Ryan Neelam

Former Program Director, Public Opinion and Foreign Policy
Ryan Neelam
Biography
Publications
News and media

Ryan Neelam was Director of the Public Opinion and Foreign Policy Program at the Lowy Institute. He lead the flagship annual Lowy Institute Poll, was project director for the Global Diplomacy Index, and wrote about climate diplomacy and multilateral policy. 

His writing has appeared in leading publications such as the Financial Times, Nikkei Asia, Australian Financial Review, and The Australian, and his research and commentary have been cited by The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, Time Magazine, The Guardian, Bloomberg, and many others.

Prior to joining the Lowy Institute in 2023, Ryan served as an Australian diplomat for 14 years, including acting as Consul-General to Hong Kong and Macau. Ryan was also posted to the Australian Mission to the United Nations in New York, where he negotiated agreement to the UN Sustainable Development Goals, served on the UN Security Council during Australia’s two-year term, and led on climate change. He has managed key diplomatic relationships, developed policy, and represented Australia on global economic, climate change, human rights, and peace and security issues.

Ryan holds a Bachelor of Economics and Social Sciences (Honours) from the University of Sydney.

In Donald Trump we distrust – in record numbers
Commentary
In Donald Trump we distrust – in record numbers
Originally published on The Australian Financial Review
2025 Lowy Institute Poll — Preview
Polling
2025 Lowy Institute Poll — Preview
Trust in the United States drops to a new low, Australians’ confidence in political leaders’ foreign policy abilities.
Brazil's 2024 G20 Summit: Right Agenda, Little Consensus
Commentary
Brazil's 2024 G20 Summit: Right Agenda, Little Consensus
This article first appeared in the Council of Council's Global Perspectives, 26 November 2024.
End game at COP29: Green talks in the “Blue Zone”
End game at COP29: Green talks in the “Blue Zone”
The best hope is that the final hours are following a predictable pattern of brinkmanship.
What Trump’s win means for global climate negotiations
What Trump’s win means for global climate negotiations
The US election result casts a shadow over next week’s UN climate talks in Azerbaijan. But the world can’t afford to down tools.
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