Hunter Marston is a PhD Researcher at the ANU Department of International Relations at the ANU College of Asia and the Pacific.

He commenced his PhD at ANU in July 2019. His research is focused on great power competition in Southeast Asia. In particular, he explores how small states in Southeast Asia form hedging strategies to manage their relations with the United States and China, with particular focus on Singapore, Vietnam, and Myanmar. His main research interests include state-society relations and political change in Southeast Asia, US foreign policy, and US-China competition.

Prior to joining ANU, Hunter worked as a Senior Research Assistant at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC, in the Center for East Asia Policy Studies. He also supported research and events for The India Project at Brookings. While at Brookings, he co-authored a chapter with Joseph Liow of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies on Singapore’s balancing tactics vis-a-vis China and the United States. The chapter was published in Jeff Smith’s edited volume, Asia’s Quest for Balance: China’s Rise and Balancing in the Indo-Pacific (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2018). He also recently completed field research on social media and violence in Myanmar as a Robert Myers Fellow with a grant from the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs.

Hunter completed his Masters in Public Policy at the University of Washington (2013) and his MA in Southeast Asia Studies, also at the University of Washington (2012). While at the University of Washington, Hunter spent a summer internship in the US Embassy in Myanmar as a Harold Rosenthal Fellow in International Relations.

Hunter is based in the United States.


Fields of expertise



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Australia likely to maintain ties with Myanmar, expert says

Australia is likely to maintain diplomatic relations with Myanmar amid the military’s violent crack downs on protestors, an expert from The Australian National University…


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