Associate Professor of US and International History, University of Melbourne
Barbara Keys is the author of two books: Reclaiming American Virtue: The Human Rights Revolution of the 1970s (Harvard University Press, 2014), which offers an explanation of the origins of the human rights “boom” of the 1970s in the United States; and the prizewinning Globalizing Sport: National Rivalry and International Community in the 1930s (Harvard University Press, 2006), a transnational study of the emergence of international sports competitions as a significant political and cultural force in the interwar years. She has a PhD in History from Harvard University and has taught at the University of Melbourne since 2006. Her current research projects are on transnational campaigns against torture since 1945; the influence of Henry Kissinger and his consulting firm Kissinger Associates on Sino-American relations from 1971 to the present; and the idealisms associated with international sport.

World politics explainer: The twin-tower bombings (9/11)
Oct 04, 2018 14:19 pm UTC| Insights & Views Politics
This article is part of our series of explainers on key moments in the past 100 years of world political history. In it, our authors examine how and why an event unfolded, its impact at the time, and its relevance to...