In this paper for Griffith University’s Asia Institute, I explore the implications of Papua New Guinea’s long-known police shortage and provide some practical recommendations on reversing this trend through political support.
Continue readingAuthor Archive: Sean Jacobs
Vale Ambassador C. Steven McGann
As world and US geopolitical attention shifts to the Pacific islands, it’s clear that Pacific thinkers will be increasingly important – people who understand not only Washington DC but the rhythms of 15 genuinely unique Pacific island nations, covering 300,000 square miles. The late US Ambassador to the Pacific, Steven McGann, was one of these people, serving as US Ambassador to Fiji from 2008 to 2011 – a representation that includes Kiribati, Nauru, Tonga, and Tuvalu. It’s mildly ironic – with the distance of time – that McGann’s 2008 Pacific appointment by George W. Bush emerged when US and world […]
Continue readingABC Radio National: Pacific update – New and old foreign players
Some thoughts on what is likely one of the most consequential times in recent South Pacific history. Here I join Tess Newton Cain and the ABC’s Philip Adams on Late Night Live.
Continue readingThe significance of Biden’s (almost) Papua New Guinea visit
Published at Griffith Asia Insights The late US Secretary of State George Shultz noted that “diplomatic visits are an important expression of presidential priorities.” Despite President Biden’s last-minute cancellation to Papua New Guinea (PNG), the significance of Secretary of State Anthony Blinken’s brief visit should not be overlooked, let alone the signing of the US-PNG Defense Cooperation Agreement (DCA) – an agreement that reflects not only a changing strategic atmosphere but PNG’s emergence, scale and its challenges and internal politics. Indeed, while working with Port Moresby’s National Capital District Commission in 2010, I recall the fanfare of then-US Secretary of […]
Continue readingThoughts on Menzies’ legacy
Sharing some thoughts in the Spectator on the legacy of Robert Menzies – the founder of the Liberal Party – in 2023.
Continue readingWhat can the Pacific learn from Brisbane 2032?
Published in the Griffith Asia Review’s Pacific Outlook section With the hefty price tag of hosting an Olympic and Paralympic Games, and the fear of creating ‘white elephant’ venues that long sit dormant after use, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has adopted a ‘new norm’ approach for the Brisbane 2032 Games. This plan, the IOC notes, “will provide cities with increased flexibility in designing the Games to meet long-term development goals” and “invites opportunities to reduce venue sizes, rethink transport options, optimise existing infrastructure and reuse the field of play for various sports.” While the Games will continue to carry a significant […]
Continue readingReform versus remittances? Pacific states, leadership, and economic reform
My first piece for Griffith Asia Insights on the importance of remittances to Pacific economies and, at the same time, not forgetting about economic reform.
Continue readingAmerican Diary: love of the game
Observations on the American republic, following a recent trip.
Continue readingBooks I read in 2022
At the start of the year, in preparing for a part-time MBA, I absorbed as many leadership, strategy and management books as palatable – not bad for one’s general reading but certainly enabling a head start. This included revisiting Peter Thiel’s Zero to One but also exploring the less well-known Parag Khanna’s The Future is Asian, and William Thorndike’s even less known but excellent The Outsiders – a book on unorthodox CEOs that good friend Jordan Shopov kindly gifted me. Indeed, The Outsiders was fascinating. In an era when we singularly lionise CEOs like Warren Buffett and other charismatic celebrity-types, […]
Continue readingAustralia and a Pacific ‘shape up’ in 2023
A short recap in The Spectator on 2022 and my thoughts for Australia-Pacific relations in 2023.
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