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Published daily by the Lowy Institute

  • 8 Aug 2024
    • India
    • United Kingdom
    • Identities
    • Review

    A reckoning with empire

    Ved Shinde
    Two very different volumes on the legacies of imperialism expose the parallax of coloniser and colonised.
  • 2 Aug 2024
    • Global Issues
    • Review

    Shots around the world: The influence of assassins on international affairs

    Mark Pierce
    Leaders are always going to be hard to protect, especially if demonstrating a common touch means touching commoners.
  • 24 Jul 2024
    • Diplomacy
    • Review

    Shakespeare as life coach

    Mark Pierce
    Two new books examine how the Bard’s wit and wisdom can serve as guides for modern day policy and prophecy.
  • 4 Jul 2024
    • India
    • Review

    Eyes on India

    Mark Pierce
    The burdens of history should not be confused with sentimentalism in forging a modern relationship.
  • 19 Jun 2024
    • Diplomacy
    • United Kingdom
    • Review

    How to broaden the political gene pool

    Mark Pierce
    With the United Kingdom headed for the polls, Alastair Campbell has a few suggestions on what makes a good leader.
  • 7 Jun 2024
    • Defence & Security
    • Review

    The forgotten weapon of mass destruction

    Huma Rehman
    Preventing the spread of unconventional tools of warfare requires constant vigilance.
  • 30 May 2024
    • Australian trade, investment & economy
    • Trade
    • WTO
    • Review

    Fibs, squibs, and trading digs

    Justin Brown
    Is it any wonder the public is often bemused about the merits of trade policy?
  • 28 May 2024
    • Defence & Security
    • Global Economy
    • Review

    The economics of strategy

    Sam Roggeveen
    How one discipline can learn much from another.
  • 23 May 2024
    • Review

    The month the world changed

    Mark Pierce
    New research brings a valuable insight into the role of people not usually seen or heard in stories of war.
  • 16 May 2024
    • Review

    A bread index to measure revolt

    Mark Pierce
    Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.
  • 10 May 2024
    • Review

    Noble Rushdie will not be silenced

    Mark Pierce
    Physically, Rushdie will never be the same after his attack. But as a writer, he is back.
  • 30 Apr 2024
    • Germany
    • Review

    The God in the rubble

    Marcus Colla
    Germany’s struggle with morality is not only a concern of history but an animating factor in contemporary politics.
  • 19 Apr 2024
    • Australia
    • Defence & Security
    • Maritime Security
    • Review

    Girt by sea: Redrawing Australia’s mental map

    David Brewster
    A big part of the challenge is asking the hard questions – and a new book does just that.
  • 17 Apr 2024
    • United States
    • Review

    Telling tales about “Civil War”

    Sam Roggeveen
    Politics isn’t the only strange omission from what is undoubtedly a captivating and relentless movie spectacle.
  • 9 Apr 2024
    • Review

    Life on Earth: From beginning to end

    Mark Pierce
    A new take on the history of the world starts 3.8 billion years ago and offers conclusions about our future.
  • 8 Apr 2024
    • India
    • Review

    India's turbulent history newly revealed

    Ved Shinde
    Two recent history books that improve our understanding of India's present
  • 26 Mar 2024
    • China
    • India
    • United Kingdom
    • Review

    Opium and the colonial narco-state

    Mark Pierce
    In an attempt to control 19th century trade with India and China, Britain dumped tea and resorted to a new addictive drug.
  • 15 Mar 2024
    • Trade
    • Review

    What price sanctions?

    John West
    When trade is made a weapon, the target isn’t always hit.
  • 7 Mar 2024
    • Intelligence and security
    • Review

    Spy novels and unicorn hunting

    Mark Pierce
    Seeking perfection among the dead ends, red herrings and lost causes, a lover of espionage lists the must-haves.
  • 29 Feb 2024
    • Defence & Security
    • United States
    • Review

    When war-planning and politics collide

    Erin Hurley
    The rhythms of the electoral cycle are too often overlooked in the conduct of conflict.
  • 22 Feb 2024
    • Review

    Words as weapons in the war of ideas

    Mark Pierce
    A new book explores the power of literature on history's battlefields.
  • 13 Feb 2024
    • Japan
    • Japan's Economy
    • Review

    How to fix Japan

    John West
    Embracing the lost art of “creative destruction” will allow the once booming economy to flourish again.
  • 29 Jan 2024
    • Australia and Climate Change
    • Australia's Defence Challenges
    • Australian Defence Force
    • Australian Navy
    • Maritime Security
    • Review

    Why big projects fail: Climate change and AUKUS submarines

    Stephen Grenville
    Construction lessons – from the Empire State to the Sydney Opera House – can inform Australia’s most pressing problems.
  • 15 Jan 2024
    • Technology
    • Review

    Manager of the internet, controller of the world?

    Sam Roggeveen
    Power is much more than GDP and tank numbers. But the US monopoly on the digital age is eroding.
  • 3 Jan 2024
    • North Korea
    • Global Issues
    • Human rights
    • Review

    Why do we travel to unsettling places?

