
Overview
Background
Areas of responsibility
The duties of the Pro-Vice-Chancellor fall broadly into four areas of activity. As the standing deputy to Professor Aidan Byrne, UQ’s Provost and Senior Vice-President, the Pro-Vice-Chancellor acts for him and takes carriage of initiatives led by his Office. A second dimension to the role relates to strategy and planning. The PVC is the academic lead in relation to the activities of the Planning and Business Intelligence team: a priority in this area is to develop data analytics to assist decision-makers in aligning their organisational units’ priorities with the overall strategy of the University. Another dimension to the role is connected to people and culture. The PVC is the relevant senior executive for matters relating to staffing and employee relations, including leading enterprise bargaining, staff development, and staff conduct and performance: related, developing and shaping policies and procedures that promote excellence, enhance capability, value diversity, and improve the culture of UQ as a place to work. The final area of activity relates to his Chair of two Boards: UQ Art Museum and the University of Queensland Press, providing the PVC with an opportunity to work in close collaboration with the Deputy Vice-Chancellor for External Engagement. The position of Pro-Vice-Chancellor reports to the Provost and is a member of the University’s Executive, Senior Management Group, and Academic Board.
Biography
Tim brings to the role 25 years of experience as researcher, educator and academic leader. His most recent appointment was Executive Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at The University of Queensland (UQ). Tim was the first Dean of the new Faculty after its inauguration in 2014; under his leadership, the Faculty has established itself as among the very best in Australia and competitive internationally across many disciplinary areas. Prior to his four-year term as Dean, Tim was the Director of UQ’s Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect as well as Professor of International Relations in the School of Political Science (which has remained his substantive position since he joined UQ in 2010). He had previously held discipline and faculty-level leadership roles at the University of Exeter (UK). Tim began his career at Aberystwyth University in Wales, which is famous for having the oldest and one of the best departments of International Relations in the world. His graduate training was at the University of Oxford where he won a national prize for his PhD. He is recognised for his research on human rights protection and foreign policy-making in a changing world order. He has written and co-edited thirteen books, including Human Rights in World Politics (1999), Worlds in Collision (2002), and Terror in our Time (2012). Recently he has collaborated with colleagues in the School of Political Science and International Studies to produced two edited volumes: The Oxford Handbook of the Responsibility to Protect (2016) co-edited with Alex Bellamy, and The Globalization of International Society (2017) co-edited with Christian Reus-Smit – this book has received two prizes from different sections of the International Studies Association.
In 2019 he was involved in the publication of the edited classic Diplomatic Investigations: Essays in the Theory of International Politics; the new edition has been put together with Ian Hall at Griffith University. Additionally, he is working with his political science colleague at UQ, Richard Devetak, on an innovative and multi-disciplinary project called ‘The Rise of the International’. Tim continues to co-teach a popular Master’s course on ‘humanitarian emergencies’. In recognition of his scholarly contribution, Tim was elected Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences Australia in 2016.
Availability
- Professor Tim Dunne is:
- Available for supervision
- Media expert
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Masters (Coursework), University of Oxford
- Doctor of Philosophy, University of Oxford
Research interests
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Human rights, Human Protection and the Responsibility to Protect
Tim's research seeks to bridge normative theory and foreign policy. Recent research has focused on the development of the responsibility to protect norm. From 2010 to 2014, Tim was Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect (at UQ). Many publications flowed from this period, including the publication of The Oxford Handbook of the Responsibility to Protect (co-edited with Alex Bellamy), published in 2016. Other outputs in this area include collaborations with many UQ staff (and former PhD students), including Richard Devetak, Charles Hunt, Jess Gifkins, Jocelyn Vaughan, Eglantine Staunton, and Katharine Gelber.
