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Professor Matt McDonald
Professor

Matt McDonald

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+61 7 336 53042

Overview

Background

Professor of International Relations

Matt McDonald joined the School of Political Science and International Studies in January 2010. After completing his PhD at UQ in 2003, Matt held lectureship posts in international relations at the University of New South Wales and the University of Birmingham (UK), and was Associate Professor in International Security at the University of Warwick (UK). His research focuses on the relationship between security and climate change, the international politics of climate change, and critical theoretical approaches to security. He has published on these themes in a wide range of journsls, and is the author of Ecological Security: Climate Change and the Construction of Security (Cambridge UP, 2021), Security, the Environment and Emancipation (Routledge 2012) and (with Anthony Burke and Katrina Lee-Koo) Ethics and Global Security (Routledge 2014). He was formerly co-editor of Australian Journal of Politics and History. He is currently completing an ARC-funded project on comparative national approaches to the climate change- security relationship, and is currently leading the cross-disciplinary University research network, Climate Politics and Policy.

Selected Publications

Books (Authored)

  • Ecological Security: Climate Change and the Construction of Security (Cambridge UP, 2021)
  • (with Anthony Burke and Katrina Lee-Koo), Ethics and Global Security: A Cosmopolitan Approach (Routledge, 2014)
  • Security, the Environment and Emancipation: Contestation over Environmental Change (Routledge, 2012).

Edited Volumes

  • (with Paul Williams), Security Studies: An Introduction, 4th ed (Routledge, 2023)
  • (with Paul Williams), Security Studies: An Introduction, 3rd ed (Routledge, 2018)
  • Critical Security in the Asia-Pacific. Special Issue of Critical Studies on Security, 5:3 (2017).
  • (with Mark Beeson), The Politics of Climate Change in Australia. Special Issue of Australian Journal of Politics and History, 59:3 (2013).
  • (with Tim Dunne), The Politics of Liberal Internationalism, Special Issue of International Politics, 50:1 (2013).
  • (with Anthony Burke), Critical Security in the Asia-Pacific (Manchester UP, 2007).

Refereed Journal Articles

  • 'Emergency Measures? Terrorism and Climate Change on the Security Agenda', European Journal of International Security, 10:1 (2025), pp.115-32.
  • 'Fit for Purpose? Climate Change, Security and IR', International Relations, 38:3 (2024), pp.313-30.
  • 'Cimate change, security and the institutional prospects for ecological security', Geoforum, 155 (2024), 10496.
  • 'Accepting Responsibility? Institutions and the Security Implications of Climate Change', Security Dialogue, 55:3 (2024), pp.293-310.
  • (with Susan Park et al), 'Ecological Crises and Ecopolitics Research in Australia', Australian Journal of Politics and History, 71:1 (2024), pp.147-65.
  • (with Jonathan Symons et al), 'Australia, we need to talk about Solar Geoengineering', Australian Journal of International Affairs, 78:3 (2024), pp.369-74.
  • 'Immovable Objects? Impediments to a UN Security Council Resolution on Climate Change', International Affairs, 99:4 (2023), pp.1635-51.
  • 'Geoengineering, Climate Change and Ecological Security', Environmental Politics, 32:4 (2023), 565-85.
  • (with Jessica Kirk), ‘The Politics of Exceptionalism: Securitization and COVID-19’, Global Studies Quarterly, 1:3 (2021).
  • 'After the Fires? Climate Change and Security in Australia', Australian Journal of Political Science, 56:1 (2021), 1-18.
  • ‘Climate Change and Security: Towards an Ecological Security Discourse?’, International Theory, 10:2 (2018), 153-80.
  • ‘Critical Security in the Asia-Pacific: An Introduction’, Critical Studies on Security, 5:3 (2017), 237-52.
  • ‘Remembering Gallipoli: Anzac, the Great War and Australian Memory Politics’, Australian Journal of Politics and History, 63:3 (2017), pp.405-17.
  • (with Lee Wilson) ‘Trouble in Paradise? Citizen Militia Groups in Bali, Indonesia’, Security Dialogue, 48:3 (2017), pp.241-58.
  • ‘Bourdieu, Environmental NGOs and Australian Climate Politics’, Environmental Politics, 25:6 (2016), pp.1058-78.
  • (with Anthony Burke and Katrina Lee-Koo) 'Ethics and Global Security', Journal of Global Security Studies,1:1 (2016), pp. 64-79
  • 'Australian Foreign Policy under the Abbott Government: Foreign Policy as Domestic Politics?' Australian Journal of International Affairs 69:6 (2015), pp 651-669.
  • ‘Discourses of Climate Security’, Political Geography, 33 (2013), pp.43-51.
  • (with Christopher S. Browning),‘The Future of Critical Security Studies: Ethics and the Politics of Security’, European Journal of International Relations 19:2 (2013), pp.235-55.
  • 'The Failed Securitization of Climate Change in Australia’, Australian Journal of Political Science, 47:4 (2012), pp.579-92.
  • ‘Lest we Forget: The Politics of Memory and Australian Military Intervention’, International Political Sociology, 4:3 (2010), pp.287-302.
  • 'Securitization and the Construction of Security', European Journal of International Relations, 14:4 (2008), pp.563-87.
  • (with Katharine Gelber) ‘Ethics and Exclusion: Representations of Sovereignty in Australia’s Approach to Asylum-Seekers’, Review of International Studies, 32:2 (2006), pp.269-89.
  • ‘Fair Weather Friend? Australia’s Approach to Global Climate Change’, Australian Journal of Politics and History, 51:2 (2005), pp. 216-34.
  • ‘Human Security and the Construction of Security’, Global Society, 16:3 (2002), pp. 277-95.

