Dr Srinjoy Bose

Dr Srinjoy Bose

Senior Lecturer

PhD (The Australian National University)
M.Sos.Sc. (National University of Singapore)
B.A. Honours, First Class (University of Otago)

Arts, Design & Architecture (ADA)
School of Social Sciences

I am Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, and Program Convenor of the Master of International Relations. I research topics in critical peace/security studies including, political order and violence, international intervention, war-to-peace transition / conflict transformation, state (trans)formation, warlord/rebel governance, and the political economy of statebuilding and peacebuilding in 'fragile' and deeply divided states and societies. My research has been funded by the European Union, UN Development Programme and UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, United States Institute of Peace, Australian Aid, and even Facebook. My research is applied and outcome oriented, and has contributed to significant transformative and positive change in South / Southwest Asia and beyond. For example, my research on democracy promotion informed the Afghanistan Independent Election Commission's election reform efforts. Similarly, my research on statebuilding informed the United Nations Development Programme's reconstruction efforts in Mosul, Iraq. More recently, my research on the racialization of drone warfare is informing the UN Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent's expert work on Human Rights in Africa. To learn more about my research agenda and research projects, see the Research Activities section on this profile page.

In 2018 I joined the School of Social Sciences. Previously, I was Marie Sklodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at the School of Government and International Affairs, Durham University. Prior to that I was Prime Minister's Australia-Asia Endeavour Postgraduate Award scholar at The Australian National University, where I earned my PhD in Politicsand International Relations. I am a Visiting Fellow at the Department of International Relations, The ANU, and the Network for Education and Research on Peace and Sustainability, Hiroshima University. I also consult as a geopolitics, security, and NGO analyst. In my different professional capacities, I work with public-sector experts, government officials, diplomats, UN/World Bank and INGO representatives, activists, and even armed groups. Between 2014 and 2019 I was appointed international election observer by the Afghanistan Independent Election Commission, and was tasked with monitoring Afghanistan's Presidential, Parliamentary, and Provincial Council elections.

I am co-Editor of Drones andGlobal Order: The Implications of Remote Warfare for International Society(Routledge, 2022),Hybridity in Peacebuilding andDevelopment: a Critical and Reflexive Approach(Routledge, 2019),Hybridity on the Ground in Peacebuilding and Development: Critical Conversations(The ANU Press, 2018), Afghanistan - Challenges and Prospects(Routledge, 2017), 'Critical Hybridity in Peacebuilding and Development' (Third World Thematics: a TWQ Journal 2:4, 2018), and 'Elections and the State: Critical Perspectives on Democracy Promotion in Afghanistan' (Conflict, Security and Development 16:6, 2016). In addition, I have published in several leading peer-reviewed journals including Australian Journal of International Affairs,Conflict, Security and Development, Critical Research on Religion,Global Policy, Global Responsibility to Protect, and Security Studies (forthcoming).I serve on the Editorial Boards of the journalsGlobal Policy, Review of International Studies, and Environment & Security.

