Overview
Background
Dr Sarah Teitt is Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect and Senior Lecturer in Peace and Conflict Studies in the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland.
Her expertise centres on the intersection of atrocity prevention, civilian protection, and peacebuilding in the Asia Pacific region, with a particular interest in China’s impact and evolving roles in these areas. Her work has been published in journals such as Cooperation and Conflict, International Peacekeeping, the Australian Journal of International Affairs, Survival, the Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding, and Global Governance. She is co-editor of the volumes China-North Korea Relations: Between Development and Security (2020) and Responsibility to Protect and Women, Peace and Security: Aligning the Protection Agendas (2013), and she currently serves on the editorial team of the Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding. From 2019 to 2025, she was an Australian Research Council DECRA Senior Research Fellow.
Sarah’s work is grounded in a commitment to ensuring research is relevant, accessible, and useful for improving atrocity prevention policy and practice. She has extensive experience in designing and delivering training, executive education and policy dialogue programs, including for the United Nations (UN) Office on Genocide Prevention and the Responsibility to Protect, UN Women, the UN Staff System College, the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission for Human Rights, the ASEAN Commission on the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Women and Children, as well as numerous government-affiliated think tanks and research institutes across the Asia Pacific region.
She was founder and lead convenor of the annual Australia-China Dialogue on the Responsibility to Protect from 2014-2020, co-hosted by the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect and the China Institute of International Studies--a think tank affiliated with the Chinese Foreign Ministry.
In 2016, Sarah co-founded the Asia Pacific Partnership for Atrocity Prevention (APPAP), an alliance of organizations from across the Asia Pacific region working toward the prevention of atrocity crimes and the protection of vulnerable populations. From 2017-2020, she served as the Co-Chair of APPAP's Gender Working Group, and currently is the lead convenor of the APPAP Secretariat.
Availability
- Dr Sarah Teitt is:
- Available for supervision
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Bachelor of Arts, Roanoke College
- Masters (Coursework), The University of Queensland
- Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland
Works
Search Professor Sarah Teitt’s works on UQ eSpace
2014
Other Outputs
Women's empowerment and atrocity prevention
Teitt, Sarah (2014, 11 11). Women's empowerment and atrocity prevention e-International Relations
2014
Journal Article
Bridging the gap: early warning, gender and the responsibility to protect
Davies, Sara E., Teitt, Sarah and Nwokora, Zim (2014). Bridging the gap: early warning, gender and the responsibility to protect. Cooperation and Conflict, 50 (2), 228-249. doi: 10.1177/0010836714545689
2014
Other Outputs
ASEAN and the Prevention of Sexual Violence in Conflict and Humanitarian Situations: From Commitment to Practical Action in Southeast Asia
Teitt, Sarah (2014). ASEAN and the Prevention of Sexual Violence in Conflict and Humanitarian Situations: From Commitment to Practical Action in Southeast Asia . R2P Ideas in Brief Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect.
2014
Book Chapter
China and the international human rights regime
Teitt, Sarah (2014). China and the international human rights regime. The Globalization of World Politics: Case Studies from Australia, New Zealand and the Asia Pacific. (pp. 108-110) edited by Charles Hawkesly and Nichole Georgiou. South Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Oxford University Press.
2014
Other Outputs
China and the International Humanitarian Order
Teitt, Sarah (2014). China and the International Humanitarian Order. R2P Ideas in Brief Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect.
2014
Journal Article
Women, peace and security as an ASEAN priority
Davies, Sara E., Nackers, Kimberly and Teitt, Sarah (2014). Women, peace and security as an ASEAN priority. Australian Journal of International Affairs, 68 (3), 333-355. doi: 10.1080/10357718.2014.902030
2013
Conference Publication
Humanity and hegemony in China's humanitarian discourse
Teitt, Sarah E. (2013). Humanity and hegemony in China's humanitarian discourse. ISA San Francisco 2013: 54th International Studies Association Annual Convention, San Francisco, CA, USA, 3-6 April, 2013.
