Australian Aid in the Pacific Islands By Dr Nichole Georgeou and Dr Charles Hawksley 26 July 2016 Australian aid is at its lowest level since the 1970s, but geostrategic interests mean Australia remains the largest donor in the Pacific region. How […] Read More
Positive Coverage of AIIA Study Tour to Sri Lanka 25 July 2016 The AIIA Victoria’s recent Study Tour to Sri Lanka has been positively received by the Parliament of Sri Lanka and local media. Following the […] Read More
Xi is The Man: Corruption Crackdown and Centralisation By Cormac Power 25 July 2016 For an increasingly globalised and connected economy, open and transparent markets are key to sustained economic growth. Yet, it is this transparency that […] Read More
The Judgments Project By Reyna Ge 25 July 2016 For Australia, legal certainty in the enforcement of civil and commercial judgments across borders is a top priority. An improved framework is even […] Read More
The Judgments Project 25 July 2016 For Australia, legal certainty in the enforcement of civil and commercial judgments across borders is a top priority. An improved framework is even […] Read More
Winter Editorial 2016 the Editor-in-Chief and Deputy Editor 23 July 2016 Welcome to the latest issue of Quarterly Access. We must start by extending a big thank you to our outgoing Editor-in-Chief, Hector Sharp. […] Read More
Reducing Indonesia’s Transboundary Haze Pollution – A New Policy Approach Jack Greig 23 July 2016 Transboundary Haze Pollution (THP) presents a serious ongoing environmental and economic problem of international consequence. In 2006 the […] Read More
The Challenges Posed to Principled Aid by International and Australian Counter-Terrorism Legislation Caleb Althorpe 23 July 2016 The principles of impartiality and neutrality are key foundations in the delivery of humanitarian assistance. However a tension […] Read More
Whose rights are the most right? The Dilemma of Autonomy in a Society: On Abortion, Women, and Human Life Nina Roxburgh 23 July 2016 In debates on reproductive rights, the moral status of the embryo and fetus is largely at the centre […] Read More
Justice, peace and security in Colombia Alejandra Pineda 23 July 2016 In a patriarchal society like Colombia´s, violence and militarism are strongly linked, and rooted in culture and politics. Violence and militarism are connected […] Read More
Women’s Participation in the Japanese Government: Will Parliament Reach the 30 per cent Target by 2020? Elisa Solomon 23 July 2016 This year marks seventy years since Japanese women first exercised their right of suffrage. In the same amendment […] Read More