Illegal Fishing and Australian Security By Jade Lindley , Sarah Percy and Erika Techera 03 January 2019Reconceptualising illegal fishing as a security issue may prove an effective solution. Read More
Maritime Tensions and the Fraying of International Order By Dr Rebecca Strating 12 September 2018Australia's region is facing mounting maritime tensions. This tells us much about the fraying of international order and the capacity of international law to deal with maritime disputes. Read More
Social Contracts and the Australian Civil-Military Relationship By Cate Carter 20 August 2018Military covenants try to build civil-military relationships on the foundation of a social contract, but is that true for the Australian Defence Force? Read More
Feminism in International Affairs Today By Professor Cynthia Enloe 17 August 2018At a time when hypermasculine figures dominate the world stage, it’s not possible to be sanguine about equality. A sustained and active effort is required to roll back sexism. Read More
Australia's Rules-Based International Order By Professor Nick Bisley 27 July 2018The rules-based international order has become a rhetorical centrepiece of Australian international policy. One of the challenges in the current moment is that the rules and principles that were built on the foundation of American primacy are being questioned as power shifts. Read More
Australia’s Role as International Trade Rule-Maker By Associate Professor Elizabeth Thurbon 26 July 2018Australia is playing a major role in international economic rule-making through its aggressive pursuit of preferential trade agreements. So how well do the trade rules it is promoting help advance Australia's foreign policy objectives? Read More
Letting the Sunshine in: Whistleblowers in International Organisations By Dr Kim Moloney, Professor Jonathan P. West and Professor James S. Bowman 15 June 2018Legal protection of whistleblowers is integral to ensuring that public bodies uphold transparency and accountability values. However, international organisations often do not provide the same protections as democratic states such as Australia. Read More
Australian Foreign Policy: Does the public matter? Should the community care? By Allan Gyngell AO FAIIA 07 December 2017Everything Australia wants to do as a country depends on its ability to understand the rest of the world. To that end, governments can, have and should lead public opinion. Read More
Let them Speak: Australian Values and Chinese Students By Professor James Laurenceson 11 October 2017If Australia insists only Chinese student voices critical of their government are authentic, a majority will be alienated and this would be an affront to Australian values. Read More
How Now? Kowtow? Australian Foreign Policy and a Rising China By Allan Gyngell AO FAIIA13 September 2017There’s no doubt the way Australia engages with China is the most important issue in Australian foreign relations, combining complexity and consequence. Read More Play
The International Community's Response to the Rohingya Crisis By Aisha Ismail and Dr Elliot Dolan-Evans 12 September 2017The Rohingya crisis in Myanmar continues to escalate and the international community has yet to decide on an effective response. Read More