2013
Other Outputs
Realizing commitments to women, peace and security in Southeast Asia
Teitt, Sarah and Davies, Sara (2013). Realizing commitments to women, peace and security in Southeast Asia. R2P Ideas in Brief Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect.
2013
Book
Responsibility to protect and women, peace and security agenda: aligning the protection agendas
Sara E. Davies, Zim Nwokora, Eli Stamnes and Sarah Teitt eds. (2013). Responsibility to protect and women, peace and security agenda: aligning the protection agendas. Leiden, Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.
2013
Book Chapter
Introduction: The responsibility to protect: a principle for the women, peace and security agenda?
Davies, Sara E., Nwokora, Zim, Stamnes, Eli and Teitt, Sarah (2013). Introduction: The responsibility to protect: a principle for the women, peace and security agenda?. Responsibility to protect and women, peace and security: aligning the protection agendas. (pp. 1-6) edited by Sara E. Davies, Zim Nwokora, Eli Stamnes and Sarah Teitt. Leiden, The Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff.
2012
Book Chapter
The responsibility to protect and China's peacekeeping policy
Teitt, Sarah (2012). The responsibility to protect and China's peacekeeping policy. China’s evolving approach to peacekeeping. (pp. 56-70) edited by Marc Lanteigne and Miwa Hirono. London, U.K.: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780203718803
2012
Journal Article
Engendering the responsibility to protect: women and the prevention of mass atrocities
Davies, Sara E. and Teitt, Sarah (2012). Engendering the responsibility to protect: women and the prevention of mass atrocities. Global Responsibility to Protect, 4 (2), 198-222. doi: 10.1163/187598412X639700
2012
Book Chapter
Paper tiger or platform for action? South Asia and the responsibility to protect
Teitt, Sarah (2012). Paper tiger or platform for action? South Asia and the responsibility to protect. The Routledge handbook of the responsibility to protect. (pp. 197-215) edited by W. Andy Wright and Frazer Egerton. London, United Kingdom: Routledge.
2011
Journal Article
The responsibility to protect and China's peacekeeping policy
Teitt, Sarah (2011). The responsibility to protect and China's peacekeeping policy. International Peacekeeping, 18 (3), 298-312. doi: 10.1080/13533312.2011.563085
2011
Conference Publication
The paradox of Chinese peacekeeping
Teitt, Sarah (2011). The paradox of Chinese peacekeeping. International Studies Association Annual Convention, Montreal, Canada, 16-19 March 2011.
2011
Conference Publication
Promoting the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) in Northeast Asia: Institutional limitations, ad hoc opportunities
Teitt, Sarah (2011). Promoting the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) in Northeast Asia: Institutional limitations, ad hoc opportunities. International Studies Association Annual Convention ISA 2011, Montreal, Canada, 16-19 March 2011.
2009
Journal Article
Assessing Polemics, Principles and Practices: China and the Responsibility to Protect
Teitt, S. (2009). Assessing Polemics, Principles and Practices: China and the Responsibility to Protect. Global Responsibility to Protect, 1 (2), 208-236. doi: 10.1163/187598409X424306
2008
Other Outputs
China and the responsibility to protect
Teitt, Sarah (2008). China and the responsibility to protect. Brisbane, QLD, Australia: Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect.
Funding
Current funding
Past funding
Supervision
Availability
- Dr Sarah Teitt is:
- Available for supervision
Looking for a supervisor? Read our advice on how to choose a supervisor.
Supervision history
Completed supervision
-
2025
Doctor Philosophy
Dialogue and Nonviolent Discipline in Nonviolent Resistance Movements: The Case of Hong Kong's 2019 Anti-ELAB Movement
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Alexander Bellamy
-
2024
Doctor Philosophy
Chinese peacebuilding practice in Myanmar
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Alexander Bellamy, Professor Shahar Hameiri
-
2020
Doctor Philosophy
Peacekeeping as Habit: Examining Indonesia's Maintenance of Personnel Contribution in United Nations Peacekeeping Operations
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Alexander Bellamy
Media
Enquiries
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