Location
Room 131, Morven Brown
  • Book Chapters | 2024
    Lushenko P; Bose S, 2024, 'Blending Counterinsurgency to Defeat Hybrid Threats', in Ramaniuk S; Roul A; Fabe AP; János B (ed.), Handbook of Terrorist and Insurgent Groups: a Global Survey of Threats, Tactics, and Characteristics, CRC Press / Taylor & Francis, Boca Raton,
    Book Chapters | 2024
    Lushenko P; Bose S, 2024, 'High Value Targeting and International Society’s “Warfare Trap”’', in Romaniuk S; Roul A; Fabe AP; Besenyő J (ed.), Handbook of Terrorist and Insurgent Groups: a Global Survey of Threats, Tactics, and Characteristics, CRC Press / Taylor & Francis, Boca Raton,
    Book Chapters | 2023
    Bose S, 2023, 'Legitimacy in Statebuilding', in The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Global Security Studies, Springer International Publishing, pp. 897 - 906,
    Book Chapters | 2021
    Blaxland J; Bose S; Lushenko P, 2021, 'The Significance—and Potential—of a Fourth Wave of Drone Warfare Scholarship', in Lushenko P; Bose S; Maley W (ed.), Drones and Global Order: The implications of remote warfare for international society, Routledge, London,
    Book Chapters | 2021
    Bose S, 2021, 'Legitimacy in Statebuilding', in The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Global Security Studies, Palgrave,
    Book Chapters | 2021
    Bose S, 2021, 'Legitimacy in Statebuilding', in Romaniuk S; Marton P (ed.), The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Global Security Studies., Palgrave Macmillan,
    Book Chapters | 2021
    Lushenko P; Bose S; Maley W, 2021, 'Conceptualizing Global Order in an Era of Remote Warfare', in Lushenko P; Bose S; Maley W (ed.), Drones and Global Order: The implications of remote warfare for international society, Routledge, London,
    Book Chapters | 2020
    Bose S; Panda A, 2020, 'The Conflict in Afghanistan: Interlocking Strategic Challenges as a Barrier to Regional Solution.', in Inoguchi T (ed.), The Sage Handbook of Asian Foreign Policy., Sage Publishing, London, pp. 361 - 378,
    Book Chapters | 2019
    Forsyth M; Kent L; Dinnen S; Wallis J; Bose S, 2019, 'Hybridity in Peacebuilding and Development: a Critical Approach', in Kent L; Forsyth M; Dinnen S; Wallis J; Bose S (ed.), Hybridity in Peacebuilding and Development: a Critical and Reflexive Approach, Routledge, Durham, pp. 1 - 15,
    Book Chapters | 2018
    Bose S; Thakur R, 2018, 'The UN Secretary-General and the Forgotten Third R2P Responsibility.', in Reviewing the Responsibility to Protect Origins, Implementation and Controversies, Routledge, London,
    Book Chapters | 2018
    Kent L; Bose S; Wallis J; Dinnen S; Forsyth M, 2018, 'Introduction', in Wallis J; Kent L; Forsyth M; Dinnen S; Bose S (ed.), Hybridity on the Ground in Peacebuilding and Development: Critical Conversations, ANU Press, Canberra, pp. 1 - 17,
    Book Chapters | 2018
    Mount G, 2018, 'Hybrid Peace/War', in Wallis J; Kent L; Forsyth M; Dinnen S; Bose S (ed.), Hybridity on the Ground in Peacebuilding and Development, ANU Press, Canberra, pp. 203 - 217,
    Book Chapters | 2018
    Sharan T; Bose S, 2018, 'Conflict Management, Extractive Industries, and the 2014 International Military Exit Strategy in Afghanistan', in Owen C; Juraev S; Lewis D; Megoran N; Heathershaw J (ed.), Interrogating Illiberal Peace in Eurasia: Critical Perspectives on Peace and Conflict, Rowman & Littlefield International, London, pp. 249 - 270,
    Book Chapters | 2017
    Bose S; Ibrahimi N, 2017, 'Afghanistan’s Political Parties: a Tale of Incomplete Reform and Transformation', in Bose S; Motwani N; Maley W (ed.), Afghanistan - Challenges and Prospects, Routledge, London, pp. 122 - 140,
    Book Chapters | 2017
    Bose S; Maley W, 2017, 'Contextualising Afghanistan’s Transitions: Influences and Challenges', in Bose S; Motwani N; Maley W (ed.), Afghanistan - Challenges and Prospects, Routledge, London, pp. 1 - 27,
    Book Chapters | 2017
    Schmeidl S, 2017, 'Internal displacement in Afghanistan: the tip of the iceberg', in Maley W; Bose S; Motwani N (ed.), Afghanistan Challenges and Prospects, Routledge, Oxon OX / New York, pp. 169 - 187,
    Book Chapters | 2005
    Bose S, 2005, 'Students or Soldiers? Conscientious Objection during World War II', in Tower Turmoil: Characters and Controversies at the University of Otago, Otago University Press, Dunedin, pp. 81 - 94,
  • Edited Books | 2021
    Lushenko P; Bose S; Maley W, (eds.), 2021, Drones and Global Order: The implications of remote warfare for international society, Routledge, London,
    Edited Books | 2019
    Kent L; Forsyth M; Dinnen S; Wallis J; Bose S, (eds.), 2019, Hybridity in Peacebuilding and Development: A critical and reflexive approach, Routledge, London,
    Edited Books | 2018
    Bose S; Motwani N; Maley W, (eds.), 2018, Afghanistan - Challenges and Prospects, Routledge, London,
    Edited Books | 2018
    Wallis J; Kent L; Forsyth M; Dinnen S; Bose S, (eds.), 2018, Hybridity on the Ground in Peacebuilding and Development: Critical Conversations, ANU Press, Canberra,
  • Journal articles | 2024
    Lushenko P; Carter K; Bose S, 2024, 'Target Discrimination: How Racial Biases Affect Public Support for US Drone Strikes', Security Studies
    Journal articles | 2023
    Bose S; Johnston N, 2023, 'A New Agenda for R2P: Towards a Revitalised Norm for a Multilateral World', Global Policy
    Journal articles | 2023
    Bose S; Mancino M; Simangan D, 2023, 'Ecosystem Services and Sustainable Peace in Afghanistan: Gaps in National Policy, and their Security Implications', Global Policy, 15, pp. 193 - 203,
    Journal articles | 2023
    Hasan M; Bose S, 2023, 'Politics of Constructing Islam in the Everyday Lives of Young Bangladeshis: Asserting Majoritarian Islam, and the ‘Good / Bad Muslim’ Narrative', Critical Research on Religion, 11, pp. 63 - 81,
    Journal articles | 2023
    Norton R; Lushenko P; Bose S; Maley W, 2023, 'Drones and Global Order: Implications of Remote Warfare for International Society', Naval War College Review, 76, pp. 164 - 166,
    Journal articles | 2023
    Norton R; Lushenko P; Bose S; Maley W, 2023, 'Drones and Global Order: Implications of Remote Warfare for International Society', Naval War College Review, 76, pp. 164 - 166,
    Journal articles | 2023
    Simangan D; Bose S; Candelaria JL; Krampe F; Kaneko S, 2023, 'Positive Peace and Environmental Sustainability: Local Evidence from Afghanistan and Nepal', Environment and Security, 1, pp. 142 - 162,
    Journal articles | 2021
    Mancino M; Bose S, 2021, 'Land Rights in Peacebuilding Discourse: Domination and Resistance in Timor-Leste’s Ita Nia Rai Program', Australian Journal of International Affairs, 75, pp. 546 - 568,
    Journal articles | 2021
    Simangan D; Bose S, 2021, 'Oiling the Rigs of State-Building: A Political Settlements Analysis of Petroleum Revenue Management in Timor-Leste', Asian Journal of Peacebuilding, 9, pp. 67 - 89,
    Journal articles | 2020
    Johnston N; Bose S, 2020, 'Violence, Power and Meaning: The Moral Logic of Terrorism', Global Policy, 11, pp. 315 - 325,
    Journal articles | 2018
    Forsyth M; Kent L; Dinnen S; Wallis J; Bose S, 2018, 'Hybridity in Peacebuilding and Development: a Critical Approach', Third World Thematics: a TWQ Journal, 2, pp. 407 - 421,
    Journal articles | 2016
    Bose S; Panda A, 2016, 'Indian and Chinese Foreign Policy Imperatives and Strategies vis-à-vis Afghanistan', India Review, 15, pp. 379 - 406,
    Journal articles | 2016
    Bose S; Thakur R, 2016, 'The UN Secretary-General and the Forgotten Third R2P Responsibility', Global Responsibility to Protect, 8, pp. 343 - 365,
    Journal articles | 2016
    Goodhand J; Suhrke A; Bose S, 2016, 'Flooding the Lake? International Democracy Promotion and the Political Economy of the 2014 Presidential Election in Afghanistan', Conflict, Security and Development, 16, pp. 481 - 500,
    Journal articles | 2016
    Schmeidl S; Bose S, 2016, 'Youth Interrupted: The Consequences of Urban Displacement for Young Men and Women in Afghanistan', Journal of Peacebuilding & Development, 11, pp. 68 - 82,
    Journal articles | 2016
