Susannah Patton
Nonresident Fellow
Areas of expertise
Indo-Pacific strategy; Australian foreign policy; Southeast Asia
Biography
Publications
News and media
Susannah Patton is Director, Asia Engagement at RMIT and a Nonresident fellow at the Lowy Institute.
From 2022 to 2026 Susannah led the Lowy Institute’s Southeast Asia Program and was responsible for the Asia Power Index. Her research interests include geopolitical trends in Southeast Asia and Australian foreign policy. Susannah is an active participant in policy dialogues, conferences and professional education programs connecting Australia with Asia and improving Australians’ understanding of the region.
Susannah has contributed commentary to Australian and international media outlets, and her writing has been published in leading outlets including The New York Times, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy and the Australian Financial Review. She is a regular contributor to the Lowy Institute’s international magazine, The Interpreter.
Earlier in her career Susannah worked in various Southeast Asia-focused positions in the Australian government, including as a Senior Analyst in the Southeast Asia Branch at the Office of National Intelligence, in the ASEAN-Australia Special Summit Taskforce in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, and as a diplomat in the Australian Embassy in Bangkok. She speaks Thai and holds degrees in law and political science from the Australian National University.
Analysis
Southeast Asia’s evolving defence partnerships
While the United States and China remain key security actors, countries in the region are engaging with a broader array of external partners to enhance their autonomy and military…
Albanese’s Beijing visit sends mixed signals across Southeast Asia
The region sees independence where Australia sees relationship management.
Australia’s ambitious conflict prevention agenda in Asia
Penny Wong's initiative is conceptually muddled but might still be smart diplomacy in Southeast Asia
Does Australia see China as a threat?
Squaring the circle between public opinion and political rhetoric.
A border skirmish and leaked phone call sees the Thailand-Cambodia dispute surge back to life
An international dispute that is all about domestic politics.
Commentary
The burning questions Hegseth left unanswered on the China challenge
Originally published in The Australian Financial Review
SBS
24 March 2025
SBS
24 March 2025
ABC
19 March 2025
Channel News Asia
13 January 2025
Washington Post
19 December 2024