Strategic and Defence Studies Centre

The Strategic and Defence Studies Centre (SDSC) is a university centre that is situated in the Hedley Bull Centre at the Australian National University. It is Australia's oldest-established centre for the study of strategic, defence and wider security issues and a leading regional think tank on these topics. The Centre was established in 1966 by Professor T.B. Millar, then a senior fellow at the ANU's Department of International Relations, in order to "advance the study of Australian, regional, and global strategic and defence issues". The current head of SDSC is Brendan Taylor.

The key priorities of the SDSC are to "contribute to the national public debate on strategic, defence and wider security issues, foster regional dialogue and interactions on security questions, publish top quality scholarly research deliver high-quality graduate teaching"

To do so, the SDSC publishes the peer-reviewed Canberra Papers on Strategy and Defence as well as the SDSC Working Papers. Additionally, it attracts highly regarded speakers (both from academia and the defence community) in its seminar and conference program. It awards high-performing PhD students with the Sir Arthur Tange PhD Scholarships in Strategic & Defence Policy (named in honour of the former Australian Secretary of Defence) and outstanding postgraduate students with the T.B. Millar Scholarship.

The SDSC staff gives frequent lectures and seminars for other departments within the ANU and other universities, as well as to various government departments. The Centre has also assisted Australia's major defence training institution, the Australian Defence College, with the strategic studies sections of its courses. Members of the Centre provide advice and training courses in strategic affairs to the Australian Department of Defence and the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The SDSC, furthermore, delivers the Graduate Studies in Strategy and Defence Program and is host of the Boeing Library.

The staff of the SDSC has established professional links with other Australian and overseas universities and centres specialising in strategic and security issues as the Centre aims to foster an enhanced pattern of liaison through the exchange of ideas, personal contacts and, where appropriate, joint projects. The scholars at the SDSC do also provide expert commentary on important defence issues to the Australian and overseas media. Current staff include thinkers at the forefront of Australia's strategic debate, such as Prof. Hugh White, Prof. Desmond Ball, Prof. Paul Dibb, Prof. Joan Beaumont, Admiral Chris Barrie (former Chief of Defence Force), Dr. Daniel Marston, Dr. Ron Huisken, Dr. Stephen Frueling, Dr. Brendan Taylor, Dr. John Blaxland, Mr. Andrew Carr, Prof. David Horner, Dr. Peter Dean, Mr. Bob Breen, Dr. Garth Pratten, Dr. Ben Schreer, and Dr. Joanne Wallis.

The SDSC is part of the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia Pacific, a non-governmental process for second track dialogue on security and defence issues in Asia Pacific.

Read more about Strategic And Defence Studies Centre:  Boeing Library

Famous quotes containing the words strategic, defence, studies and/or centre:

    The practice of S/M is the creation of pleasure.... And that’s why S/M is really a subculture. It’s a process of invention. S/M is the use of a strategic relationship as a source of pleasure.
    Michel Foucault (1926–1984)

    Education must have two foundations—morality as a support for virtue, prudence as a defence for self against the vices of others. By letting the balance incline to the side of morality, you only make dupes or martyrs; by letting it incline to the other, you make calculating egoists.
    —Sébastien-Roch Nicolas De Chamfort (1741–1794)

    His life itself passes deeper in nature than the studies of the naturalist penetrate; himself a subject for the naturalist. The latter raises the moss and bark gently with his knife in search of insects; the former lays open logs to their core with his axe, and moss and bark fly far and wide. He gets his living by barking trees. Such a man has some right to fish, and I love to see nature carried out in him.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Freedom to think our own thoughts, freedom to utter them, freedom to live out the promptings of our inner life ultimated in this convention, was termed a monstrosity of the 19th century. What was it?—the legitimate out-birth of the eternal law of progress. This reformation underlies every other; it is the only healthful centre around which hope of humanity can revolve.
    Harriot K. Hunt (1805–1875)