Index

Edited Book

Luca Anceschi, Joseph Camilleri and Benjamin Tolosa Jr (eds), Conflict, Religion and Culture: Domestic and Regional Implications for Southeast Asia and Australia, Manila, Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2009, 169 pp.

Op-Ed
4 February 1990

Bougainville: Australia's Role

Article

Joseph A. Camilleri, '"Internal Conflict in an Independent Papua New Guinea": A Rejoinder', Australian Outlook, 28(3), December 1974, 308-312.

News
1 November 2003

This article by K. C. Boey (Sunday Times, Malaysia, 1 November 2003) reports on the book launch of Camilleri's book Regionalism in the New Asia-Pacific Order: the Political Economy of the Asia-Pacific Region, Volume 2. The book was lunched by Prof Desmond Ball (Australian National University).

Speech
7 November 2014

A public forum to consider Australia’s World War I commemoration and whether it pays appropriate respect to those who died believing in a better world.

World War I brought death to approximately 61,000 Australians and shattered the lives of countless others. Globally, a generation was virtually lost.
The legacy of the war continues to this day. A century on, does our commemoration stop short of asking the hard questions such as how such a cataclysmic event could occur, what we learnt from it and whether that responsibility to learn has been lost amid the flag-waving?

Keynote Address
27 October 2014

Tasmanian Peace Trust Annual Lecture, Hobart

The lecture was published by the Tasmanian Peace Trust.

Lecture
13 September 2016

This is the first of a series of four lectures given at St Michael's on Collins, Melbourne

Below are the the PowerPoint presentation and several links:

The first is a link to video clip in which Waleed Aly speaks out on the issue of Aborignial deaths in custody

www.mamamia.com.au/waleed-aly-aboriginal-deaths-in-custody/

The second is a link to the website of the organisation Animals Australi

Op-Ed
30 October 2017

The result of the recent snap election called by Shinzo Abe and Japan’s steady military build-up are a portent of things to come. The Korean crisis, which owes at least as much to Washington’s flexing of military muscle as to Pyongyang’s misguided nuclear antics, holds the key to many of these ominous developments.

Project
12 November 2018 to 31 December 2019

Humanity and the Earth’s other species are under threat as never before. 

Earth@Peace is a unique project that will inspire and empower new ways of approaching the future.