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PROGRAM Monday 4 th to Wednesday 6 th of July 2016 St Leos College, St Lucia Campus See the Conference Overview p.3 for tea breaks Back to top

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1 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

PROGRAMMonday 4th to Wednesday 6th of July 2016St Leos College, St Lucia Campus

See the Conference Overview p.3 for tea breaks Back to top

OCIS is Proudly Sponsored by

N A T I O N A L S E C U R I T Y C O L L E G E

School of Political Science and International StudiesGraduate Centre in Governance and International Affairs

Tabl

e of

Con

tent

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2

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Conference Overview

Panel session 1 (1:30pm -3:00pm)

Panel Session 2 (3:30pm-5:00pm)

Conference Dinner Customs House (7:00pm-10:00pm)

Panel session 1 (9:00am-10:30am)

Panel session 2 (11:00am-12:30pm)

Panel session 3 (1:30pm-3:00pm)

Closing Plenary Address by Prof Anne Orford (3:30 -5:00pm)

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Panel session 1 (9:00am-10:30am)

Keynote Address Prof Katzenstein (11:00am-12:30pm)

Panel session 2 (1:30pm-3:00pm)

Panel session 3 (3:30pm-5:00pm)

Reception Honouring Early-Career Scholars Sponsored by AIIA (5:00pm-6:00pm)

See the Conference Overview p.3 for tea breaks Back to top

Conf

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3 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

Monday Tuesday Wednesday

9:00am -10:30am Workshops Panels (Session 1) Panels (Session 1)

10:30am -11:00am Morning tea Morning tea

11:00am -12:30pm

OCIS Keynote Address by Prof. Peter Katzenstein

(Advanced Engineering building)Panels (Session 2)

12:30pm -1:30pm

(except Monday)

12pm: Registration opens Lunch Lunch

1:30pm -3:00pm Panels (Session 1) Panels (Session 2) Panels (Session 3)

3:00pm -3:30pm Afternoon tea Afternoon tea Afternoon tea

3:30pm -5:00pm Panels (Session 2) Panels (Session 3)

Closing OCIS Plenary Address by Prof. Anne Orford

(Advanced Engineering building)

5:00pm -6:00pm

Reception honouring early-career scholars

7:00pm -10:00pm

Conference dinner(Customs House)

Workshops

See the Conference Overview p.3 for tea breaks Back to top

Monday 4th to Wednesday 6th of July 2016

Mon

day,

Ses

sion

11:

30pm

-3:0

0pm

4

Panel 1

HYBRIDITY 2.0 DEVELOPING THE CONCEPTUAL AND ANALYTICAL UTILITY OF

‘HYBRIDITY’ FOR THE STUDY AND PRACTICE OF

PEACE FORMATION

Panel 3

DESPERATE AND STATELESS

Panel 2

ROUNDTABLE: “THE BIG ISSUES” IN

INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS - AN AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL

OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS EDITORIAL BOARD

Panel 4

POLITICAL ECONOMY OF GLOBAL HEALTH

PAPER 1

“Hybridity: Empiricism, Normativity and Instrumentalisation”

Dr Anne BrownRMIT University

PAPER 2

“Hybridisation of peace, security and justice: Cases from West Africa and Oceania”

Dr Volker BoegeUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Inside and Out: Violence, Spatiality and Power in a Hybrid Political Order”

Dr Damian GrenfellRMIT University

PAPER 4

“Hybrid forms of peace and an ontology of relationships: The case for relational peace formation”

Dr Charles HuntRMIT University

CHAIR

Dr Lee WilsonUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“Security Bound”

Associate Prof. Bruce BuchanGriffith University

PAPER 2

“Thinking politics relationally: ‘states of (in)security’ and social suffering”

Dr Heloise WeberUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Refugee solutions and stateless development: a critique of Betts and Collier”

Dr Samid SulimanGriffith University

PAPER 4

“Walls as ‘more-than-human’ spaces: Why do we need a posthuman conversation in border studies?”

Ms Umut OzgucUniversity of New South Wales

CHAIR

Dr Elizabeth StrakoschUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“The Political Economy of Denialism in Global Health”

Dr Owain WilliamsUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“Between global health gover-nance and medical diplomacy in the global South: A Radio-graphy of China and Cuba’s health assistance programs”

Dr Lai-Ha ChanUniversity of Technology, Sydney

Dr Daniel BiroUniversity of South Australia

PAPER 3

“Patenting Global Public Goods: The Case of India’s HIV Generic Drugs”

Dr Catherine Yuk-Ping LoCity University of Hong Kong

PAPER 4

“Investor-State Dispute Settle-ment mechanism: The Trojan Horse of the Trans- Pacific Partnership and its Implications for Public Health”

Mr Muhammad Zaheer AbbasQueensland University of Technology

CHAIR

Associate Prof. Wesley WidmaierGriffith University

DISCUSSANT

Associate Prof. Wesley WidmaierGriffith University

PARTICIPANT 1

Prof. Nick BisleyLa Trobe University

PARTICIPANT 2

Ms Melissa Conley TylerAustralian Institute of International Affairs

PARTICIPANT 3

Associate Prof.Laura Shepherd

University of New South Wales

CHAIR

Prof. Jason SharmanGriffith University

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5 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

Panel 6

THE GLOBAL SOUTH IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY: AN ALTERNATIVE ORDER IN THE 21ST CENTURY?

Panel 8

GLOBAL LGBTQI AND GENDER POLITICS

Panel 7

POLITICS OF AID DEVELOPMENT

Panel 9

AUSTRALIAN FOREIGN POLICY

PAPER 1

“The BRICS and the G20: Constructing a New Consensus”

Dr Tom ChodorUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“The BRICS New Development Bank: A Counter-Hegemonic Challenge?”

Dr Adrian BazbauersUniversity of Canberra

PAPER 3

“The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: Contributing to an Alternative Order for the 21st Century?”

Dr Susan EngelUniversity of Wollongong

PAPER 4

“Building on the BRICS: The Role of Rising Powers in Global Energy and Climate Governance”

Prof. Marc WilliamsUniversity of New South Wales

Dr Christian DownieUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 1

“Queer Subjects and Australian Refugee Law: An exercise in boundary policing and ventriloquism”

Mr Josh PallasUniversity of Wollongong

PAPER 2

“The ‘Pinkwashing’ of Australia’s Asylum Policy”

Jaz DawsonUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 3

“Rule of Law reform Programming: Gender mainstreaming in the Somali Context”

Dr Roisin BurkeUniversity of Canterbury

PAPER 4

“Engendering trust: Gender mainstreaming in the Tongan Police”

Ms Hannah GordonUniversity of Otago

PAPER 1

“A Comparison of Canadian and Australian Defence and Security Relations with China”

Dr Craig SnyderDeakin University

PAPER 2

“Lobbying for the Alliance: Australian Lobbying and the US Congress”

Prof. Alan TidwellGeorgetown University

PAPER 3

“Australia and the South China Sea disputes: A middle power’s dilemma or opportu-nity?”

