Australia’s evolving strategic environment, marked by accelerating technological competition and rising Indo-Pacific tensions, demands a shift from episodic defence planning towards a coordinated whole-of-nation defence posture. This paper argues that national resilience now depends on integrating government, industry, academia and civil society into a sustained capability framework. It proposes three interconnected initiatives designed to operationalise this approach: (1) a nationwide science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM)-to-Defence talent pipeline that builds the human capital essential for emerging air and space missions; (2) a sovereign space acceleration initiative that establishes rapid, sovereign space-launch, production and data infrastructure to secure Australia’s access to space-based capabilities; and (3) an air and space reserve network that embeds civilian technical specialists directly into Defence operations through a legally enabled, scalable reserve model. Together, these initiatives synchronise people, platforms and partnerships to deliver enduring strategic advantage, reduce reliance on external suppliers and enhance national preparedness across air, space, cyber and autonomous domains. The paper concludes that adopting such a framework is vital if Australia is to shift from reactive capability development to proactive, long-term sovereignty in an increasingly contested regional environment.
Yvette Z Ross (Wed,) studied this question.