Senior Lecturer in International & Community Development, Deakin University
I am a Burma/Myanmar specialist focused primarily on socioeconomic and political development in that country. My research is focused on international development programming in conflict-affected situations, and the relationship between everyday peacebuilding, community-led local development, and conflict dynamics, particularly in Myanmar. I have thus also worked on issues such as Myanmar’s previous sanctions regime, fragile states, democratic transition, the role of faith and faith-based organisations in development, and theoretical and case study evaluations of development in difficult sociopolitical contexts. I am a Senior Lecturer in International & Community Developmen at Deakin University, having previously lectured in politics and international development at Deakin University and The University of Melbourne. I have almost a decade of professional experience living and working in developmen in SE Asia. I have published more than two dozen academic papers/chapters, including in Development in Practice, Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy, Social Compass and Development Bulletin. I have four books: Context-Sensitive Development: How International NGOs Operate in Myanmar (Kumarian 2012), Development in Difficult Sociopolitical Contexts (Palgrave 2014), Development Across Faith Boundaries (Routledge 2017, with Matthew Clarke), and Myanmar's 'Rohingya' Conflict (Hurst 2018, with Costas Laoutides).

Aung San Suu Kyi's extraordinary fall from grace
Oct 04, 2018 14:23 pm UTC| Insights & Views Politics
Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmars civilian leader and de facto president, is under fire from all sides. Domestically, she is facing growing criticism for stalled economic and political reforms, glacial progress on policy and...