Srl | Item |
1 |
ID:
022127
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
59-76
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2 |
ID:
021985
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
60-69
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3 |
ID:
021942
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
10-17
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4 |
ID:
021907
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
30-36
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5 |
ID:
021908
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
41-45
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6 |
ID:
021975
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
42-49
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7 |
ID:
022107
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
279-290
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8 |
ID:
022105
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
253-264
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Summary/Abstract |
The Defence White Paper of December 2000 declares that the main task of the ADF is to maintain the capability to defend Australian territory from any credible attack without relying on the combat forces of any other country. Australia is unusual among contemporary Western states in affirming such a policy. Most other states are reordering their priorities to put less emphasis on conventional conflict and more on tasks such as peacekeeping and border protection, while assuming that in the event of major conventional conflicts they are likely to be involved as subsidiary members of a coalition led in most cases by the United States. Should Australia follow this trend? The article reviews this question in the light of a number of scenarios for the use of Australia's armed forces in the period ahead, and concludes that the arguments for change are not persuasive.
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9 |
ID:
022104
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
237-251
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Summary/Abstract |
Arguably, the world trading system has entered a period of greater change and uncertainty in the past two years than at any time since the end of the Cold War. At the same time, Australia faces a range of internal and external challenges to its trade policy, while having lost many of the old 'certainties' guiding its trade agenda. This article identifies four major challenges confronting Australian trade policy now and into the future: the EU agenda to inject self-serving 'governance' mechanisms into the WTO; rises in the demands and influence of developing countries within the WTO; the new trend towards bilateral free trade areas; and increasing opposition to globalisation by groups within society. It assesses the capacity of Australia's trade bureaucracy to manage these issues, warning against expecting too much of the trade policy agenda, particularly in relation to the role it plays within domestic politics in Australia.
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10 |
ID:
022102
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
207-222
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Summary/Abstract |
This article critically examines the argument that the forces of globalisation will see the end of the foreign ministry in the context of Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT). It suggests that globalisation is affecting the subject matter of foreign policy-making through four processes: diffusion, enmeshment, contradiction, and transformation. It then looks at three prominent challenges these processes have made to the work of DFAT: politicisation; the volume and contestation of information; and resource-cutting. It concludes that rather than being eroded by globalisation, DFAT has been forced to play a more assertive and diversified role, and that it has responded to these challenges in a highly creative way.
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11 |
ID:
022352
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
791-810
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12 |
ID:
023185
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
437-461
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13 |
ID:
021847
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
20-23
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14 |
ID:
023186
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
494-531
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15 |
ID:
021974
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
6-10
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16 |
ID:
021809
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
13-15
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17 |
ID:
022230
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
41-57
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18 |
ID:
022560
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
387-394
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19 |
ID:
023622
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
753-766
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20 |
ID:
022101
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Publication |
July 2002.
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Description |
197-206
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Summary/Abstract |
This article examines the capacity of Australia's overseas network to respond to a range of different challenges confronting today's diplomats. These include doing more with less at a time of greater international interaction and activity; deepening our understanding of foreign societies at a time when it can be increasingly dangerous to do so; and doing both these things at a time when questions remain about our basic standpoint.
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