In late 1945, Australia eagerly put up its hand to join the American-led military occupation of war-devastated Japan: the old enemy was still hated, yet the Australian involvement was motivated by ideals of democratic reconstruction rather than retribution. In the age of Iraq, when Australia has again participated in a US occupation of a “rogue” non-Western state humbled in war, it is time to consider troubling questions surrounding the nation’s engagement in contentious overseas occupations. Can Western conceptions of democracy be imposed militarily on other societies? To what extent has Australia’s willingness to support the United States been an expression of independent policy-making or meek acquiescence in the neocolonial imperatives o...
This chapter examines a different kind of sacrifice – that made by young men who went contrary to th...
This paper is based on research conducted in Australia and the United States into Australian aims to...
Between 1957 and 1968, the Prime Minister Robert Menzies and several of his ministers, including Ale...
The circumstances and context of Australia’s contemporary military engagement in Afghanistan and Ira...
Current scholarship on the Allied Occupation of Japan 1945–1952 remains captivated by the overarchin...
Occupied Japan was an ideological battleground for contesting ideas concerned with charting Japan's ...
Historiography tends to seek patterns of inevitability, attempting to explain a decided course rathe...
The authors refute the portrayal of Australia as America's pliant ally in the Vietnam and Iraq Wars,...
Australia presents its Pacific War effort as a fight for liberation. This article challenges that vi...
After decades of growth and development, Iraq has become amongst the worst performing states worldwi...
In September 1946, the British Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF) Monthly Occupation Intelligence ...
While the role of the United States in the development of Japan's post-war constitution is well docu...
This book is a sibling of last year's production Australia 1942: In the Shadow of War. That book foc...
In the official and popular memory of the Australian nation, the Anzac tradition is central. In 1915...
This paper is based on research conducted in Australia and the United States into Australian aims to...
This chapter examines a different kind of sacrifice – that made by young men who went contrary to th...
This paper is based on research conducted in Australia and the United States into Australian aims to...
Between 1957 and 1968, the Prime Minister Robert Menzies and several of his ministers, including Ale...
The circumstances and context of Australia’s contemporary military engagement in Afghanistan and Ira...
Current scholarship on the Allied Occupation of Japan 1945–1952 remains captivated by the overarchin...
Occupied Japan was an ideological battleground for contesting ideas concerned with charting Japan's ...
Historiography tends to seek patterns of inevitability, attempting to explain a decided course rathe...
The authors refute the portrayal of Australia as America's pliant ally in the Vietnam and Iraq Wars,...
Australia presents its Pacific War effort as a fight for liberation. This article challenges that vi...
After decades of growth and development, Iraq has become amongst the worst performing states worldwi...
In September 1946, the British Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF) Monthly Occupation Intelligence ...
While the role of the United States in the development of Japan's post-war constitution is well docu...
This book is a sibling of last year's production Australia 1942: In the Shadow of War. That book foc...
In the official and popular memory of the Australian nation, the Anzac tradition is central. In 1915...
This paper is based on research conducted in Australia and the United States into Australian aims to...
This chapter examines a different kind of sacrifice – that made by young men who went contrary to th...
This paper is based on research conducted in Australia and the United States into Australian aims to...
Between 1957 and 1968, the Prime Minister Robert Menzies and several of his ministers, including Ale...