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Asia Rising

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South Korea has unique security challenges when compared to many of its neighbours. Like many it lives in the shadow of giants like China and Russia, but the ever-present threat of North Korea is less than 50km from its capital, Seoul.
While its alliance with the United States remains important to Korea’s security and foreign policy outlook, there are many possibilities for stronger ties to allies and partners. This could present opportunities to enhance maritime security cooperation between Australia and Korea and better coordinate maritime capacity building with other states the region.
How can Australia and South Korea develop an effective regional partnership? What are the opportunities and limits presented by moving the relationship forward?
A La Trobe Asia / UWA Defence and Security Institute event
Panel:
Dr Troy Lee-Brown (Research Fellow, Defence and Security Institute, UWA)
Professor Bec Strating (Director, La Trobe Asia)
Afeeya Akhand (Fellow, Australian Strategic Policy Institute)
Dongkeun Lee (Policy Fellow, Asia-Pacific Leadership Network)
Recorded on 8th September, 2025
Taiwan sits at the heart of the Indo-Pacific, a vibrant democracy and global technology hub whose future has major implications for regional stability. Its position is complicated by the “one China” policy and growing strategic competition, making Taiwan’s international relationships more important than ever.
Guest: Dr Chen Ming-chi (Deputy Minister in Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
Recorded on 28th August, 2025.
When Hu Yaobang died in April 1989, throngs of mourners converged on the Martyrs' Monument in Tiananmen Square to pay their respects. Following Hu's 1987 ouster by party elders, Chinese propaganda officials had sought to tarnish his reputation and dim his memory, yet his death galvanized the nascent pro-democracy student movement, setting off the dramatic demonstrations that culminated in the Tiananmen massacre.
Guest: Robert L. Suettinger (Author of The Conscience of the Party: Hu Yaobang, Chinas Communist Reformer)
Interviewer: Professor James Leibold (Politics, La Trobe University)
Recorded 16th June, 2025.
2025 has been a challenging year for international development. The abrupt dismantling of USAID by the United States’ Trump Administration, sucking $40 billion out of the aid system, as well as significant cuts in development budgets by the United Kingdom and European donors has massively reduced aid funding available.
This is having implications for multilateral organisations like the United Nations and World Health Organisation, as well as non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and – of course – the people and communities that they support.
How can multilateral organisations and NGOs reflect on the challenge and future directions? How can international development adapt and remain relevant in Asia and the Pacific? How can the process be decolonised to transform ways of working to support locally driven change?
Panel:
Munkhtuya (Tuya) Altangerel (Resident Representative, UNDP Pacific)
Matthew Maury (CEO, Australian Council for International Development) (ACFID)
Jope Tarai (PhD Scholar, ANU)
Dr Lisa Denney (Director, Centre for Human Security and Social Change, La Trobe University)
Ambika Vishwanath (Principal Research Fellow, La Trobe Asia) (Chair)
This event was a collaboration between the Centre for Human Security and Social Change and La Trobe Asia.
Recorded on 14th August, 2025.
The United States has undergone profound changes in President Donald Trump’s second term, and these are affecting the world. America appears to be rejecting the very international system it helped create, with destabilising tariffs ushering in a new era of economic nationalism that threatens to reshape the Asian security landscape.
With multiple crises demanding attention in the Middle East and an ongoing war in Ukraine, we still do not know what Trump's Asia security policy looks like, creating uncertainty for allies and partners navigating an increasingly complex geopolitical environment.
Join La Trobe Asia for a special event as we mark the first six months of President Trump’s second term, with insights into the impact of tariffs around Asia, how alliances could shift, and the implications for both Australia and the world.
Panel:
Professor Nick Bisley (Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, La Trobe University)
Dr Lupita Wijaya (Research Fellow, La Trobe Asia)
Ambika Vishwanath (Principal Research Fellow, La Trobe Asia)
Dan Flitton (Managing Editor, The Interpreter)
Professor Bec Strating (Director, La Trobe Asia)(Chair)
Recorded 1st August, 2025.
The past year has been eventful for South Korea. They've faced security dilemmas, tensions with with North Korea, an impeachment, and an important election - all events and issues that have made headlines around the world. But if this is the view from outside of the country, what does it look like on the streets of Seoul?
