The notion of using technology to offset demographic and economic limitations on Australia�s military emerged in the early 1970s alongside the concept of defence selfreliance. It began as a means to bolster Australia�s credibility as a regional security partner as US and British presence in Southeast Asia waned. By the twenty-first century it became a recurring policy concept and featured in public statements and diplomatic signals at the highest levels of government. Although the need for an �edge� in military capability was articulated consistently in policy and political statements, the meaning of the concept changed over time. This evolution provides insight into key strategic policy decisions and offer lessons for scholars, policymaker...
This ARI deals with the key decisions on strategic priorities to be adopted by the new Australian La...
This thesis is about the importance of nuclear weapons to Australian defence and strategic policy in...
“The tyranny of dissonance” among Australia’s geography, history, values, and political interests ha...
Capability edge is one of the most expensive ideas that Australian politicians have ever had. The n...
The essays in this book were originally presented as speeches to the SDSC/IISS conference on The New...
The first, and often the hardest, step in any defence policy is to define strategic objectives—what ...
The fortieth anniversary of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre’s founding provided the opportu...
Following the Howard Government's changes to Australia's defence policy, some of the assumptions tha...
During the decade from 1967 Australia's strategic environment altered fundamentally. This thesis exp...
The newly-released National Security Strategy provides good coverage of broad security issues, but c...
From the late 1940s until the early 1980s, the Australian government provided strategic guidance for...
The 2013 Defence White Paper places greater emphasis than its predecessors on defence engagement, an...
This Policy Analysis examines the challenges confronting the forthcoming Defence White Paper. Rod Ly...
This report argues that successive Australian governments have failed to define an effective nationa...
The first section is a discussion of the relative importance of the defence and other objectives, ai...
This ARI deals with the key decisions on strategic priorities to be adopted by the new Australian La...
This thesis is about the importance of nuclear weapons to Australian defence and strategic policy in...
“The tyranny of dissonance” among Australia’s geography, history, values, and political interests ha...
Capability edge is one of the most expensive ideas that Australian politicians have ever had. The n...
The essays in this book were originally presented as speeches to the SDSC/IISS conference on The New...
The first, and often the hardest, step in any defence policy is to define strategic objectives—what ...
The fortieth anniversary of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre’s founding provided the opportu...
Following the Howard Government's changes to Australia's defence policy, some of the assumptions tha...
During the decade from 1967 Australia's strategic environment altered fundamentally. This thesis exp...
The newly-released National Security Strategy provides good coverage of broad security issues, but c...
From the late 1940s until the early 1980s, the Australian government provided strategic guidance for...
The 2013 Defence White Paper places greater emphasis than its predecessors on defence engagement, an...
This Policy Analysis examines the challenges confronting the forthcoming Defence White Paper. Rod Ly...
This report argues that successive Australian governments have failed to define an effective nationa...
The first section is a discussion of the relative importance of the defence and other objectives, ai...
This ARI deals with the key decisions on strategic priorities to be adopted by the new Australian La...
This thesis is about the importance of nuclear weapons to Australian defence and strategic policy in...
“The tyranny of dissonance” among Australia’s geography, history, values, and political interests ha...