12 January 2024: The Month in Australian Foreign Affairs
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This month in Australian foreign affairs: 2023 Lowy Lecture, NZ PM Luxon visits, statement on Houthi attacks, earthquake in Japan, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This month in Australian foreign affairs: 2023 Lowy Lecture, NZ PM Luxon visits, statement on Houthi attacks, earthquake in Japan, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: ANZIM ministerial consultations; new sanctions announced for Myanmar entities; new aid for Timor-Leste, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: Chinese FM Wang Yi in Canberra for Foreign and Strategic Dialogue; funding to UNRWA reinstated and upgraded; Marles and Wong host AUKMIN; Watts to attend Summit for Democracy in ROK, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: joint statement on Houthi attacks, Wong in Jordan, Israel, Occupied Palestinian Territories, humanitarian assistance gets a boost, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: comments on Julian Assange and Dr Yang Hengjun; Marles to travel to Jakarta for defence talks; Gallagher to travel to Rio de Janeiro Australia for G20 Foreign Ministers Meeting; Trade delegation to WTO announced, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: new ambassadors appointed to ASEAN and WTO, cyber sanction powers in use, further sanctions against Hamas, a joint statement on Houthi attacks, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: Albanese addresses US TikTok ban; new AUKUS sub concerns for Australian defence; new ambassadors announced; Chinese sanctions on Australian wine, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: Philippine's President Ferdinand R Marcos Jr first official visit to Australia; statement on death of Alexei Navalny; Ukraine; Australian-Pacific Rugby Union Partnership, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: ASEAN-Australia Special Summit; Australia and Vietnam announce comprehensive strategic partnership; new investment platforms for Southeast Asia; Australia and Malaysia hold 2nd Annual Leaders' Meeting, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: PM joint statement on Israel's ground offensive in Rafah; new support for Ukraine; Australia to support 250 Pacific athletes to join Olympic Games in Paris; new support for PNG Rugby, and more.
Blog: Australian Institute of International Affairs
This week in Australian foreign affairs: Papua New Guinea (PNG)-Australia Annual Leaders' Dialogue; China hands death sentence to Yang Hengjun; Royal Australian Navy sends officers and sailors to Guam under AUKUS agreement; new support for PNG Rugby, and more.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
The Constitution requires courts to exercise independent judgment and "say what the law is," including on questions of the president's foreign‐affairs powers.
In: Journal of global security studies, Band 9, Heft 1
ISSN: 2057-3189
Abstract
How does military conscription influence mass opinion on foreign affairs? Is gender relevant for the impact compulsory service has on public opinion? Leveraging South Korea's mandatory military service for men and fluctuations in inter-Korea relations from 2003 to 2018, we assess conscription's impact on South Korean opinions of North Korea. We rely on the random nature of a child's gender, given the number of children in a family, to infer the effect of conscription on the views of parents via a "son effect." While the gender and foreign policy opinion literature suggests that female aversion to the costs of conflict can result in positive views toward an adversary, we find that the high costs of conscription result in mothers of sons subject to military service holding more negative and hostile perceptions of North Korea compared to women with no sons as well as men. We do not find such differences between fathers of sons and men without sons.
Blog: Blog der Republik
I. Rolf Mützenich, der Vorsitzende der SPD-Fraktion im Deutschen Bundestag, ist ein Mann, der lieber nichts sagt als einen falschen […]
The post Ohne Verhandlungen kein Ende des Kriegs in der Ukraine – Forscher in "Foreign Affairs" einig mit SPD-Fraktionschef Rolf Mützenich first appeared on Blog der Republik.
In: Cold war history, S. 1-5
ISSN: 1743-7962