Roundtable in Asia Policy 20.2
Rebecca Strating and Joanne Wallis’s Girt by Sea: Re-Imagining Australia’s Security
How should Australia best pursue national security? Sarah Teo, Matthew Sussex, Maria Rost Rublee, Joanne Wallis, and Rebecca Strating discuss this question, the importance of maritime spaces to Australia, and the role of strategic imagination in security and defense policymaking in Girt by Sea: Re-Imagining Australia’s Security.
Recalibrating Australia’s Strategy toward Its Maritime Neighborhood
Sarah Teo
Smooth Sailing or Troubled Waters? Australia Girt by Sea
Matthew Sussex
Strategic Imagination and the Future of Australian National Security Thinking
Maria Rost Rublee
Authors’ Response: Reimagining Australia’s Security Is More Urgent Than Ever
Joanne Wallis and Rebecca Strating
Sarah Teo is an Assistant Professor at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies, Deputy Head of Graduate Studies, and Coordinator of the PhD program at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University (Singapore).
Matthew Sussex is an Associate Professor (Adjunct) at the Griffith Asia Institute at Griffith University and a Visiting Fellow in both the Centre for European Studies and the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University (Australia).
Maria Rost Rublee is Professor of International Relations at the University of Melbourne (Australia), with expertise in international relations, including nuclear politics, Indo-Pacific security, political psychology, and gender and diversity in national security.
Joanne Wallis is Professor of International Security and Director of the Stretton Institute’s Security in the Pacific Islands research program at the University of Adelaide (Australia) and a Senior Nonresident Fellow of the Brookings Institution.
Rebecca Strating is the Director of La Trobe Asia and a Professor of International Relations at La Trobe University in Melbourne (Australia).
About Asia Policy
Asia Policy is a peer-reviewed scholarly journal presenting policy-relevant academic research on the Asia-Pacific that draws clear and concise conclusions useful to today’s policymakers. Asia Policy is published quarterly in January, April, July, and October and accepts submissions on a rolling basis. Learn more