    Melissa Conley Tyler
    Whether the DMZ or sites of historic atrocities, place carries a connection to remind us of the precariousness of life.
  • 21 Dec 2023
    • Philippines
    • Human rights
    • Review

    Manila’s killing fields: Rodrigo Duterte’s bloody war on the poor

    Richard Javad Heydarian
    It’s best to not only take populists seriously, but also literally, especially when they threaten mass murder.
  • 13 Dec 2023
    • India
    • Recommendations
    • Review

    The Fix: Nationalist theatre, with a twist

    Evan Freidin
    An action film where the climax features a gritty anti-hero urging the importance of an informed vote? Watch and learn.
  • 11 Dec 2023
    • Defence & Security
    • Intelligence and security
    • Review

    Espionage top ten

    Milton Cockburn
    From George Smiley to Jackson Lamb, the best spy fiction relies not on heroes but masters of the plot.
  • 6 Dec 2023
    • Europe
    • International law
    • Review

    The Fix: A death in Malta

    Jim Nolan
    Uncovering the murky business of corruption and graft too often puts journalists’ lives at risk.
  • 6 Dec 2023
    • Europe
    • Review

    Tales from the magic circle

    Marcus Colla
    A new book explores how post-war Europe’s waves of counterculture and activism transformed the notion of revolution.
  • 29 Nov 2023
    • Recommendations
    • Review

    The Fix: Simple history is never simplistic

    Mark Pierce
    Your weekly Interpreter feature about issues, resources and helpful distractions that might otherwise be missed.
  • 17 Nov 2023
    • United Kingdom
    • Review

    Practising politics in a moral wilderness

    Mark Pierce
    Yes Minister, indeed.
  • 8 Nov 2023
    • India
    • Recommendations
    • Review

    The Fix: Escape banality, shun labels

    Ved Shinde
    Your weekly Interpreter feature about issues, resources or helpful distractions that might otherwise be missed.
  • 1 Nov 2023
    • Saudi Arabia
    • Recommendations
    • Review

    The Fix: An evolving Saudi Arabia

    Gabriela Bernal
    Your weekly Interpreter feature about issues, resources or helpful distractions that might otherwise be missed.
  • 26 Oct 2023
    • Russia
    • Ukraine
    • Review

    A Marshall Plan for Ukraine?

    John West
    History can be a useful guide, but the geopolitical circumstances of today are vastly different.
  • 23 Oct 2023
    • War Crimes
    • Review

    War crimes: The trial of a fallen French war hero and lessons for today

    Mark Pierce
    When can personal responsibility be dissolved into collective culpability?
  • 13 Oct 2023
    • Australia
    • Canada
    • The Trump Presidency
    • United States
    • Review

    Imagining Trump’s second term

    Mark Pierce
    Could Canada cope? Might Australia? Two books on the “vice in the chest and tightness in the stomach” prospect.
  • 29 Sep 2023
    • Europe
    • Review

    The decline of Europe: “Rage, rage, against the dying of the light”

    Mark Pierce
    From the early signs of decay to the recent downwards turn, Europe’s trajectory is captured with pen and voice.
  • 28 Sep 2023
    • Australia in the World
    • Australia's Defence Challenges
    • Australia-United States Relations
    • Australian Defence Force
    • Defence & Security
    • Maritime Security
    • Review

    AUKUS: A debate after the fact is still worth having

    Georgina Downer
    Can Australia’s statecraft and alliances offer alternative security options in the Indo-Pacific?
  • 21 Sep 2023
    • Germany
    • Review

    Plumbing the depths of the former East Germany’s grotesque delusion

    Mark Pierce
    A mostly unsentimental new memoir of life in the GDR ruminates on the what-ifs.
  • 8 Sep 2023
    • United Kingdom
    • Review

    Boris Johnson: Does distance really lend enchantment to the view?

    Mark Pierce
    A recent biography on the former PM reveals a man short on dignity and gravitas, and afraid to make the hard decisions.
  • 29 Aug 2023
    • Australia
    • Defence & Security
    • Review

    A compelling voice for rethinking Australia’s national security

    Gareth Evans
    Sam Roggeveen’s Echidna Strategy rightly challenges Australia to act as a diplomatic powerhouse, not a military one.
  • 11 Aug 2023
    • Defence & Security
    • Review

    Learning Cold War lessons of espionage anew

    Ben Scott
    The ever-present threat of spies can lead to the greater danger – ourselves.
  • 10 Aug 2023
    • Russia
    • Ukraine
    • Review

    Fake news, propaganda, and the withering of commitment to truth

    Mark Pierce
    Joseph Stalin’s denial of access for Western journalists during the Second World War heralded the birth of disinformation.
  • 28 Jul 2023
    • Afghanistan
    • Afghanistan War
    • Review

    Far from the limelight, forgotten Afghans continue the fight

    Melissa Jardine
    Accounts from Kabul hold lessons on how easily the world moves on, and some takeaways for Ukraine.
  • 21 Jul 2023
    • Australia
    • Australian Diplomacy
    • Review

    Nobody ever teaches anyone how to be a Minister

    Mark Pierce
    At the heart of Australia’s Westminster democracy is an eclectic, eccentric, DIY political system.
  • 13 Jul 2023
    • Indonesia
    • Human rights
    • Review

    For Indonesia’s haunting past, Jokowi’s resolution is non-judicial

    Warief Djajanto Basorie
    A new book throws light on the 1965 massacres – but the government’s redress for victims is yet to extend to justice for the perpetrators.
  • 3 Jul 2023
    • China
    • Review

    China’s answer to Top Gun is a flat spin

    Evan Freidin
    Hardly the touted blockbuster, Born To Fly is more dreary vanity flight than rousing nationalist paean.
  • 23 Jun 2023
    • Space exploration
    • Review

    Low Earth orbit: The next frontier

    Luke Dawes
    A new book explores how power plays in space are destined to become an extension of cold geopolitical logic.
  • 26 May 2023
    • India
    • Vietnam
    • Review

    India’s underperforming ties to Vietnam

    Jitendra Nath Misra
    India’s weak cultural imprint fragments into insignificance faced with China’s.
Pagination
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