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Senior politics lecturer, Australian National University

I research and teach in the field of international relations, at the intersection of international political economy and international security. My major research interests focus on geoeconomics (including economic statecraft and technology competition), grand strategy in the context of power transitions and international order, and the Indo-Pacific region.

The issue areas covered by my published research include (see my personal website for links):

Sino-US technology competition and great power rivalry, plus the logic (and costs) of decoupling
How East and South Asian states navigate relations between the US and China through hedging strategies
Tourism as an instrument of Chinese economic statecraft
China’s “institutional statecraft” and its creation of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
Conceptualising and measuring power in Australian foreign policy
Bargaining power in Eurozone bailout negotiations between Greece and Germany
“Doxing democracy”, i.e. cyber interference in democratic elections
As of January 2021, topics I’m currently working on include a book project on geoeconomics, and paper projects on the logic of a China-led international order, informal economic sanctions, and Australia's managment of bilateral relations with China.

I also co-host a podcast called Australia in the World.

I received my PhD in 2014 from Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Initially trained in law and economics, I previously worked as Associate to the Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Australia, a corporate lawyer, and researcher at International Crisis Group.

Experience

  • –present
    Senior politics lecturer, Australian National University