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Organisation

Lowy Institute for International Policy

Alternate Name:

Lowy Institute

Discussion paper

The case for Australia's UN Security Council bid


This paper makes the case that Australia's bid for the Security Council is both prudent and popular, and refutes the various arguments that have been made against the bid. Image: Riacale / Flickr
Briefing paper

Message to the G20: Defeating protectionism begins at home


On 16 November last year, G20 leaders made a commitment to resist protectionism. According to the World Bank, by the end of February 2009, seventeen of the twenty had already ‘implemented 47 measures whose effect is to restrict trade.’ When the leaders meet in Pittsburgh on 24 September 2009, they will have an opportunity to...
Briefing paper

Australia's poisoned alumni: international education and the costs to Australia


In this new Lowy Institute Policy Brief, Executive Director Michael Wesley analyses the multi-faceted international student debate. It canvasses the dynamics of the international student industry and the social, economic and criminal issues faced by international students during their time in Australia. Wesley scutinises the wide-ranging implications of the problem and considers that if left...
Report

The Pacific Islands and the world conference


The Pacific Islands and the World: The Global Economic Crisis, held in Brisbane on 2 and 3 August, brought together Pacific Island leaders, ministers, officials from international and regional organisations, private sector and civil society representatives, in advance of the annual Pacific Islands Forum leaders meeting. The Pacific Islands region as a whole has weathered...
Report

Barack Obama, Kevin Rudd and the alliance: American and Australian perspectives


A good deal of copy has been written about the Australia-US alliance over the past decade, but almost all of it, naturally enough, described the alliance as it developed under the stewardship of conservative leaders in Washington and Canberra. Now the alliance is in the hands of a Democratic president and a Labor prime minister...

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