Dr Jian ZhangUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 4

“Australian Public opinion and defence: The US security alliance”

Dr Danielle ChubbDeakin University

PAPER 1

“How to end the race to the bottom in textile manufac-turing in the Philippines: Applying new growth theory via corporate social respon-sibility programs”

Mr Eric MastersGriffith University

PAPER 2

“The Role of ‘Salience Augmentation’ in Driving Aid Policy Change”

Mr Benjamin DayAustralian National University

PAPER 3

“Contextualisation of a development discourse: a case study of an NGO in Bangladesh”

Dr Jae Eun NohUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 4

“Imperial agents or development partners: The role of NGOs at the local level in Sri Lanka”

Dr Indi AkurugodaUniversity of Ruhuna

Panel 5

ATROCITIES PREVENTION AND THE ASIA PACIFIC

PAPER 1

“Looking Back to Forge Ahead: Chinese Views on Safeguarding Syria”

Dr Sarah TeittUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“Regionalizing Protection: AU and ASEAN responses to Mass Atrocity Crimes against Internally Displaced Persons”

Dr Phil OrchardUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“R2P in East Asia: the Next Decade”

Prof. Alex BellamyUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 4

“Atrocity Prevention in the context of Democratic Transition in Myanmar”

Dr Noel MoradaUniversity of Queensland

CHAIR

Dr Sarah TeittUniversity of Queensland

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Mon

day,

Ses

sion

23:

30pm

-5:0

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6

Panel 1

ROUNDTABLE: AFTER THE PARIS AGREEMENT ON

CLIMATE CHANGE: INTER-NATIONAL POLITICS OF THE ANTHROPOCENE

Panel 3

GLOBAL INDIGENOUS POLITICS

Panel 2

EARLY MODERN INTERNATIONAL

THOUGHT

Panel 4

HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE,

DIPLOMACY AND COMPETITION IN THE

ASIA-PACIFIC

PAPER 1

“Planet politics: A manifesto from the end of IR”

Dr Anthony BurkeUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 2

“Ecology, the Anthropocene and the politics of security”

Associate Professor Matt McDonald

University of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Expanding personhood in international law: The need for cetaceous rights and defining crimes against biodiversity”

Dr Stephanie FishelUniversity of Alabama

PAPER 4

“Democracy in the Anthropocene”

Professor Robyn EckersleyUniversity of Melbourne

DISCUSSANT

Dr Anthony BurkeUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 1

“Counselling little brother: Aboriginal Australia as an International System”

Dr Morgan BriggUniversity of Queensland

Adjunct Associate Professor Mary Graham,

University of Queensland

Dr Martin WeberUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“Exceptionalised War in ‘Our Story’ at the Australian War Memorial and Representation of Indigenous War Experience”

Ms Lisa Barritt-EylesUniversity of Newcastle

PAPER 3

“Ethnopolitics in Ecuador: Collective rights, Inter-American Constitutionalism and the good living (sumak kawsay)”

Mr Carlos Gallegos-AndaAustralian National University

PAPER 1

“Politics, Emotions, and the Mind/Body Problem in the Writings of Princess Elisabeth of Bohemia”

Professor Renee JefferyGriffith University

PAPER 2

“Self-interest and the Distant Vulnerable: Insights from Hobbes, Pufendorf, and Leibniz”

Dr Luke GlanvilleAustralian National University

PAPER 3

“‘Within the orbit of this life’: Natural law in International Relations”

Associate Professor Richard Devetak

University of Queensland

PAPER 4

“Chartered companies and European expansion, 1600-1900”

Professor Jason SharmanGriffith University

Associate ProfessorAndrew Phillips

University of Queensland

CHAIR

Dr Ryan WalterUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“The Promise and the Perils of Humanitarian Diplomacy”

Associate Prof. Jacinta O’HaganUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“Humanitarian assistance and competition for major power status in the Asia-Pacific”

Mr Richard Salmons Australian National University

PAPER 3

“Disaster Diplomacy and the Japanese Self Defense Force”

Ms Kate StevensonUniversity of Tokyo

PAPER 4

“Internalizing R2P: Address-ing the challenge of state security practices and the micro-dynamics of armed conflict”

Dr Cecilia JacobAustralian National University

CHAIR

Associate Professor Jacinta O’Hagan

University of Queensland

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7 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

Panel 6

EDUCATION, GLOBALISATION,

LEADERSHIP

Panel 8

GENDER AND LGBTQI RIGHTS

Panel 7

COSMOPOLITAN EXTRATERRITORIALITY

PAPER 1

“Educational Sovereignty in Indonesia-US Bilateral Relationship”

Dr Anita AbbottCharisma University

PAPER 2

“Internships as practical edu-cation in international affairs”

Ms Melissa Conley-TylerAustralian Institute of

International Affairs

PAPER 3

“The politics of the globali-sation of sports: The rise of non-western nations”

Dr Amit GuptaUnited States Air Force

Air War College

PAPER 1

“Queer wars: the global polarization around gay rights”

Mr Dennis AltmanLa Trobe University

Dr Jonathan SymonsMacquarie University

PAPER 2

“Diaspora feminism and the question of women’s rights in Iran”

Ms Sanaz NasirpourUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 3

“International Theory and LGBTQ rights”

Associate Professor Anthony Langlois

Flinders University

PAPER 4

“Ambivalence of women’s empowerment in post-conflict reconstruction in Nepal”

Mr Prakash PaudelUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“Cosmopolitan extraterritoriality”

Dr Richard ShapcottUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“Exporting harmful people: Analyzing the domestic motivation, enactment and application of Australia’s Extraterritorial Child sex tourism laws”

Dr Melissa CurleyUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Extraterritorial Jurisdiction and the Cosmopolitan State”

Dr Danielle Ireland-Piper Bond University

CHAIR

Dr Richard ShapcottUniversity of Queensland

Panel 9

RE-THINKING CONFLICT, PEACE AND SECURITY IN IR: PERSPECTIVES FROM SOUTH ASIA

PAPER 1

“Locating the ‘international’ in feminist IR: A postcolonial critique from South Asia”

Dr Swati ParasharMonash University

PAPER 2

“Security and connectivity: The dread frontier and India’s Northeast in India’s LEP”

Dr Sinderpal SinghNational University of Singapore

PAPER 3

“Religion and securitisation: Perspectives from South Asia”

Dr Monika Barthwal DattaUniversity of New South Wales

Dr Shweta Singh South Asian University

PAPER 4

“Empire and martial race war: Imperial necessity and the foundation myths of the Pakistan Army”

Dr Mark BriskeyCurtin University

CHAIRDr Priya Chacko

University of Adelaide

Panel 5

ASIA PACIFIC IR

PAPER 1

“Assessing Regional Cooperation: ASEAN States, Migrant Worker Rights and Norms Socialization in Southeast Asia”

Mr Ruji AuethavornpipatAustralian National University

PAPER 2

“A robust cosmopolitan partnership between Australia-ASEAN”

Ms Lunyka Adelina PertiwiGajah Mada University

PAPER 3

“Northeast Asia Regional Integration: One Step Forward and Two Steps Back?”