    Sharan T; Bose S, 2016, 'Political networks and the 2014 Afghan presidential election: power restructuring, ethnicity and state stability', Conflict, Security and Development, 16, pp. 613 - 633,
    Journal articles | 2015
    Bose S, 2015, 'An election observer’s view & appraisal of the 2014 Afghan elections', Journal of Eastern European and Central Asian Research, 2, pp. 1 - 1,
    Journal articles | 2015
    Motwani N; Bose S, 2015, 'Afghanistan: ‘Spoilers’ in the Regional Security Context', Australian Journal of International Affairs, 69, pp. 266 - 284,
    Journal articles | 2014
    Bose S; Motwani N, 2014, 'The limits of 'hybrid' governance in Afghanistan', Strategic Analysis of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analysis, 38, pp. 416 - 426,
    Journal articles | 2007
    Bose S, 2007, 'Terrorism and Human Rights: Legal Challenges for India', Calcutta Law Times
  • Reports | 2023
    Lushenko P; Carter K; Bose S, 2023, DO RACIAL BIASES SHAPE AMERICANS’ SUPPORT FOR DRONE STRIKES? WE ASKED THEM, Modern War Institute, West Point, New York,
    Reports | 2021
    Bose S; Maley W; Ibrahimi N; Motwani N, 2021, Australia’s Engagement in Afghanistan: Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade References Committee Inquiry, Parliament of Australia, Canberra, 15,
    Reports | 2021
    Maley W; Ibrahimi N; Motwani N; Bose S, 2021, Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade References Committee Inquiry: Australia’s Engagement inAfghanistan, Parliament of Australia, Canberra, 15, ,
    Reports | 2020
    Megally H; Slye RC; Afako B; Fitzgerald M; Badi E; Nemat O; Bose S; Pena MC, 2020, Transitional Justice and Violent Extremism, Institute for Integrated Transitions, Barcelona, ,
    Reports | 2020
    Nemat O; Bose S, 2020, In War, No One Distributes Sweets: Assessing Transitional Justice Responses & Approaches in Post-2001 Afghanistan, Institute for Integrated Transitions, Barcelona, ,
    Reports | 2019
    Bose S; Bizhan N; Ibrahimi N, 2019, Youth Protest Movements in Afghanistan: Seeking Voice and Agency, United States Institute of Peace (USIP), Washington, D.C., 145,
    Reports | 2019
    Bose S; Parry J; Siddiqui N, 2019, Lessons Learned Study on UN Humanitarian, Civil-Military Coordination and Stabilization Efforts in Mosul, SREO Consulting, Erbil, Iraq
    Reports | 2019
    Bose S, 2019, Afghanistan Presidential Election, 28 September 2019. International Election Observer's Report
    Reports | 2018
    Bose S, 2018, Afghanistan Presidential and Parliamentary Elections, 05 April 2014 and 20 October 2018. International Election Observer's Report
    Reports | 2014
    Bose S; Hess M; Ramasubramanian G; Maley W, 2014, The Future of Afghanistan in South-West Asia: Influences & Challenges, The Australian National University, Canberra,
    Reports | 2014
    Bose S, 2014, India And China: An Agenda For Cooperation On Afghanistan, Institute of Chinese Studies, New Delhi, 9, ,
    Conference Proceedings (Editor of) | 2014
    Ramasubramanian G; Hess M; Bose S; Maley W; Bose S, (eds.), 2014, 'The Future of Afghanistan in South-West Asia: Influences & Challenges', The Australian National University, Canberra
    Reports | 2007
    Bose S, 2007, Energy Politics: India-Bangladesh-Myanmar Relations, Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi, 45, ,
    Reports | 2007
    Bose S, 2007, Shi'a and Iranian Ascendence: Sunni and American Perceptions, Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi, 10, ,
  • Media | 2023
    Bose S, 2023, DO RACIAL BIASES SHAPE AMERICANS’ SUPPORT FOR DRONE STRIKES? WE ASKED THEM, Modern War Institute, ,
    Media | 2022
    Bose S, 2022, South Asia Outlook 2022 - Afghanistan, National University of Singapore, Singapore, ,
    Media | 2021
    Bose S; Hill K, 2021, What's next for Afghanistan?, Radio New Zealand, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2021
    Bose S; Mancino M, 2021, Property: A Tool for Empowerment and Disempowerment in Timor-Leste, Australian Institute of International Affairs, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2021
    Bose S; Maskiell L, 2021, Srinjoy Bose on the US Involvement in Afghanistan since September 11, Passport, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2021
    Bose S; Quinn R, 2021, "If you think the Afghanistan War was a waste - speak to any Afghan": Dr Srinjoy Bose, ABC Overnights, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2021
    Bose S; Sudario E, 2021, 1 Week of Conflict, Australian Film Television Radio School FM, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2021
    Bose S, 2021, Afghanistan Crisis, Ticker News, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2021
    Bose S, 2021, Afghanistan in Crisis, Ticker News, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2021
    Bose S, 2021, The Future of Afghanistan, National University of Singapore, Singapore, ,
    Media | 2021
    Bose S, 2021, The Taliban and Crisis in Afghanistan, Channel News Asia, Singapore, ,
    Media | 2021
    Sevakari M; Bose S; Sriram S, 2021, Afghanistan: USA's Conflicting Intervention and How We Can Support Change, Unfounded, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2021
    Sevekari M; Bose S; Sriram S, 2021, Afghanistan: Understanding the Conflict, Unfounded, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2020
    Bose S, 2020, In Afghanistan, Peace or Fragmentation?, Lowy Institute, ,
    Media | 2020
    Stanley J; Bose S, 2020, Nights with John Stanley, 2GB, 873am, Sydney, ,
    Media | 2019
    Bose S; Ibrahimi N; Bizhan N, 2019, Youth Protest in Afghanistan, Development Policy Centre, The Australian National University, ,
    Media | 2019
    Bose S; Motwani N, 2019, Afghan Elections Bring No Peace, Lowy Institute, ,
    Media | 2019
    Bose S; Motwani N, 2019, Afghan Elections: Impressions from Polling Day, Lowy Institute, ,
    Media | 2019
    Maley W; Motwani N; Akbari F; Bose S, 2019, Afghanistan’s 2019 Election (15): Administrative and technical problems in Kabul city, Afghanistan Analysts Network, ,
    Media | 2018
    Bose S; Maley W; Motwani N, 2018, Afghanistan: Ceasefires and Cascade Effects, Australian Institute of International Affairs, ,
    Media | 2017
    Bose S, 2017, Pakistan is supporting IS-Khorasan in Afghanistan...it is simply another tool in Pakistan's 'spoiler' toolkit, Times of India, ,
    Media | 2016
    Bose S, 2016, Pakistan Remains Obstacle to Lasting Peace with the Taliban, Asian Studies Association of Australia, ,
    Media | 2015
    Bose S; Khoshnoudiparast F, 2015, US Credibility in the Middle East and the Nuclear Deal with Iran, E-International Relations, ,
    Media | 2015
    Bose S; Sharan T, 2015, NUG One Year On: Struggling to Govern, Foreign Policy, ,
    Media | 2014
    Bose S; Ibrahimi N, 2014, Fixing the Afghan Election Mess, Foreign Policy, ,
    Media | 2014
    Bose S; Ibrahimi N, 2014, Why Afghanistan’s National Unity Government Is Risky, Foreign Policy, ,
    Media | 2014
    Bose S, 2014, Afghan Youth: Challenges to Development, Himal Southasian, ,
    Media | 2014
    Bose S, 2014, Afghan voters sick of Karzai and Taliban — they want change: Srinjoy Bose, The Times of India, ,
    Media | 2014
    Bose S, 2014, Afghanistan’s 2014 Election: An Observer’s Account, The Diplomat Magazine, ,
    Media | 2014
    Bose S, 2014, Afghanistan’s 2014 Run-Off Election: An Observer’s Account, The Diplomat Magazine, ,
    Media | 2014
    Bose S, 2014, Former Election Observer Reacts To Power-Sharing Deal, Radio Free Europe, ,
    Media | 2014
    Bose S, 2014, RtoP and Women, Peace and Security: A Shared Agenda for the Asia-Pacific?, E-International Relations, ,
    Media | 2014
    Bose S, 2014, Scholar Skeptical of Afghan Unity Government Deal, Radio Free Europe, ,
    Media | 2014
    Schmeidl S; Bose S, 2014, Afghanistan: A unity government at last or woes to come?, The Lowy Institute, ,
    Media | 2013
    Bose S, 2013, Afghan Youth: Separating Fact from Fiction, The Diplomat Magazine, ,
    Media | 2009
    Bose S, 2009, Code of Conduct: Campaign of Misinformation?, Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, New Delhi, ,
    Media | 2007
    Bose S, 2007, Talking to the Taliban: It is a futile and precarious exercise, The Tribune, ,