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The Globalisation of International Society
With Chris Reus-Smit, in the School of Political Science and International Studies (POLSIS), Tim completed a project on The Globalization of International Society which was published by Oxford University Press in February 2017. The project was assisted by two funded workshops, one by the Academy of the Social Sciences Australia, the other by the International Studies Association. Contributors to the book include: Mark Beeson and Stephen Bell, Barry Buzan, Ian Clark, Neta Crawford, Richard Devetak and Emily Tannock, Lene Hansen, Hun Joon Kim, Paul Keal, Audie Klotz, Jacinta O’Hagan, Andrew Phillips, Heather Rae, Gerry Simpson, Hendrik Spruytt, Sarah Teitt, Ann Towns, Jennifer Welsh and Yongjin Zhang. The book has been awarded two prizes from different sections of the International Studies Association.
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International Terrorism and World Order
With Ken Booth, Tim has written and edited two books (2002, 2012) that examine how far 9/11 changed the configuration of world order. Rather than viewing terrorism in a reductive manner, commonly found in the terrorism studies literature, my work in this area has focused on the systemic character of international terrorism.
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International Relations Theory
Tim's early research has advanced the claim – now widely accepted – that the study of international society constitutes a distinct perspective in the field (see his 1998 book). He continues to write about how the normative order has evolved, and particularly, the impact of the decline of American power on the liberal project. This theme was explored in the Oxford University Press book on Liberal World Orders (2015) that was co-edited with Trine Flockhart. The fifth edition of the bestselling Oxford textbook on International Relations Theory (co-edited with Steve Smith and Milja Kurki) will be published by Oxford University Press in 2020.
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Foreign Policy
Tim has also edited a multi-edition textbook on Foreign Policy: Theories, Actors, Cases. Co-editors on the project are Steve Smith and Amelia Hadfield. It is now in its 3rd edition (2016) and is published by Oxford University Press.
Research impacts
I try to have an impact through education and by influencing students, one mind at a time. As Nelson Mandela famously argued, education is the most powerful weapon we have to change the world.
In terms of research impact, I have always been drawn to 'theory' as I believe our ways of seeing frame (and limit) our ways of doing. Or to put it another way, as Keynes did, all economists are slaves to one or other ideology. So the first question for every political intervention is 'how should we think about the issue or challenge?' And the first answer has to be contextual; all truths and realities have a history.' The other impact that research should have his that it needs to guide action. That is why I have been drawn to human rights and human protection issues in order to theorise the possibility of widening moral sensibilities despite the spectre of sovereignty and self-interest.
Works
Search Professor Tim Dunne’s works on UQ eSpace
2005
Book Chapter
The new agenda
Dunne, Tim (2005). The new agenda. International society and its critics. (pp. 65-79) edited by Alex J. Bellamy. Melbourne, Australia; Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press.
2005
Book Chapter
Global governance: an English school perspective
Dunne, Tim (2005). Global governance: an English school perspective. Contending perspectives on global governance: Coherence, contestation and world order. (pp. 72-87) edited by Alice D. Ba and Matthew J. Hoffmann. London, U.K.: Routledge.
2004
Journal Article
'When the shooting starts': Atlanticism in British security strategy
Dunne, Tim (2004). 'When the shooting starts': Atlanticism in British security strategy. International Affairs, 80 (5), 893-909. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-2346.2004.00424.x
2004
Journal Article
‘We the peoples’: Contending discourses of security in human rights theory and practice
Dunne, Tim and Wheeler, Nicholas J. (2004). ‘We the peoples’: Contending discourses of security in human rights theory and practice. International Relations, 18 (1), 9-23. doi: 10.1177/0047117804041738
2004
Journal Article
European conquest and the rights of indigenous peoples: The moral backwardness of international society
Dunne, Tim (2004). European conquest and the rights of indigenous peoples: The moral backwardness of international society. International Affairs, 80 (1), 117-118.
2003
Journal Article
Society and hierarchy in international relations
Dunne, Tim (2003). Society and hierarchy in international relations. International Relations, 17 (3), 303-320. doi: 10.1177/00471178030173004
2002
Journal Article
International relations - Still an American social science?: Toward diversity in international thought.
Dunne, T (2002). International relations - Still an American social science?: Toward diversity in international thought.. AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW, 96 (1), 258-259.
