Australia as a rising middle power
This paper examines the key drivers shaping Australia’s role as a middle power in an era of intensifying US-China strategic competition. These drivers include the influence of strategic geography; its historical legacy in international affairs; the impact of its economic relationships with states in...
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2020
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1436032020-11-01T08:40:02Z Australia as a rising middle power Davis, Malcolm - S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies - Social sciences::Political science This paper examines the key drivers shaping Australia’s role as a middle power in an era of intensifying US-China strategic competition. These drivers include the influence of strategic geography; its historical legacy in international affairs; the impact of its economic relationships with states in the Indo-Pacific region; the changing demands of defence policy, including the potential offered by rapid technological change; and, the impact of climate change, resource constraints and demographic factors. The paper considers three possible scenarios that will shape Australia’s middle power policy choices – a US-China strategic equilibrium; a “China crash” scenario that promotes a more nationalist and assertive Chinese foreign policy; and a third “major power conflict” scenario where competition extends into military conflict. The paper concludes that Australia cannot maintain a delicate balance between its strategic alliance with the US and trading relationship with China. It argues there is a need for Australia to adopt a deeper strategic alliance with the US while promoting closer ties with its partners in the Indo-Pacific and supporting the growth of a Free and Open Indo-Pacific region to counterbalance growing Chinese power. Australia needs to embrace an Indo-Pacific step up, and as a middle power, reduce the prospect of a Sino-centric regional order emerging. 2020-09-14T02:41:39Z 2020-09-14T02:41:39Z 2020 Working Paper Davis, M. (2020). Australia as a rising middle power. (RSIS Working Paper. 328). RSIS Commentaries. Singapore: Nanyang Technological University. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143603 en RSIS Working Papers, 328-20 Nanyang Technological University application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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This paper examines the key drivers shaping Australia’s role as a middle power in an era of intensifying US-China strategic competition. These drivers include the influence of strategic geography; its historical legacy in international affairs; the impact of its economic relationships with states in the Indo-Pacific region; the changing demands of defence policy, including the potential offered by rapid technological change; and, the impact of climate change, resource constraints and demographic factors. The paper considers three possible scenarios that will shape Australia’s middle power policy choices – a US-China strategic equilibrium; a “China crash” scenario that promotes a more nationalist and assertive Chinese foreign policy; and a third “major power conflict” scenario where competition extends into military conflict. The paper concludes that Australia cannot maintain a delicate balance between its strategic alliance with the US and trading relationship with China. It argues there is a need for Australia to adopt a deeper strategic alliance with the US while promoting closer ties with its partners in the Indo-Pacific and supporting the growth of a Free and Open Indo-Pacific region to counterbalance growing Chinese power. Australia needs to embrace an Indo-Pacific step up, and as a middle power, reduce the prospect of a Sino-centric regional order emerging. |
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- Davis, Malcolm |
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Working Paper |
author |
Davis, Malcolm |
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Davis, Malcolm |
title |
Australia as a rising middle power |
title_short |
Australia as a rising middle power |
title_full |
Australia as a rising middle power |
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Australia as a rising middle power |
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Australia as a rising middle power |
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australia as a rising middle power |
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Nanyang Technological University |
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2020 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/143603 |
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1686109372173778944 |