  • Faculty of Arts, Design and Architecture (, Sydney) Research Grant: 2022; A$10,000
  • School of Social Science (, Sydney)Strategic Priority Funding Research Grant: 2022; A$4,000
  • Faculty of Arts, Design and Architecture (, Sydney) Research Grant: 2021; A$10,000
  • School of Social Science (, Sydney)Strategic Priority Funding Research Grant: 2021; A$4,000
  • School of Social Science (, Sydney)Strategic Priority Funding Research Grant: 2020; A$4,000
  • School of Social Science (, Sydney) Strategic Priority Funding Research Grant: 2019; A$5,000
  • Facebook Research Grant: 2018; A$70,000
  • School of Social Science (, Sydney) Strategic Priority Funding Research Grant: 2018; A$4,000
  • European Union COFUND (Marie Sklodowska-Curie) Fellowship: 2017; A$140,000
  • United States Institute of Peace (USIP) Research Grant: 2017; A$50,000
  • Coral Bell School of Asia-Pacific Affairs (ANU) Travel Grant: 2015; A$1,000
  • Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship: 2015; A$9,000
  • ANU Vice-Chancellor's Travel Grant: 2013; A$1,000
  • Coral Bell School of Asia-Pacific Affairs (ANU) Fieldwork Grant: 2013; A$7,000
  • AusAID (ISSS) Workshop Grant: 2013; A$17,000
  • Research School of Asia and Pacific (ANU) Workshop Grant: 2013; A$20,000
  • Prime Minister's Australia-Asia Endeavour Postgraduate Award: 2010; A$252,000
  • National University of Singapore Research Scholarship: 2007: S$52,000

