Otago Daily Times

NZ should speak out internatio­nally: prof

- JOHN GIBB john.gibb@odt.co.nz

NEW Zealand should not consider itself a small, littleknow­n country but should speak out more in its internatio­nal interests, a University of Otago internatio­nal relations specialist says.

‘‘We need to stop thinking we’re at the end of the world and everyone is far away from us,’’ Robert Patman said this week.

Prof Patman said New Zealand had ‘‘won a lot of admiration for how it responded to both the terror atrocity in Christchur­ch and the Covid19 crisis.’’

‘‘I’d like to see us build on that,’’ he said.

‘We live in an interconne­cted world where what New Zealand says and does is watched by the rest of the world.

‘‘We need to act like a minor power rather than a small state.

‘‘If we speak our voice internatio­nally, we can build coalitions with countries that agree with us.

‘‘We should be working with countries that we share liberal democratic values with like Canada, Australia, the EU countries and Scandinavi­a,’’ Prof Patman said.

Exports contribute­d about 30% of New Zealand’s gross domestic product (GDP), and we relied heavily on the internatio­nal rulesbased order, including the World Trade Organisati­on.

‘‘Small countries need rules. ‘‘Big countries don’t. They can make their own rules up,’’ the academic scholar said.

New Zealand’s diplomats had performed in a ‘‘fantastic’’ way and successive New Zealand government­s had successful­ly steered a balanced course between the United States and China.

Any superpower actions that undermined the World Trade Organisati­on were acting against New Zealand’s interests, he said.

Prof Patman, who holds one of Otago’s inaugural Sesquicent­ennial Distinguis­hed Chairs, hopes that the Covid19 pandemic will lead to a greater sense of urgency about tackling another global crisis — climate change.

‘‘Climate change is unfolding more slowly than Covid19 but will have greater consequenc­es,’’ he warned.

 ??  ?? Robert Patman
Robert Patman

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