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The book will be launched by Linda Mulcahy, Professor of Socio-Legal Studies and Director of the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies at Oxford University and Professor of Law at ANU College of Law. Until the late 20th century, ‘an archive’ generally meant a repository for documents, as well as the
The inaugural Peer Review Seminar will feature conversations on the latest global trends and local matters in academic peer review. Experts from across the research ecosystem will discuss peer review’s significance, to academia and the wider public, plus latest innovations being adopted. Sessions
ANU Press ANU Press is our primary imprint where high-quality, peer-reviewed monographs and journals covering a range of disciplines are published. Each submission is passed through a rigorous evaluation process by the appropriate Editorial Board and must meet the minimum requirements of
Helen Lee is Professor of Anthropology at La Trobe University in Melbourne. Since her first book, Becoming Tongan: An Ethnography of Childhood (1996, as H. Morton), she has published widely on migration and transnationalism and on Tongan history and society. This includes the ANU Press publication Migration and Transnationalism: Pacific Perspectives (2009, with Steve Tupai Francis)
Dr Joanne Wallis is a Senior Lecturer and Director of Studies in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, College of Asia and the Pacific at The Australian National University.
Stuart Bedford is a Senior Lecturer at The Australian National University and Associate at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. He has been involved in the discovery and investigation of Lapita sites in Vanuatu since 1995. This has involved undertaking archaeological research on most of the islands of the archipelago on some of the best preserved Lapita sites known, which has helped transform the understanding of Lapita across its Pacific distribution.
Dan Halvorson is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Government and International Relations at Griffith University. His research interests focus on the history of Australia’s foreign and defence policies, Cold War history and decolonisation, and the historical sociology of the religious resurgence in world affairs.
ANU Press is delighted to announce the release of a new imprint, ANU Press Languages. This imprint is dedicated to exploring language teaching and aims to promote exceptional language-based texts, including textbooks, educational materials and works from a diverse range of disciplines. Content from
Ron Boxall entered the Officer Cadet School, Portsea, in January 1959 and was commissioned into the Australian Regular Army in the following December. During the 1966–67 tour in Vietnam of the 5th Battalion, the Royal Australian Regiment, he was second-in-command of D Company. He returned to Vietnam in 1971 with another infantry battalion in which he served as a rifle company commander. His military career spanned 31 years; he left the Army as a Brigadier.
Greg Fry is Honorary Associate Professor in the Asia-Pacific College of Diplomacy in the Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, at The Australian National University. He is also Adjunct Associate Professor in the School of Government, Development and International Affairs at the University of the South Pacific. His most recent books include Intervention and State-Building in the Pacific (co-editor with Tarcisius Kabutaulaka, Manchester University Press, 2008); and The New Pacific Diplomacy (co‑editor with Sandra Tarte, ANU Press, 2015.)