Mr Tony LiuNational Chung Hsing University /

Australian Catholic University

PAPER 4

“A role theoretical analysis of ‘Rising Korea’”

Mr Patrick FlammUniversity of Auckland

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8

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Conference dinnerMonday 4th of July, 7pm -10pm

There are several types of transportation available within Brisbane to help you get to the conference dinner venue.

It is a scenic cruise on the CityCat Ferry from the University of Queensland’s UQ St Lucia Ferry terminal to Customs House. If you prefer other types of transportation or are heading to the conference dinner from another location you can visit the TRANSLink website to explore all of your options.

Dress code: Smart Business Attire

The OCIS 2016 conference dinner will be held Monday, July 4th at 7:00pm to 10pm at Customs House. To encourage maximum attendance from postgraduate students, junior academics, and established scholars, dinner is complimentary for all guests who registered to attend on the registration form.

Tues

day,

Ses

sion

19:

00am

-10:

30am

9 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

Panel 1

UNDERSTANDING TERRORISM

Panel 3

ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL

POLITICAL ECONOMY

Panel 2

REFUGEES, SOCIALINCLUSION AND THE

LEGACIES OF VIO-LENCE IN AUSTRALIA

Panel 4

THE G20, THE UN,AND GLOBAL GOVERNANCE

PAPER 1

“Open-source Intelligence and the War on Terror: An under-utilized asset in an information age?”

Dr Daniel BaldinoUniversity of Notre Dame

PAPER 2

“Contesting Legitimacy, Contesting History: Terrorist Organisations and Legitimacy Seeking Behaviours”

Ms. Kelly Wade-JohnsonUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“The Islamic State (IS) in Indonesia”

Dr Sukawarsini DjelantikParahyangan Catholic University

PAPER 4

“Boko Haram in the Insurgency Triangle - Religion, Region, Realpolitik and the Rhetoric of Terror in Practice”

Mr Wisdom IyekekpoloGriffith University

PAPER 1

Developmental Mindset: The Revival of Financial Activism in South Korea”

Dr Elizabeth Thurbon University of New South Wales

PAPER 2

“Why trade deficits are good for growth and why this is so little known

Associate Professor Bill DunnUniversity of Sydney

PAPER 3

“A Pacific Spring? Comparing the context of the Arab Spring with modern-day Pasifika”

Mr Aiden CraneyLa Trobe University

PAPER 4

“The Systemic Disintegration of Mubarak’s Neo-liberal Authoritarianism”

Mr Gijs VerbossenLa Trobe University

PAPER 1 “Child Refugees and the Legacy of Violence: Dis-ruption, Connectivity and Inclusion”

Ms Jessica StrojaGriffith University

PAPER 2

“Bearing Witness to Injus-tice: Latin America, Refu-gees and Social Inclusion in Australia”

Dr Robert MasonGriffith University

PAPER 3

“Innocent and Worthy: Representation of Childhood during the Pacific Solution”

Ms Sherry McGahanGriffith University

PAPER 4

“Control orders and the Arab/Muslim ‘Other’ in Australian racial neoliberalism”

Mr Cameron SmithMacquarie University

CHAIRDr Phil Orchard

University of Queensland

PAPER 1

“1 in 20: The G20, middle powers and global governance reform”

Dr Christian DownieUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 2

“The B20 Experience during Australia’s G20 Presidency”

Mr Dean ColdicottDeakin University

PAPER 3

“G20 Outreach during Australia’s Presidency”

Dr Steven SlaughterDeakin University

PAPER 4

“A historical analysis of the UN DPI (Department of Pub-lic Information)’s 70 years and its future strategy: From public information to public engagement”

Ms Bora YoonEwha Womans University

Professor Kisuk ChoEwha Womans University

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10

Panel 6

INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE VOICE

Panel 8

GENDERED INTERVENTIONS: INTERROGATING THE

METHODS AND PRACTICES OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES THROUGH A GENDER LENS

Panel 7

US FOREIGN POLICY AND NEW SECURITY

CHALLENGES

Panel 9

ROUNDTABLE: THE GLOBALIZATION OF

INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY

PAPER 1

“Torture Testimonies: Restoring voice to detainees in the war on terror”

Dr Cynthia BanhamAustralian National University

PAPER 2

“Genre and the Writing of Human Rights”

Dr Benjamin AuthersUniversity of Canberra

PAPER 3

“Freedom of speech, national security, and silencing”

Professor Katharine GelberUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 4

“The Role of the trans-national advocacy network in advancing the rights of older persons”

Dr Annie HerroUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 1

“Brown Women are the Future: Gendered Representations in and of Islamic Banking After the Global Financial Crisis”

Dr Penny GriffinUniversity of New South Wales

Dr Maryam Khalid, Macquarie University

PAPER 2

“Research as Gendered Inter-vention: Feminist Research Ethics and the Self in the Research Encounter”

Associate Prof. Laura ShepherdUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 3

“Climate Change Adaptation: a New Thematic Approach for Peacekeeping”

Mr Shahedul Akber khanUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 4

“Hegemonic Masculinity and the Rise of a New Local Political and Economic Elite in Post-Conflict Aceh, Indonesia”

Ms Sait Abdulah Murdoch University

Dr Maryam Khalid, Macquarie University

PAPER 1

“Incremental Change through Ambiguity: Responsibility to protect and U.S. Foreign Policy”

Mr Morgan ReesGriffith University

PAPER 2

“A Theoretical approach to Security and Propaganda in Russia and Turkey”

Associate Prof. Matthew SussexAustralian National University

Mr Wayne McLean, Australian National University

PAPER 3

“Middle Powers at War”

Dr Andrew CarrAustralian National University

PAPER 4

“Has the use of American land power since 9/11 achieved ‘decisive victory’?”

Dr Miles KittsUniversity of Queensland

PARTICIPANT 1

Professor Ian ClarkUniversity of Queensland

PARTICIPANT 2

Dr Heather RaeUniversity of Queensland

PARTICIPANT 3

Associate Professor Jacinta O’Hagan

University of Queensland

PARTICIPANT 4

Professor Ian HallGriffith University

CHAIR

Professor Tim Dunne University of Queensland

CHAIR

Dr Cynthia BanhamAustralian National University

Panel 5

THE BRICS AND INTERNATIONAL

POLITICS

PAPER 1

“Civilizational aspects in IR: The Contemporary China-India Relations”

Mr Ravi Dutt BajpaiDeakin University

PAPER 2

“New Institutions and New Rules? China’s Ambition in Global Development Governance”

Dr Lai-Ha ChanUniversity of Technology, Sydney

PAPER 3

“Russia and One Belt One Road: Bandwagoning or continentalism?”

Mr Nikolay MurashkinUniversity of Cambridge

PAPER 4

“Nepal between China and India: A Yam between two Boulders?”

Mr Bikram TimilsinaUniversity of Queensland

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11 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

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OCIS Keynote AddressTuesday 5th of July, 11:00am-12:30pm

He is the author, co-author, editor and co-editor of about 40 books, edited volumes or monographs and over 100 articles or book chapters.

