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
VIII - Australian Policy Towards China, 1961–1965
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
Australian policy dealing with the People’s Republic of China between 1961 and 1965 moved in traditional channels. The coalition Liberal and Country Party Federal Government was in power throughout these years and maintained formal external relationships with little innovation. This aspect of policy was stressed in 1962 by the new Minister for External Affairs, Sir Garfield Barwick, when, discussing Australian foreign policy, he referred to ’the continuity of our major lines of policy’, adding that ’If our policies have been wisely conceived and steadfastly pursued, this continuing change [in international life] will not often call for more than slight corrections of the basic policy course.’ Mr Hasluck, in his first speech to Parliament as Minister for External Affairs on 23 March 1965, stressed in turn that ’I am not introducing any change in the foreign policy of the Government. The foreign policy is that of the Government, not of a person.’
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- Information
- Australia in World Affairs 1961–1965 , pp. 397 - 415Publisher: Cambridge University PressFirst published in: 2024