Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Tables, Figures and Boxes
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Middle Power Dreaming: Australian Foreign Policy during the Rudd–Gillard Governments
- 2 The Howard–Downer Legacy: Global Deputy, Regional Sheriff
- 3 Back from the Brink: Australia and the Global Economy 2006–10
- 4 Australia–America 2006–2010: Waiting for Obama
- 5 Australia and China: The Challenges to Forging a ‘True Friendship’
- 6 Australia and Japan: Mobilising the Bilateral Relationship
- 7 Australia and Europe
- 8 Australia’s Strategic and Commercial Engagement with South Asia under Kevin Rudd: The Paradoxes
- 9 Australia, the Pacific Islands and Timor-Leste
- 10 Progress and Limits in Regional Cooperation: Australia and Southeast Asia
- 11 Australian Foreign Policy towards Africa
- 12 Plus Ça Change? The Coalition, Labor and the Challenges of Environmental Foreign Policy
- 13 The Australia 2020 Summit as an Experiment in Foreign Policy-making
- 14 Defence and Security
- 15 Australia’s Foreign Policy Machinery
- 16 Regional, Alliance and Global Priorities of the Rudd–Gillard Governments
- References
- Index
16 - Regional, Alliance and Global Priorities of the Rudd–Gillard Governments
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Tables, Figures and Boxes
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Middle Power Dreaming: Australian Foreign Policy during the Rudd–Gillard Governments
- 2 The Howard–Downer Legacy: Global Deputy, Regional Sheriff
- 3 Back from the Brink: Australia and the Global Economy 2006–10
- 4 Australia–America 2006–2010: Waiting for Obama
- 5 Australia and China: The Challenges to Forging a ‘True Friendship’
- 6 Australia and Japan: Mobilising the Bilateral Relationship
- 7 Australia and Europe
- 8 Australia’s Strategic and Commercial Engagement with South Asia under Kevin Rudd: The Paradoxes
- 9 Australia, the Pacific Islands and Timor-Leste
- 10 Progress and Limits in Regional Cooperation: Australia and Southeast Asia
- 11 Australian Foreign Policy towards Africa
- 12 Plus Ça Change? The Coalition, Labor and the Challenges of Environmental Foreign Policy
- 13 The Australia 2020 Summit as an Experiment in Foreign Policy-making
- 14 Defence and Security
- 15 Australia’s Foreign Policy Machinery
- 16 Regional, Alliance and Global Priorities of the Rudd–Gillard Governments
- References
- Index
Summary
In its annual poll for 2010, the Lowy Institute for International Policy included public opinion data under the heading of the ‘Rudd government’s foreign policy report card’. Asked about its performance across a range of issues, those polled gave their highest mark for the Rudd government’s management of the alliance with the United States (7/10), but only 6/10 for the government’s response to the global economic crisis, a mere 5/10 for combating climate change, and a lowly 4/10 for dealing with Japanese whaling. It must have been slightly unnerving for the government that these issues were precisely those that Kevin Rudd had identified as clear-cut successes in the area of foreign policy. More broadly, the increasingly widespread perception that the Rudd government’s management of foreign policy was indifferent at best posed problems, because it was the one policy area in which Rudd himself could claim particular professional expertise. If the government was unable to point to a record of unequivocal successes in the Prime Minister’s own specialist domain, it raised questions about its capacity to deliver on other fronts as well.
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- Australia in World Affairs 2006–2010Middle Power Dreaming, pp. 237 - 251Publisher: Cambridge University PressFirst published in: 2024