This article examines the 1949 attendance of John W. Burton, Australia's Secretary of the Department of External Affairs, at Jawaharlal Nehru's New Delhi Conference of non-Western nations. It argues that initial ambivalence and unevenness, then a swift process of learning and adjustment, characterised both Burton's response to India and the Chifley Government's stance toward change in Asia more generally. Burton's relationship with Nehru's India is used as a case study of the ways that intellectual and cultural preconceptions, as well as firsthand interactions and experience, shaped Australian government officials in their attempts to craft policy responses to the rise of Asian nationalism
This article examines Australia’s response to the 1972 expulsion of Asians from Uganda. It compares ...
This article challenges the validity of recent suggestions that shared history underpins India-Austr...
The constructivist project in international relations (IR) has recently extended beyond the transhis...
This article is a study of the Chifley government\u27s foreign policy towards Asia, in particular In...
This article is a study of the response of the Australian government under Robert Menzies to the eme...
In 1955 29 Asian, African and Middle Eastern nations gathered in Bandung. Indonesia, to discuss a ra...
‘No nation can escape its geography’, warned Percy Spender, Australia’s Minister for External Affair...
There have been a number of studies of the White Australia policy and some examination of white Aust...
This article examines the ways in which Australia’s global connections during the colonial period ha...
The issue of engaging with Asia raises a question posed by Mahatma Gandhi almost 70 years ago: 'Whic...
This paper seeks to provide the genesis of the decline of Jawaharlal Nehru\u27s friendly relations w...
This article argues that 'Asia' has tended to function as an ambivalent 'sign' in Australian politic...
John Wear Burton, Secretary of External Affairs 1947-1950, occupies a unique position within the his...
Beginning in 1943–44, Australia's relationship with India is its oldest continuous formal diplomatic...
During the mid-1960s Australia became increasingly interested in developments in Southeast Asia and...
This article examines Australia’s response to the 1972 expulsion of Asians from Uganda. It compares ...
This article challenges the validity of recent suggestions that shared history underpins India-Austr...
The constructivist project in international relations (IR) has recently extended beyond the transhis...
This article is a study of the Chifley government\u27s foreign policy towards Asia, in particular In...
This article is a study of the response of the Australian government under Robert Menzies to the eme...
In 1955 29 Asian, African and Middle Eastern nations gathered in Bandung. Indonesia, to discuss a ra...
‘No nation can escape its geography’, warned Percy Spender, Australia’s Minister for External Affair...
There have been a number of studies of the White Australia policy and some examination of white Aust...
This article examines the ways in which Australia’s global connections during the colonial period ha...
The issue of engaging with Asia raises a question posed by Mahatma Gandhi almost 70 years ago: 'Whic...
This paper seeks to provide the genesis of the decline of Jawaharlal Nehru\u27s friendly relations w...
This article argues that 'Asia' has tended to function as an ambivalent 'sign' in Australian politic...
John Wear Burton, Secretary of External Affairs 1947-1950, occupies a unique position within the his...
Beginning in 1943–44, Australia's relationship with India is its oldest continuous formal diplomatic...
During the mid-1960s Australia became increasingly interested in developments in Southeast Asia and...
This article examines Australia’s response to the 1972 expulsion of Asians from Uganda. It compares ...
This article challenges the validity of recent suggestions that shared history underpins India-Austr...
The constructivist project in international relations (IR) has recently extended beyond the transhis...