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Australian Institute of International Affairs in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory | Education



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Australian Institute of International Affairs

Locality: Canberra, Australian Capital Territory

Phone: +61 2 6282 2133



Address: 32 Thesiger Ct 2600 Canberra, ACT, Australia

Website: http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/

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25.01.2022 Will ASEAN Survive til 2030? Watch the lecture by Bilahari Kausikan to the AIIA now. Dont forget to like and subscribe!



25.01.2022 For a long time, Australia enjoyed a unique position among Western democracies. Until recently, Australia played a prominent role in international politics, exerting influence on global affairs while escaping involvement in major conflicts. https://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//as-state-sponsor/

24.01.2022 On 8 November, Myanmar held the second parliamentary election since the end of five decades of junta rule. Amid economic hardships, escalating civil and ethnic upheavals, and a strained international image with the Rohingya issue, Aung San Suu Kyi’s ruling party has claimed landslide victory https://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//the-2020-myanmar/

24.01.2022 The recent coup dtat in Mali exposes the country and the wider region to the burgeoning threat of jihadi terrorists. But it also provides an opportunity for the installation of a new, democratically elected government to further peace and stability. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//military-coup-in-/



21.01.2022 Armenia and Azerbaijan are embroiled in a bloody fight over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, officially recognised as Azerbaijani territory since 1993. The problem is that the majority of those living inside the enclave are ethnic Armenians, and they would much rather live under Armenian rule. https://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//nagorno-karabakh/

18.01.2022 Sign up for AIIA Webinars: internationalaffairs.org.au/events

18.01.2022 The people of West Papua, Indonesia have been sold down the river by international politics. They are now fighting ever more ferociously for their independence, according to John Martinkus. John West writes for Australian Outlook. #australianoutlook #readingroom #subscribetoday



18.01.2022 Without satellites, military operations are functioning in the blind. The Outer Space Treaty needs revisiting, and legal boundaries and norms must be established as states continue to build their space programs. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//beijings-space-jam/

18.01.2022 New Zealand has had to decide how to deal with the white supremacist terrorist who was responsible for the shooting of 51 worshippers at two Christchurch mosques. The challenges have come both inside and outside the courtroom. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//dealing-with-terr/

16.01.2022 Check out our events over the next month. Go to http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/events/

16.01.2022 Join us on September 14, the day of the LDP presidential election in Japan as Prime Minister Abe Shinzos biographer Tobias Harris discusses the outgoing PMs legacy and future directions for Japan with AIIA National Executive Director Dr Bryce Wakefield. See more at internationalaffairs.org.au/events

12.01.2022 The world appears to have jumped to Lebanons aid after the Beirut blast. However, the actual crisis is much longer and more complex than is being recognised. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//slow-onset-crises/



11.01.2022 China has traversed a number of different revisionist pathways since the Cold War. Xi Jinpings Leninist calculus has contributed to China exhibiting both reformist and positionalist forms of revisionism simultaneously, both of which contain pathways toward revolutionary revisionism. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//is-china-heading-/

11.01.2022 Joe Bidens vice-presidential pick may be the most consequential political move in his career. Kamala Harris, already a rising star of the Democratic establishment, offers a promising glimpse of the partys future. Dr Gorana Grgic of the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney write for Australian Outlook! #AustralianOutlook #KamalaHarris #SubscribeToday #

08.01.2022 As Suga Yoshihide takes over as Japans prime minister, what will be the legacy of the Abe Administration. Watch the discussion with Tobias Harris and AIIA National Executive Director now. Dont forget to like and subscribe!

07.01.2022 Quantitative easing has long been a critical means of responding to economic crisis. In May, Germanys Constitutional Court declared the European Central Banks quantitative easing program was illegal. Lewis Jackson writes for Australian Outlook. #AustralianOutlook #subscribetoday... http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//german-constituti/

07.01.2022 Intensifying tensions and the resurgence of nuclear debates in the Asia-Pacific will have profound and uncertain implications for war and peace in the 21st century. In this era of strategic uncertainty dominated by nuclear-armed giants, middle powers are thinking about how to avoid subjugation without a nuclear deterrent of their own. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//australias-nuclea/

06.01.2022 New Online Events on International Affairs! - https://mailchi.mp//new-online-events-on-international-aff

06.01.2022 President Trumps recent threats against TikTok align with the US governments broader strategy to maintain its comparative advantage over surveillance of its citizenry. This is not a moral panic, rather it is an(other) example of realpolitik in the pursuit of national interest in the age of surveillance capitalism. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//stranger-times-wh/

05.01.2022 Russia is well-aware that it is no exception to Chinas hegemonic ambitions. To effectively constrain China, the United States and its allies and partners must recalibrate their engagements with Russia. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//recalibrating-rel/

04.01.2022 The abrupt resignation of Prime Minister Abe Shinzo due to poor health has sent shockwaves across the political landscape. This has raised concerns about the implications for Japans economy and foreign policy. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//abe-the-gamechang/

04.01.2022 Since the outbreak of COVID-19, everything about clinical practice and the medical educational system has been turned upside down. Scientific discovery progresses at a rapid pace during times of crisis as new approaches are born from adversity. Dr Wendy Coates writes for Australian Outlook. #AustralianOutlook #subscribetoday

03.01.2022 India and the United States have forged a defining partnership of the 21st century grounded in their shared democratic values, common public good, and converging security interests. The 2+2 Dialogue further strengthens the US-India Comprehensive Global Partnership. https://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//the-third-india-/

02.01.2022 Many Americans think their country is in bad shape. George Friedmans close examination of American history indicates that the country is in the midst of an expected period of transition rather than a state of decline. Colin Chapman writes for Australian Outlook. #AustralianOutlook #ReadingRoom #subscribetoday

02.01.2022 This was the year that Vietnam was poised to make progress on its rise as a regional leader. Under the auspices of Vietnam’s ASEAN chairmanship, a breakthrough in global trade has been achieved despite rising protectionism and a global pandemic. https://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//vietnam-takes-th/

01.01.2022 Australia does not behave as a good international citizen anymore, but this is a strategic adaptation to a more demanding regional environment. With a challenging Indo-Pacific and declining US leadership, Canberra should engage strategically with long-overlooked states in the region. https://www.internationalaffairs.org.au//australia-betwee/

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