Academic Position:
Lecturer in Peace and Conflict Studies
Administrative Position: Coordinator - Global Issues Program
Qualifications: PhD, MSc (Econ), BSc
Office:
Telephone:
Fax:
Email:
560, General Purpose North 3 (#39A)
+61 7 3365 7530
+61 7 3365 1388
s.kaempf@uq.edu.au

Research Expertise

  • International Security
  • Media and Politics
  • Ethics and International Politics
  • Peacekeeping

Teaching Interests

POLS1501 Introduction to Peace and Conflict Analysis
POLS3510 International Peacekeeping
POLS7504 Contemporary Peacekeeping

Background

Dr Sebastian Kaempf is Lecturer in Peace and Conflict Studies at the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland (Australia). He is also a Research Associate of the US Studies Centre at The University of Sydney. He received his PhD (‘Wresting under Conditions of Asymmetry: Contemporary US Warfare and the Trade-off between Casualty-Aversion and Civilian Protection’) at the Department of International Politics at Aberystwyth University (UK) in 2007. From September 2004 to January 2005 he was a visiting fellow at the Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University (US). He holds a BSc and MSc (Econ) in International Relations from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).

Research Interests

His general research interests include the relationship between ethics and the laws of war, critical security studies, American warfare, asymmetric conflicts, (the regionalisation of) peacekeeping, and the impact of new media technology on contemporary security.

In particular, Sebastian has three areas of research interests:
The first research project examines the relationship between ethics and the laws of war in the context of contemporary US warfare. More specifically, it investigates the ways in which wars waged under conditions of asymmetry have impacted on the relationship between the US norms of casualty-aversion and civilian protection. This historically-informed conceptual enquiry is explored in relation to questions of legitimacy and effectiveness of US interventions in Somalia, Afghanistan, and Iraq.
Since coming to UQ in September 2006, he has worked as principle co-investigator (with Professor Alex Bellamy and Associate Professor Paul Williams) on a historically-based comparative research project that examines the legitimacy of UN and non-UN peace operations.
In addition to the above areas of research, he has recently started exploring the historical and contemporary roles of media in international affairs, both as an important source of information, and increasingly, as a medium of war and diplomacy. In this newly emerging and multidisciplinary field, his research focus has been on the impact of new media technology on contemporary warfare, with particular reference to the US ‘War on Terror’.

For some more details, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjT8SGErqco and http://soundcloud.com/dwgmf/war-2-0.

Research Projects

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