Recent books include:

Anglo-America and Its Discontents: Civilizational Identities beyond West and East (Routledge, 2012).

Sinicization and the Rise of China: Civilizational Processes beyond East and West (Routledge, 2012).

Civilizations in World Politics: Plural and Pluralist Perspectives (Routledge, 2010).

Beyond Paradigms: Analytic Eclecticism in World Politics (Palgrave, 2010), with Rudra Sil. European Identity (Cambridge University Press, 2009), co-edited with Jeffrey T. Checkel.

Rethinking Japanese Security (Routledge, 2008). Anti-Americanisms in World Politics, co-edited with Robert O. Keohane (Cornell University Press, 2007).

Religion in an Expanding Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2006), co-edited with Timothy A. Byrnes.

Beyond Japan: East Asian Regionalism (Cornell University Press, 2006), co-edited with Takashi Shiraishi.

A World of Regions: Asia and Europe in the American Imperium

(Cornell University Press, 2005).

Rethinking Security in East Asia: Identity, Power, and Efficiency (Stanford University Press, 2004), co-edited with Allen Carlson and J.J. Suh. Professor Katzenstein served as President of the American Political Science Association (2008-09). He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Science in 1987 and the American Philosophical Society in 2009. He was the recipient of the 1974 Helen Dwight Reid Award of the American Political Science Association for the best dissertation in international relations; of the American Political Science Association’s 1986 Woodrow Wilson prize for the best book published in the United States on international affairs; and, together with Nobuo Okawara, of the 1993 Masayoshi Ohira Memorial Prize. One of his edited volumes, The Culture of National Security, was selected by Choice magazine as one of the top ten books in international relations in 1997. Since joining the Cornell Government Department in 1973 Professor Katzenstein has chaired or been a member of more than one hundred dissertation committees. He received Cornell’s College of Arts and Science Stephen and Margery Russell Distinguished Teaching Award in 1993, and, in recognition of sustained and distinguished undergraduate teaching, was made one of Cornell University’s Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellows in 2004. Professor Katzenstein is one of the most influential scholars of his generation, and we very much look forward to welcoming him to the University of Queensland and to the OCIS community.

We are very excited to announce that Professor Peter J. Katzenstein will deliver the OCIS Keynote Address.

Professor Katzenstein is Walter S. Carpenter, Jr. Professor of International Studies at Cornell University. His research and teaching lie at the intersection of the fields of international relations and comparative politics. Professor Katzenstein’s work addresses issues of political economy, security, and culture in world politics. His current research interests focus on the politics of civilizations; on questions of public diplomacy, law, religion, and popular culture; regionalism in world politics; and German politics.

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Panel 1

ROUNDTABLE: THE ETHICS OF SCHOLAR-SHIP IN A CHANGING REGION: STUDYING AND TEACHING THE

ASIA-PACIFIC

Panel 3

CRITICAL THEORY -CRITICAL FEMINISM:

RECOGNITION & EMOTIONS IN

WORLD POLITICS

Panel 2

ROUNDTABLE: GLOBAL CLIMATE POLITICS AFTER

PARIS

Panel 4

THE RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT

PARTICIPANT 1

Dr Mathew DaviesAustralian National University

PARTICIPANT 2

Professor Andrew O’NeilGriffith University

PARTICIPANT 3

Dr Catherine JonesWarwick University

CHAIR

Associate Prof. Sara DaviesGriffith University

PARTICIPANT 1

Associate Prof. Peter ChristoffUniversity of Melbourne

PARTICIPANT 2

Professor Robyn EckersleyUniversity of Melbourne

PARTICIPANT 3

Dr Ben ParrUniversity of Melbourne

CHAIR

Associate Prof. Matt McDonaldUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“A Normative Reconstruction of Social Freedom in the Global Public Sphere

Dr Shannon BrincatGriffith University

PAPER 2

“Sexing the Disabled Veteran: Maimed Bodies, Masculinity and Homona-tional Militarism “

Ms Federica CasoUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Recognition, Twitter and Transformative Democracy”

Dr Constance DuncombeUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 4

“Emotions and Recognition in World Politics”

Dr Emma HutchisonDr Constance Duncombe

Professor Roland BleikerUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“Pragmatic constructivist ethics and the international response to the humanitarian crisis in Syria”

Professor Jason RalphUniversity of Leeds and the University

of Queensland

PAPER 2

“France and the Responsibility to Protect”

Dr Eglantine StauntonUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Rhetorically Excluded: The AU’s (Lacking) Role in Deciding to Use Force in Libya”

Dr Vickie FraterUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 4

“Responsibility protecting Syrians: Reconciling R2P with the chemical weapons taboo”

Dr Tim AistropeUniversity of Queensland

CHAIR

Dr Phil OrchardUniversity of Queensland

12

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Panel 6

NEW APPROACHES TO INDIA’S

FOREIGN POLICY

Panel 8

THE POLITICS OF DEVELOPMENT

Panel 7

GLOBAL LAW

Panel 9

GENDER, PROTEC-TION, PEACE AND

SECURITY

PAPER 1

“India and the Liberal Global Order: Multilateralism, Exceptionalism, and Multialignment”

Professor Ian HallGriffith University

PAPER 2

“Indian Think Tanks and their role in informing and influencing national security/strategic policy agenda in India”

Ms Stuti BhatnagarUniversity of Adelaide

PAPER 3

“Desecuritising India’s Nuclear Power Status”

Dr Monika Barthwal-DattaUniversity of New South Wales

Dr William Clapton

University of NSW

PAPER 4

“Indian Military Diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific”

Mr Jayant SinghNational University of Singapore

CHAIR

Dr Priya ChackoUniversity of Adelaide

PAPER 1

“Drivers of Developmental Change: Understanding the development context in Pacific island countries”

Mr Aiden CraneyLa Trobe University

Dr Julien Barbara,

Australian National University, Associate

Professor Nicole Haley, Australian Na-tional University

PAPER 2

“Civilizational legacies and Chi-na’s engagement in development in Africa”

Mr George KaravasUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“The rural developmental state”Dr Diane Colman

Western Sydney University

PAPER 4

“National food security through a ‘dual mandate’ global trade and investment strategy: a GCC case study”

Associate Professor Leanne Piggott

The University of SydneyMr Michael Katz

The University of Sydney

PAPER 5

“The Paradox of Juridicial Reforms and Pakistani Women’s Property Rights”

Ms Humaira ShafiUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“The dangers of fetishizing peacebuilding: Lessons from conflicts in the Pacific””

Dr Nicole GeorgeUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“War heroes, traitors & thugs: Masculinities and hybrid peace in South Sudan”

Dr David DuriesmithUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 3

“Gender Dimensions of R2P: A Feminist Lens on Institutional Design””.

