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Documents on Australian Foreign Policy: Australia and Papua New Guinea, 1970-1972: The transition to self-governance

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Documents on Australian Foreign Policy: Australia and Papua New Guinea, 1970-1972: The transition to self-governance

Contributors:

By (Author) Bruce Hunt
Edited by Stephen Henningham

ISBN:

9781742237176

Publisher:

UNSW Press

Imprint:

UNSW Press

Publication Date:

1st April 2021

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

327.940953

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

832

Dimensions:

Width 160mm, Height 226mm

Description

This volume, commissioned by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade in the Documents on Australian Foreign Policy series, is the first comprehensive survey of Australia's approach to the world in the 1920s.

DFAT Documents on Australian Foreign Policy, Australia and Papua New Guinea, 1970 - 1972 is the second of three volumes on on Papua New Guinea and its transition to self-government. This era saw monumental change in the relationship between Australia and Papua New Guinea as PNG went from a territory firmly controlled by Canberra to self-government in 1975. Documents outline the role of Australian Prime Minister John Gorton who quickened the pace of change following a visit to PNG by Gough Whitlam at the start of 1970, and the Australian ministers and officials who worked constructively with their PNG counterparts, including Andrew Peacock, at territories minister from early 1972.

Author Bio

The late Bruce Hunt was a Research Fellow in the School of History, College of Arts and Social Sciences at the Australian National University. He had a BA (Hons) from Sydney University and a PhD from the University of New England. He was an officer in the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) from 1974 to 2011. In addition to Port Moresby, he served overseas in Bonn, Harare and Tel Aviv and as High Commissioner to the Kingdom of Tonga. He was Director of the PNG Section in DFAT from 19901994 and from 20002003. In 2000 he was an adviser to the Commonwealth Eminent Persons Group set up to examine the challenges faced by the Papua New Guinea Defence Force. He is the author of Australias Northern Shield Papua New Guinea and the Defence of Australia since 1880.

Stephen Henningham is a specialist historian in the Historical Research Section in DFAT. He has a BA (Hons) from the University of New South Wales and a PhD from the Australian National University (ANU). He served in Noumea as a policy officer, in Port Moresby as Deputy High Commissioner, in Ho Chi Minh City as Consul General, and in Samoa as High Commissioner. He was a South Pacific specialist at the Office of National Assessments in 19871988 and worked on South Pacific politics and history at the ANU from 1988 to 1995. Among other publications he is the author of France and the South Pacific: A Contemporary History and The Pacific Island States: Security and Sovereignty in the Post-Cold War World.

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