Challenges for Feminist-Informed Foreign Policy: Militarisation and Australia’s engagements via AUKUS and NATO

In recent years, Australia has assessed the global and regional security environment as increasingly unstable. The rising economic and military power of China and broader challenges to the ‘rules based international order’ seemingly signal a period of instability, prompting a reconsideration of Aust...

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Main Authors: Agius, Christine, Bergman-Rosamond, Annika, Haastrup, Toni, Wright, Katharine A. M.
Other Authors: Swinburne University of Technology
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: International Women's Development Agency 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/476447
https://iwda.org.au/resource/challenges-for-feminist-informed-foreign-policy-militarisation-and-australias-engagements-via-aukus-and-nato/
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spelling ftswinburne:tle:e288ad95-4fd5-46da-875c-48d1a96906d3:28f49f06-0da8-44be-9edc-ad1dd0a9c582:1 2024-01-21T10:06:14+01:00 Challenges for Feminist-Informed Foreign Policy: Militarisation and Australia’s engagements via AUKUS and NATO Agius, Christine Bergman-Rosamond, Annika Haastrup, Toni Wright, Katharine A. M. Swinburne University of Technology 2023 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/476447 https://iwda.org.au/resource/challenges-for-feminist-informed-foreign-policy-militarisation-and-australias-engagements-via-aukus-and-nato/ unknown International Women's Development Agency http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/476447 https://iwda.org.au/resource/challenges-for-feminist-informed-foreign-policy-militarisation-and-australias-engagements-via-aukus-and-nato/ Copyright © 2023 Australian Feminist Foreign Policy Coalition (AFFPC) Issues Paper Series (Dec 2023) Report 2023 ftswinburne 2023-12-25T23:27:57Z In recent years, Australia has assessed the global and regional security environment as increasingly unstable. The rising economic and military power of China and broader challenges to the ‘rules based international order’ seemingly signal a period of instability, prompting a reconsideration of Australia’s defence capacity and role in the region. Meanwhile, new forms of cooperation with like-minded states have emerged, most notably the AUKUS agreement, announced in 2021 by then Prime Minister Scott Morison with bipartisan support, which binds Australia more closely with the United Kingdom (UK) and the United States (US) militarily. Australia has also strengthened its relations with NATO, aspiring to play a central role in the Indo-Pacific region as a NATO partner, alongside Japan, South Korea, and New Zealand. In this AFFPC Issues Paper, we explore the contradictions and tensions that emerge in the framing of national security threats and whether there are opportunities for more inclusive peace and security as promoted by the principles of feminist-informed foreign policy. For example, amidst this focus on militarisation, when the Australian Labor Party (led by Prime Minister Albanese) assumed power in 2022, Foreign Minister Penny Wong articulated a new foreign policy direction, which seemed to leverage broader attention towards feminist-informed acts and commitments. Wong promised that Australia would focus more attention on listening to its regional Pacific partners and committed to enacting a First Nations foreign policy. Report First Nations Swinburne University of Technology: Swinburne Research Bank New Zealand Pacific
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description In recent years, Australia has assessed the global and regional security environment as increasingly unstable. The rising economic and military power of China and broader challenges to the ‘rules based international order’ seemingly signal a period of instability, prompting a reconsideration of Australia’s defence capacity and role in the region. Meanwhile, new forms of cooperation with like-minded states have emerged, most notably the AUKUS agreement, announced in 2021 by then Prime Minister Scott Morison with bipartisan support, which binds Australia more closely with the United Kingdom (UK) and the United States (US) militarily. Australia has also strengthened its relations with NATO, aspiring to play a central role in the Indo-Pacific region as a NATO partner, alongside Japan, South Korea, and New Zealand. In this AFFPC Issues Paper, we explore the contradictions and tensions that emerge in the framing of national security threats and whether there are opportunities for more inclusive peace and security as promoted by the principles of feminist-informed foreign policy. For example, amidst this focus on militarisation, when the Australian Labor Party (led by Prime Minister Albanese) assumed power in 2022, Foreign Minister Penny Wong articulated a new foreign policy direction, which seemed to leverage broader attention towards feminist-informed acts and commitments. Wong promised that Australia would focus more attention on listening to its regional Pacific partners and committed to enacting a First Nations foreign policy.
author2 Swinburne University of Technology
format Report
author Agius, Christine
Bergman-Rosamond, Annika
Haastrup, Toni
Wright, Katharine A. M.
spellingShingle Agius, Christine
Bergman-Rosamond, Annika
Haastrup, Toni
Wright, Katharine A. M.
Challenges for Feminist-Informed Foreign Policy: Militarisation and Australia’s engagements via AUKUS and NATO
author_facet Agius, Christine
Bergman-Rosamond, Annika
Haastrup, Toni
Wright, Katharine A. M.
author_sort Agius, Christine
title Challenges for Feminist-Informed Foreign Policy: Militarisation and Australia’s engagements via AUKUS and NATO
title_short Challenges for Feminist-Informed Foreign Policy: Militarisation and Australia’s engagements via AUKUS and NATO
title_full Challenges for Feminist-Informed Foreign Policy: Militarisation and Australia’s engagements via AUKUS and NATO
title_fullStr Challenges for Feminist-Informed Foreign Policy: Militarisation and Australia’s engagements via AUKUS and NATO
title_full_unstemmed Challenges for Feminist-Informed Foreign Policy: Militarisation and Australia’s engagements via AUKUS and NATO
title_sort challenges for feminist-informed foreign policy: militarisation and australia’s engagements via aukus and nato
publisher International Women's Development Agency
publishDate 2023
url http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/476447
https://iwda.org.au/resource/challenges-for-feminist-informed-foreign-policy-militarisation-and-australias-engagements-via-aukus-and-nato/
geographic New Zealand
Pacific
geographic_facet New Zealand
Pacific
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Australian Feminist Foreign Policy Coalition (AFFPC) Issues Paper Series (Dec 2023)
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1959.3/476447
https://iwda.org.au/resource/challenges-for-feminist-informed-foreign-policy-militarisation-and-australias-engagements-via-aukus-and-nato/
op_rights Copyright © 2023
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