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anupress.bsky.social
ANU Press
@anupress.bsky.social
The first and largest open-access university press in the world. Based at ANU, we publish academic monographs and journals across a wide variety of disciplines.
Our upcoming title brings together scholars, practitioners and activists to explore how politics is gendered across Asia and Oceania, using an intersectional lens on gender, sexuality, race, class, religion, ability, migrancy and more.

Register your interest today: doi.org/10.22459/GPR...
November 27, 2025 at 1:05 AM
China’s energy shift since 2010 has moved it from coal dependence to global leadership in solar, wind, batteries and EVs.

The next challenge: deeper reforms and stronger global cooperation to support an affordable, inclusive green transition?

Now available: doi.org/10.22459/GET...
November 24, 2025 at 9:14 PM
📚 BOOK LAUNCH 📚

Come along to the launch ‘Gender and Politics Reimagined', a coming together of academics, gender and development practitioners and activists to reflect on the gendering of politics.

🗓️ 3 December
⏰ 11 am
📍Coombs Tea Room, HC Coombs Building, ANU

Scan the QR code to register 👇
November 24, 2025 at 3:42 AM
China’s push for peak carbon by 2030 and reach neutrality by 2060 is reshaping its economy. This book explores China’s renewable-energy progress, opportunities and challenges ahead.

Learn more and register your interest: doi.org/10.22459/GET...
November 23, 2025 at 9:47 PM
This issue features stories ranging from Norway’s helicopter-sprayed forests and New Zealand’s Ice Age climate debates to Gothic settler landscapes and the rise of Phoenix palms. It also includes a powerful memoir on the fight to save K’gari from sand mining.

Get your copy: doi.org/10.22459/IRE...
November 17, 2025 at 9:42 PM
It was a privilege to celebrate the launch of 'Military History Supremo', a tribute to Emeritus Professor David Horner’s remarkable legacy. Edited by Professor Emerita Joan Beaumont and Dr Garth Pratten, the volume features leading scholars building on his influential work in military history.
November 17, 2025 at 2:08 AM
This latest issue of the 'International Review of Environmental History' takes readers from the settler landscapes of nineteenth-century Aotearoa New Zealand to the post-1945 rise of herbicides in Northern Europe.

Register your interest to learn more: doi.org/10.22459/IRE...
November 12, 2025 at 10:47 PM
Our latest title is a timely and powerful collection on language education in Australian universities, focusing on topics of wide-ranging importance: disruption, decentring and diversification.

A must-read for anyone rethinking how languages are taught in higher education!

doi.org/10.22459/DDD...
November 5, 2025 at 10:25 PM
What does it mean to come of age in a society where the paths to adulthood are increasingly uncertain, yet the pressure to succeed remains relentless?

Find out more in the latest issue of ‘Made in China Journal’: doi.org/10.22459/MIC...
October 27, 2025 at 11:10 PM
🚨COMING SOON🚨

"As languages and cultures educators and scholars, one thing we can confidently say is that the past few years have clearly demonstrated our collective capacity to evolve through, and also enact, disruption."

Learn more and register your interest: doi.org/10.22459/DDD...
October 19, 2025 at 10:03 PM
This upcoming issue of ‘Made in China Journal’ dives deep into how a generation is navigating constraint, competition and creativity, from digital platforms to poetry and from co-living to basketball courts.

Register your interest to learn more doi.org/10.22459/MIC...
October 13, 2025 at 2:44 AM
How can language teaching in Australian higher education be disrupted, decentred and diversified?

This volume offers theory, critical reflection, pedagogy and data-driven research to challenge how languages are taught and imagined.

Register your interest: doi.org/10.22459/DDD...
September 30, 2025 at 3:43 AM
With increasing globalisation and convergence in securities markets, regulatory cooperation is increasingly relevant.

This book proposes a deeper, strategic collaboration between India and Australia in regard to the securities sector.

Get your copy today doi.org/10.22459/DSC...
September 15, 2025 at 10:38 PM
Just how do India 🇮🇳 and Australia 🇦🇺 stack up when it comes to securities regulation?

Our upcoming book examines the potential strategic collaboration between these countries in the securities sector.

Register your interest and learn more doi.org/10.22459/DSC...
September 12, 2025 at 1:31 AM
We’re excited to unveil four compelling upcoming titles:

📚 A reflection on the gendering of politics
🌿 A new issue of our environmental history journal
⚖️ An exploration of law-making in a young democracy
🔍 The history of the Mauututu Nakanai of West New Britain

Learn more at press.anu.edu.au
September 4, 2025 at 2:03 AM
We are delighted to announce that Erik Eklund’s new book, ‘Politics, Pride and Perversion: The Rise and Fall of Frank Arkell’, has been selected for the 2025 Australian Political Book of the Year Award longlist. Congratulations!

Get your copy today: doi.org/10.22459/PPP.2025
August 25, 2025 at 4:06 AM
This edition of EAFQ maps the terrain on which Asia must choose between short-term accommodation and long-term growth and resilience, and examines how governments across the region are juggling the shocks from Washington alongside political and economic pressures.

doi.org/10.22459/EAFQ.17.03.2025
August 25, 2025 at 1:09 AM
The latest issue of ‘East Asia Forum Quarterly’ explores how governments in Asia are navigating trade shocks, tech disruption and shifting power dynamics, and why regional cooperation is key to shaping a fairer global order.

Register your interest: doi.org/10.22459/EAF...
August 21, 2025 at 4:34 AM
‘It is time for a critical evaluation of histories of Indonesia extending back to the formal period of colonisation right through to the present using the scholarly lens of coloniality and decoloniality to capture the enduring legacies of and processes that reproduce coloniality.’
August 20, 2025 at 11:25 PM
Our upcoming title explores Indonesia’s past and present through the lens of coloniality, examining how colonial power structures persist beyond the formal period of colonisation.

Register your interest today: doi.org/10.22459/RHI...

@susieprotschky.bsky.social @asianstudies.org
August 19, 2025 at 12:53 AM
Huge congratulations to our author Erik Eklund, whose powerful book ‘Politics, Pride and Perversion: The Rise and Fall of Frank Arkell’ has been shortlisted for the #NSWHA Community and Regional History Prize!

Don’t miss this compelling read. Get your copy today: doi.org/10.22459/PPP.2025
August 18, 2025 at 2:04 AM
A powerful study of resource extraction and inequality.

‘Ink and Land’ explores how indigenous groups in #PNG compete for land rights around the Wafi-Golpu copper-gold mine, shaped by law, politics and the promise of gold.

Get your copy today: doi.org/10.22459/IL....
August 13, 2025 at 10:51 PM
“We cannot be spectators to this change. We cannot become spectators on our own land." – Naga Jason

‘Ink and Land’ explores the political and legal struggles over landownership in #PNG, as groups compete to be recognised as customary landowners of the Wafi-Golpu copper-gold mine.
August 11, 2025 at 5:35 AM
This volume of 'Aboriginal History Journal' opens with Christopher Morton’s careful consideration of the provenance of a Wiradjuri or Gamilaroi marara (tree carving), tracing the likely route it took to its current location on display at the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford.

doi.org/10.22459/AH....
August 4, 2025 at 11:33 PM
‘Struggle, Reform, Boom and Bust’, co-authored by leading Australian and Papua New Guinean scholars, blends economic policy and institutional analysis through the lens of modern economic theory and offers fresh insights that reflect recent developments and reforms.

doi.org/10.22459/SRB...
July 30, 2025 at 10:22 PM