| Awards | Order of Australia |
|---|---|
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Peace and Conflict Studies |
| Institutions | University of Sydney |
Emeritus ProfessorStuart ReesAM is anAustralian academic, human rights activist and author who is the founder of theSydney Peace Foundation[1] andEmeritus Professor at the Centre forPeace and Conflict Studies at theUniversity of Sydney inAustralia.[1]
He holds aBachelor of Arts withHonours, aDiploma ofSocial Studies, a Certificate ofSocial Casework and aDoctor of Philosophy.[2]
From 1978 to 2000 Rees wasProfessor ofSocial Work andSocial Policy at the University of Sydney. For years Rees taught a post-graduate unit titled "Passion, Peace and Poetry" at the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, in which he integrated poetry with a study of the great non-violence leaders such as Gandhi and Martin Luther King. A similar use of poetry to illustrate the theme of peace with justice runs through many of his publications.
Prior to this he taught atUniversity of Aberdeen andUniversity of Southampton in theUnited Kingdom, atUniversity of Toronto andWilfrid Laurier University inCanada, and at theUniversity of California, Berkeley and theUniversity of Texas at Austin in the United States.
Rees' awards include a Simon Fellowship at theUniversity of Manchester, a Humanities Fellowship at theCity University of Hong Kong, the Jerusalem Peace Prize, and an honorary doctorate and the Award of Highest Honour for 'Significant Contributions to World Peace' conferred in 1998 bySoka University, Japan. For four years he was an elected Fellow of the Senate of the University of Sydney. In 2005 he was awarded the Order of Australia for services to international relations.
For six years he was a member of the Aboriginal Reconciliation Council of New South Wales and is currently a council member of the Toda Research Institute into Global Governance and Human Security. Between 2004-2010, Professor Rees chaired the NSW Energy Council.
Rees' publications include numerous books and over one hundred journal articles on social justice, health care and welfare services, critiques of free market economics, the human costs of management practices and the attributes of peace negotiations and humanitarianism in social policy. Rees has also published three anthologies of poetry: The Jury’s Return (1992), Tell Me the Truth About War (2004) and A Will to Live (2014).
Rees has been a human rights activist in several countries and his non-academic activities have included community development, probation services and social work in the UK andCanada; work withWar on Poverty programs in the U.S.A.; and work with theSave the Children non-governmental organisation inIndia andSri Lanka; co-architect of the West Papua Social Justice project; and co architect of the Sri Lankan project for the human rights of the Tamil minority.
Rees is a regular broadcaster on Australia'sABC Radio about the "means and meaning of peace with justice" is also a regular New Matilda contributor[2]. In 2012, Rees spoke about Pablo Picasso as a lifelong advocate of peace at the Art Gallery NSW (Art After Hours)[3] Rees is a regular convenor at 'Politics in the Pub'[4]. His most recent discussion - 'War, Peace & Propaganda: John Pilger in conversation with Professor Stuart Rees'.
Rees is an active supporter of the worldwideBoycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement which promotes Palestinian peoples' rights to self-determination. Rees has defended his efforts to convince the University of Sydney to sever ties with Israeli institutions. At a rally held in August 2013, Rees was personally supported by Australian MPDavid Shoebridge.[3] In 2013, Rees sharply criticisedJulia Gillard for signing theLondon Declaration on Combating Anti-Semitism. Rees described Gillard's signing of the declaration as "childish, thoughtless but easily populist."[4]
In 2005 he was awarded a Member of theOrder of Australiafor service to international relations, particularly as Director of the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Sydney and through the establishment of the Sydney Peace Prize.[5]