To win its seat on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) in both 1993-94 and 2015-16, New Zealand campaigned using the same prime pillar; its ability to act independently on the world’s prime authority for maintenance of international peace and security. With the substantial change in New Zealand’s international relationships between the two UNSC tenures, most particularly with the United States of America and China, many commentators have questioned whether New Zealand still acts independently in international affairs. Employing analytic eclecticism, this thesis applied a combined analytical framework to assess the drive behind New Zealand’s actions during both its 1993-94 and 2015-16 UNSC tenures, allowing both traditional internat...
This edited collection is an ambitious but ultimately unsatisfying attempt to examine the impact of ...
The evolution of New Zealand's policies concerning the diplomatic recognition of the People's Republ...
As a small state New Zealand benefits from a strong rules-based order which, through negotiated agre...
To win its seat on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) in both 1993-94 and 2015-16, New Zeala...
This article compares the constitutive relationship between foreign policy and globalisation in Aust...
This thesis is an in-depth study into the New Zealand-Australian relationship and the two nations' d...
In recent decades a new international structure has emerged, dramatically increasing the incentives ...
“National ideals or National Interest?” examines the making and implementation by successive New Zea...
With the rise of China and the United States (US) foreign policy rebalance to the Asia-Pacific meeti...
This thesis evaluates three of New Zealand’s foreign strategy documents, the China Strategy, the Ind...
This thesis analyses discourses of national identity and the nation, using the case study of New Zea...
This thesis discusses New Zealand's relations with the League of Nations from its inception in 1920 ...
This thesis seeks to explain the roots of security thinking in Australia and New Zealand and what it...
This thesis looks at the New Zealand's external relations in the period 1942- 1952 and in particular...
Benedict Anderson (1983) famously observed that nations are distinguished ‘not by their falsity/genu...
This edited collection is an ambitious but ultimately unsatisfying attempt to examine the impact of ...
The evolution of New Zealand's policies concerning the diplomatic recognition of the People's Republ...
As a small state New Zealand benefits from a strong rules-based order which, through negotiated agre...
To win its seat on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) in both 1993-94 and 2015-16, New Zeala...
This article compares the constitutive relationship between foreign policy and globalisation in Aust...
This thesis is an in-depth study into the New Zealand-Australian relationship and the two nations' d...
In recent decades a new international structure has emerged, dramatically increasing the incentives ...
“National ideals or National Interest?” examines the making and implementation by successive New Zea...
With the rise of China and the United States (US) foreign policy rebalance to the Asia-Pacific meeti...
This thesis evaluates three of New Zealand’s foreign strategy documents, the China Strategy, the Ind...
This thesis analyses discourses of national identity and the nation, using the case study of New Zea...
This thesis discusses New Zealand's relations with the League of Nations from its inception in 1920 ...
This thesis seeks to explain the roots of security thinking in Australia and New Zealand and what it...
This thesis looks at the New Zealand's external relations in the period 1942- 1952 and in particular...
Benedict Anderson (1983) famously observed that nations are distinguished ‘not by their falsity/genu...
This edited collection is an ambitious but ultimately unsatisfying attempt to examine the impact of ...
The evolution of New Zealand's policies concerning the diplomatic recognition of the People's Republ...
As a small state New Zealand benefits from a strong rules-based order which, through negotiated agre...