Ms Kavitha SuthananthirarajUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 4

“Mapping the impact of sexual and gender based violence by interveners on peacebuilding”

Dr Anne PowlesCentre for Defence and Security

Studies, Massey University

CHAIR

Dr Nicole GeorgeUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“Order and the International Criminal Court”

Dr Matt KillingsworthUniversity of Tasmania

PAPER 2

“Jurisdiction Issues in Prosecution and Adjudica-tion of Transnational Cyber Crimes”

Mrs Riaz Shamreeza Queensland University of

Technology

PAPER 3

“Soft Law and the Laws of War”

Associate Professor Sarah Percy

University of Queensland

PAPER 4

“The disconnect between the Laws of War and how they are displayed in modern popular media”

Mr Brian MacNamaraUniversity of Queensland

Panel 5

INTERNATIONAL POLITICS OF THE

PACIFIC

PAPER 1

“Pacific Peoples and the Scramble for Antarctica”

Ms Valerie BichardUniversity of Canberra

Mr Russell Kerr, Australian National University

PAPER 2

“The Globalisation of Justice and Responses to Serious Offending Within Fiji”

Mr John WhiteheadMonash University

PAPER 3

“The Ontology of Regional Order: Resilience in the Western Pacific”

Mr Zac RogersFlinders University

PAPER 4

“Fallacy of ranking hu-manity: Indexology and the subalternization of Pacific peoples”

Professor Steven RatuvaUniversity of Canterbury

13 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

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Tues

day,

Ses

sion

33:

30pm

-5:0

0pm

Panel 1

ROUNDTABLE: HOW TO GET PUBLISHED AS

A YOUNG SCHOLAR, AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL

OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS/TAYLOR

& FRANCIS

Panel 3

INTERNATIONAL THEORY

Panel 2

ROUNDTABLE: CULTUR-AL DIVERSITY AND

INTERNATIONAL OR-DER

Panel 4

IMPLEMENTING THE RESPONSIBILITY TO

PROTECT: PROGRESS AND PITFALLS

PARTICIPANT 1

Ms Melissa Conley TylerAustralian Institute of International Affairs

PARTICIPANT 2

Mr Joshua PittTaylor & Francis

PARTICIPANT 3

Professor Nick BisleyLa Trobe University

PAPER 1

“Whither Non-western IR”

Mr Ravi Dutt BajpaiDeakin University

PAPER 2

“Hannah Arendt and Moder-nity: A Democratic Transi-tion”

Ms Rebecca DewUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“An opening toward the possible: Henri Lefebvre’s critique of formal politics”

Ari JerremsMonash University

PAPER 4

“Bridge over Troubled Water? Emancipation and Social Justice

Mr Sondre LindahlUniversity of Otago

PAPER 1

Dr Cynthia BanhamAustralian National University

PAPER 2

Professor Evelyn GohAustralian National University

PAPER 3

Professor Toni ErskineUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 4

Dr Emma HutchisonUniversity of Queensland

CHAIR

Professor Christian Reus-SmitUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“The Responsibility to Protect Regime: Contestation and Consolidation”

Dr Phil OrchardUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“Collective security and the collective responsibility to protect”

Dr Luke GlanvilleAustralian National University

PAPER 3

“State Identity and the Inter-pretation of Norms: The Case of Russia and the Responsi-bility to Protect Doctrine”

Dr Heather RaeUniversity of Queensland

Dr Phil Orchard University of Queensland

PAPER 4

“Understanding Responsibility to Protect as a Composite Norm”

Professor Brian JobUniversity of British Columbia

Dr Anastasia ShesterininaYale University

CHAIR

Dr Luke GlanvilleAustralian National University

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Panel 6

GLOBAL GOVERNANCE

Panel 8

THE NEW POLITICS OF SECURITY AND

TERRITORIALITY

Panel 7

INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY

Panel 9

PREVENTING CONFLICT, SECURING THE PEACE IN

SOUTH-EAST ASIA: GENDERED PERSPECTIVES

PAPER 1

“The Politics of Implementing the Regional Economic Proposal (REP) for UN Security Council Reform”

Dr Richard HartwigTexas A&M University-Kingsville

PAPER 2

“Feasible structural change for the UN Security Council?”

Professor John LangmoreUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 3

“Power and Purpose: What shaped the United Nations policy towards post-war Sri Lanka?”

Ms Sandya GunasekaraGriffith University

PAPER 4

The Role of the Chair in Infor-mal International Organiza-tions: The Case of the G20 and Australia’s presidency”

Dr Christian DownieUniversity of New South Wales

Dr Larry CrumpGriffith University

PAPER 1

“Legitimacy Claims from the Grey Zone: The Legitimation of Kurdish Fighters in Syria and Iraq”

Dr Vickie FraterUniversity of Queensland

Ms Kelly Wade-JohnsonUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“Silencing ‘Territoriality’ to the name territory: Indige-nous challenge to the inter-national system of state”

Dr Joseph HongohUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“The Strategic Importance of Tribes: Failed theory or work in practice?“

Dr Gavin MountUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 4

“State Repression, Foreign Intervention, and the Self-fulfilling prophecy of Radical Islam”

Dr Tristan DunningUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“The Politics of Counting: Analyzing Patterns of Report-ing Sexual and Gender-Based Violence in Conflict”

Professor Jacqui TrueMonash University

Associate Professor Sara DaviesGriffith University

PAPER 2

“‘Successful’ peace processes and the invisibility of conflict-related sexual and gender-based violence”

Ms Maria TanyagMonash University

PAPER 3

“Banking on women: Micro-finance in the liberal peace”

Ms Melissa JohnstoneMurdoch University

PAPER 4

“From liberal to post-liberal peace: what’s gender got to do with it?”

Dr Sarah SmithSwinburne University

CHAIR

Associate Professor Susan Harris-Rimmer

Griffith University

DISCUSSANT

Associate Prof. Mathew DaviesAustralian National University

PAPER 1

“Human rights champion orconflicted power/ Condition-ality and the European Union’s free trade agreement negotiations

Mr Lachlan McKenzieUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 2

“Hollywood, Silicon Valley and TRIPS-plus copyright standard setting by the United States: an economic nationalist perspec-tive”

Mr Madison CartwrightUniversity of Sydney

PAPER 3

“Susan Strange and Global Governance?”

Professor Susan SellAustralian National University

PAPER 4

“Monetary Pragmatism, Fast and Slow - or the Taylor Rule in Practice”

Dr Wesley WidmaierGriffith University

Panel 5

EAST ASIA AND PEACE OPERATIONS

PAPER 1

“South East Asian Powers and contributions to Peace Operations”

Dr Catherine JonesUniversity of Warwick

PAPER 2

“Responsible Power and Duties Beyond Borders: New Trends in China’s Approach to Civil Wars and Humanitarian Crises”

Dr Sarah TeittUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Japanese Overseas Mission in the New Era of Collective Self-Defence”

Associate Prof. Garren Mulloy Daito Bunka University, Japan

PAPER 4

“They don’t practice ‘Good Morning Sir!’ : Policing and police-building discourses in Solomon Islands”

Mr Daniel McAvoyDeakin University

CHAIR

Dr Catherine JonesUniversity of Warwick

DISCUSSANT

Dr Sara DaviesGriffith University

15 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

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16

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Reception honouring early-career scholarsSponsored by the Australian Institute of International Affairs (AIIA)

Tuesday 5th of July, 5:00pm -6:00pm

OCIS will be hosting a reception on Tuesday 05 July to honour first books by early-career scholars. This event will showcase the books of first-time authors who will be attending the conference. All conference participants are welcome to attend the reception to see the work of these authors.

