Outlines some of the challenges faced by Asia\u27s economic and political rise and shifts. On 8 July 2011, the Lowy Institute for International Policy hosted its eighth annual New Voices conference. The 2011 conference ‘Dynamic Asia’ adopted an Indo-Pacific regional focus. Never before in modern times have Asia and its future been so globally significant and yet so unpredictable. Home to some of the largest and fastest growing economies, over 60 per cent of the world’s population, and a growing number of security and strategic challenges, understanding the changes afoot in Asia is crucially important for our future leaders and policymakers. \u27Dynamic Asia’ required participants to interrogate the way in which we think about Asia as a geop...
The scale and pace of Asia’s transformation is unprecedented and the implications for Australia...
Asia and the Pacific, an immense region, both new and old, in which two thirds of the world lives. A...
This thesis set out to ascertain the position of recent Australian Governments on the latest instalm...
The emergence of the region is a modern phenomenon and still in the process of evolution. The econom...
The Australian project of accommodation to the Asia-Pacific region as the dynamic centre of the worl...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/The fast-growing countries of...
The post-Cold War era provides both opportunities and challenges to the Asia-Pacific – a vast and co...
Suddenly Asia has emerged as a major player in the global economy. Asia already accounts for 27 per ...
The Federal Government\u27s new Asia policy argues that in order to thrive in the Asian century, Aus...
This issue of the EAFQ takes the top 12 essays from a large international competition, and other inv...
This is a summary of key ideas and discussions from an International Symposium held at the Universit...
International Conference What is Asia? Changing Boundaries and Identities in Contemporary Asia Da...
No matter how one looks at the numbers, the Asian economies are bound to have a central role in the ...
Asia and the Pacific, an immense region, both new and old, in which two thirds of the world lives. A...
A major new Lowy Institute report is likely to influence Australia’s approach in Asia, writes Geoffr...
The scale and pace of Asia’s transformation is unprecedented and the implications for Australia...
Asia and the Pacific, an immense region, both new and old, in which two thirds of the world lives. A...
This thesis set out to ascertain the position of recent Australian Governments on the latest instalm...
The emergence of the region is a modern phenomenon and still in the process of evolution. The econom...
The Australian project of accommodation to the Asia-Pacific region as the dynamic centre of the worl...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/The fast-growing countries of...
The post-Cold War era provides both opportunities and challenges to the Asia-Pacific – a vast and co...
Suddenly Asia has emerged as a major player in the global economy. Asia already accounts for 27 per ...
The Federal Government\u27s new Asia policy argues that in order to thrive in the Asian century, Aus...
This issue of the EAFQ takes the top 12 essays from a large international competition, and other inv...
This is a summary of key ideas and discussions from an International Symposium held at the Universit...
International Conference What is Asia? Changing Boundaries and Identities in Contemporary Asia Da...
No matter how one looks at the numbers, the Asian economies are bound to have a central role in the ...
Asia and the Pacific, an immense region, both new and old, in which two thirds of the world lives. A...
A major new Lowy Institute report is likely to influence Australia’s approach in Asia, writes Geoffr...
The scale and pace of Asia’s transformation is unprecedented and the implications for Australia...
Asia and the Pacific, an immense region, both new and old, in which two thirds of the world lives. A...
This thesis set out to ascertain the position of recent Australian Governments on the latest instalm...