What are climate (im)mobilities and how can policy and practice around them be better?
New typology of climate (im)mobility policy clusters is out now from myself and Henrietta McNeil!
https://t.co/7sYtV3f5x0
Hopefully, it's helped, in even a small way, to reshape thinking around what Australia's relationship with states in Oceania should look like.
Article here: https://t.co/8xodfZxGHK
Pretty amazed and excited to say that I've been awarded the Boyer Prize for the best journal article of 2024 in the Australian Journal of International Affairs for my article 'A Dysfunctional Family'
https://t.co/0ztzjEOee3
Thanks to the co-editors Joanne Wallis and Tim Legrand, the whole team at @AustJIA, the exceptionally thoughtful reviewers, and everyone who has read, shared, written about, or taught with the article since it was published.
Hosting COP31 with the Pacific is an opportunity for Australia to catalyse its energy transition and put the Pacific at the top of its foreign and strategic policy priorities. writes @Surangeljr
https://t.co/WAvui7qzTS
I'll be speaking alongside Yetta Gurtner on Tuesday next week for Pint of Science
$10 tickets, 6.30pm at Townsville Brewing Co.
If you are around Townsville come past!
https://t.co/AYjplYE76T
The Oxford Handbook on Norm Research in International Relations, edited by @SassanGholiagha, @antjewiener.bsky.social, and myself, now has a webpage (and a cover!) and will be out in November.
https://t.co/aviiHVdphF
Pacific nations must look to themselves and their neighbors – particularly those in Southeast Asia – to secure the Blue Pacific Continent.
https://t.co/fjYfSzBewo
🇻🇺Vanuatu and the Global Centre for Climate Mobility kick-start comprehensive partnership to strengthen national responses to climate mobility
Read full press release here:
Labor insists the Coalition made biggest foreign policy blunder since WWII. But has Albanese repaired damage in the Pacific? https://t.co/J2VsOcOcbW via @ABCaustralia
While media headlines often highlight the plight of “climate refugees”, most displaced people in the Pacific have not crossed an international border. My report for islands Business @IBIupdate looks at the displaced community of Walande in Solomon Islands.
https://t.co/iMroFE6rR5
With the US & UK retreating from foreign #aid, #Australia's new budget is more than numbers — it's a statement of intent. But what should Australia's role really be in the #Pacific?
A quick, smart read here: https://t.co/Wm2bPn9TPp
@ANUBellSchool
@MaclellanNic Definitely happening bilaterally too. 2023 Saudi - Solomons bilateral resulted in commitments to support SI's relocation programme in return for exploring options for Saudi's to establish carbon offset programmes in SI>
https://t.co/Ct5dvKVS1g
Great read here, another argument for why Australia needs to be doing more and doing better in the Pacific
Responsibility and anxiety in the ‘Pacific family’: AUKUS as a source of ontological insecurity https://t.co/eb8m3xmWFx
Happy to share the latest discussion paper by Romitesh Kant, Mereoni Chung and myself entitled, "The Pacific Ocean of peace: a promise or a paradox?" published as open access in the Australian Journal of International Affairs
DOI:
https://t.co/NZTw2jo2RM
The Pacific is leading the world on climate mobilities policy - including planned relocations.
Australia has to adapt its approach to consider lessons from the Pacific region alongside the usual Western suspects. Lessons from Fiji, SI, and others missing from analysis like this
What can we learn from other countries’ relocation, reconstruction or housing buy-back programs?
Find out in our latest Hazard Note - Resilient housing programs: A framework for evaluation
Read the Hazard Note: https://t.co/lX1Me74cQQ
@UQ_News@QReconstruction
'What Should Australian Aid in the Pacific Look Like after the Retreat of USAID?'
My thoughts on why Aus should be doing more to support Pacific communities to design and implement their own dev projects, particularly on climate mobilities
https://t.co/ijPFj5tDCu