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Anthony Burke (born 1966) is an Australian political theorist and international relations scholar. He is Associate Professor (Reader) of Politics and International Relations in the University of New South Wales. He was the founding editor and is publisher of the transdisciplinary journal of the humanities and social sciences, ''Borderlands''.〔http://www.borderlands.net.au/〕 His published work ranges across the fields of security studies, war and peace, international ethics, the international relations of the Asia-Pacific and the Middle-East, and Australian politics and history. He is best known for contributions to the field of critical security studies and the study of war and peace, combining them with explorations of fundamental themes in political and social theory: freedom, security, sovereignty, terror, being, ethics, violence, and truth.〔Thinking World Politics: Weblog, http://worldthoughtworldpolitics.wordpress.com/about-anthony-burke/〕 He is the author of three books: ''Ethics and Global Security: A Cosmopolitan Approach'' (with Katrina Lee-Koo and Matt McDonald, Routledge 2014), ''Beyond Security, Ethics and Violence: War Against The Other'' (Routledge, 2007), and ''Fear of Security: Australia’s Invasion Anxiety'' (Pluto Press Australia, 2001; 2nd. edn. Cambridge University Press, 2008). He is the co-editor, with Matthew McDonald, of ''Critical Security in the Asia-Pacific'' (Manchester University Press, 2007). ==Education and career== Anthony Burke received a B.A. (Communications) in 1991 and M.A. by thesis in 1994 from the University of Technology Sydney, where he also tutored and lectured. He studied journalism, creative writing, cultural theory and politics under teachers and intellectuals such as the literary theorist Stephen Muecke, sociologists Jean Martin and Caroline Graham, novelist Amanda Lohrey, semiologist Gunther Kress, media theorists Helen Wilson and McKenzie Wark and historians John Docker and Ann Curthoys. His fellow students included writers such as Lindsay Barrett, Fiona Allon, Bernard Cohen, Justine Ettler and Anthony Macris. During this time, until the mid-1990s, he also worked as a human rights activist with campaigns for East Timor, Bougainville, West Papua and Indonesia. In 1991-2 he was a researcher in telecommunications law and policy at the Communications Law Centre, UNSW.〔 He was awarded a Ph.D in Political Science and International Relations from the Australian National University in 1999, and subsequently worked in the Australian Senate as a committee researcher on the environment, arts and communications. Whilst there he led a research team on the Senate’s 2000 report, ''The Heat is On: Australia’s Greenhouse Future''.〔http://www.aph.gov.au/Senate/committee/ecita_ctte/completed_inquiries/1999-02/gobalwarm/report/index.htm〕 He was appointed to a lectureship at the University of Queensland in 2001 and left to join the University of Adelaide in July that year. In 2005 he joined the University of New South Wales in Sydney, where he was promoted to Associate Professor in 2007, and in 2008 transferred to its college at the Australian Defence Force Academy in Canberra, Australia’s capital.〔http://hass.unsw.adfa.edu.au/staff/profiles/burke.html〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Anthony D. Burke」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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