Between the Lines - podcast cover

Between the Lines

ABC listenwww.abc.net.au
This program is no longer in production. Making sense of Australia’s place in the world, Between the Lines puts contemporary international issues and events into a broader historical context, seeking out original perspectives and challenging accepted wisdom.
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Episodes

Egypt and the Arab Winter; and can the military get away with another coup in Myanmar?

A decade ago, the Arab Spring promised to end dictatorship and bring self-government to people across the Middle East. Yet it mostly led to either renewed dictatorship, civil war, extremist terror, or all three. Also; after five decades of military dictatorship came to an end in Myanmar, the armed forces there retained a significant hold on power. After being trounced in last November’s election, the military leaders became even more unhappy, hence the recent coup.

Feb 11, 202129 min

Can Australia and China learn to get along?

The relationship between China and Australia continues to deteriorate and it goes beyond trade sanctions. By standing up to China, is Canberra just 'pulling the tail of the tiger'? Or are we right to protect our national sovereignty?

Feb 04, 202129 min

Indigenous support for Australia Day; and Trump is gone. Now what?

Re-naming Australia Day won't help, says a prominent leader of our Indigenous community, who defends our national holiday. Jacinta Nampijinpa-Price says that moves to call January 26, “invasion day”, are pointless and divisive. They won't help Aboriginal Australians, especially those in remote communities, who suffer from profound disadvantage. Also, America post Trump. How will Joe Biden convince a divided America to unite?

Jan 28, 202129 min

Is Home Affairs too big?; also Rana Mitter on China's new nationalism

Is the Department of Home Affairs too big? Peter Edwards and Jacinta Carroll on the legacy of the Hope Royal Commissions into intelligence which recommended a clear separation between intelligence collection and policy making. Also: China's Good War. Oxford university historian Rana Mitter on how the new Chinese nationalism is being shaped by a re-interpretation of China's role in World War Two.

Jan 21, 202129 min

The French history behind Lebanon’s problems; challenging the prisoners of war narrative; remembering Brent Scowcroft

Joshua Landis: The French mandate and Lebanese history Lebanon was once a model for the Middle East. Today, it looks more like Syria or Iraq. Why? And should the French be held accountable? Joshua Landis, Director: Centre for Middle East Studies and Associate Professor, University of Oklahoma Japan’s POWs: systematic mistreatment? During World War Two more Australians died in Japanese prisoner of war camps than were killed in combat. Conventional wisdom says they were systematically mistreated.S...

Jan 14, 202128 min

Turnbull's legacy, and 75 years after Hitler's death: who did he really see as the enemy?

Weighing up Turnbull’s legacy Former Prime Minister Malcom Turnbull recently published his memoir A Bigger Picture. In it he settles old scores with colleagues over his 2018 ousting, which he describes as an “act of madness.” What is his legacy, and how will history judge our nation’s twenty ninth Prime Minister? Jacqueline Maley, columnist at The Sydney Morning Herald. Jennifer Oriel, columnist at The Australian And, the death of a führer April 2020 marked seventy-five years since Hitler’s suic...

Jan 07, 202129 min

Shinzo Abe resignation and Catherine Belton on the Navalny poisoning, Belarus and Putin’s people

Shinzo Abe resignation Shinzo Abe is Japan’s most successful post-war political leader. Recently, he resigned for health reasons. So what is his legacy for Japan and the wider region? Plus, Putin’s People: how the KGB took back Russia and then took on the West. Journalist Catherine Belton explains how tensions in Belarus and the poisoning of anticorruption campaigner Alexei Navalny fit into Russa’s post-Communist power politics.

Dec 31, 202029 min

Elaine Pearson on free speech at UNSW and Hiroshima 75th anniversary

Defending the right to offend China on campus This year, Human Rights Watch Australia Director Elaine Pearson was interviewed by the media department at the University of New South Wales about the human rights implications of Hong Kong's new national security law. Her comments on Hong Kong new national security legislation upset some students. They claimed the article caused offence to China and demanded the university remove the article. The university temporarily removed the article, but after...