Wed

nesd

ay, S

essi

on 1

9:00

am-1

0:30

am

Panel 1

ROUNDTABLE: WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY

POST-2015: CONCEPTS, CRITICISMS AND

CHALLENGES

Panel 3

CIVIL SOCIETY AND TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE IN THE

ASIA-PACIFIC AND AFRICAN CONTEXTS

Panel 2

ROUNDTABLE:THE INDIAN OCEAN AND

WESTERN PACIFIC: MARITIME CHALLENGES, OPPORTUNITIES, AND

POLICIES

Panel 4

REFORMING GLOBAL HEALTH

GOVERNANCE INSTITUTIONS

PARTICIPANT 1

Associate Professor Laura Shepherd

University of New South Wales

PARTICIPANT 2

Dr Nicole GeorgeUniversity of Queensland

PARTICIPANT 3

Dr Katrina Lee-KooMonash University

PARTICIPANT 4

Professor Jacqui TrueMonash University

CHAIR

Associate Professor Laura Shepherd

University of New South Wales

PAPER 1

“Religion and Secularism in Civil Society Approaches to Transitional Justice in the Asia-Pacific”

Dr Lia KentAustralian National University

Dr Joanne Wallis, Australian National University

Professor Renee JefferyGriffith University

PAPER 2

“Making Amends in Contexts of Profound Asymmetries in Power: Corporate Responses to Sexual Violence in the PNG Mining Industry”

Dr Sinclair DinnenAustralian National University

Dr Kylie McKennaAustralian National University

PAPER 3

“Youth Contribution to Truth and Reconciliation in the Solomon Islands”

Ms Caitlin MollicaGriffith University

PAPER 4

“The Politics of Transitional Jus-tice: The African Experience”

Professor Helen WareUniversity of New England

CHAIR

Professor Renee JefferyGriffith University

PAPER 1

Professor Howard HenselUnited States Air Force Air War College

PAPER 2

Dr Yves-Heng LimFugen Catholic University

PAPER 3

Dr Amit GuptaUnited States Air Force Air War College

PARTICIPANT 4

Wg Cdr Carol J. AbrahamNew Zealand Defence Staff

CHAIR

Professor Howard HenselUnited States Air Force Air War College

PAPER 1

“The right to health’s location in the post-2015 sustainable Development Goals - an ad-vance for health and human rights or a backward step?”

Dr Clare BrolanUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“The WHO: and embattled global health defender or a bureaucratic disaster?”

Associate Professor Adam Kamradt-Scott

University of Sydney

PAPER 3

“Global Health Governance as International Society”

Dr Jeremy YoudeAustralian National University

PAPER 4

“Profiteering from health security”

Dr Owain WilliamsUniversity of Queensland

CHAIR

Professor Belinda BennettQueensland University of Technology

DISCUSSANT

Professor Belinda BennettQueensland University of Technology

17 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

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Panel 6

CHANGING FORMS OF DEMOCRACY

Panel 8

US-CHINA RELATIONS

Panel 7

CLIMATE CHANGE AND THE

ENVIRONMENT

Panel 9

PRIVATE SECURITY IN THE PACIFIC REGION

PAPER 1

“Parochializing Democrati-zation through Deliberation: A Postcolonial Perspective on Filling the Democratic Deficit”

Mr Hamza Bin JehangirUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 2

“Problematic Publics: How do transnational publics form to address global problems?”

Dr Daniel BrayLa Trobe University

Dr Steven SlaughterDeakin University

PAPER 3

“The Success of Civil E-Participation and E-voting: Lessons from Estonia”

Ms Jiyoung ParkEwha Womans University

Professor Kisuk ChoEwha Womans University

Ms. Hwajung KimEwha Womans University

PAPER 4

“Nationalism entrepre-neurship: towards an actor centred theory of nationalism”

Mr Nicholas BromfieldThe University of Sydney

PAPER 1

“A Non-Zero-Sum Game with A ‘Foreign’ Stakeholder: Unpacking the “coexistence” between China and the U.S.-led liberal order, and re-imagining their puzzling compatibility”

Ms Aoxi TianAustralian National University

PAPER 2

“China’s new ‘ecological civilization’ discourse and what it means for the future of Chinese climate policy and climate diplomacy”

Dr Ben ParrUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 3

“A Multi-Causal Analysis of Beijing’s Engagement with US Internet Governance Hegemony”

Mr Tristan GallowayDeakin University

PAPER 4

“United States’ Withdrawal from the Philippines, and Sino-Philippine Disputes as the South China Sea”

Dr Daniel Wei Boon ChuaNanyang Technological University

PAPER 1

“The Dynamics of Private Security Companies in Post-Conflict Solomon Islands”

Dr Anna PowlesMassey University

PAPER 2

“Shadows of the State: Private Security Companies in Timor Leste”

Mr Jose Sousa-SantosVictoria University

PAPER 3

“Security Governance in Melanesia - the inexorable rise of private security in Papua New Guinea”

Dr Sinclair DinnenAustralian National University

PAPER 4

“The private military and security industry and the construction of a new normative environment”

Ms Rebecca ShawUniversity of Queensland

CHAIR

Dr Sinclair DinnenAustralian National University

PAPER 1

“The Changing Climate of International Relations”

Mr Russell KerrAustralian National University

PAPER 2

“The Science of ‘Long-Term Change’ as Framing ClimateAction: How scientific discourses have constrained and enabled adaptation and mitigation strategies in the Paris Agreement”

Ms Ashleigh CroucherUniversity of Queensland

Dr Shannon BrincatGriffith University

Sophie PascoeUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 3

“The human security consequences of ENSO in a climate changed world”

Dr Michael ThomasUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 4

“Transnational socio-envi-ronmental movements in Asian countries: Who wins and loses?”

