2nd March 2023, Tuesday 

About the Speaker

Dr David Brewster is a Senior Research Fellow with the National Security College, Australian National University where he works on the Indian Ocean and Indo-Pacific maritime security.  He is also a Distinguished Research Fellow with the Australia India Institute, University of Melbourne.  He is a frequent speaker at international security conferences throughout the region and is an Australian delegate to several major 1.5 Track security and defence dialogues.  His research interests include Indian Ocean security, India’s security and defence relationships, and, Indo-Pacific maritime security.  His books include India as an Asia Pacific Power, about India’s strategic role in
the Asia Pacific and India’s Ocean: the story of India’s bid for regional leadership which examines India’s strategic ambitions in the Indian Ocean.  His latest edited volume is India and China at Sea: Competition for Naval Dominance in the Indian Ocean, which addresses Indian and Chinese perspectives about their roles in the Indian Ocean and their evolving naval strategies towards each other.  He contributed a chapter to Strategic Asia 2019
titled ‘The Red Flag Follows Trade: China’s Future as an Indian Ocean Power’.  Dr Brewster is also the author of a major new report, Australia’s Second Sea: Facing our Multipolar Future in the Indian Ocean, which proposes a new
roadmap for Australia’s strategic engagement in the Indian Ocean.

Dr Brewster is currently engaged in the following projects:

  • Indian Ocean security: This project looks at the future strategic order of the Indian Ocean, with a particular focus on the roles of India and China.
  • Australia in the Indian Ocean. This project will examine the development of Australia’s strategic role in the Indian Ocean from Imperial to contemporary times.  It will focus on the competing imperatives faced by Australia in supporting its alliance partners, especially in the Middle East, taking an active role in the security of Southeast Asia, as well as addressing its own continental security.