Guest: Sangmi Jeong (Research Professor, Korea National Diplomatic Academy).
Recorded 2nd May, 2025.
The 18 countries and territories across the Pacific are some of the most vulnerable to growing risks emerging from climate changes, especially the small island states.
Despite contributing less than 0.03% to global greenhouse gas emissions, the islands face devastating consequences, from sea level rise and loss of territory to unpredictable weather patterns to growing food and water insecurity.
India-Australia’s bilateral ties are at their strongest, presenting an opportune moment for more active collaboration to address food insecurity as an immediate concern and strengthen climate resilience in the Pacific Island region.
Panel:
Ambika Vishwanath (Principal Research Fellow, La Trobe Asia)
Sunaina Kumar (Senior Fellow, Observer Research Foundation)
Michael Copage (Head of Climate and Security Policy Centre, Australian Strategic Policy Institute)
Dr Ruth Gamble (Deputy Director, La Trobe Asia)
Professor Bec Starting (Director, La Trobe Asia)
Professor Coral Warr (Pro-Vice Chancellor, Graduate and Global Research)
This event was held on 23rd July, 2025.
Many happy returns to the Dalai Lama who has just turned 90, but the reality that many are facing is that there may soon be a dispute over succession. The Dalai Lama’s supporters will choose their own reincarnated leader, but the Chinese government has long made it clear that the successor will come from China.
Guest: Assoc. Professor Ruth Gamble (Deputy Director, La Trobe Asia)
Recorded on 8th July, 2025.
South Korea faces a number of security challenges, living in the shadow of states such as China and Russia, and with its capital Seoul around 50km from the border it shares with North Korea. In times of contestation and with a new government in place it has the chance to reexamine its priorities and contribution to security in the Asia Pacific.
Guest: Dongkeun Lee (Policy Fellow, Asia-Pacific Leadership Network)
Recorded on 27th April, 2025.
The Australian government has released a new roadmap aiming to bolster critical minerals co-operation between Australia and India. Crucial to the economy and productivity, the mineral trade, the plan aims to drive research and trade in both countries, but can the plan also address resource security and climate concerns?
Guests:
Ambika Vishwanath (DFAT Maitri Principal Research Fellow, La Trobe Asia)
Titiksha Vashist (Co-founder and Lead Researcher, Pranava Institute)
Recorded 16th April, 2025
High in the Himalayas the waters of Asia’s eight largest rivers intersect. The rivers of the Asian Highlands are central to the world’s weather systems and activities in their water catchments have shaped the human past and will shape the future. These rivers support more than three billion people and provide water for 85% of Asia’s populations, and what happens to Asian highland rivers is of global significance.
Today human activities are contributing to rising temperatures, which leads to glacial shrinkage and uncertain river flows. Highland rivers are suffering from multiple crises, including inept management, negative effects from poorly planned damming, and declining fish stocks, along with decreased biodiversity.
This event explores the rivers of this critically important region and the iconological crisis that they face.
The launch of Rivers of the Asian Highlands From Deep Time to the Climate Crisis by Ruth Gamble, Gillian G. Tan, Hongzhang Xu, Sara Beavis, Petra Maurer, Jamie Pittock, John Powers, Robert J. Wasson, published by Routledge.
Speakers:
Professor Emily T. Yeh (Geography, University of Colorado Boulder)
Dipak Gyawali (Former Minister of Water Resources of Nepal)
Dr Ruth Gamble (Deputy Director, La Trobe Asia)
Ambika Vishwanath (Principal Research Fellow, La Trobe Asia) (Chair)
Recorded on 27th May, 2025.
The Asia-Pacific is an area of great power contestation, of an intense rivalry between major powers, particularly the United States and China. How influence and dominance intersect in the Asia Pacific has major implications for the politics, economies and militaries of the countries in the region.
Guest: Mike Bosack (Special Adviser for Government Relations,Yokosuka Council on Asia-Pacific Studies)
Recorded 29th April, 2025.
Australia's federal election has produced a significant majority for PM Anthony Albanese. While most of the campaign was dominated by domestic issues, the shadow cast by the Trump administration's highly destabilising policies was long.
