
Qualifications
Research Interests
Professor Steven Ratuva, an award-winning political sociologist and global interdisciplinary scholar, is Director of the Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies. He was awarded the 2020 Metge Medal by the Royal Society of New Zealand -Te Apārangi, the country’s highest award in social science research excellence. He was also co-winner of the 2019 University of Canterbury research medal, the university’s highest academic honour. He became the first Pacific Islander and foreign national to win both esteemed and highly contested awards. He is also recipient of a number of research grants by Marsden, NZ Health Research Council, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and others, totalling a few million dollars.
He was a recipient of a Fulbright Senior Fellowship and was Fulbright professor at the University of California (LA), Duke University and Georgetown University in 2018. He is Chair of the International Political Science Association research committee on Security, Conflict and Democratization and former President of the Pacific Islands Political Studies Association. He has transdisciplinary across sociology, anthropology, political science, development studies, economics, philosophy and history. With a PhD from the Institute of Development Studies (University of Sussex), he has published widely on a range of issues Pacific societies and culture, indigenous knowledge, development, conflict, peace, political change, coups, memory activism, social solidarity economy, social protection, elections, ethnicity, security, military, affirmative action, COVID-19, social indexes, indigenous knowledge, climate security and nationalism.
Recent Publications
- Ratuva S. (2021) Epistemic siege: Neoliberalism and the commodification of knowledge (Forthcoming). 1-200.
- Ratuva S. (2021) Risks, identity and conflict: Theoretical perspectives and case studies. Palgrave- Springer. 1-250.
- Ratuva S., Crichton-Hill Y., Ross T., Vakaoti P. and Basu A. (2021) Social protection and COVID-19: A comparative study of resilience and social solidarity. Singapore: Palgrave-Springer. 1-277. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-2948-8.
- Ratuva S., Hamdy A. and Compel R. (2021) Risk, identity and conflict: Theoretical perspectives and case studies. Singapore: Palgrave. 1-390. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-1486-6.
- Ratuva S. (2019) Contested Terrain: Reconceptualising Security in the Pacific. Canberra: ANU Press. 304. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/CT.2019.