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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper discusses various aspects of Australian life, including its defense, the economy, technology and tourism, among others. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVAusLnk.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
and tourism industry among others. Defense Australia and the United States have been allies for many years, of course, but Australia is also allied with many of its neighbors.
Australia is a party to the ANZUS Treaty, a "military alliance which binds Australia and the United States, and separately Australia and New Zealand, to cooperate on defence [sic]
matters in the Pacific Ocean area" (Other descriptions of ANZUS). The treaty, which is now two parallel agreements, used to be a three-way mutual defense pact, until New Zealand
banned U.S. nuclear warships from their ports (one of the few countries that has actually stood up to the United States). Because New Zealand will not allow American nuclear-powered
warships into their harbors, that part of the treaty specifically providing for mutual defense between the U.S. and New Zealand no longer exists but "is still in force between either
country and Australia, separately" (Other descriptions of ANZUS). Thus, the "US-Australia alliance under the ANZUS Treaty remains in full force" (Other descriptions of ANZUS). The Five-Power Defense Arrangement is
also a mutual-defense pact. It is a treaty among the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore and Malaysia. "Intended to replace the former defense role of the British
in the Singapore-Malaysia area, the arrangement obligates members to consult in the event of external threat and provides for stationing Commonwealth forces in Singapore" (Foreign relations, 2005). Economy In
the 1980s, Australia "commenced a basic reorientation of its economy" and changed from "an inward looking, import-substitution country to an internationally competitive, export-oriented one" (Australia). Among the key reforms
Australian undertook during this transformation were "unilaterally reducing high tariffs and other protective barriers; floating the Australian dollar exchange rate; deregulating the financial services sector ... privatizing many government-owned services
...