The re-elected government faces the most complex international environment in decades with the ongoing wars in Ukraine and Gaza, an America led by a mercurial President who appears intent on wrecking the liberal international order and an ambitious and confident China.
This panel will discuss the most immediate international challenges facing the newly elected government, how it is likely to approach these issues and what new direction a more confident and emboldened Labor government may take.
Panel:
The Hon Bill Shorten (Leader of the Australian Labor Party (2013 - 2019), Vice-Chancellor of the University of Canberra)
Professor Andrea Carson (Political Communication, La Trobe University)
Professor Nick Bisley (Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, La Trobe University)
Professor Bec Strating (Director, La Trobe Asia)
Recorded 13th May, 2025
The past six months in South Korea have been eventful - a declaration of martial law, the impeachment of President Yoon Suk Yeol, but the country continues and now there is an election on the 3rd June. The election is heated, and there are still protests on the streets of Seoul.
How the votes could go, what is on the agenda, and how this will affect the world are all topics of debate.
Guest:
Dr Duyeon Kim (Adjunct Senior Fellow, Indo-Pacific Security Program, Centre for New American Security)
Recorded on 29th February, 2025.
It is two weeks until an Australian federal election in which the presiding Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, will meet the challenger Peter Dutton in a campaign that has been dominated by domestic issues, but overshadowed by Trump.
Guests:
Professor Bec Strating (Director, La Trobe Asia)
Professor Andrea Carson (Journalism, La Trobe University)
Recorded on 16th April, 2025.
Late last year the Chinese government announced it had approved the world’s largest and most expensive, hydropower project on the Yarlung Tsangpo River in the Eastern Himalaya, near its disputed border with India. The project would generate around 60 gigawatts annually, nearly three times the capacity of the Three Gorges Dam, and help them meet their energy transition goals.
What they actually intend to build and the impact it could have on the surrounding landscape and the people who call it home is the subject of much debate.
Guests:
Dr Ruth Gamble (Senior Lecturer, Archaeology and History, La Trobe University)
Dr Hongzhang Xu (Senior Ecohydrologist, Murray Darling Basin Authority (MDBA))
Recorded on April 1st, 2025.
As President Donald Trump leads his second term, relationships between the US and Asian countries continue to evolve under his administration’s policies.
While there has been much focus on Europe's reactions to a more transactional leadership style in the US, less has been discussed about how it will affect trade negotiations, military alliances, and geopolitical tensions in Asia.
The United States, once a reliable ally to many, now represents a wild card, and how Trump views Asian nations including China, North Korea, Japan, and India, will have a measurable impact on trade, security, and diplomacy.
Panel:
Professor Bec Strating (Director, La Trobe Asia)
Professor Nick Bisley (Dean of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, La Trobe University)
Ambika Vishwanath (DFAT Maitri Research Fellow, La Trobe Asia)
Assoc. Professor Ruth Gamble (Deputy Director, La Trobe Asia)(Chair)
Former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte was arrested on March 11, 2025, by the Philippine National Police and Interpol, acting on a warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC). The warrant charges Duterte with crimes against humanity related to his administration's controversial "war on drugs," which resulted in thousands of deaths.
Guest: Associate Professor Kerstin Steiner (La Trobe Law School, La Trobe University)
Recorded on 18 March, 2025.
Australian headlines in late February were dominated by the activities of the Chinese navy’s Task Group 107 as it progressed south along the Australian coast and conducted a series of live-fire exercises.
To the media and a segment of politicians this is a big deal, and at the very least it signals a message that China is trying to send to Australia.
Guest: Professor Bec Strating (Director, La Trobe Asia)
Recorded on 3rd March, 2025.
The global south is struggling with extreme weather patterns and how to respond, with the Philippines being no exception. Since the devastation of the 2013 Haiyan typhoon, more than 15 thousand households have been relocated from the coast to Tacloban North, and this climate gentrfication has caused inequalities amongst the residents.
Guests:
Associate Professor Brooke Wilmsen (Social Enquiry, La Trobe University)
Dr Justin See (Development Studies, University of Melbourne)
Recorded on 21st February, 2025.
well balanced intellectual perspective on the Kashmir criisis