This article is a study of the response of the Australian government under Robert Menzies to the emergence of the Afro-Asian movement in the mid-1950s, especially the element of the non-aligned nations, which culminated in the Bandung meeting of April 1955. Non-alignment and anti-colonialism posed direct threats to the Menzies government\u27s plans for the defence of Southeast Asia and its foreign policy for the region. The study of the Australian response to the Bandung meeting reveals the different legacies which European imperialism left behind in Australia compared with its neighbours in south and east Asia.<br /
The paper traces the engagement of Asia after 1945 with reference to the role of education. Initiall...
In the late 1950s the Australian Council for the World Council of Churches (AC-WCC) inspired primari...
Indonesia’s 1975 invasion of Portuguese Timor was more than an authoritarian state violating a defen...
This article aims to investigate the extent to which the Bandung Conference affected the internation...
This article examines Australia's long-held doubts about Britain's willingness and ability to mainta...
In the twenty years since Indonesia declared herself independent, Indonesia and Australia have enjo...
During the mid-1960s Australia became increasingly interested in developments in Southeast Asia and...
This article is a study of the Chifley government\u27s foreign policy towards Asia, in particular In...
This article examines the 1949 attendance of John W. Burton, Australia's Secretary of the Department...
The 1955 Asian-African Conference (Bandung) has been hailed as a turning point in the emergence of t...
This article draws on previously classified Australian and British archival material to reevaluate A...
Australia as a Western society in the Orient faces a unique and paradoxical challenge in her relatio...
Where does Australia fit in the story of the “long 1960s”? The nation entered the decade ruled by a ...
This article examines Australia's aid program in Indonesia in the 1960s. With the transfer by the Du...
In 1955 29 Asian, African and Middle Eastern nations gathered in Bandung. Indonesia, to discuss a ra...
The paper traces the engagement of Asia after 1945 with reference to the role of education. Initiall...
In the late 1950s the Australian Council for the World Council of Churches (AC-WCC) inspired primari...
Indonesia’s 1975 invasion of Portuguese Timor was more than an authoritarian state violating a defen...
This article aims to investigate the extent to which the Bandung Conference affected the internation...
This article examines Australia's long-held doubts about Britain's willingness and ability to mainta...
In the twenty years since Indonesia declared herself independent, Indonesia and Australia have enjo...
During the mid-1960s Australia became increasingly interested in developments in Southeast Asia and...
This article is a study of the Chifley government\u27s foreign policy towards Asia, in particular In...
This article examines the 1949 attendance of John W. Burton, Australia's Secretary of the Department...
The 1955 Asian-African Conference (Bandung) has been hailed as a turning point in the emergence of t...
This article draws on previously classified Australian and British archival material to reevaluate A...
Australia as a Western society in the Orient faces a unique and paradoxical challenge in her relatio...
Where does Australia fit in the story of the “long 1960s”? The nation entered the decade ruled by a ...
This article examines Australia's aid program in Indonesia in the 1960s. With the transfer by the Du...
In 1955 29 Asian, African and Middle Eastern nations gathered in Bandung. Indonesia, to discuss a ra...
The paper traces the engagement of Asia after 1945 with reference to the role of education. Initiall...
In the late 1950s the Australian Council for the World Council of Churches (AC-WCC) inspired primari...
Indonesia’s 1975 invasion of Portuguese Timor was more than an authoritarian state violating a defen...