Australian Institute of International Affairs

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Group.png Australian Institute of International Affairs   WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
LogoAIIAblueverysmall.JPG
Formation1920
HeadquartersCanberra, Australia
Membership• 34665861413 8606b88cbf k.jpg Allan Gyngell
• Ac.kimbeazleynew.jpg Kim Beazley
•  Bryce Wakefield
•  Nancy Schneider
•  Coral Bell
• Gareth Evans.jpg Gareth Evans
•  Stephen FitzGerald
•  Hamish McDonald
•  Robert O’Neill
•  John Sanderson
• James Wolfensohn.jpg James Wolfensohn
• Woolcut.png Richard Woolcott
•  Hilary Charlesworth
•  Jocelyn Chey
•  Peter Edwards
•  Elizabeth Evatt
•  Owen Harries
•  John McCarth
•  Nancy Viviani
•  Denis Warner
•  Bruce Grant
•  Helen Hughes
•  Janet Hunt
•  James Ingram
•  Baillieu Myer
•  Ric Smith
•  Graeme Dobell
•  Peter Drysdale
•  Joanna Hewitt
•  Robert Hill (Australia)
• Meaney1.png Neville Meaney
•  Colleen Ryan
•  Hugh White
•  Garry Woodard
•  Joan Beaumont
•  Rowan Callick
•  Francis Gurry
•  Stuart Harris
•  John Legge
•  Wang Gungwu
•  Samina Yasmee
•  nJames Cotton
•  James Crawford
•  Harold Crouch
•  Rawdon Dalrymple
•  Erika Feller
•  Hugh Morgan
• Dennis J Richardson (2).jpg Dennis Richardson
•  Tony Walker
•  Desmond Ball
•  Tim Costello
•  Philip Flood
•  Jenny McGregor
•  Geoffrey Miller
•  Gillian Triggs
•  eraldine Doogue
• Alexander Downer.jpg Alexander Downer
•  Ken Henry
• David Irvine DGS ASIO.jpg David Irvine
• Michael D. Kirby.jpg Michael Kirby
•  John Ravenhill
•  Elizabeth Reid
•  Penny Wensley
•  Sue Boyd
•  Alison Broinowski
•  Clive Hildebrand
•  Martine Letts
• Greg Sheridan.jpg Greg Sheridan
•  Russell Trood
•  Peter Varghese
•  Tony Wheeler
•  Maureen Wheeler
•  Colin Chapman
•  John W. H. Denton
•  Helen Durham
•  Helen Evans
•  Bill Farmer
•  John Menadue
•  Ramesh Thakur
• Amb Michael Thawley.jpg Michael Thawley
• Julie Bishop.png Julie Bishop
•  Peter Boyce
•  Sean Dorney
•  Linda Jakobson
•  Paul Kelly
•  Tim Lindsey
•  Murray McLean
•  Helen Szoke
•  Michael Wesley
•  Melissa H. Conley Tyler
•  Stephen Cordner
•  Michael Costello
•  Rod Eddington
• Andrew Forrest 2017.jpg Andrew Forrest
•  Anthony Milner
• Andrew Parker.jpg Andrew Parker
•  Shirley Scott
•  Nick Bisley
•  Caitlin Byrne
•  Peter Grey
•  Miles Kupa
•  Bill Maley
•  Tessa Morris-Suzuki
•  Frances Adamson
•  Stan Grant
•  Meg Gurry
•  Duncan Edward Lewis
•  Heather Smith
•  Warwick Smith
•  Gary Quinlan
•  Jacqui True
Australian think tank focusing on International relations. Formed in the 1920s as an affiliate of the Royal Institute of International Affairs.

The Australian Institute of International Affairs (AIIA) is an Australian research institute and think tank which focuses on International relations. It is one of the oldest active private research institutes in Australia.