2002
Book
Worlds in collision: Terror and the future of global order
Ken Booth and Tim Dunne eds. (2002). Worlds in collision: Terror and the future of global order. London, England, U.K.: Palgrave Macmillan.
2001
Journal Article
Empires, systems and states: great transformations in international politics
Cox, Michael, Dunne, Tim and Booth, Ken (2001). Empires, systems and states: great transformations in international politics. Review of International Studies, 27 (5), 1-15. doi: 10.1017/S0260210501008002
2001
Journal Article
East Timor and the new humanitarian interventionism
Wheeler, Nicholas J. and Dunne, Tim (2001). East Timor and the new humanitarian interventionism. International Affairs, 77 (4), 805-827. doi: 10.1111/1468-2346.00220
2001
Journal Article
The global covenant: human conduct in a world of states.
Dunne, T (2001). The global covenant: human conduct in a world of states.. INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 77 (1), 175-176.
2001
Journal Article
Sociological investigations: Instrumental, legitimist and coercive interpretations of international society
Dunne, Tim (2001). Sociological investigations: Instrumental, legitimist and coercive interpretations of international society. Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 30 (1), 67-91. doi: 10.1177/03058298010300010601
2001
Book Chapter
The new humanitarian interventionism
Dunne, T., Hill, C. and Hanson, M. J. (2001). The new humanitarian interventionism. International Relations in the New Century. (pp. 93-116) edited by Hanson, M, Tow and W. Victoria, Aust.: Oxford Uni Press.
2001
Book
Empires, systems and states: great transformations in world politics
Michael Cox, Tim Dunne and Ken Booth eds. (2001). Empires, systems and states: great transformations in world politics. Review of international studies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
2001
Book
How might we live?: global ethics in a new century
Ken Booth, Tim Dunne and Michael Cox eds. (2001). How might we live?: global ethics in a new century. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
2000
Journal Article
How might we live? Global ethics in a new century - Introduction
Booth, Ken, Dunne, Tim and Cox, Michael (2000). How might we live? Global ethics in a new century - Introduction. Review of International Studies, 26 (5), 1-28. doi: 10.1017/S0260210500000012
2000
Journal Article
Encyclopedia of genocide, vol 1-2.
Dunne, T (2000). Encyclopedia of genocide, vol 1-2.. INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 76 (3), 648-649.
2000
Journal Article
Nested identities: nationalism, territory, and scale.
Dunne, T (2000). Nested identities: nationalism, territory, and scale.. INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 76 (1), 160-161.
1999
Journal Article
Introduction: The interregnum: controversies in world politics, 1989-99
Cox, Michael, Booth, Ken and Dunne, Tim (1999). Introduction: The interregnum: controversies in world politics, 1989-99. Review of International Studies, 25 (5), 3-19. doi: 10.1017/S0260210599000030
1999
Journal Article
National collective identity: social constructs and international systems.
Dunne, T (1999). National collective identity: social constructs and international systems.. INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 75 (4), 825-826.
Funding
Past funding
Supervision
Availability
- Professor Tim Dunne is:
- Available for supervision
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Supervision history
Completed supervision
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2019
Doctor Philosophy
Sovereignty and Responsibility in Indonesia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Richard Devetak
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2019
Doctor Philosophy
Counterinsurgency and Civilian Protection in Peace Operations
Principal Advisor
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2016
Doctor Philosophy
France and Human Protection: A Tale of Two Norms
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Richard Devetak
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2013
Doctor Philosophy
Reinterpreting Resistance: Hamas' Polysemic Conceptions of Jihad and the Search for Popular Legitimacy
Principal Advisor
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2019
Doctor Philosophy
Contesting legitimacy: terrorist organisations and legitimacy-seeking behaviours
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Andrew Phillips, Professor Shahar Hameiri
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2013
Doctor Philosophy
Let's argue about war! Normative arguments about the legitimacy of force 1492 - 2003
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Andrew Phillips
Media
Enquiries
Contact Professor Tim Dunne directly for media enquiries about:
- Foreign Policy
- Human Rights
- International
- International Terrorism
- Responsibility to Protect
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