
Overview
Background
Melissa Johnston is a Lecturer in the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland where she works in the areas of political economy and security. Melissa was awarded a Discovery Early Career Research Award (2022-2025) for her project on Brideprice, Conflict and Violence Against Women in Southeast Asia.
Melissa has two main research areas. The first area examines the pivotal role of misogyny and violence against women in the political economy of violent extremism, populism and Islamist and right wing politics,looking at the empirical and analytical links between violence against women and violent extremism in Indonesia, Bangladesh, the Philippines and Libya. Findings show that support for violence against women and misogyny is the best predictor of an individual's support for violent extremism - a finding cited several times by the UN Secretary General in 2019 and 2020. This empirical work has been extended theoretically in the 2024 piece analysing the centrality of patriarchy to international order in the article "Morbid symptoms: a feminist dialectics of global patriarchy in crisis", co-authered with Sara Meger (University of Melbourne).
The second area is the political economy of post-conflict rebuilding. Her doctoral dissertation (winner of the 2019 Australian Political Studies Association thesis prize) and OUP monograph "Rebuilding Patriarchy" (winner of the 2024 BISA IPEG book prize), applies a feminist political economy approach to account for the uneven outcomes gender programming by international development agencies. It argues the outcomes of international interventions on gender responsive budgeting, laws against domestic violence and microfinance are shaped by power relations between men and women in a setting of elite dominance. In the Timor-Leste case specifically, the political economy of kinship—as manifested in brideprice or traditional dispute resolution—has been as crucial to class formation as it has in perpetuating gender injustices. A journal article from this work "Frontier Finance" was the winner of the 2021 Australian International Political Economy Network best journal article prize.
Previously, Melissa has worked for the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) on Asia-Pacific development, and for Women Against Violence Europe (WAVE) on European Union programs to protect women from severe intimate partner violence.
Availability
- Dr Melissa Johnston is:
- Available for supervision
- Media expert
Qualifications
- Doctor of Philosophy of Politics, Murdoch University
Research impacts
I have a portfolio of skills, publications, and grant successes that demonstrate my commitment to pursuing innovative research. I have contributed to the field of International Relations by forging a research program focusing on the gendered drivers of conflict, focussing on feminist political economy analysis of the triggers of conflict and violence against women. My 2022-2025 DECRA on brideprice, conflict, and violence against women is the result of my sustained intellectual development as a lead researcher of the gender drivers of conflict, and their links to the political economy. The second area of my research on violent extremism has had a significant impact in keynotes, online, and international policy making. It has been cited by the cited in two UN Secretary General Reports, the UN Special Rapporteur on Promoting Human Rights and the Review of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, significant international policy statements
Works
Search Professor Melissa Johnston’s works on UQ eSpace
Featured
2020
Journal Article
Frontier finance: the role of microfinance in debt and violence in post-conflict Timor-Leste
Johnston, Melissa Frances (2020). Frontier finance: the role of microfinance in debt and violence in post-conflict Timor-Leste. Review of International Political Economy, 27 (6), 1305-1329. doi: 10.1080/09692290.2020.1733633
2024
Journal Article
Morbid symptoms: a feminist dialectics of global patriarchy in crisis
Johnston, Melissa and Meger, Sara (2024). Morbid symptoms: a feminist dialectics of global patriarchy in crisis. European Journal of International Relations, 1-28. doi: 10.1177/13540661241295658
2024
Conference Publication
Book talk: building peace, rebuilding patriarchy
Johnston, Melissa (2024). Book talk: building peace, rebuilding patriarchy. IIPPE 2024 Annual Conference: The Changing World Economy and Today's Imperialism, Istanbul, Turkey, 4 - 7 September 2024.
2024
Conference Publication
The political economy of patriarchal accumulation
Johnston, Melissa (2024). The political economy of patriarchal accumulation. IIPPE 2024 Annual Conference: The Changing World Economy and Today's Imperialism, Istanbul, Turkey, 4 - 7 September 2024.
2024
Other Outputs
Misogyny, racism and violent extremism in Australia: policy brief
Meger, Sara, Johnston, Melissa and Riveros-Morales, Yolanda (2024). Misogyny, racism and violent extremism in Australia: policy brief. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: The University of Melbourne.
2024
Journal Article
Running on empty: depletion and social reproduction in Myanmar and Sri Lanka
Lingham, Jayanthi Thiyaga and Johnston, Melissa (2024). Running on empty: depletion and social reproduction in Myanmar and Sri Lanka. Antipode, 57 (2), 494-514. doi: 10.1111/anti.13016
2023
Other Outputs
Bring enough cows to marry: Brideprice, conflict, and gender relations in South Sudan
Pospisil, Jan, Johnston, Melissa, Garang, Adut Alaak and Tai, Nyachangkuoth Rambang (2023). Bring enough cows to marry: Brideprice, conflict, and gender relations in South Sudan. Coventry, United Kingdom: University of Coventry.
2023
Conference Publication
Patriarchal accumulation regimes: do men also appropriate women’s labour and commodities as men, not just as part of capitalist patriarchy?
