. “However, the longer Trump continues to engage Putin on Ukraine without deliverables, the more Budapest will be uncomfortable giving Washington a blank cheque.”
Go to source
12 July 2025
AIIA CEO Dr Bryce Wakefield quoted by the BBC: "This is part of a broader, understated and mature diplomacy from the current government and it does not fall into the recriminations of previous years."
Go to source
24 June 2025
AIIA CEO Bryce Wakefield quoted in the Nightly: “The US strategy on pressuring allies with a one-size-fits-all approach may work with NATO, where there is a hot war near the eastern flank and a history of European nations coordinating on policy, but it’s less effective against the individual countries of the Indo-Pacific, which have different and specific political contexts within which they must operate.”
Go to source
18 June 2025
AIIA Programs and Publications Manager Emily Mosley cited by Radio New Zealand: "The choice before us is clear: Engage with the whole breadth of American institutions and demand accountability and stability, or panic and risk eroding one of the most effective checks."
Go to source
3 June 2025
Jack Jarmon's Australian Outlook article "In Russia, the Chips are Down" cited in the Frankfurter Rundschau: A problematic legacy of outdated equipment and a lack of personnel hampered Russia's efforts to build its own world-class industry. According to the Australian Institute of International Affairs, this continues to have repercussions for the Russian chip industry.
Go to source
27 May 2025
Former AIIA National Office Intern Jasper Hufschmidt Morse's Australian Outlook article covered extensively in Frankfurter Rundschau: "What would happen if Russian aircraft were intercepted in German or another NATO member state's airspace, Jasper Hufschmidt Morse asked in his analysis for the Australian Institute of International Affairs."
Go to source
14 May 2025
AIIA CEO Dr Bryce Wakefield quoted in The Australian: "Australian Institute of International Affairs chief executive Bryce Wakefield said the Indonesia relationship was crucial and required a sustained effort by Australia to deliver meaningful benefits."
Go to source
4 May 2025
AIIA CEO Dr Bryce Wakefield quoted in The Australian's first article since the 2025 Federal election to cover the Albanese government's foreign policy approach. "Wakefield said as the US slapped tariffs on the rest of the world, Australia needed to work even more closely with Southeast Asia to create new economic opportunities."
Go to source
29 April 2025
AIIA Tasmania Vice President Professor James Chin's Australian Outlook article on Chinese interests in the South Pacific cited in the Australian.
Go to source
6 April 2025
AIIA National President Dr Heather Smith PSM FAIIA: "The biggest challenge to overcome is the inability of our political class to position Australia for this new world.”
Go to source
4 April 2025
AIIA CEO Dr Bryce Wakefield: "The 'golden age' in nationalist rhetoric is simply an imagined time in the past where things were always better, and in every nationalist's mind, the actual period of that golden age might be different. It's left vague for a reason."
Go to source
2 April 2025
AIIA President Dr Heather Smith PSM FAIIA: "The post-Cold War order isn’t collapsing, it has collapsed. The US is dismantling the foundations of its global hegemony, along with the norms and values that have underpinned the US-Australia relationship."
Go to source
31 March 2025
Australian Outlook article by ANU academic cited: "Some may be tempted to cite an article that’s just been published by an Australian think tank by ANU academic Edward Chan"
Go to source
27 March 2025
"According to a 2018 study tour report from the Australian Institute of International Affairs Victoria, the Australian embassy in Tehran had been 'building up' its staff over the three years prior."
Go to source
18 March 2025
AIIA CEO Dr Bryce Wakefield explained the activities of the Indo-Pacific Cooperation Network, an initiative organised by the AIIA and the Japan Foundation, to the Fiji One Breakfast team.
Go to source
4 March 2025
AIIA CEO Dr Bryce Wakefield shares his views on the Varghese review into strategic research funding
Go to source
21 January 2025
AIIA CEO Dr Bryce Wakefield quoted in the AFR: “If he is serious about doing what he says he is going to do about Panama, then I don’t think there is much hope for the global rules-based order going forward.”
Go to source
16 January 2025
In his article in the Australian Financial Review, AIIA CEO Dr Bryce Wakefield responds to Chinese Ambassador Xiao Qian's claims about the nature of the bilateral relationship.
Go to source