Displaying results 2351 to 2360 of 2638.
Robert O’Neill was the intelligence officer of the 5th Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment, for much of its first tour in Vietnam, 1966–67. He later became a strategic analyst and historian of war, serving as head of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, ANU, 1971–82; director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, London, 1982–87; and Chichele Professor of the History of War, Oxford University, 1987–2001. He was also the Australian official historian for the Korean War, 1970–82, and chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Imperial War Museum, London, 1998–2001.
Gordon Peake is a writer, podcaster and consultant with extensive experience working at the coalface of international development. His first book, Beloved Land, was an award-winning account of life in Timor-Leste.
The Global Thinkers Series is an initiative of the Public Policy Editorial Board at the ANU Press. The series was launched in 2020 to highlight the writings of internationally acclaimed Australia-linked scholars, particularly those working in policy-relevant fields. Each volume is a capstone book,
France Meyer is a professional literary translator specialising in modern Arabic literature. France has translated into French 21 Arabic prize-winning novels, seven of them by Egyptian writer and Nobel Prize of Literature Laureate Naguib Mahfouz. In 2015, France co-designed and taught the first Introductory Arabic online course at the Centre for Arab and Islamic Studies – Middle-East and Central Asia (CAIS) at The Australian National University, where she was an Arabic lecturer until May 2021 before becoming an ANU honorary appointee in 2021.
Anna Olijnyk is a senior lecturer in law at the University of Adelaide. She is the director of the Public Law and Policy Research Unit. She is the author of Justice and Efficiency in Mega-litigation (Hart 2019) and a co-author of Government Accountability: Australian Administrative Law (Cambridge University Press, 2nd ed., 2018) and Judicial Federalism in Australia (Federation Press, 2021). Her work has been published in leading journals, including the International Journal of Constitutional Law, Public Law Review, University of New South Wales Law Journal and Sydney Law Review.
Alexander Reilly is an adjunct professor of law at the University of Adelaide and a tribunal member of the South Australian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. He is a co‑author of Australian Public Law (Oxford University Press, 3rd ed., 2018) and Rights and Redemption, History, Law and Indigenous Peoples (UNSW Press, 2008), and a co‑editor of Sovereignty: Frontiers of Possibility (University of Hawaiʻi Press, 2013). Alex has written extensively on a wide range of public law issues in Australian and international journals focusing on refugee law and policy, citizenship, and constitutional law.
Daya Dakasi Da-Wei Kuan comes from the Tayal indigenous group in Taiwan. He is an associate professor in the Department of Ethnology at National Chengchi University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Paul D’Arcy is a Pacific environmental historian in the Department of Pacific Affairs, in the Coral Bell School of Asia and Pacific Affairs, at The Australian National University.
Karen J. Brison is a professor of anthropology at Union College in Schenectady, New York. She received her PhD in anthropology in 1988 from the University of California, San Diego. She has conducted research in Papua New Guinea and Fiji on Pentecostalism, gossip and oratory, childhood and education, and gender. She is the author of three books, and the co-editor of a fourth, and has published numerous articles.
The books in this series contain the papers presented at the information systems foundations workshops conducted by the School of Accounting and Business Information Systems at The Australian National University. Scholarly Information Services