This volume is the published proceedings of a conference conducted by Mississippi State University in Jackson MS in 2007, examining Asian energy security issues.
This volume was commissioned as a response to A Stronger and More Prosperous World through Secure and Accessible Seas published by the US Naval War College, to provide an Australian perspective on international maritime law issu
Peter Stuckey Mitchell, a grazier, died in 1921 and left funds that form the basis of a trust account known as the Peter Mitchell Trust Fund, to be used to provide prizes ‘to encourage and help the capable, healthy and strong to develop … their na
This volume is the proceedings of a seminar held in Canberra in 2002, and conducted with the support of the Centre for Maritime Policy, University of Wollongong.
This volume is the proceedings of the first Sea Power Conference held in Sydney in 2000.
This paper aims to understand coercion theory in an international framework, and thus how Australia can combat offensive compellence through influence in the Indo-Pacific.
After a three decade lull, great power competition has returned to Asia. This burgeoning strategic era will, however, be very different from what Australia has experienced in the past.
Because of its utility as the safest and cheapest way of transporting goods and people, the sea has always been a basis - and many would say the basis - for trade.
With the oceans and seas critical elements of the global economy, food and energy security, and livelihoods, the blue economy concept is rapidly gaining currency as an essential element of national security and prosperity.