Dec 24, 202029 min

2020: the year in review

2020 has many contenders for events with enormous consequence: the COVID pandemic, racial tensions, cancel culture and China, to name a few. It's easy to identify the 'losers', but who are the 'winners' who managed to lead in such uncertain times?

Dec 10, 202029 min

The legacy of September 11, 2001

The 9/11 terrorist attacks in the US are arguably the most significant and consequential events of the past 20 years. But beyond the initial 'shock and awe' revenge on al Qaida, the war on terror had only just begun.

Nov 26, 202029 min

Trump's achievements in the Middle East; and why James Baker is 'the man who ran Washington'

Donald Trump’s foreign policy is usually met with derision. But while critics mock his diplomacy just days away from the US presidential election, Trump has had a few victories to put in his closing advertising pitch to the American people. Also, for more than a quarter century, no Republican won the presidency or ran the White House without the advice of James Baker. A new biography outlines his belief that respect is key to good governance. So how did it all go wrong?

Oct 29, 202029 min

NZ election: why voters chose 'health over wealth'; and the rise of socialism in the time of COVID

Jacinda Ardern’s Labour Party has won a stunning victory in a landslide election but if NZ does not sort out its economic challenges quickly, could our trans-Tasman cousins become a failed state? Also, COVID-19 won’t spell the end of capitalism, but will the US move closer towards government intervention for complex issues like the pandemic? And if socialism continues to rise, how will it be different from the past?

Oct 22, 202029 min

The Trump 'clown-verse' continues; and China's unrealistic green energy goals

Trump's response to COVID and the farcical presidential debate cause yet more concern for the US election. If America no longer stands as a global inspiration, where does that leave us? Also, China has been hailed as the world’s great hope for slashing carbon emissions. But if Beijing needs fossil fuels to grow the economy and reduce poverty, is the praise premature?

Oct 08, 202029 min

Has Scott Morrison spent too much?; and can China rise peacefully?

As the Liberal Government prepares for the federal budget, is it going through an ideological revolution? For several decades, conservatives have supported smaller government and fiscal prudence but the coronavirus has meant that Scott Morrison has broken with tradition. Also, how does the world ensure that Xi Jinping’s China lives in a rules-based liberal international order?

Oct 01, 202029 min

Does Asia prefer Trump over Biden?; and why isolating Russia doesn't make sense

Is Donald Trump a better bet for Asia than Joe Biden? While the region’s political elites are far more worried about China than climate change, Trump is more focused on containing China than decarbonising the global economy. Also, why does the West want to isolate Russia, when it has only had negative results in the past?

Sep 24, 202029 min

Is Home Affairs too big?; also Rana Mitter on China's new nationalism

Is the Department of Home Affairs too big? Peter Edwards and Jacinta Carroll on the legacy of the Hope Royal Commissions into intelligence which recommended a clear separation between intelligence collection and policy making. Also: China's Good War. Oxford university historian Rana Mitter on how the new Chinese nationalism is being shaped by a re-interpretation of China's role in World War Two.

Sep 10, 202029 min

Shinzo Abe resignation and Catherine Belton on the Navalny poisoning, Belarus and Putin’s people

Shinzo Abe resignation Shinzo Abe is Japan’s most successful post-war political leader. This week he resigned for health reasons. So what is his legacy for Japan and the wider region? Plus, Putin’s People: how the KGB took back Russia and then took on the West. Journalist Catherine Belton explains how tensions in Belarus and the poisoning of anticorruption campaigner Alexei Navalny fit into Russa’s post-Communist power politics.

Sep 03, 202029 min

The French history behind Lebanon’s problems; challenging the prisoners of war narrative; remembering Brent Scowcroft

Joshua Landis: The French mandate and Lebanese history Lebanon’s was once a model for the Middle East. Today, it looks more like Syria or Iraq. Why? And should the French be held accountable? Also; Japan’s POWs: systematic mistreatment? During World War Two more Australians died in Japanese prisoner of war camps than were killed in combat. Conventional wisdom says they were systematically mistreated.Sarah Kovner argues that the story is more complex than that. Also; Vale Brent Scowcroft: US fore...

Aug 20, 202028 min
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