Making sense of Xi’s claim that the US is ‘goading’ China to invade Taiwan
December
Why Dutton is flying in the face of the China hawks
December
Note: This article appeared in The Australian Financial Review on June 26 2024.
China hawks predictably attacked the Albanese government for being too soft on Beijing during Premier Li Qiang’s visit to Australia last week.
In conversation with Cheng Lei and Nick Coyle | LIVESTREAM
December
During People’s Republic of China (PRC) Premier Li Qiang’s recent visit to Australia, business-to-business and people-to-people ties were the focus.
Are China–Australia relations ‘back on track’ after Li’s visit?
December
Note: This article appeared in The Saturday Paper on June 22 2024.
The Chinese premier’s four-day visit to Australia showed both countries’ leaders endeavouring to walk out of the shadows of earlier tensions – but their memory lingers uncomfortably in the public and policy debate.
The Chinese premier wants Australia to look at the sun. We fear being blinded
December
Best foot forward
December
Australia’s approach to Chinese power and managing relations with Beijing: The enduring paradigm of liberalism
December
As China’s economy has grown, its military capabilities have expanded commensurately, and Beijing has adopted a more assertive foreign policy stance. Perceiving its primacy to be under threat, the response in Washington has been a hard turn towards a Realist paradigm evident across both the military and economic domains. The first contribution of this article is to document that, despite Australia being a staunch US security ally and having its own anxieties about Chinese power, Canberra has undertaken a more modest Realist tilt.
Despite the diplomatic thaw, Australians still deeply mistrust China
December
UTS:ACRI/BIDA Poll 2024
December
The potential impact of EU’s carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM): An Australia-China relationship perspective
December
Purpose
This paper aims to investigate the multifaced aspects and consequences of the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) from an Australia-China relationship perspective.
Design/methodology/approach