Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents and Contributors
- I Australian Foreign Policy in Action
- II The Australian Diplomatic Service 1935–1965
- III Economic Policies
- IV The United Nations
- V Australian Defence, 1945–1965
- VI Australia and the United States
- VII Australia and Japan, 1961–1965
- VIII Australian Policy Towards China, 1961–1965
- IX Australia and the Indian Ocean Area, 1961–1965
- X Papua-New Guinea, 1961–1965
- XI The South Pacific Commission
- Index
- Plates
I - Australian Foreign Policy in Action
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 March 2024
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents and Contributors
- I Australian Foreign Policy in Action
- II The Australian Diplomatic Service 1935–1965
- III Economic Policies
- IV The United Nations
- V Australian Defence, 1945–1965
- VI Australia and the United States
- VII Australia and Japan, 1961–1965
- VIII Australian Policy Towards China, 1961–1965
- IX Australia and the Indian Ocean Area, 1961–1965
- X Papua-New Guinea, 1961–1965
- XI The South Pacific Commission
- Index
- Plates
Summary
No foreign policy is conducted in a void. The words themselves imply a definition of relationship: a foreign policy operates within an international framework which is not itself rigid but subject, from the pressure of change, to constant alteration in form. The period of this volume, 1961–65, was one in which Australia, in response to new challenges, achieved a degree of maturity in both the shaping and the execution of policy. In narrow Australian terms, it opened with events which by 1962 had produced a major diplomatic defeat for Australia in the outcome of the West New Guinea dispute; it was to close with a remarkable Australian diplomatic success in the conduct of relations with Indonesia. The basic objective of policy, the safety of Australia itself, was consolidated and indeed secured for a foreseeable time by the United States relationship. But this was coupled with large uncertainties about the extent and nature of the growing political, military, and economic involvement in South-East Asia, and perhaps Asia generally.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Australia in World Affairs 1961–1965 , pp. 1 - 133Publisher: Cambridge University PressFirst published in: 2024