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CYBER AND CRITICAL TECHNOLOGY IN THE INDO-PACIFIC

RMIT College of Business and Law - Thought Leadership Series

CYBER AND CRITICAL TECHNOLOGY IN THE INDO-PACIFIC

Cyberspace and critical technology affect Australia's national security, economy, democracy and human rights.

They also impact international peace, stability and sustainable development. For Australia, cyberspace and critical technology is therefore a foreign policy priority.

In April 2021 the Australian Government launched Australia's International Cyber and Critical Technology Engagement Strategy.

The Strategy aims to create a cyberspace and critical technology that ensure a safe, secure and prosperous Australia, Indo-Pacific and world.

In collaboration with the RMIT Centre for Cyber Security Research and Innovation (CCSRI) we are asking the question:

Why is cooperation with the Indo-Pacific region around cyber and critical technology important to Australia?

Come and join us!

The Panel

Hosted by Professor Matt Warren, Director of the RMIT Centre of Cyber Security Research and Innovation (CCSRI), we are delighted to hear from two high-calibre speakers.

 

Dr Tobias Feakin - Ambassador for Cyber Affairs and Critical Technology at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade

Tobias is Australia’s inaugural Ambassador for Cyber Affairs and Critical Technology. He commenced as Ambassador for Cyber Affairs in January 2017, before having his mandate expanded to reflect the central role that technology issues have in geopolitics.

He leads Australia’s Whole of Government international engagement to advance and protect Australia’s national security, foreign policy, economic and trade, and development interests in cyberspace and critical technology.

 

Dr Craig Emerson - Director of the Australian APEC Study Centre

Craig is an eminent economist, with 35 years of experience in public policy, politics and public service. He was Senior Adviser to Prime Minister Bob Hawke from 1986 to 1990 and, after entering parliament in 1998, went on to serve as Minister for Trade and Competitiveness, Minister for Tertiary Education, Skills, Science and Research, and Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Asian Century Policy between 2010 and 2013.

He is now Managing Director of Craig Emerson Economics, Chair of the Mckell Institute, an Adjunct Professor at Victoria University’s College of Business, and writes a fortnightly column for The Australian Financial Review. He is also a member of CEDA’s Council on Economic Policy.

 

RMIT University Centre for Cyber Security Research and Innovation (CCSRI) 

The RMIT University Centre for Cyber Security Research and Innovation (CCSRI) is a multi-disciplinary research centre that brings researchers from across RMIT to bring a truly multidisciplinary approach to the organisational, human and technology aspects of Cyber Security.

The mission of the RMIT University Centre for Cyber Security Research and Innovation (CCSRI) is to be acknowledged as a world-class research centre in multi-disciplinary Cyber Security research and to be acknowledged by Australian and overseas industry and government as a leading source of knowledge and expertise in multi-disciplinary Cyber Security research.