17 Dec 2020 Favourites of 2020: Evil Geniuses Sam Hendricks Creating an American dystopia took planners, architects and salesmen. How did they get away with it?
16 Dec 2020 Favourites of 2020: The moral ambiguity of spying Erin Hurley A Black female protagonist elevates the genre to show how intelligence professionals live with their choices.
15 Dec 2020 Favourites of 2020: Homeland Elegies Lydia Khalil A novel clears up what has been obscured by the reflexive belief in America’s founding myths.
15 Dec 2020 The wrong side won: Remembering John le Carré Milton Cockburn The famed author roamed the grey of the international order and captured a world of “half-angels fighting half-devils”.
14 Dec 2020 Favourites of 2020: Capturing a precarious moment Aarti Betigeri Documentary photographers have the toughest of briefs – a still image of an ever changing world.
11 Dec 2020 Favourites of 2020: A lockdown loaf Jennifer Hsu When it came to baking bread, we were breaking bread as a community.
10 Dec 2020 Where America finds itself John Sexton With Trump on the way out, from the White House at least, there is perhaps a chance to get serious for a moment.
9 Dec 2020 Favourites of 2020: Minister of Finance Incorporated Alyssa Leng To grasp Malaysia’s infamous 1MDB scandal means understanding the elaborate ecosystem of government-linked companies.
8 Dec 2020 Favourites of 2020: The politics of Tiger King Bec Strating An absurd insight? Dishonesty, narcissism and the celebritisation of politics do sound awfully familiar.
7 Dec 2020 Favourites of 2020: Memes Madeleine Nyst Internet culture is moving faster than ever, and what better way to understand a crazy year?
9 Nov 2020 The safeguards in Australia’s intelligence ecosystem David Irvine Robert Hope laid out down operating principles to ensure the intelligence community is properly managed and accountable.
4 Nov 2020 Book review: The China bubble that never pops John West Against the odds, the Chinese economy has navigated multiple crises, but the future may be more problematic.
3 Nov 2020 Taking China seriously: A review of Geoff Raby’s “grand strategy” James Curran Jumping at shadows is no basis for Australian foreign policy. Common sense must prevail.
12 Oct 2020 The false promise of regime change Bob Bowker A new book from an Obama insider considers the repeated failures of outside overthrow in the Middle East.
18 Sep 2020 Book Review: Where borders aren’t always badlands Shane McLeod People-to-people connections that stretch across tens of thousands of years don’t stop when lines are drawn on a map.
4 Sep 2020 Book Review: The seeds of authoritarianism Warwick McFadyen Anne Applebaum’s latest book is a forensic and humane study of a world where methods change, but lust for power doesn’t.
21 Aug 2020 Book Review: The deadly legacy of the Cold War in the modern world John West The anti-communist purge in Indonesia in the 1960s is retold in a compelling examination of US Cold War policy.
17 Aug 2020 Book review: “The false promise of liberal order” Ben Scott A contrarian view on a cherished historical narrative and the necessity of “dark bargains with illiberal forces”.
31 Jul 2020 Book review: Superpower showdown Robert Wihtol The fraught relationship between the United States and China is set to deteriorate further.
24 Jul 2020 Book review: The memory of a massacre in Thailand David Hopkins Survivors and perpetrators alike have preferred silence as a way of coping with a traumatic past.
6 Jul 2020 Book review: The making of Putin’s Russia Robert Wihtol How did an uncharismatic former mid-level KGB spy rise to the pinnacle of Russian politics?
25 Jun 2020 Book review: What’s holding China’s economy back? John West The CCP’s discriminatory hukou system is a great obstacle to changing from world’s factory to a service-driven economy.
13 Apr 2020 Book review: The Indo-Pacific contest John West A meditation on the region – the arena of Australia’s greatest strategic focus – puts China’s rise in historic context.
20 Mar 2020 Books for quarantine: Hugh White suggests, plus a time for classics Daniel Flitton More reader responses to the call for books to collect for social isolation.
18 Mar 2020 Books for self-isolation: Revisiting Why Nations Fail Scott Robinson Looking to past examples of state collapse offers a predictive guide to why nations will fail in the future.