Media

Matt has been interviewed on television and radio, and has contributed opinion editorials to ABC News, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian Literary Review, Australian Outlook, ABC's The Drum, Insight, the Lowy Interpreter and is a regular contributor to The Conversation. For his recent articles in The Conversation, see here: https://www.theconversation.com/profiles/matt-mcdonald-12655/articles

Availability

Professor Matt McDonald is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Fields of research

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Arts, The University of Queensland
  • Masters (Coursework) of International Studies, The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland

Research interests

  • The relationship between security and climate change

  • Critical theoretical approaches to security

  • The politics of Geoengineering

  • The politics of climate change in Australia

Research impacts

On climate change, and in particular its relationship to security, Matt has consulted the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, the Department of Defence, the New Zealand Ministry of Defence, the UK's Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the UN's Climate and Security Mechanism. He is a member of Australia's stakeholder briefing group for the UNFCCC climate change talks. He has also worked with policy-makers, industry groups and NGO representatives in communicating research work on the politics of climate change in Australia. He has hosted a dedicated interdisciplinary workshop on this theme at UQ, and is leading University-wide interdisciplinary network on Climate Poltics and Policy.

Matt has contributed to broader public debate on issues relating to climate change and Australian foreign policy through media work, in particular opinion editorial publications in ABC News, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian Literary Review, ABC's The Drum, The Conversation and the Lowy Interpreter. And he has been invited to present his research in Australia and beyond: a combination of seminars and public lectures at leading institutions in Australia (ANU, Sydney, UNSW, Griffith, Adelaide, Deakin), the UK (Warwick, St Andrews, Glasgow, Birmingham, Manchester, Queen Mary, Leeds, Nottingham, Aberystwyth, Leicester), the US (Harvard, George Washington, Denver, Utah), Europe (Copenhagen, Sciences Po Paris, Geneva, Hamburg, NUPI Norway, SIPRI Stockholm), India (Manipal), Turkey (Bilkent), Thailand (Chiang Mai), Israel (Hebrew University) and New Zealand (VUW).

Works

Search Professor Matt McDonald’s works on UQ eSpace

95 works between 2001 and 2025

41 - 60 of 95 works

2017

Book Chapter

Introduction

McDonald, Matt and Mitchell, Audra (2017). Introduction. Reflections on the posthuman in international relations. (pp. 1-8) edited by Clara Eroukhmanhoff and Matt Harker. Bristol, United Kingdom: E-International Relations.

Introduction

2017

Book Chapter

Ecological Security

McDonald, Matt (2017). Ecological Security. Reflections on the posthuman in international relations: The anthropocene, security and ecology. (pp. 62-72) edited by Clara Eroukhmanhoff and Matt Harker. Bristol, United Kingdom: E-International Relations.

Ecological Security

2016

Journal Article

Regional cooperation on energy in South Asia: unraveling the political challenges in implementing transnational pipelines and electricity grids

Huda, Mirza Sadaqat and McDonald, Matt (2016). Regional cooperation on energy in South Asia: unraveling the political challenges in implementing transnational pipelines and electricity grids. Energy Policy, 98, 73-83. doi: 10.1016/j.enpol.2016.07.046

Regional cooperation on energy in South Asia: unraveling the political challenges in implementing transnational pipelines and electricity grids

2016

Journal Article

Bourdieu, environmental NGOs and Australian climate politics

McDonald, Matt (2016). Bourdieu, environmental NGOs and Australian climate politics. Environmental Politics, 25 (6), 1058-1078. doi: 10.1080/09644016.2016.1196968

Bourdieu, environmental NGOs and Australian climate politics

2016

Journal Article

Editors' note

Bonnell, Andrew G. and McDonald, Matt (2016). Editors' note. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 62 (2), 335-335. doi: 10.1111/ajph.12259

Editors' note

2016

Journal Article

An ethics of global security

Burke, Anthony, Lee-Koo, Katrina and McDonald, Matt (2016). An ethics of global security. Journal of Global Security Studies, 1 (1), 64-79. doi: 10.1093/jogss/ogv004

An ethics of global security

2016

Book Chapter

Australia and Global Climate Change

McDonald, Matt (2016). Australia and Global Climate Change. Foreign Policy: Theories, Actors, Cases. (pp. 394-410) edited by Steve Smith, Amelia Hadfield and Tim Dunne. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.