Johnston, Melissa (2023). Patriarchal accumulation regimes: do men also appropriate women’s labour and commodities as men, not just as part of capitalist patriarchy?. European International Studies Association Conference, Potsdam, Germany, 5-9 September 2023.
2023
Conference Publication
Running on empty: depletion and social reproduction in Myanmar and Sri Lanka
Lingham, Jayanthi and Johnston, Melissa (2023). Running on empty: depletion and social reproduction in Myanmar and Sri Lanka. European International Studies Association Conference, Potsdam, Germany, 5-9 September 2023.
2023
Book
Building peace, rebuilding patriarchy: the failure of gender interventions in Timor-Leste
Johnston, Melissa (2023). Building peace, rebuilding patriarchy: the failure of gender interventions in Timor-Leste. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University PressNew York. doi: 10.1093/oso/9780197637999.001.0001
2023
Conference Publication
Patriarchal accumulation regimes: do men also appropriate women’s labour and commodities as men, not just as part of capitalist patriarchy?
Johnston, Melissa (2023). Patriarchal accumulation regimes: do men also appropriate women’s labour and commodities as men, not just as part of capitalist patriarchy?. Asian Studies Association of Australia Workshop Examining the “hidden abode” of social reproduction, marriage, and violence in Southeast Asia, Salatiga, Indonesia, 20-21 July 2023.
2023
Journal Article
Brideprice's relationship to conflict, class, and violence against women
Johnston, Melissa (2023). Brideprice's relationship to conflict, class, and violence against women. Journal of Global Security Studies, 8 (1) ogac043, 1-18. doi: 10.1093/jogss/ogac043
2022
Conference Publication
Linkages between violent misogyny and violent extremism and radicalization that lead to terrorism
Johnston, Melissa and Meger, Sara (2022). Linkages between violent misogyny and violent extremism and radicalization that lead to terrorism. Linkages between violent misogyny and violent extremism and radicalization that lead to terrorism, Vienna, Austria, 9 September.
2022
Other Outputs
Linkages between violent misogyny and violent extremism and radicalization that lead to terrorism
Johnston, Melissa and Meger, Sara (2022). Linkages between violent misogyny and violent extremism and radicalization that lead to terrorism. Vienna, Austria: The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
2022
Conference Publication
Misogyny and violent extremism: investigating missing variables
Johnston, Melissa, Riveros-Morales, Yolanda and True, Jacqui (2022). Misogyny and violent extremism: investigating missing variables. European International Studies Association Conference, Athens, Greece , 1-4 September 2022.
2022
Book Chapter
Feminist methods in international relations research
Johnston, Melissa (2022). Feminist methods in international relations research. Handbook of research methods in international relations. (pp. 214-231) edited by R. Huddleston, Thomas Jamieson and Patrick James. Northampton, MA USA: Edward Elgar Publishing. doi: 10.4337/9781839101014.00022
2022
Journal Article
Women and the justice divide in Asia Pacific: how can informal and formal institutions bridge the gap?
Mollica, Caitlin, Davies, Sara E., True, Jacqui, Eddyono, Sri Wiyanti, Fonseka, Bhavani and Johnston, Melissa (2022). Women and the justice divide in Asia Pacific: how can informal and formal institutions bridge the gap?. Human Rights Quarterly, 44 (3), 612-639. doi: 10.1353/hrq.2022.0029
2022
Conference Publication
War on two fronts: gender and the ethnonationalist state
Johnston, Melissa and Lingham, Jayanthi (2022). War on two fronts: gender and the ethnonationalist state. Australian International Political Economy Network , Brisbane, QLD Australia, 3-4 February 2022.
2021
Journal Article
"Patriarchal reset" in the asia pacific during COVID-19: the impacts on women's security and rights
Johnston, Melissa, Davies, Sara E., True, Jacqui and Riveros-Morales, Yolanda (2021). "Patriarchal reset" in the asia pacific during COVID-19: the impacts on women's security and rights. The Pacific Review, 36 (3), 1-28. doi: 10.1080/09512748.2021.2005123
2020
Other Outputs
Mapping the impact of COVID-19 in the Indo-Pacific region II: women, peace and security practitioner views
Johnston, Melissa, True, Jacqui, Davies, Sara, Riveros-Morales, Yolanda and Phillips, Sara (2020). Mapping the impact of COVID-19 in the Indo-Pacific region II: women, peace and security practitioner views. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Monash University.
Supervision
Availability
- Dr Melissa Johnston is:
- Available for supervision
Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.
Supervision history
Current supervision
-
Doctor Philosophy
Matrilineal Societies in the Borderlands
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Shahar Hameiri
-
Doctor Philosophy
The Making of Little Jihadist in Indonesia: A Study on The Process of Children Association with Terrorist Group
Principal Advisor
-
Doctor Philosophy
PLANNING AND BUDGETING REFORM IN INDONESIA: GOVERNANCE, REGULATIONS, AND INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENT
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Shahar Hameiri
-
Doctor Philosophy
The Politics of Investment De-Risking in Indonesia
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Shahar Hameiri
Media
Enquiries
Contact Dr Melissa Johnston directly for media enquiries about:
- Gender and Conflict
- Indonesia
- Misogyny
- Myanmar
- Political Economy
- Timor-Leste
- Violent Extremism
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