  • European Union COFUND (Marie Sklodowska-Curie) Fellowship: 2017; A$140,000.
  • Prime Minister's Australia-Asia Endeavour Postgraduate Award: 2010; A$252,000.
  • National University of Singapore Research Scholarship: 2007: A$52,000.

My current Research Agenda comprises two core studies: First, I am working towards publishing my book, titled The Legitimacy Puzzle: Statebuilding in Contemporary Afghanistan. The book explores the sources of state legitimacy and impact of legitimation strategies on statebuilding in Afghanistan, and represents a comprehensive and original attempt to place Afghanistan’s post-2001 statebuilding project within an easily accessible political-sociology framework. It also explores the extent to which the internationally-assisted statebuilding project was misconceived, overlooking the critical importance of connecting international and local legitimacy principles through the newly designed institutions and structures in which the authority of state was vested. Concurrently, I have developed a follow-on study - titled, Democracy Promotion and State-Formation in Limited Access Orders: a Political Economy Study of Elections in Afghanistan - thatadds to critiques of the rise of democracy promotion, and employs political economy analyses to understand the more focused research on the perverse effects of elections in Afghanistan. This study de-constructs and denaturalises the idea of the Weberian state, blurring the binary distinctions between state and non-state, legitimate and illegitimate and highlight the networks, coalitions, and material foundations that underpin or undermine the state. The thinking is, if political transitions are primarily about the restoration (or creation) of legitimate political authority, this suggests a need to focus attention on the ‘vernacular’ of local politics.