Australia and Global Climate Change

2016

Book Chapter

Whose security? Ethics and the referent

McDonald, Matt (2016). Whose security? Ethics and the referent. Ethical security studies: a new research agenda. (pp. 32-45) edited by Anthony Burke and Jonna Nyman. London, United Kingdom: Routledge.

Whose security? Ethics and the referent

2015

Journal Article

Australian foreign policy under the Abbott government: foreign policy as domestic politics?

McDonald, Matt (2015). Australian foreign policy under the Abbott government: foreign policy as domestic politics?. Australian Journal of International Affairs, 69 (6), 651-669. doi: 10.1080/10357718.2015.1056514

Australian foreign policy under the Abbott government: foreign policy as domestic politics?

2015

Journal Article

Climate Security and Economic Security: The Limits to Climate Change action in Australia?

McDonald, Matt (2015). Climate Security and Economic Security: The Limits to Climate Change action in Australia?. International Politics, 52 (4), 484-501. doi: 10.1057/ip.2015.5

Climate Security and Economic Security: The Limits to Climate Change action in Australia?

2014

Journal Article

Book review of Four degrees of global warming: Australia in a hot world

McDonald, Matt (2014). Book review of Four degrees of global warming: Australia in a hot world. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 60 (3), 477-478.

Book review of Four degrees of global warming: Australia in a hot world

2014

Book Chapter

Australia and climate change

Eckersley, Robyn and McDonald, Matt (2014). Australia and climate change. Australian foreign policy : controversies and debates. (pp. 230-251) edited by Daniel Baldino, Andrew Carr and Anthony Langlois. South Melboure, Vic., Australia: Oxford University Press.

Australia and climate change

2014

Book Chapter

Contesting border security: emancipation and asylum in the Australian context

McDonald, Matt (2014). Contesting border security: emancipation and asylum in the Australian context. Contesting Security: Strategies and logics. (pp. 154-168) edited by Thierry Balzacq. Abington, Oxon, UK: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780203079850-19

Contesting border security: emancipation and asylum in the Australian context

2014

Book Chapter

Constructivism, US foreign policy, and counterterrorism

Jackson, Richard and McDonald, Matt (2014). Constructivism, US foreign policy, and counterterrorism. Obama and the world : new directions in US foreign policy. (pp. 15-28) edited by Inderjeet Parmar, Linda B. Miller and Mark Ledwidge. New York, NY United States: Routledge.

Constructivism, US foreign policy, and counterterrorism

2013

Journal Article

Issues in Australian foreign policy: January to June 2013

McDonald, Matt (2013). Issues in Australian foreign policy: January to June 2013. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 59 (4), 605-617. doi: 10.1111/ajph.12036

Issues in Australian foreign policy: January to June 2013

2013

Journal Article

The politics of climate change in Australia

Beeson, Mark and McDonald, Matt (2013). The politics of climate change in Australia. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 59 (3), 331-348. doi: 10.1111/ajph.12019

The politics of climate change in Australia

2013

Journal Article

The future of Australian climate politics

McDonald, Matt (2013). The future of Australian climate politics. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 59 (3), 449-456. doi: 10.1111/ajph.12026

The future of Australian climate politics

2013

Journal Article

Foreign and defence policy on Australia's political agenda, 1962-2012

McDonald, Matt (2013). Foreign and defence policy on Australia's political agenda, 1962-2012. Australian Journal of Public Administration, 72 (2), 171-184. doi: 10.1111/1467-8500.12021

Foreign and defence policy on Australia's political agenda, 1962-2012

2013

Journal Article

Foreign policy internationalism and political possibility

McDonald, Matt (2013). Foreign policy internationalism and political possibility. International Politics, 50 (1), 97-117. doi: 10.1057/ip.2012.30

Foreign policy internationalism and political possibility

2013

Journal Article

The politics of liberal internationalism

Dunne, Tim and McDonald, Matt (2013). The politics of liberal internationalism. International Politics, 50 (1), 1-17. doi: 10.1057/ip.2012.25

The politics of liberal internationalism

Funding

Past funding

  • 2019 - 2024
    Climate Change and National Security: International Responses
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2012
    Climate Change and Discourses of Security
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2012
    The politics of climate change in Australia
    UWA-UQ Bilateral Research Collaboration Award
    Open grant
  • 2010 - 2012
    Internationalism and foreign Policy under the Rudd Government
    UQ New Staff Research Start-Up Fund
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Matt McDonald is:
Available for supervision

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Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Identity, Institutions and Policy: Ontological security and the Australian Defence Force

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Sarah Percy

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Human security and climate migration: making sense of vulnerability to climate change in the Pacific

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Nicole George

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Middle Power as a Strategy of Resistance: Indonesia's Middle Power Diplomacy Under the Yudhoyono and Jokowi Administrations

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Andrew Phillips

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Matt McDonald directly for media enquiries about:

  • Australian foreign policy
  • climate politics
  • International security

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au