This is a past event. Registration is closed. View other AIIA ACT Branch events.

UPDATE: This event is at full in-house capacity and is no longer taking in-person registrations. Online registration remains open.


Each of the current Middle East situations and issues of most concern: Gaza; the Occupation; Lebanon; the Houthi attacks on Red Sea shipping; Iran; and pressure on the United States forces in Syria and Iraq, are unlikely to be resolved in the foreseeable future. The new normal in the Middle East has become less predictable and potentially more dangerous for all the regional actors, as relativities of power change, military capabilities evolve, and uncertainty grows regarding the role of the United States.

Australia needs to address the consequences -for our interests, especially in the multilateral sphere, and for the values we uphold -of a continuing, mutually degrading cycle of violence between Israel and the Palestinians. Moreover, we will need to find a balance between, on one hand, our interests in preserving and building the long-standing relationship with Washington; and, on the other hand, our less tangible, but also significant, interests in projecting, with confidence, the values important to a changing, diverse Australia.


Please join us from 5:30pm for complimentary drinks and nibbles. This event will be held in person and streamed online.

Agenda

Drinks + Nibbles
Presentation by guest speaker
Dr. Bob Bowker
  • Dr. Bob Bowker (Honorary Professorial Fellow, Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, Australian National University)

    Dr. Bob Bowker

    Honorary Professorial Fellow, Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies, Australian National University

    Bob Bowker retired from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade in 2008 after a 37-year career working mostly on the Middle East. He was posted to Saudi Arabia from 1974 to 2006, and Syria from 1979 to 1981 with short term assignments as Charge d’Affaires in Beirut. He was Australian Ambassador to Jordan (1989-1992). He was Director of External Relations and Public Information, and later Senior Adviser, Policy Research of UNRWA in 1997-1998, based in Gaza and Jerusalem. He was appointed Australian ambassador to Egypt and non-resident Ambassador to Syria, Libya, Tunisia and Sudan in 2005-2008.

    He was the DFAT Scholar in Residence at the ANU Centre for Middle East and Central Asian Studies in 1994 and was awarded a PhD at the ANU in 2003.

    Following his retirement from DFAT, Bowker returned to the ANU Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies where he was Adjunct Professor from 2008 to 2016, and an Honorary Visiting Fellow from 2017 to 2019. He consulted to the then Office of National Assessments from 2008 to 2010.

    His academic experience includes an attachment as Deputy Director of Studies at the Centre for Defence and Strategic Studies, Australian Defence College, 2001-2003; and developing and teaching graduate courses at the Australian National University on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and political and social change in the Arab world.

    He has written extensively on Middle East issues for the Lowy Institute, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, and as a consultant for RAND. He has written articles for a number of Australian newspapers and frequently interviewed on the ABC, SBS and other media networks.

    Bowker is the author of six books on Middle East issues, including the widely referenced Palestinian Refugees: Mythology, Identity and the Search for Peace. In addition to his scholarship on Palestinian refugee issues, his Australia, Menzies and Suez, a monograph discussing Australia’s approach to the 1956 Suez Crisis, was published in November 2019; and a volume co-edited with Matthew Jordan of 449 Australian government documents relating to the Suez Crisis, Australia and the Suez Crisis, 1950-1957 was published by DFAT in 2021. A professional memoir, Tomorrow There will be Apricots: An Australian Diplomat in the Arab World, was published in 2022 and shortlisted for the 2023 ACT Book of the Year.

    More information about speaker
Q + A

Location

32 Thesiger Ct
Thesiger Court 32
Deakin, Australian Capital Territory, Australia

See route

Contact us

For additional event or venue information, please email act.branch@internationalaffairs.org.auYou can also reach us at +61 421002890

Sponsors and Partners