Twentieth Anniversary Special Issue – International relations: an Oceanic perspective


Autoria(s): Curley, Melissa; Davies, Sara E.; Devetak, Richard; Kaempf, Seb
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

In his sweeping survey of the Australian study of international relations, Martin Indyk1 claimed that ‘a common set of assumptions tends to underpin the work of almost all Australian scholars in the discipline’. If that assertion could have been plausibly extended to the whole region one generation ago, it certainly cannot now. The International Relations scholarship emanating from the Oceanic region regales in a diversity of theoretical, methodological and ethical assumptions. This diversity certainly emerged before the first Oceanic Conference on International Studies (OCIS) was convened in Canberra in 2004, however, subsequent conferences in Melbourne (2006) and Brisbane (2008) have galvanised and enriched that diversity. The state of the discipline in the region is as strong and healthy now as it has ever been, as is its integration into the global discipline, something we believe is reflected in the contributions collected in this Special Issue of Global Change, Peace and Security....

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/72944/

Relação

DOI:10.1080/14781150802659218

Curley, Melissa, Davies, Sara E., Devetak, Richard, & Kaempf, Seb (2009) Twentieth Anniversary Special Issue – International relations: an Oceanic perspective. Global Change, Peace & Security, 21(1), pp. 1-2.

Fonte

Faculty of Law

Tipo

Journal Article