Michael Fullilove
Michael Fullilove (1972-) is an Australian foreign policy specialist, no Director of the Global Issues Program, at the Lowy Institute for International Policy in Sydney, and Nonresident Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy at the U.S. Brookings Institution
He is a former adviser to Australian Prime Minister Paul Keating, an assignment which he took at age 22, before leaving on his Rhodes Scholarship.[1]
Research
He has written several papers on the Australian diaspora and the role of Australia in the world. [2] This drew on a 2004 paper, coauthored with Chloë Flutter and published by the Lowy Institute for International Policy called "Diaspora: The World Wide Web of Australians. Drawing on research by Bob Birrell, Graeme Hugo and others, we suggested it is time Australia took its expat community seriously, and factored them into discussions about national policy."
With Fergus Green, he concluded that the Copenhagen conference on global warming indicates increased cooperation between China and the U.S. [3]
Political commentary
He thought Barack Obama's Nobel Peace Prize speech superior to the one he gave at West Point. It surprised his audience in that it did not renounce the appropriate use of force, but clearly distanced him from the positions of the George W. Bush Administration. [4] He is of the opinion that Obama would have been better advised to give his Cairo speech in Indonesia.[5]
Education
- Rhodes scholarship where he wrote a doctorate on US foreign policy
References
- ↑ Michael Fullilove. The Drum. Australian Broadcasting Corporation (21 October 2012). Retrieved on 9 November 2013.
- ↑ Michael Fullilove (17 December 2005), Diaspora: The World Wide Web of Australians, Centre for Policy Development
- ↑ Talks should at least be a big step on the way, Lowy Institute for International Policy, at 11
- ↑ Michael Fullilove (14 December 2009), Oslo humanitarianism, Lowy Institute for International Policy
- ↑ Michael Fullilove (6 June 2009), Cairo not the venue I wanted, but still..., Lowy Institute for International Policy