Welcome to the AIIA NSW

The AIIA NSW is an independent, non-profit organisation, committed to the promotion of informed discussion among the Australian public on international issues and their impact on Australia. Members and visitors hear well informed speakers discuss international issues in an informal environment at the historic Glover Cottages, at 124 Kent St, Millers Point, Sydney.  

An American Melodrama

The Presidential campaign in 2012

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Hosted by: Australian Institute of International Affairs, Sydney

The event will start on: Tuesday, 28 February 2012 6:00 PM

And will end on: Tuesday, 28 February 2012 7:30 PM

At The Glover Cottages, Sydney

124 Kent Street , Sydney NSW

    nsw.branch@aiia.asn.au

Posted by: nsw   

The AIIA NSW is holding this important event precisely one week ahead of Super Tuesday, normally the date when the largest number of primaries take place, providing a clear indication of which Republican presidential candidate is likely to be nominated at the party convention later in the year.

 

This year’s presidential election in November promises to be tight, and the campaign brutal.  Barack Obama will have to spend as much time defending his record as making promises for the future. ‘Yes we can’ will not work as a campaign slogan second time round, and there is no certainty yet as to who will be Obama’s running mate.

The question is, who will challenge him? Just a week ago it was hard to see the Republicans picking anyone other than Mitt Romney, but a firm challenge is now being mounted by Newt Gingrich. Whoever wins the GOP nomination, their campaign task will be to unite the party after five years of squabbling and many distractions.

 

Will Americans, particularly those from the Bible belt, elect a wealthy Mormon former investment banker, or a wealthy campaigner who has been married three times?

 

The AIIA has assembled a formidable panel to discuss the US election prospects in a year where the outlook for the US economy, while better than Europe, is mixed. Each member of our panel has a different perspective, but all share a passion for US politics. We welcome:

 

Tom Switzer, editor of the Australian Spectator, and a research associate at the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney, where where he also teaches undergraduate courses in American politics and Australian political and diplomatic history. He is also books editor of American Review, and host of American Talk. In his earlier career, for seven years from 2001 he was opinion page editor of The Australian, and earlier spent three years as an assistant editor at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. Profile and articles

Dr David Smith, who is is jointly appointed between the United States Studies Centre and the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Sydney. His recent research examines political relations between governments and religious communities in the US and other countries with a focus on Mormons and Jehovah’s Witnesses. Recently he has explored how the religious identity of presidential candidates affects support for them, looking especially at Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. Profile and articles.

Jonathan Tasini has been writing, lecturing and blogging about the American political and economic landscape for more than 25 years. He has worked in electoral and legislative campaigns and is himself a two-time candidate for Congress (the U.S. Senate in 2006 and the U.S. House in 2010). He has written extensively on economic, political and labor affairs for a wide variety of publications and organizations, including The Wall Street Journal, Business Week, The Washington Post, The New York Times, and Playboy. Profile.

 

The discussion will be chaired by AIIA NSW president, Colin Chapman, who has covered or closely followed US presidential campaigns since the election of President Richard Nixon in 1968.

 

 

Refreshments served from 6pm

Entry Fee:  Members: $15.00    Senior/Student members $10.00  Guests $20.00 

Advance Registration essential

  REGISTER ON LINE NOW

 


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AIIANSW starts new blog, posts videos

The AIIA in NSW has started a new blog to provide its members with more news and pictures about its activities, including videos of most of its meetings, as well as comments about about major foreign policy issues. 

Called the Glover Cottages Portal - after the name of its historic Sydney headquarters - it will provide comment and analysis as well as liove links to specific web pages of media that cover intern ational issues well, such as ABC's Lateline, the Financial Times and the New York Times. 

Edited by AIIANSW council member Shannon Barnes, the Glover Cottages Portal is open to anyone with a positive interest in international affairs. 

AIIA NSW hosts senior Chinese delegation

 

A delegation from China's State Council Information Office in Beijing, headed by Dong Yunhu, the deputy director, visited the AIIA at the Glover Cottages on December 16 for an exchange of views on journalism and media developments in Asia.
Mr Dong and his team of six had come to Sydney from Indonesia, where he delivered a speech at the 4th Bali Democracy Forum. He is an author and former secretary-general of the China Society for Human Rights Studies.

Colin Chapman, AIIA NSW president, opened the meeting with an overview of the Australian media, noting that only one national newspaper and three metropolitan dailies took international affairs seriously, while only one broadcaster, the ABC, supported a correspondent in Beijing, though there were a number of internet entities that provided analysis and comment.
Louisa Graham, general manager of the Walkleys Foundation, and a former AIIA NSW vice-president, told the visitors that one good reason why the Australian press had not been dragged into scandals like the one in Britain, which is currently the subject to a major investigation, was because Australian journalists were bound by a code of ethics. Mr Dong asked for - and was given a copy of the code. 

In his remarks he made it clear he favoured an open press, while also adding the caveat that in China journalists were obliged to consider also their responsibilities to society. Mr Dong said China is struggling with the rapidity at which communications are developing through the use of internet and electronic means. This was highlighted in a question by William Hobart who asked how the SCIO felt about the micro blogging surge in China. He stressed that media freedom is very important, but defined freedom as the ability to “act within the law,” and emphasised that as the media grows in importance and reach so too does its responsibilities, such as not to undermine public order or security.

The two sides agreed to continue their dialogue, possibly by holding a conference on journalistic principles and standards. The China State Council also agreed to investigate an AIIA request to provide more information on the problems and challenges China faces in addressing climate change.