In addition to the above, I am working on several secondary projects.Below is a list of workingand completed projects:

Working/Ongoing Projects:

  • 'Sustainable Peace and Peaceful Sustainability in Conflict-Affected Societies: Nepal and Afghanistan'. By investigating the variableslinking positive peace and environmental sustainability (and establish their relationship), this project examines local manifestations of thepositive peace-environmental sustainability nexus. In so doing, the project aims to integratepositive peace indicators and environmental sustainability indicators into an online and publicly accessible database, and influenceresearch, policies, and initiatives on positive peace and environmental sustainability. Collaborative project. Co-Investigator and Afghanistan case-study Theme Leader (Chief Investigator Dr Dahlia Simangan, Hiroshima University).
  • ‘Democracy Promotion and State-Formation in Limited Access Orders: a Political Economy Study of Elections in Afghanistan’. Examining how illiberal institutions may contribute to state-formation in post-conflict societies. The study employs a political economy framework of analysis to interrogate democracy promotion and election practices in Afghanistan. Individual project. Chief Investigator.
  • ‘Misinformation in Diverse Societies, Political Behaviour and Good Governance’. Utilizing a field experiment with WhatsApp and multi-wave survey experiments on the ground in India and Afghanistan, this study aims to establish causal relationship between misinformation spread through social networks and ethnic violence, public opinion on ethnic relations, and public policy choices. Collaborative project. Chief Investigator.
  • ‘Legitimacy in Afghanistan: Keeping the State at Bay’. Examining tensions in statebuilding between local and international interests and practices. The study demonstrates that Afghanistan’s social order curbed and blunted the ambitions of political power, and made it extraordinarily resistant to political moulding. Individual project. Chief Investigator. Manuscript to be submitted with Journal of Peace Research [Impact Factor: 3.164; H-Index: 76].
  • ‘Dispersion of Coercive Power in Afghanistan: Structural Legitimacy and State Legitimation’. Examining how cooperation between international, state, and non-state actors to provide security have resulted in the embedding of violent or illegitimate institutions and forms of order in the machinery of the (Afghan) state. Individual project. Chief Investigator. Manuscript to be submitted with International Peacekeeping [Impact Factor: 1.063; H-Index: 15].
  • ‘Elite Redux: Elite Settlements and the Perpetuation of Power’. Examining the international practice of basing conflict resolution efforts in fragile societies on the concept of ‘political settlements’. The study problematizes political settlements in the context of the statebuilding paradigm as the prevailing exit pathway from fragility, and finds that often the procedural focus on elections as pathway out of conflict tends to legitimize the status quo, and in the process perpetuating the dominance of powerful elites that were often at the root of the conflict. Collaborative project. Co-Investigator with Prof. Sukanya Podder (King’s College London, UK) and Erwin Van Veen (Clingendael Institute, Netherlands). Manuscript to be submitted with International Affairs [Impact Factor: 1.478; H-Index: 58].
  • ‘The Economic Origins of Warlord Support for Peace: a Comparative Study of Mexcio and Afghanistan’. Articulating a political-economic theory to explain the conditions and processes by which warlords prefer to make peace. The theory is evaluated by a very different comparative research design using studies of post-revolutionary Mexico (1910-1929) and contemporary Afghanistan (2001-2018). The findings, based on archival and secondary evidence from the US, Mexico, and Afghanistan, support the intuitive theory that warlords prefer peace agreements when the costs of retaining power become unacceptable and their financial backers provide incentives. Collaborative project; Co-Investigator with Dr Vasabjit Banerjee (Mississippi State University). Manuscript to be submitted with Journal of Peace Research (H-Index: 81; Impact Factor: 3.888).


