Indigenous foreign policy: the challenges of survivalism before and after the era of Western dominance

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Australian Journal of International Affairs Pub Date : 2023-10-18 DOI:10.1080/10357718.2023.2268029
Andrew Phillips
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Mary Graham and Morgan Brigg advance a timely and provocative call to incorporate a relationalist ethos into Australian foreign policy, informed by Indigenous Australian worldviews and diplomatic practices. Their proposal holds great promise in enriching Australia’s regional engagement. Yet it abrades against a persistent survivalism that is deeply sedimented in Indo-Pacific Asia’s statecraft. Quintessentially survivalist practices – exemplified in coercive state-building and competitive power politics – date from the advent of sedentary civilizations in antiquity. These traditions of violent inter-polity competition long predated and have now outlasted the West’s brief period of colonial domination in Asia. Exemplified most dangerously in China’s current push for regional primacy, these survivalist pressures will constrain Australia’s foreign policy for the foreseeable future. This limits but by no means negates the progressive possibilities offered by incorporating an Indigenous relationalist ethos into Australia’s statecraft.
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本土外交政策:西方统治时代前后生存主义的挑战
玛丽·格雷厄姆和摩根·布里格提出了一个及时且具有挑衅性的呼吁,即在澳大利亚土著世界观和外交实践的基础上,将关系主义精神纳入澳大利亚的外交政策。他们的提议为丰富澳大利亚的地区参与带来了巨大的希望。然而,它与深深植根于印太地区治国方略的持久生存主义背道而驰。典型的生存主义实践——以强制性的国家建设和竞争性的权力政治为例——可以追溯到古代定居文明的出现。这些政治间暴力竞争的传统早在西方在亚洲的短暂殖民统治时期之前就存在了,而且现在已经延续了很长时间。最危险的例子是中国目前对地区主导地位的推动,这些生存主义压力将在可预见的未来限制澳大利亚的外交政策。这限制了但绝不是否定将土著关系主义精神纳入澳大利亚治国方略所提供的进步可能性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
13.30%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: AJIA is the journal of the Australian Institute of International Affairs. The Institute was established in 1933 as an independent and non-political body and its purpose is to stimulate interest in and understanding of international affairs among its members and the general public. The aim of the Australian Journal of International Affairs is to publish high quality scholarly research on international political, social, economic and legal issues, especially (but not exclusively) within the Asia-Pacific region. The journal publishes research articles, refereed review essays and commentary and provocation pieces. ''Articles'' are traditional scholarly articles. ‘Review essays’ use newly published books as the basis to thematically examine current events in International Relations. The journal also publishes commentaries and provocations which are high quality and engaging pieces of commentary, opinion and provocation in a variety of styles. The Australian Journal of International Affairs aims to analyse international issues for an Australian readership and to present Australian perspectives to readers in other countries. While seeking to stimulate interest in and understanding of international affairs, the journal does not seek to promote any particular policies or approaches. All suitable manuscripts submitted are sent to two referees in a full ''double blind'' refereeing process.
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