Climate Change

March/April 2022

Volume 47 Number 2

NZIR

NZ$6.90 (INCL. GST)

Leading the call for climate action

Sagarika Dutt comments on the United Kingdom’s presidency of the climate change conference held in Glasgow late last year.

The new net goes fishing

Nanaia Mahuta discusses how and why Aotearoa New Zealand will build on the Pacific Reset towards a Pacific Resilience approach.

Promoting the Kazakh world

Dmitry Shlapentokh describes Kazakhstan’s attempts to please all sides in its approach to ethnicity, a process sped up by the recent violence.

The on-line boom of Tibetan diplomacy

David Görömbölyi explains how exiled Tibetans have used digitalisation to their advantage in proclaiming their message.

Promoting New Zealand’s trade opportunities

Damien O’Connor outlines the government’s approach to trade policy in an increasingly challenging global environment.

PACER Plus one year on

Phil Twyford outlines the benefits being provided by the Pacific Agreement on Closer Economic Relations Plus.

REFELCTIONS

Tracing New Zealand’s diplomatic path

Ian McGibbon reflects on his career-long association with diplomats and on the MFAT history project.

BOOKS

MICHAEL DOBBS: King Richard: Nixon and Watergate: an American tragedy (David Capie).

MICHEAL E. MANN: The New Climate War: The Fight to Take Back Our Planet (Stephen Hoadley).

JEFF SPARROW: Crimes Against Nature: Capitalism and Global Heating (Stephen Hoadley).

JONATHAN KLYG AND STEVEN LEONARD (eds): To Boldly Go: Leadership, strategy, and conflict in the 21st century and beyond (Marçal Sanmartí).

INSTITUTE NOTES

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Leading the call for climate action

Sagarika Dutt comments on the United Kingdom’s presidency of the climate change conference held in Glasgow late last year.

The new net goes fishing

Nanaia Mahuta discusses how and why Aotearoa New Zealand will build on the Pacific Reset towards a Pacific Resilience approach.

Promoting the Kazakh world

Dmitry Shlapentokh describes Kazakhstan’s attempts to please all sides in its approach to ethnicity, a process sped up by the recent violence.

The on-line boom of Tibetan diplomacy

David Görömbölyi explains how exiled Tibetans have used digitalisation to their advantage in proclaiming their message.

Promoting New Zealand’s trade opportunities

Damien O’Connor outlines the government’s approach to trade policy in an increasingly challenging global environment.

PACER Plus one year on

Phil Twyford outlines the benefits being provided by the Pacific Agreement on Closer Economic Relations Plus.

REFELCTIONS

Tracing New Zealand’s diplomatic path

Ian McGibbon reflects on his career-long association with diplomats and on the MFAT history project.

BOOKS

MICHAEL DOBBS: King Richard: Nixon and Watergate: an American tragedy (David Capie).

MICHEAL E. MANN: The New Climate War: The Fight to Take Back Our Planet (Stephen Hoadley).

JEFF SPARROW: Crimes Against Nature: Capitalism and Global Heating (Stephen Hoadley).

JONATHAN KLYG AND STEVEN LEONARD (eds): To Boldly Go: Leadership, strategy, and conflict in the 21st century and beyond (Marçal Sanmartí).

INSTITUTE NOTES

Membership

NZIIA membership is open to anyone interested in understanding the importance of global affairs to the political and economic well-being of New Zealand.