OCIS and Beyond: International Relations in Australia: Introduction


Autoria(s): Bellamy, Alex J.; Davies, Sara E.
Data(s)

01/09/2009

Resumo

The Oceanic Conference for International Studies (OCIS) has grown from a small, mostly Australian and New Zealand, affair to an international biennial gathering of scholars from North America, Europe, Asia and the Pacific. Established by a small organising committee drawn from universities across Australia and New Zealand, the principal aim of OCIS was to bring together the Oceanic International Relations (IR) community in an organic and inclusive fashion. There would be no secretariat, minimal bureaucracy, costs would be kept as low as possible, and assistance provided to graduate students. The first OCIS, held at the Australian National University in 2004, proved more successful than the organisers had envisaged. The conference continued to grow at its subsequent meetings at the University of Melbourne (2006) and the University of Queensland (2008). With each conference, a new organising committee was established to take carriage of OCIS. At the 2008 meeting, the question of creating a permanent organising meeting and beginning the transition towards a professional association was discussed in detail. If the transition happens at all, it will be gradual, organic, inclusive, and will prioritise the maintenance of the sense of community OCIS has helped establish. Whilst OCIS itself has flourished, associated initiatives such as OCIS working groups and the OCIS newsletter and listserv have withered on the vine, confirming the original organising committee’s view that endeavours such as this will only prosper to the extent that they are derived and driven from the community as a whole. In 2010, OCIS will hold its first conference in New Zealand, hosted by the University of Auckland...

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/72951/

Publicador

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia

Relação

DOI:10.1111/j.1467-8497.2009.1519a.x

Bellamy, Alex J. & Davies, Sara E. (2009) OCIS and Beyond: International Relations in Australia: Introduction. Australian Journal of Politics & History, 55(3), pp. 317-323.

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Law

Tipo

Journal Article