ID | 022102 |
Title Proper | Australia's Department of foreign affairs and trade and the challenges of globalization |
Language | ENG |
Author | Wedley Michael ; Wesley, Michael |
Publication | July 2002. |
Description | 207-222 |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | 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. |
`In' analytical Note | Australian Journal of International Affairs Vol: 56 No 2, July 2002 207-222 |
Journal Source | Australian Journal of International Affairs Vol: 56 No 2 |
Key Words | Trade-Australia ; Australia-Trade ; Globalization-Australia ; International Relations-Australia |