Displaying results 2381 to 2390 of 2610.

Perspectives on Europe »

Perspectives on Europe is the first open-access, double-blind peer-reviewed book series on Europe and the European Union published in the Indo-Pacific region. Addressing issues relating to Europe and its internal and external relations, this multidisciplinary series offers a platform for critical

Anika Gauja »

Anika Gauja is a professor of politics in the Department of Government and International Relations, University of Sydney.

Marian Sawer »

Marian Sawer is an emeritus professor in the School of Politics and International Relations, The Australian National University.

Jill Sheppard »

Jill Sheppard is a senior lecturer in the School of Politics and International Relations, The Australian National University.

Jess Melvin »

Jess Melvin is a Discovery Early Career Research Award fellow in the School of Humanities (History) at the University of Sydney. She is author of The Army and the Indonesian Genocide: Mechanics of Mass Murder (2018). She was previously a postdoctoral fellow in genocide studies and a Henry Hart Rice Faculty Fellow in Southeast Asian studies at Yale University. Her research interests include human rights in Southeast Asia, political violence in the postcolonial world and Acehnese history.

Sri Lestari Wahyuningroem »

Sri Lestari Wahyuningroem is a senior lecturer at Universitas Pembangunan Nasional Veteran Jakarta, Indonesia. She holds a PhD from The Australian National University and began research on Aceh in 1998, examining military violence against women. Since then, she has undertaken research in Aceh for the United Nations Population Fund, the United Nations Fund for Women, the International Center for Transitional Justice, and Asia Justice and Rights. She is the author of Transitional Justice from State to Civil Society: Democratization in Indonesia (2020).

Annie Pohlman »

Annie Pohlman teaches Indonesian studies at the University of Queensland, in Brisbane. She is the author of Women, Sexual Violence and the Indonesian Killings of 1965–66 (2015) and co-editor of a range of volumes on mass atrocities, Southeast Asian history, and trauma and memory. Her research interests include Indonesian history, Southeast Asian politics, comparative genocide studies, torture, oral testimony and gendered experiences of violence.

Kate Bagnall »

Kate Bagnall is a social historian whose research sits at the intersections of migration, law and the family in the British settler colonial world. Kate is best known for her work in Chinese Australian history as well as in the history of the White Australia policy and its colonial beginnings. Her recent publications include the groundbreaking edited collection Locating Chinese Women: Historical Mobility between China and Australia (2021), co-edited with Julia Martínez. Before becoming a senior lecturer in humanities (history) at the University of Tasmania in 2019, Kate was an ARC DECRA research fellow at the University of Wollongong (2016–19).

Peter Prince »

Peter Prince has been writing for two decades about legal identity and belonging in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Australia. Peter completed his PhD in 2016 in this area through the ANU College of Law. He has published articles, papers and blogs on the implications of this history for the right to belong in modern Australia. His work has been cited by the High Court of Australia in critical ‘aliens’ cases, including Singh (2004), Love & Thoms (2020) and Chetcuti (2021). He is an affiliate of the University of Sydney Law School.

FAQs »

Read advice and find answers to frequently asked questions on topics including: Title:  How do I order a print copy of an ANU Press title? FAQ Text:  ANU Press makes use of a Print-on-Demand (PoD) service to supply paperback copies of its books and journals to customers To purchase an ANU Press