Mongolia, Ancient Empire, Modern Mystery - Hosted by the AIIA Queensland
Join us either in-person or online as former Captain in the US Marine Corps and American Director of Friends of Mongolia, Nicholas Millward, and PhD candidate at QUT, Usukhbold Chimedregzen, participate in a discussion on Mongolia's place within a region of rising powers and growing tension and Australia's own relationship with the Northeast Asian country.
If you are attending in-person, please arrive at Holding Redlich at 5.30pm for registration and drinks. This event will be available online. After registering, on April 27 you will receive a follow-up confirmation email containing further details on how to join the webinar which will commence at 6pm AEST. The event is free for AIIA Queensland members and AIIA members from all states. Non-members pay $10 and student non-members $5.
If you arrive after 6pm, the lifts may not be accessible. Ring 0403 777 541 for assistance.
Images supplied: Kremlin.ru
License: Attribution 4.0 International
Many know Mongolia as the place from which Mongol Emperor Kublai Khan conquered China and much of Southeast Asia and had influence and reach as far as Europe and Africa. A Marxist satellite state of the Soviet Empire and suffering itself from Stalinist purges, Mongolia emerged as a democracy in 1990. Mongolia is a vast land-locked country of 3.5 million people and is growing quickly. Known traditionally for its nomadic tribes, horsemanship and the hardiness of its people under extreme climatic conditions, it is undergoing a significant economic transformation based on growth in mining and trade.
Highly dependent on Russia for energy and China for trade, what is Mongolia's relationships with those countries and also with the Koreas, Japan and Taiwan?
On this, Nicholas Millward and Usukhbold Chimedregzen will answer these questions, as well as discussing the areas of opportunity to deepen ties between Mongolia and Australia.