Mr Sokphea YoungUniversity of Melbourne

Panel 5

CRITICAL ENGAGEMENT

WITH IR THEORY

PAPER 1

“Masculinist protection and middle powers: reclaiming the sovereign state and security”

Dr Christine AgiusSwinburne University

PAPER 2

“Cosmopolitanism Shaped not Found”

Dr Richard ShapcottUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“International Society ‘Cons- titutionalism’, Structural-Materialist ‘Republicanism’, and the Problem of U.S. Polit-ical Ideology: The Approaches of Christian Reus-Smit and Daniel Deudney reconsidered”

Mr Eliot LynchUniversity of Otago

PAPER 4

“Firm Foundations? Moral Foundations in a Pluralist International Society”

Mr Stephen McGuinnessUniversity of New South Wales

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Wed

nesd

ay, S

essi

on 2

11:0

0am

-12:

30pm

Panel 1

ROUNDTABLE: GLOBAL POLITICS

WITHOUT IGNORANCE

Panel 3

RETHINKING THE LIBERAL CANON:

LOCKE, BENTHAM, RICARDO

Panel 2

CRITICAL APPROACHES TO

SOVEREIGNTY ANDSECURITY

Panel 4

MILITARY INVOLVEMENT IN HUMANITARIAN ACTION

- PRACTICAL AND THEORETICAL IMPLICATION

FOR HUMANITARIAN RESPONDERS

PAPER 1

“John Locke and International Theory”

Ms Juliette GoutUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“Bentham’s Liberal Inter-ventionism from Theory to Practice (and Back): Lessons from Tripoli”

Mr Lorenzo CelloUniversity of Queensland

PARTICIPANT3

“David Ricardo: Wealth First, Security Last”

Dr Ryan WalterUniversity of Queensland

CHAIR

Dr Ryan WalterUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 1

“Spiritual Beliefs and Magic in Post-Colonial Timor-Les-te: The Role of Transcenden-tal Power and Agency in the Constitution of Security”

Ms Bronwyn WinchRMIT University

PAPER 2

“Beyond Hybridity to the Politics of Scale: International Intervention and ‘Local’ Politics”

Associate Prof. Shahar HameiriUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Inside inside/Outside out-side: thinking about power in an age of black sites and ra-cialised mass incarceration”

Dr Robin CameronRMIT University

PAPER 4

“W(h)ither Global Studies? Australian Intellectuals and the Global Imaginary”

Associate Prof. Paul BattersbyRMIT University

PAPER 1

“Humanity as an intellectual virtue”

Dr Anne McNevinThe New School

PAPER 2

“Rethinking global pedago-gies in the Anthropocene”

Dr Samid SulimanGriffith University

PAPER 3

“Spanish language debates on decolonizing IR”

Mr Ari JerremsMonash University

PAPER 1

“Guiding Interaction: Improving understanding and usage of current civil-military guidelines”

Ms Beth EgglestonRMIT University

Humanitarian Advisory Group

PAPER 2

“Transforming Disaster Res-ponse: Expanding capacities and adapting frameworks”

Ms Emma KettleRedR

PAPER 3

“Segmenting the Space: Defining humanitarianisms”

Dr Vandra HarrisRMIT University

PAPER 4

“The US Military as a Human-itarian Norm Entrepreneur: Compensating Civilian Victims of Lawful Armed Combat”

Ms Beth MorrisonUniversity of Queensland

CHAIR

Professor Andrew O’NeilGriffith University

19 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

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Panel 6

REPRESENTATION MATTERS: STIGMA

AND HEALTH

Panel 8

ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS

Panel 7

ENERGY AND RESOURCE POLITICS

Panel 9

DIPLOMACY AND FOREIGN POLICY

PAPER 1

“A gendered Human Rights Analysis of Global Health: Learning from Ebola”

Professor Belinda BennettQueensland University of Technology

PAPER 2

“Health condition and rights of female garment workers and sex workers in Bangladesh”

Dr Jae-Eun NohUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Non-Stigmatisation Norm in China’s HIV/AIDS Governance”

Dr Pak Lee Kent University

PAPER 4

“Who is being Secured? Health security reconsidered”

Associate Prof. Sara DaviesGriffith University

CHAIR AND DISCUSSANT

Associate Professor Susan Harris-Rimmer

Griffith University

PAPER 1

“Environmental activism in contexts of new and social media surveillance”

Ms Diletta Luna CalibeoGriffith University

Dr Richard HindmarshGriffith University

PAPER 2

“Indigenous Knowledges in the Global Discourse of Climate Change: a Critical Assessment of the UNEP’s and IPCC’s Reports”

Mr Pedram RashidiUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Censure, Reform and the Possibility of Institutional Learning: The Case of Multinational Corporations and Environmental Harm”

Professor Toni ErskineUniversity of New South Wales

PAPER 4

“The Climate State: A new state form?”

Associate Prof. Peter ChristoffUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 1

“Think Tank Diplomacy”

Ms Melissa Conley TylerAustralian Institute of

International Affairs

PAPER 2

“Non-Western Foreign Poli-cy Relationships: The Case of Iran and the West”

Mr Andrew ThomasMonash University

PAPER 3

“Is the Water’s Edge Dif-ferent in America? Foreign Policy Bipartisanship in Westminster Systems”

Professor Kim NossalQueen’s University

PAPER 4

“Shielding the Republic: Barack Obama and the Jeffersonian and Jacksoni-an Traditions of American Foreign Policy”

Mr Anthony RickettsAustralian National University

Associate Professor Michael ClarkeAustralian National University

PAPER 1

“Ideology vs. Scale in Resource Politics”

Mr Lian SinclairMurdoch University

PAPER 2

“Explaining Variations in State Intervention in Oil Supply in Asian Net Importing Countries”

Ms Gail MaAustralian National University

PAPER 3

“Regional Cooperation on Energy in South Asia: The case of the Turkmeni-stan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India Pipeline”

Mr Mirza Sadaqat HudaUniversity of Queensland

Panel 5

STATE TRANSFORMA-TION AND THE ECO-NOMICS-SECURITY

NEXUS IN ASIA

PAPER 1

“Capitalising Foreign Policy: Geo-economics and the Transnationali-sation of the State”

Dr Priya ChackoAdelaide University

Professor Kanishka JayasuriyaMurdoch University

PAPER 2

“State Transformation and the Pol-itics of Primary Commodity Gover-nance: Ecological Security, National Development and Business Risk”

Professor Helen NesaduraiMonash University, Malaysia

PAPER 3

“Geo-strategy for State Transfor-mation: China’s ‘Connectivity’ Projects in Greater Asia”

Professor Evelyn GohAustralian National University

PAPER 4

“Transforming the International Economy and the Nation-State: China from Bretton Woods to Bandung (1944-1955)”

Dr Amy KingAustralian National University

CHAIR

Professor Evelyn GohAustralian National University

DISCUSSANT

Associate Professor Shahar Hameiri

University of Queensland

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Wed

nesd

ay, S

essi

on 3

1:30

pm-3

:00p

m

Panel 1

CHINESE POLITICS IN THE REGION

Panel 3

UN PEACE OPERATIONS IN

THE 21ST CENTURY: CHANGES AND

CONSEQUENCES

Panel 2

INTERNATIONAL THEORY

Panel 4

INTERVENTIONS, PEACE AND AID IN THE WESTERN

PACIFIC

PAPER 1

“(Unintended) Consequences of the Robust Turn in UN Peace Operations”

Dr Charles HuntRMIT University

Professor Alex BellamyUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 2

“Vulnerability of UN peacekeepers in a changing security environment”

Ms Lisa SharlandAustralian Strategic Policy Institute

PAPER 3

“Reading peacekeeping history backwards”

Dr Jeni Whalan University of Queensland

PAPER 4

“Balancing Norms in UN Peace Operations: Civilian Protection and Counter-Terrorism”

