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Michael Morgan elected Secretary of the Australian Association for the Advancement of Pacific Studies

CDI Deputy Director Michael Morgan was elected secretary of the inaugural conference of the Australian Association for the Advancement of Pacific Studies (AAAPS) held 24-27 January at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in Brisbane , Australia . The four day conference included the formal launch of the AAAPS as an important initiative designed to promote the teaching and study of the Pacific Islands in Australian Universities. As such, the conference showcased Australian excellence in disciplinary and interdisciplinary humanities research, scholarship and tertiary teaching about the Pacific Islands .
At this event, Michael Morgan presented key findings of CDI's major research project, Political Parties in the Pacific Islands (Pandanus Press, 2006 forthcoming), and outlined avenues for using this applied research in CDI's political parties strengthening programs. His presentation surveyed the recent adoption in PNG of stronger national regulatory frameworks for parliamentary parties, the strengthening and democratizing of internal governance arrangements, and broadening the appeal of political parties beyond specific groups of voters, and charted what avenues exist for political party strengthening more generally in Melanesia based on these experiences. Given the recommendations of the Senate Committee on Australia's relations with Papua New Guinea and the islands of the south-west Pacific (2003), which pilloried the absence of any pervasive, coherent practice of engagement which brings Australia and Pacific countries together, the paper also explores the implications of CDI's "practitioner-oriented" approach to political parties' capacity building and reform programs.

AAAPS
AAAPS - Inaugural Conference Web Page
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The Centre for Democratic Institutions (CDI) is a government-funded body that supports the efforts of new democracies in the Asia-Pacific region to strengthen their political systems. It provides training, technical assistance and peer support for parliamentarians and emerging leaders in Southeast Asia and the South Pacific, with a particular focus on Indonesia, Timor-Leste, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu and Fiji.

The Australian Government established CDI in 1998. It is funded primarily by the Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID). One of the primary ways in which CDI works to promote democracy is through strengthening parliamentary governance and political parties. The Centre focusses on parliamentary and political party development, and conducts flagship training courses and policy-relevant research on these subjects.
© The Centre for Democratic Institutions, The Australian National University. Please direct all comments to cdi@anu.edu.au. Last modified: 22 May, 2008 CRICOSProvider Number: 00120C Web Counter

 

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