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Honours years at ADFA are highly desirable, sought after by the most academically gifted students and promoted to all students by ADFA, RMC and DOCM-A staff. It is to be considered the first option for eligible high performing Army ADFA students, ahead of all other career options including unit postings. ADFA honours will be awarded annually based on recommendations of military and academic staff. The UNSW University Handbook outlines the availability of honours degree programs. Each year, in September, …

Sabre&Quill21 – Army partnering with leading academia The need for Army to engage with, and learn from, academia has never been greater, as evidenced by Australia’s uncertain geo-strategic landscape. Army is an evolving, forward-looking organisation which seeks and values the contribution of academia as it continues to develop land capability. The objective of Sabre&Quill21 is to provide a venue for senior partners in academia, research-institutes and think-tanks to learn of Army’s research initiatives and …




Dan Kealy first wore the green at Duntroon in 1996. He holds a Master’s degree in Accountancy and has 25-years’ experience as an educator, with post-graduate specialisation in Early Childhood Education. His research interest is in the economics of empire and conflict, and as a reservist is currently writing the Army Urban Warfare Bibliography for the AARC. … Dan …

LT Emma Milner is an RA Sigs officer, currently posted to 3rd Combat Signals Regiment. In 2020, LT Milner completed her Bachelor of Arts (Hons) at the University of New South Wales, Canberra. The topic of this research was cyber-enabled foreign influence and interference, with a focus on Australia’s approach to defining both influence and interference. LT Milner’s research interests also includes online inauthentic behaviour, political tribalism, and the geopolitics of cyberspace. … Emma …

Future Land Warfare Essay Collection Foreword Change is hard. As Army’s Future Land Warfare, we contest ideas, encourage discourse and propose concepts that are often not to the satisfaction of every faction, agenda, or interest-group focused on the generation of land power as part of the Australian Defence Force. It is for this reason that the selected essays, written by members of the Australian Army Research Centre, the Australian Army History Unit, the Robotics and Integrated Technologies …
The question is not whether the future of warfare will be filled with autonomous, AI-driven robots, but when and in what form. [1] Robotic and autonomous systems, colloquially known as RAS, offer significant potential in the joint force logistic effort that extends from the national support base along lines of communication to frontline use. Industry has been employing automation and autonomy for some time, yet Australian Defence Force (ADF) adoption of such technologies has been evolutionary and somewhat …

The mid 20th century definition of ‘jointery’ used by the Australian Defence Force (ADF) is increasingly anachronistic. It no longer matches the ADF’s recent operational experience or its anticipated future requirements. Warfare in the 21st century demands that Australia’s defence capabilities—and therefore the joint force—expand to cover two relatively new domains: information and cyber, and space. Much of Australia’s core expertise and capability in these new domains lies outside the ADF. This challenges …
