I’m no spy, so why does ASIO think my stint in China is a black mark?

If you believe Australia needs Asia capability, then you must believe the Australian government and the wider workforce need Australians who have spent time living, studying and working in Asia.

I am an Australian, with Mandarin language skills, studying a PhD in Hong Kong, researching the impact of nationalism on public perspectives of the Australia-China relationship. I was in Canberra recently to have conversations with ANU professors, think-tankers and government staff about my research. It took all of two seconds for someone to accuse me of being a spy.

Ciara Morris, second from left, with Peking University classmates on the Great Wall of China in 2019.

A senior political staffer, at a dinner among friends, who was meeting me for the first time, thought it was appropriate to openly question my national loyalty after learning I was interested in China. Joke or not, these all-too-frequent comments are a symptom of a wider problem: undue suspicion of Australians with China capability.

I preface this by saying this feeling can be so much worse for Chinese Australians, for whom these ‘jokes’ also take on a racial frame.

I first moved to Asia in 2019 after completing my undergraduate degree in government and international relations in Sydney. I went to Beijing for my masters to learn more about China.

Arriving back in Australia a year........

© The Age