Publication Beyond the Future Force 08 Jul 2013 RAAF Air Power Conference 2012 - Air Power and Coercive Diplomacy This publication is out of print. By Keith Brent (ed)
News 25 Nov 2022 2022 Air and Space Power Conference Proceedings The Air and Space Power Conference held in March earlier this year at the National Convention Centre Canberra, has been awarded the EventsAir 2022
Publication Conference Proceedings 29 Apr 2026 Advanced Air and Space Power Conference 2026 Transcript: Heterogenous Air Power at War Air and Space Power Conference 2026 Transcript 'Heterogenous Air Power at War'The Air and Space Power Conference 2026 took place at the National Co By Air and Space Power Centre
News 04 Apr 2018 Sir James Rowland Air Power Seminar Proposals for presentations of 3,000 words (max.) are invited from established scholars, early career academic researchers, industry leaders, polic
Publication Beyond the Future Force 07 Apr 2020 Surfing the Digital Wave There is a wave of digital transformation disrupting industries globally. By Peter Layton
Publication Stand Alone Publication / Monograph 22 May 2020 Master Diversifying Air Power: Broadening Air Force’s value proposition in an age of high contest This publication augues that for Air Force to meet the challenges of Australia’s current geostrategic environment, and remain relevant, it must bro By Peter Hunter
Publication Stand Alone Publication / Monograph 05 Aug 1992 Expert Power Plus Attitude: Ideas, Strategy and Doctrine in the Royal Australian Air Force 1921-1991 Like any form of combat power, air power does not develop in isolation; nor is it static. Even if there were no formal process linking its theoretical development and practical application to other elements of national security, plainly it will remain responsive to a range of external influences from the wider civil and military communities which combine to shape the national security outlook. By Alan Stephens
Air/Space 03 May 2021 Developing Swarms of Trouble: The Hidden Threat of Consumer UAVs Technology usually follows a certain progression – first the device gets more features before it reduces in size. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) fill this description perfectly, and we have yet to come up with an adequate defence for them. By Chris Arnold