In Fear of Security: Australia's Invasion AnxietyPluto Press, 2001 - 371 pages Part of the media.culture series. Investigates Australia's 'obsession' with national security. Argues that security has dominated and distorted Australia's foreign policy and national life, from Cook's first voyage to the current Asian crisis. Contends that Australia's security always depends on the suffering and insecurity of others - whether they are boat people, asylum seekers, East Timorese or the Aborigines. Includes an analysis of Australia's Refugee Policy and the Tampa crisis. Includes photos, notes and index. Author is lecturer in International Politics at the University of Adelaide. |
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Page xli
... strategic imagination was later visible in Hasluck's wartime concerns that ' class antagonism ' would ' weaken the identity of common interests and purposes on which national loyalties are nurtured ' , in John Curtin's warnings to ...
... strategic imagination was later visible in Hasluck's wartime concerns that ' class antagonism ' would ' weaken the identity of common interests and purposes on which national loyalties are nurtured ' , in John Curtin's warnings to ...
Page 3
... strategy implies an attitude toward space which seeks to make it more flexible , manipulable and productive . As I have suggested with Cook's voyage , the strategic imagination is not so much an entry into a pre - existing space as the ...
... strategy implies an attitude toward space which seeks to make it more flexible , manipulable and productive . As I have suggested with Cook's voyage , the strategic imagination is not so much an entry into a pre - existing space as the ...
Page 4
... strategic imagination thus seeks to engender eco- nomically and politically useful arrangements of bodies , communities and social institutions . In this sense its space is never static and unchanging , but itself has a history ...
... strategic imagination thus seeks to engender eco- nomically and politically useful arrangements of bodies , communities and social institutions . In this sense its space is never static and unchanging , but itself has a history ...
Table des matières
Dedication and Acknowledgements | ix |
Preface | xvii |
The Australian Subject 17881918 | 1 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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