Completed Projects:

  • Drones and Global Order—Implications of Remote Warfare for International Society. Examined the implications of remote warfare for the legitimacy of global order.This project contributes to a "fourth wave" of literature concerned with the trade-offs imposed by drone warfare for global order. It draws on the "English School" of International Relations Theory to argue that drone warfare imposes contradictions on the structural and normative pillars of global order. These consist of the structure of international society and diffusion of military capabilities, as well as the sovereign equality of states and laws of armed conflict. The project presents a typology of contradictions imposed by drone warfare within and across these axes that threaten the legitimacy of global order. This framework also suggests a confounding consequence of drone warfare that scholars have not hitherto explored rigorously: drone warfare can sometimes strengthen global order. Collaborative project. Co-Investigator with Paul Lushenko and William Maley. Co-Editor, edited volume. London: Routledge, 2021.
  • ‘Structures of Opportunity and Patterns of Youth Activism in Afghanistan’. Special Report for USIP. Examinedemerging patterns of youth activism in Afghanistan and its implications for the future. For several decades scholars of social movements have been studying the relationship between political context, socio-economic conditions, and rise and evolution of social and political movements. In this study we designed and articulated a structures of opportunity framework to investigate how Afghanistan’s youth interpret, perceive, and respond to the opportunities made available to them by the country’s formal and informal political structures. Collaborative project. Chief Investigator. Manuscript published as United States Institute of Peace (USIP) Special Report. 2019.
  • ‘Critical Hybridity: History, Power, and Scale’. Examined how the concept of ‘hybridity’ changes as it travels between disciplines and contexts. Collaborative project. Co-Investigator with Joanne Wallis (ANU), Lia Kent (ANU), Miranda Forsyth (ANU), and Sinclair Dinnen (ANU). Guest Editor, journal special issue. Third World Thematics: a TWQ Journal 2(5), 2017. [Impact Factor: 1.156; H-Index: 61] Also published as Lia Kent, Miranda Forsyth, Joanne Wallis,Sinclair Dinnen, and Srinjoy Bose,Hybridity in Peacebuilding and Development: a Critical and Reflexive Approach. London: Routledge,2018.
  • Hybridity on the Ground in Peacebuilding and Development: Critical Conversations. Examined the potential contribution of the concept of ‘hybridity’ to improving understanding of pluralism and change in socially complex societies. Collaborative project. Co-Investigator with Joanne Wallis (ANU), Lia Kent (ANU), Miranda Forsyth (ANU), and Sinclair Dinnen (ANU). Co-Editor, edited volume.Canberra: ANU Press, 2018.
  • ‘Elections and the State: Critical Perspectives on Democracy Promotion in Afghanistan’. Political economy analysis of democracy promotion and elections in disrupted and transitioning states. Collaborative project. Principal investigators Professor Jonathan Goodhand (School of Oriental and African Studies) and Dr Astri Suhrke (Chr. Michelson Institute). Guest Editor, journal special issue. Conflict, Security and Development 16(6), 2016. [Impact Factor: 0.806; H-Index: 12]
  • Afghanistan—Challenges and Prospects. Examined the ongoing political and military transitions in Afghanistan. Collaborative project. Chief investigator. Co-Editor, edited volume.London: Routledge, 2017.
  • ‘Death by a Thousand Cuts or Dance of the Seven Veils? Legitimacy and Generation of Authority in Afghanistan’s Statebuilding Enterprise, 2001—2014’. Examined the role of Legitimacy in promoting the internationalised statebuilding project in Afghanistan. Individual project (PhD). PhD was nominated for the 2017 ANU J.G. Crawford Prize for outstanding contribution to scholarship.

