Professor Matthew Hughes
Professor of Military History
Marie Jahoda 234
- Email: matthew.hughes@brunel.ac.uk
- Tel: +44 (0)1895 266872
- Politics
- Politics and History
- Social and Political Sciences
Summary
Matthew Hughes studied at the School of Oriental and African Studies and at the London School of Economics. He completed his ESRC-funded PhD in 1995 under the supervision of Professors Brian Bond and Brian Holden Reid in the Department of War Studies, King’s College London on the strategy surrounding the British campaign in Palestine in the First World War. After working as an intern with the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Professor Hughes lectured at the universities of Northampton and Salford before coming to Brunel University in 2005, where he was Head of Politics and History, 2012-15. Professor Hughes has been a British Academy funded visiting fellow at the American University in Cairo, the American University in Beirut, and at Tel Aviv University. He spent two years as the Marine Corps University Foundation-funded Maj-Gen Matthew C. Horner Distinguished Chair in Military Theory at the US Marine Corps University, Quantico, 2008-10. His latest monograph on British counter-insurgency in Palestine in the 1930s entitled Britain's Pacification of Palestine: the British Army, the Colonial State, and the Arab Revolt, 1936-1939 (2019, paperback edition 2020) published with Cambridge University Press was a 'commended' finalist for the 2019 Society for Army Historical Research Templer Medal Prize, was long listed for the British Army Military Book of the Year 2020, and has been translated into Arabic by the Centre for Arab Unity Studies. He was the editor of the Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research (2004-8); he is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and a former Councillor and then Chair of Council of the Army Records Society (2014-18); he is a judge for the Society for Army Historical Research's annual Templer Medal prize (2003-4, 2007-8, 2018-); he is a JP and a Trustee of the Gurkha Centre; and he sits or has sat on the editorial boards of the British Journal of Military History, International History Review, Open Military History, Journal of Maltese History and Middle Eastern Studies, and was a judge for the last's annual Elie Kedourie Prize. He has been an external examiner at Maynooth University Ireland (for the Irish Defence Forces at Currgah Camp), Swansea, Exeter, Strathcylde, the Joint Services Command and Staff College, King's College London, Sussex, Kent, Buckingham, Northampton, Cambridge and Wolverhampton; he was a Visiting Lecturer at the University of Buckingham, 2016-20; and he is currently an external examiner at Loughborough University and the University of Salford. He has supervised ten PhD students to completion, and welcomes new research students interested in military history subjects.
Qualifications:
- BA Geography and History (School of Oriental and African Studies) 1988
- MSc (Econ) International Relations (London School of Economics) 1989
- PGCE History (Cardiff University) 1991
- PhD War Studies (King's College London) 1995
Newest selected publications
Hughes, M. (2024) 'Soldiers' and Dayak Sense of Self and Other on Borneo during Confrontation between Britain and Indonesia, 1962-66'. Journal of Military History (US), 88 (4). pp. 1028 - 1061. ISSN: 0899-3718
Hughes, M. (2023) ''. Middle Eastern Studies, 59 (5). pp. 855 - 857. ISSN: 0026-3206
Hughes, M. (2023) 'The Architecture of Colonial Control: Britain's Pacification of the Arab Revolt in Palestine, 1936-1939, Matthew Hughes', in Thomas, M. and Curless, G. (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Late Colonial Insurgencies and Counter-Insurgencies. Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 161 - 178. ISBN 10: 019886678X. ISBN 13: 9780198866787.
Hughes, M. (2023) '‘How Britain Stirred the Cauldron of Conflict in Palestine’'. BBC History Magazine, 24 (6). pp. 46 - 53. ISSN: 1469-8552
Hughes, M. (2023) 'Superpower Rivalry: The United States, the Soviet Union and Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1948-67'. MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES, 59 (1). pp. 174 - 176. ISSN: 0026-3206