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Lachlan Strahan – The Curious Diplomat

A memoir from the frontlines of diplomacy

In conversation with James Curran

Sunday 14th December starting 3:00 pm for 3:30 pm

From India to the Info-Pacific, a riveting insider’s account of diplomacy and politics, and Australia’s position in the world.

Lachlan Strahan spent his career as a diplomat and an ambassador in some of Australia’s most important postings, including India, Germany, Korea and Solomon Islands. He was involved in some of Australia’s biggest diplomatic challenges, from the spate of violence against Indian students in Australia to weapons discussions to Australia’s interests at the United Nations.

Working with prime ministers and foreign affairs ministers including Kevin Rudd, Tony Abbott, Malcolm Turnbull, Gareth Evans, Alexander Downer, Marise Payne and Penny Wong, Strahan had a unique insight into Australia’s foreign policy in the Indo-Pacific and beyond for more than three decades. In this lively account, Strahan reveals how Canberra sees Australia and how our allies and adversaries see us, and offers a valuable perspective on what Australia can do to supercharge our relationships in the Indo-Pacific.

Praise for Justice in Kelly Country, shortlisted for the Prime Minister’s Award for History 2023

‘This is a fascinating and original history, taut and suspenseful, written with subtlety and flair.’ Tom Griffiths

‘Lachlan Strahan brings to life a lost world of rural Victoria in the era of gold-seeking, free selection and bushranging.’ Frank Bongiorno

‘A brilliant and original window into the Kelly Outbreak of the hunter rather than just the hunted.’ Janet McCalman

BOOOKINGS ESSENTIAL

Gleebooks

49 Glebe Point Road
Glebe, NSW 2037 Australia
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+61 2 96602333


Lachlan Strahan
 is a historian and former diplomat. His book Australia’s China has become a key work on AustraliaChina relations. His account of a series of crimes in Papua New Guinea, Day of Reckoning, was shortlisted for the 2006 NSW Premier’s Australian History Prize, and his most recent book, Justice in Kelly Country, was shortlisted for the Prime Minister’s Award for History.

James Curran is Professor of Modern History at Sydney University, where he specialises in Australian and American political and foreign relations history. A former analyst with the Office of National Assessments, he was also a Fulbright Scholar at Georgetown University in Washington DC and later the Chair of Australian History at University College Dublin. James has authored a number of books, including The Power of SpeechCurtin’s EmpireThe Unknown Nation (with Stuart Ward), Unholy Fury: Whitlam and Nixon at warFighting with America; Why saying no to America wouldn’t rupture the US alliance and, most recently, David Campese. His poetry has been published in Meanjin and Quadrant, and his rugby writing in France’s twice weekly Midi-Olympique. He writes a fortnightly column on foreign affairs for the Australian Financial Review.