Professional memberships:

  • American Political Science Association (APSA)
  • Asian Studies Association of Australia (ASAA)
  • British International Studies Association (BISA) and BISA Peacekeeping & Peacebuilding Associate Working Group
  • European International Studies Association (EISA)
  • International Studies Association (ISA)
  • South Asian Studies Association of Australia (SASAA)

Other affiliations:

  • Visiting Research Fellow. Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, The Australian National University
  • Visiting Research Fellow. Networkfor Education and Research on Peace and Sustainability (NERPS), Hiroshima University
  • Fellow. Salzburg Global Seminar
  • Institute Associate. Australian Human Rights Institute,

Journal Editorial Board:

  • Global Policy(Wiley-Blackwell)
  • Review of International Studies (Cambridge)
  • Environment & Security (Sage)

Reviewer for journals:

  • Third World Quarterly (Taylor & Francis)
  • International Peacekeeping (Taylor & Francis)
  • Australian Journal of International Affairs (Taylor & Francis)
  • Global Policy(Wiley-Blackwell)
  • Terrorism and Political Violence (Taylor & Francis)
  • Asian Studies Review(Taylor & Francis)
  • Middle East Critique (Taylor & Francis)
  • International History Review (Taylor & Francis)

University service / committees:

  • Member, Faculty of Arts, Design &Architecture Faculty Board (2023-2025)
  • Member, Human Research Ethics Advisory Panel B (HREAP B) (2022-2025)
  • Co-Chair, Executive Committee ECAN (Early Career Academic Network) (2021-2022)
  • Theme Leader, Faculty of Arts, Design &Architecture Innovation Hub Anti-Racism Collaborative (2021-2022)
  • Ex-Officio Member, University Research Committee (2021-2022)
  • Ex-Officio Member, University Higher Degree Research Committee (2021-2022)
  • Member, School Research Committee, School of Social Sciences, (2021-2025)
  • Member, Faculty of Arts, Design &Architecture ECAN (Early Career Academic Network) (2021-2022)
  • Co-Chair, Globalisation & Governance Research Network (2020-2022)
  • School Student Ethics Officer, School of Social Sciences (2019-2022)
  • Member, Executive Committee ECAN (Early Career Academic Network) (2019-2020)
  • Member, Faculty Board Early Career Academic Working Group, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences (2019)
  • Deputy Chair / Secretary, Faculty of Arts &Social Sciences ECAN (Early Career Academic Network) (2018-2020)

My Research Supervision

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD),

  • Mr Christopher Khatouki (Embedded Repression: State Capacity and Economic Transformation in South Korea)
  • Ms Altynay Kozhabekova (Middle Power Behaviour in the Presence of Multiple Great Powers: Kazakhstan's Multi-Vector Foreign Policy)
  • Mr Samuel Pascoe (The Great War of Ideas - aReview into Australia's National Security Communications)
  • Mr Don Johnson Lontoc (A Study of the Socio-Spatial Segregation Between New and Old Town in Peri-Urban Metro Manila)
  • Mr Thomas Patrick Cavanagh (Forest Governance and Environmental Peacebuilding as a Project of Governmentality in Post-conflict Liberia)

Honours (B.A., Hons.),

  • Ms Tallulah Thangathurai
  • Ms Angini Singh

My Teaching

(School of Social Sciences) Teaching:

  • POLS5131 - 'Political Violence, Insurgency, and Terrorism' (Convener & Lecturer)
  • POLS5161 - 'Developing Countries and International Relations' (Convener & Lecturer)
  • ARTS1846 - 'Politics, Peace and Prosperity' (Convener & Lecturer)
  • SRAP5101 - 'Research Methods & Design' (Lecturer)
  • ARTS1811 - 'Contemporary Issues in Government & Global Politics' (Lecturer)