Ms Shannon ZimmermanUniversity of Queensland

CHAIR

Dr Charles HuntRMIT University

PAPER 1

“Beijing’s ‘Active Defence’ vs. Washington’s A2-AD: Chinese military doctrine and the impli-cations of U.S. misinterpreta-tions and misperceptions”

Mr James JohnsonUniversity of Leicester

PAPER 2

“China’s Regional Security Pol-icy and Evolution of East Asian Security Governance System”

Dr Xin JinXi’an Jiaotong University/ University of Queensland

PAPER 3

“Why Taiwan matters to Bei-jing? China’s Buffer Thinking towards Taiwan and Taiwan Strait Crises”

Mr Yu-Hua ChenAustralian National University

PAPER 4

“A New Arms Race in Asia? Conventional Prompt Strike Programmes and their Implications for Regional Stability”

Dr Benjamin ZalaAustralian National University

CHAIRDr Sarah Teitt

University of Queensland

PAPER 1

“Investigating and assessing the dividends of RAMSI in Solomon Islands”

Dr Kylie Evans-LockeUniversity of Wollongong

PAPER 2

“Fiji’s Peace Keeping Strategy 2015”

Dr Michael O’KeefeLa Trobe University

PAPER 3

“Public Administration Reform and the Politics of Scale: the case of Solomon Islands”

Associate Prof. Shahar HameiriUniversity of Queensland

PAPER 4

Australian Aid Policy and the Pacific Islands: Trends and Future Directions”

Dr Nichole GeorgeouWestern Sydney University

Dr Charles HawksleyUniversity of Wollongong

PARTICIPANT 1

“Critical theory and the main stream: Same river”

Dr Ken FraserUniversity of Canberra

PARTICIPANT 2

“Re-Evaluating Eclecticism in International Relations Theory”

Professor Samuel MakindaMurdoch University

PARTICIPANT 3

“Information is Power? Transparency as a Fetish in International Relations”

Dr Daniel McCarthyUniversity of Melbourne

Dr Matthew Fluck University of Westminster

21 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

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Panel 6

NUCLEAR POLITICS

Panel 8

AUSTRALIAN FOREIGN POLICY

Panel 7

REGIONAL SECURITY

DYNAMICSPAPER 1

“Cyber threats and nuclear weapons”

Dr Andrew FutterUniversity of Leicester

PAPER 2

“A ‘one-size-fits-all’ umbrella? Explaining variation in extended nuclear deterrence relationships”

Professor Andrew O’NeilGriffith University

Associate Prof. Stephan FruhlingAustralian National University

PAPER 3

“The Psychology of Atomic Resistance”

Dr Maria Rost RubleeMonash University

PAPER 1

“Australian responses to Poland’s June 1956 crisis”

Dr Adrian RudzinskiFlinders University

PAPER 2

“Denial Strategy in Austra-lian Strategic Thought”

Dr Adam LockyerMacquarie University

Co-author: Dr Michael D. CohenMacquarie University

PAPER 3

“Reassessing the levers and limits on Australia’s strate-gic influence in the South Pacific”

Dr Joanne WallisAustralian National University

PAPER 4

“An institutionalist explana-tion of Australian responses to international conflict”

Dr Aran MartinUniversity of Melbourne

Mr Nathan SheaUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 1

“The Indian Ocean: Region or a System?”

Ms Tereza KobelkovaAustralian National University

PAPER 2

“Quadrilateral Alliance - A Concert of Maritime De-mocracies: An Analysis of its Relevance in the Con-text of Emerging Strategic Geometry in the Indo-Pacific region”

Dr Ashok SharmaUniversity of Melbourne

PAPER 3

“Kosovo and the Parallel State: De Facto Sovereignty and Peaceful Resistance”

Mr Lucas KnotterUniversity of Canterbury

PAPER 4

“The European Union as a facilitator for third state engagement in crisis management”

Dr Margherita MateraUniversity of Melbourne

Panel 5

CONTEMPORARY INTERNATIONAL

MIGRATION ISSUES IN PACIFIC ASIA

PAPER 1

“Preparing the massive migra-tion from the pacific Islanders: A Mitigation Scenario for the Sinking Pacific Countries”

Mr Nugraha PratamaUniversitas Padjadjaran

Mr Satriya WibawaUniversitas Padjadjaran

PAPER 2

“The Rohingya Case and the Regional Stability of ASEAN and South Asia”

Mr Oce Ibrahim ChairiadiUniversitas Padjadjaran

Mr Arief RosadiUniversitas Padjadjaran

PAPER 3

“The Impacts of Changing global Migration Pattern: Chal-lenges for Asia as the Main Des-tination of Global Migration”

Dr Arry BainusUniversitas Padjadjaran

Co-author: Ms Eriska MeiyanisUniversitas Padjadjaran

PAPER 4

“Responding to the EU’s refugee crisis: A failure to achieve policy consensus?”

Ms Tamara TubakovicUniversity of Melbourne

CHAIR

Mr Nugraha PratamaUniversitas Padjadjaran

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23 OCIS 2016The Seventh Oceanic Conference on International Studies

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Closing OCIS Plenary AddressWednesday 6th of July, 3:30pm-5:00pm

She holds the Raoul Wallenberg Visiting Chair in International Human Rights and Humanitarian Law at Lund University, and has held numerous other visiting positions, including the Hedda Andersson Visiting Research Chair at Lund Uni-versity, Visiting Professor at the Sorbonne Law School, Torgny Segerstedt Visiting Professor at the University of Gothenburg, and Senior Emile Noël Research Fellow at NYU Law School. She is a founding co-convenor of the Annual Junior Faculty Forum for International Law, a past President of the Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law, and was founding Director of the Institute for International Law and the Humanities at Melbourne Law School.

She has been awarded honorary doctorates of laws by Lund University and the University of Gothenburg, and the 2013 Woodward Medal for Excellence in Humanities and Social Sciences by the University of Melbourne.Her publications include:

International Authority and the Responsibility to Protect (Cambridge University Press 2011),

Reading Humanitarian Intervention: Human Rights and the Use of Force in International Law (Cambridge University Press 2003),

The edited collection International Law and its Others (Cambridge University Press 2006), and, as co-editor, The Oxford Handbook of the Theory of Interna-tional Law (Oxford University Press 2016).

Her scholarship combines study of the historical and theoretical foundations of international law, analysis of developments in international legal doctrines and practice, and an engagement with central debates and concepts in related fields, in order to provide a clearer understanding of the role of international law in contemporary politics.

She has delivered keynote and plenary addresses at annual conferences and meetings of the American Society of International Law, the Australian Historical Association, the Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law, the European Society of International Law, the French Society of International Law, and the Korean Society of International Law, and has presented her research by invitation to numerous governments, international organizations, non-governmental organizations, and universities worldwide.

We are very delighted to announce that Professor Anne Orford will deliver the Closing OCIS Plenary Address.

Anne Orford is ARC Kathleen Fitzpatrick Laureate Fellow, Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor, and Michael D Kirby Chair of International Law at Melbourne Law School, where she directs the Laureate Program in International Law.

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