Per 2022, the National President of the AIIA is Allan Gyngell, the former executive director of the Australian Office of National Assessments. The current National Executive Director is Dr Bryce Wakefield.[1]

Overview

The institute's current mission statement is that it wants Australians to "know more, understand more, and engage more in international affairs."[2] According to the institute's then-president, Richard Boyer, writing in 1947:

The day is long past when the issues covered by the Institute are matters of intellectual and group concern only. The Institute is designed to leave its mark to some good purpose on the actual turn of events. It does so not by espousing any policy – indeed, it is strictly prevented by its constitution from endorsing or propagating any point of view. It does aim, however, to strike firmly at the heart of the problem by setting up means whereby research into international issues may be carried out and information of a factual nature may be disseminated, and also to act as a forum wherein those competent not only to give information but to express views may do so without any limitation and without unwanted publicity.[3]

The AIIA Constitution still prevents the institute from endorsing any position on international affairs. In contrast to other think tanks that focus on providing the government with policy advice, key officers of the institute emphasise the AIIA's role as a forum for public discussion.[2] According to the institute's National Executive Director Dr Bryce Wakefield the AIIA is "completely apolitical, so we can genuinely say that we are not pushing an agenda and we are not promoting our own people."[4]

Structure and location

The institute is a registered association with charity status. It is a membership organisation with a federal structure and branches located in the capitals of seven Australian states and territories. Each branch of the institute has its own constitution, maintains a local membership and council and in turn is a "member" of the national body. A representative from each branch, usually the branch president, sits on the National Board, the governing body of the institute, along with other directors. The National Office of the institute, headed by a National Executive Director answerable to the board, coordinates the branches, organises research, and directs the institute's activities with federal and international partners. The National Office is located at Stephen House in Deakin, Canberra, which was built specifically for the institute in 1987.

History

The origins of the institute can be traced to the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 that followed the First World War. Participants at that conference believed public opinion was vital in the development of foreign policy. To help create an informed public debate a number of organisations, including the American Council of Foreign Relations and the Royal Institute of International Affairs in the United Kingdom, were established to promote an understanding of international affairs.[5] Richard Boyer, an early president of the AIIA, stated that "international affairs have ceased to be the sole preserve of foreign offices and specially trained diplomats, and have become not only the concern but the responsibility of the people of the world, and most directly of the people of the democracies".[3]

The institute was formed in the 1920s as an affiliate of the Royal Institute of International Affairs. It became a federal body in 1933 and was established to provide an "objective, scientific study of international affairs. Its purpose is to stimulate interest in and promote understanding of international affairs, including politics, economics and international law".[6] The institute adopted the Chatham House Rule to encourage free and frank discussion. In the early decades of its existence, the AIIA received significant research funding from the Institute of Pacific Relations (IPR), an American non-governmental organisation that provided a forum for the discussion of political issues facing the countries of the Pacific rim. Some AIIA members were concerned that the IPR was "a vehicle for American influence which, in zero-sum terms, was assumed would displace that of Britain".[7]

Prior to the separation of the Department of External Affairs from the Prime Minister's Department, the institute "filled a gap by providing a forum for the discussion of Australia's external interests. Accordingly, the 1930s and 1940s were the period of greatest influence for the AIIA".[8] The institute's role in developing Australia's place in the world is signified by the fact that it was the first organisation to use the term "Australian Foreign Policy" as a book title, in 1934.[9] Until the 1960s, "the AIIA, especially through its journal Australian Outlook (founded in 1947, later the Australian Journal of International Affairs), was unrivalled as a focus for analysis and debate in the fields of foreign and security policy."[10]

During the 1970s, when Australian foreign policy and the Asia-Pacific region were undergoing considerable change, the institute failed to expand. Gough Whitlam, the Australian Prime Minister at the time, wrote a message to the institute in 1972 that actively encouraged it to help inform public opinion on the rapid changes underway in Australia's neighbourhood.[11]

After the arrival in the 2000s of professional think tanks in Australia such as the Lowy Institute and the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, the latter owned by the Australian government, the community-based AIIA "strengthened its think tank dimensions."[12]

Office Holders

The institute is led by a national president, with day to day leadership of the national office provided by a national executive director. There are several other office holders, including the institute's treasurer, research chair, and editor of the Australian Journal of International Affairs. The branches of the institute similarly have their own various officers and are led by branch presidents, and the New South Wales, Victoria, and Queensland branches were all led by presidents prior to the foundation of the national body of the institute.[13]

AIIA National President[13]
Name Term
Archibald Hamilton Charteris

(1874-1940)