11 Mar 2020 Book review: Contest for the Indo-Pacific Ric Smith How a “mental map” became a physical space facing “the risks of multiple plausible futures”.
10 Mar 2020 Books I’ve been meaning to read: Covid-19 and preparing for quarantine Daniel Flitton Toilet paper is piled high in the laundry cupboard. Now to make a dent on the stockpile of books.
24 Jan 2020 Book Review: Can we do good without it really costing anything? Paul Ronalds To be seduced by “MarketWorld” thinking is one thing – to grapple with how to break the cycle is quite another.
17 Jan 2020 Book review: Where Power Stops Alasdair Nicholson Replete with wry observations, this quick read will appeal to political insiders – and so achieves less as a result.
10 Jan 2020 Book review: A very private enterprise Stephen Grenville Aggressive advocates of free markets, the Koch brothers amassed a fortune by exploiting market imperfections.
6 Jan 2020 Book review: Betraying Big Brother Tiffany Teng In a #MeToo age, censorship has largely shielded China’s citizens from joining the feminist movement – but not entirely.
20 Dec 2019 Favourites of 2019: Babylon Berlin Hervé Lemahieu A well-crafted look back at the Weimar Republic’s fragile democracy in 1929 shows how societies come apart at the seams.
20 Dec 2019 Favourites of 2019: Hasan Minhaj’s incisive yet accessible comedy Aarti Betigeri A bitingly satirical, sometimes subversive, series that offers a deep dive into topical issues.
19 Dec 2019 Favourites of 2019: Yangyang Cheng Natasha Kassam “When this part of history is written, my people will be remembered for what you have done.”
18 Dec 2019 Favourites of 2019: Richard Holbrooke, “almost great” Michael Fullilove He was the diplomat who in many ways embodied the US with his idealism and his egocentrism.
13 Dec 2019 Favourites of 2019: The Trauma Cleaner Bec Strating A reminder that politics can be messy, complex and seemingly contradictory – and that’s just one person.
12 Dec 2019 Favourites of 2019: The Twitterverse Sam Roggeveen Occasionally inspiring and frequently very funny, Twitter is the great modern meeting point – mostly.
9 Dec 2019 Favourites of 2019: Slow Horses on Spook Street Daniel Flitton What better way to understand the upside-down world of today than with fiction masquerading as fact?
6 Dec 2019 How many Cold Wars does it take to make a “new” one? Ian Li In the divide between capitalist West and communist East, it was often regional politics that mattered more.
21 Nov 2019 Book review: China, the US, and the big break Stephen Grenville Detailed reporting enlivens what is a substantive and important look at the world’s big economic test.
15 Nov 2019 Book Review: The original corporate raiders John West Historian William Dalrymple looks at how a small trading company in London became a mighty army and conquered India.
11 Nov 2019 Review: Australia, real and imagined John Fitzgerald It’s time to inject new content into the hardy ideal of a free and equal Australia.
1 Nov 2019 Film review: Torture, lies, and videotape Sam Hendricks Adam Driver stars as Daniel Jones, who spent more than six years uncovering the dark secrets of the US war on terror.
10 Oct 2019 Asia’s diversity, made all the same John West Parag Khanna’s The Future is Asian is a perfect example of “Asian Century” hype.
1 Oct 2019 An educated idealist is still a believer Erin Hurley Samantha Power’s memoir is no reflection in despair but instead a continuing call to action in support of rights.
30 Sep 2019 Book review: Common enemies Natalie Sambhi A look at law-enforcement cooperation between Australia and Indonesia will interest experts and curious observers alike.
25 Sep 2019 Book review: Hidden histories of Australia’s cameleers Aarti Betigeri A historian retraces the links between South Asia and Australia, uncovering a rich and complex legacy.
16 Jul 2019 Xi Jinping: much more than just one man Geoff Raby Xi has sworn enemies and many hold grievances, but many more support him and the system of which he is a creature.
2 Jul 2019 Book review: Hugh White’s How to Defend Australia Sam Roggeveen This quietly radical book calls on Australia to plan as if our US alliance will diminish to the point of vanishing.
18 Jun 2019 Book review: The Great Successor Nazanin Zadeh-Cummings Tracing the life of Kim Jong-un delivers a captivating account of a chubby, cartoonish dictator that graces the screen.