Historical Publications
Publications | Contacts | Gallery
The Department's Historical Publications and Records
The department regularly publishes foreign and trade policy historical material and provides selected access to departmental records.
Resources
- The Historical documents database is a searchable electronic database of thousands of pages of key historical documents (also published as Documents on Australian Foreign Policy).
- Documents on Australian Foreign Policy - a project supported by successive governments since 1971 to document the evolution of Australia’s external relations. ( More about this project...)
- Freedom of Information - access to departmental records under the Freedom of Information Act
Latest publications

Full Circle: Australia and Papua New Guinea 1883-1970
Full Circle: Australia and Papua New Guinea 1883–1970, examines the bilateral relationship and contains previously unpublished photographs.
Full Circle provides an absorbing account of the relationship between Australia and PNG from the late nineteenth century to 1970 with a particular focus on the post-Second World War period and the gradual acceptance in both Australia and PNG of the need to move towards decolonisation.
Full Circle was launched on 16 September 2007 to coincide with PNG’s 32nd anniversary of Independence. It was produced with assistance from the PNG National Archives and Public Records Service. Many of the photographs in the book come from the PNG National Archives collection and several are being published for the first time.
This publication is a companion to the reference work, Australia and Papua New Guinea 1966-1969, launched in Port
Moresby earlier this year. It is the fifth in the series, Australia in the World. The series is designed to increase
understanding of Australia’s role in international
relations.
Buy now

Women with a mission: personal perspectives
Since the political appointment in 1971 of Dame Annabelle Rankin
as Australia’s high commissioner to New Zealand—the
first female head of mission in the history of Australia’s
foreign service—57 women have filled 80 appointments as heads
of Australian diplomatic missions and posts. In 2006, 23 per cent
of such positions around the world were held by women. The current
status of women in the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is
the culmination of more than six decades of advances for women in
Australia diplomacy and in Australian society more broadly. Women with a Mission: personal perspectives contains nine
stories by women who headed missions and posts from 1983 to 2006;
each of whom has taken a unique path. Their contributions provide a
valuable insights into the demands and rewards, professional and
personal, of undertaking a career in Australia’s diplomatic
service.
Buy now

Australia and Papua New Guinea 1966-1969
This publication provides a detailed record of the classified communications that informed and determined Australian policy in Papua New Guinea between 1966 and 1969. Taken mainly from the files of the Department of Territories, the documents tell the story of how Australian governments of the 1960s tried to maintain a slow pace of political change in PNG while accelerating economic development.
Highlights of the volume include Canberra’s reaction to Papua New Guinean interest in joining the Australian federation; the genesis of the Bougainville problem; conflict with a quasi-nationalist movement in the Rabaul area; early analyses of PNG’s unique parliamentary politics; fears of a break down of law and order in Port Moresby; and the formulation of a massive five-year plan for economic growth.
The book also
documents an increasingly vigorous internal debate on whether to hasten the
tempo of political change in view of growing social strains in Papua New
Guinea.
Buy now

The Struggle for Trade Liberalisation in Agriculture: Australia and the Cairns Group in the Uruguay Round
The book provides a detailed account of Australia’s efforts to form a coalition of so called ‘agricultural fair traders’ to influence the ‘majors’—the United States, the European Community and Japan—and other GATT members to liberalise world trade in agriculture during the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations between 1986 and 1993. The coalition, named after the Queensland town in which it first met, became known as the ‘Cairns Group’.
The book details Australia’s role in the formation of the Cairns Group—originally Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Fiji, Hungary, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Thailand and Uruguay. The Group negotiated a broad-ranging mandate for agricultural reform in September 1986, developed detailed negotiating proposals for the reform of agricultural trade in 1987 and 1988 and insisted that the Uruguay Round would not successfully conclude unless agriculture was adequately addressed.
Despite the Uruguay Round almost collapsing in Brussels in December 1990, the Cairns Group worked patiently with GATT’s Director-General, Arthur Dunkel, and other GATT members to resume the stalled negotiations. From 1991 to 1993 the Group helped to negotiate a deal on agricultural reform which converted all agricultural non-tariff barriers into tariffs (tariffication), reinstrumented domestic subsidies towards less trade-distorting forms of farm support and limited the use of export subsidies. From 1995 the Cairns Group succeeded in agriculture for the first time coming fully under the rules of the GATT/WTO.
The publication is the fourth in the series of short historical
narratives entitled Australia in the World: the foreign affairs
and trade files, which aims to provide readable and
well-researched stories from Australia's foreign and trade
history.
Buy now