1933-1934
Professor (later Sir) Stephen Roberts(1901-1971) 1934-1936
Sir Thomas Bavin(1874-1940) 1936-1941
Professor (later Sir) Ian Clunies Ross (1899-1859) 1942-1945
Sir Philip David Phillips (1897-1970) 1945-1946
(Later Sir) Richard Boyer(1891-1961) 1946-1949
Sir Norman Lethbridge Cowper(1896-1987) 1949-1950
Tristan N.M. Buesst(1894-1982) 1951-1954
David Alexander Stewart Campbell(1898-1970) 1955-1958
Professor John Andrews 1958-1961
Professor Gordon Greenwood(1913-1986) 1961-1965
Professor Norman Harper(1906-1986) 1965-1970
Professor Thomas Stapleton(1920-2008) 1970-1972
Rt Hon Sir Garfield Barwick AK GCMG QC(1903-1997) 1972-1983
Sir Russel Madigan OBE(1920-1999) 1983-1988
R.J. White AO 1988-1991
Garry Woodard AO(1929-) 1991-1993
Richard Searby AO QC(1931-2018) 1993-1998
Hon Neal Blewett AC(1933-) 1998-?
??
John McCarthy AO ?-2017
Hon Kim Beazley AC(1948-) 2015-2017
Allan Gyngell AO(b.?-) 2017-


 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteAuthor
Richard Woolcott“We cannot allow foreign policy to be made in the streets, by the media or by the unions.”Richard Woolcott

 

Known members

15 of the 111 of the members already have pages here:

MemberDescription
Kim BeazleyAustralian politician with spooky overtones
Julie BishopAustralian former politician.
Alexander DownerAttended the 2004 WEF AGM as Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs
Gareth EvansAustralian politician
Andrew ForrestAustralia's richest man
Allan GyngellAustralian Spook and Director-General of the Office of National Assessments (ONA) from 2009 to 2013.
David IrvineASIO Director-General of Security. Bugged dirt-poor neighbour East Timor to gain advantage in oil and gas treaty.
Michael KirbyAustralian judge later joining the international atrocity propaganda circuit
Neville Meaney
Andrew ParkerHead of MI5, promoting fear of 'jihadis'.
Dennis RichardsonAustralian intelligence boss and Ambassador to the United States.
Greg SheridanInfluential Australian journalist & editor with the Rupert Murdoch-owned The Australian, with possible ties to the Integrity Initiative.
Michael ThawleyWhile Thawley Ambassador to the United States, the Australia–United States Free Trade Agreement was established, opening Australia to US products.
James WolfensohnAustralian/US dual national, President of the World Bank, Bilderberg steering committee
Richard WoolcottAustralian public servant, diplomat, author and commentator. Informant to the United States, providing consular officials with information of internal government processes before the coup in 1975. Australian American Leadership Dialogue.
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References

  1. http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/about-us/our-people/
  2. a b https://apo.org.au/sites/default/files/resource-files/2021-08/apo-nid313602.pdf
  3. a b Boyer, RJF (1947). "Foreword". Australian Outlook. 1 (1): 4. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F00049914708565291
  4. https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Hansard/Hansard_Display?bid=committees/commsen/b9bd34a7-a2ed-4128-80f6-6430c87f1400/&sid=0000
  5. Gyngell, Allan (April 2018). "Australian Foreign Policy: Does the Public Matter? Should the Community Care?". Australian Journal of International Affairs. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10357718.2017.1421142 page 87.
  6. Stone, Diane (1996). "A Think Tank in Evolution or Decline?: The Australian Institute of International Affairs in Comparative Perspective". Australian Journal of International Affairs. 50 (2): 117–118. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10357719608445175
  7. Cotton, James (2008). "Celebrating 75 Years: The Australian Institute of International Affairs and Australian International Relations". Australian Journal of International Affairs. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10357710802480741 page 543.
  8. Stone, Diane (1996). "A Think Tank in Evolution or Decline?: The Australian Institute of International Affairs in Comparative Perspective". Australian Journal of International Affairs. 50 (2): 119. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10357719608445175
  9. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/wsh.05.2016.17
  10. Gyngell, Allan (2016). "The Rumble of Think Tanks: National Security and Public Policy Contestability in Australia". In Marston, Daniel; Leahy, Tamara (eds.). War, Strategy and History: Essays in Honour of Professor Robert O’Neill. Canberra: ANU ePress. p. 270.
  11. Stone, Diane (1996). "A Think Tank in Evolution or Decline?: The Australian Institute of International Affairs in Comparative Perspective". Australian Journal of International Affairs. https://doi.org/10.1080%2F10357719608445175 page 125.
  12. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/wsh.05.2016.17%7Cwork=War, Strategy and History: Essays in Honour of Professor Robert O’Neill
  13. a b Legge, John D. (1999). Australian Outlook: A History of the Australian Institute of International Affairs. Canberra: Allan and Unwin. pp. 220–221. ISBN 1 86508 095 0.
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