Daniel Marston (historian)
Daniel Marston is a professor in Military Studies in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University and Principal of the Military and Defense Studies Program at the Australian Command and Staff College.
Daniel Marston was born and raised in Boston, Massachusetts.[1] He completed his doctorate in the history of war at Balliol College, Oxford University, under the supervision of Professor Robert O’Neil.[2] He previously held the Ike Skelton Distinguished Chair of the Art of War at the US Army Command and General Staff College. He has been a Visiting Fellow, on multiple occasions, with the Leverhulme Changing Character of War Program at the University of Oxford. He was previously a Senior Lecturer in War Studies at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. He has been working with the USA, USMC, and British Army in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2006. His research focuses on the topic of how armies learn and reform.[3]
Marston's first book Phoenix from the Ashes, an in-depth assessment of how the British/Indian Army turned defeat into victory in the Burma campaign of the Second World War, won the Field Marshal Templer Medal Book Prize in 2003.[3]
Bibliography
Daniel Marston's publications include:
- Marston, D 2016, 'Learning and adapting for jungle warfare, 1942-45: The Australian and British Indian Armies', in P.J. Dean (ed.), Australia 1944-45: Victory in the Pacific, Cambridge University Press, Port Melbourne, Australia, pp. 121–144.
- Marston, D 2015, 'The 20th Indian Division in French Indo-China, 1945-46: Combined/ joint Operations and the 'fog of war, NIDS International Forum on War History 2015, National Institute for Defense Studies, Tokyo.
- Marston, D & Malkasian, C (eds.) 2 eds, 2008 and 2010, Counterinsurgency in Modern Warfare, Osprey Publishing Ltd, UK.
References
- "Daniel Marston". Retrieved 9 February 2017.
- "Daniel Marston". Retrieved 9 February 2017.
- Director (Research Services Division). "Professor Daniel Marston". Retrieved 9 February 2017.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)