Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/129305
Title: Crisis Policymaking: Australia and the East Timor Crisis of 1999
Authors: Connery ,David
Issue Date: 2010
Publisher: ANU Press
Abstract: East Timor’s violent transition to independence, which began early in 1999, presented the Australian Government with a significant foreign policy crisis. This crisis was not sudden, totally unexpected or ultimately threatening to Australia’s survival. But the crisis consumed the attention of Australian leaders, saw significant national and international resources employed, and led to the largest operational deployment for the Australian Defence Force since the Vietnam War. This crisis also created a significant rupture in the hitherto carefully-managed relationships between Australia and its important neighbor, Indonesia. The events of September 1999 ultimately led to the birth of a new nation and the deaths of many people who might have otherwise expected to enjoy that independence. In this major study, David Connery examines how the Australian Government—at the political and bureaucratic levels—developed and managed national security policy in the face of this crisis. The events, and the policymaking processes that both led and followed, are reconstructed using sixty interviews with key participants. This study identifies certain characteristics of crisis policymaking in Australia that include a dominant executive, secrecy, external actors and complexity.
link: http://www.oapen.org/record/458922
Keywords: Politics and government;Politics and goverment;Foreign relations;East timor;Australia
ISBN: 9781921666575
Theme:教科書-社會科學類

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