School of Global Studies

Biography

I am currently a Teaching Fellow and Researcher for the Centre for Global Health Policy in the Department of International Relations at the University of Sussex.  My doctoral research entitled 'The Molecularisation of Security: Medical Countermeasure Development and the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), 2006-2015' was completed in 2017.  It investigated the U.S. government's role in supporting public-private collaborations in the creation of Medical Countermeasures against bioterrorist threats.  Various aspects of this research have appeared in sole authored publications in Security Dialogue and Critical Studies on Security and a co-authored publication in Review of International Political Economy.

As part of this research, in late 2014, I spent three months as a visiting doctoral student at Georgetown University conducting research and interviews in Washington D.C.  This work is part of a wider project that, in conjunction with my supervisors Professor Stefan Elbe and Dr. Anne Roemer-Mahler, is investigating the way public-private partnerships between government's and pharmaceutical companies have been supported to address a range of transnational health security threats.  This project is funded by a grant from the European Research Council (2013-2017).

My background is in philosophy and in 2011, I completed a Masters in Law and International Security at Sussex.  Under the supervision of Dr. Tarik Kochi, my dissertation utilised Hegel's theory of recognition to understand notions of legitimate violence in International Law.  

Role

Teaching Fellow in International Security, International Relations; Researcher, Centre for Global Health Policy,

Qualifications

2017: University of Sussex - DPhil International Relations

2011: University of Sussex - LLM Law and International Security (Distinction)

2006: Cardiff University - BA Philosophy

Activities

The U.S. turn to medical countermeasures: failure and denial in the governance of bioterrorism
Paper presented at the 2015 Millennium Conference - Failure and Denial in World Politics - The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), London, UK - 17-18 October 2015

Prepping for Preparedness: Molecular Life and the Development of the Bioterrorist Threat in the Clinton Administration
Paper presented for the 2015 Annual Convention of the International Studies Association (ISA) Panel on 'The Molecularisation Of Security: Pre-Emption, Dual-Use And Co-Production In Global Health Security', New Orleans, 19th of February 2015

Project BioShield, BARDA and Bioterrorism: Molecular Pre-Emption and Enhancement
Paper presented for the 2014 Annual Convention of the British International Studies Association (BISA) Panel on 'Molecularising Global Health Security - Anticipation, Emergence and Resilience' Dublin, 19th of June 2014