- University of Virginia, Miller Center of Public Affairs, Department Memberadd
- Elizabeth Ingleson is a lecturer in U.S. foreign policy at the United States Studies Centre and teaches American history at the University of Sydney’s history department. She was awarded her PhD in American history from the University of Sydney in 2017. In 2015-16, she was a recipient of the National Fellowship at the University of Virginia's Miller Center. A mandarin speaker, in 2017, she was based in Guilin, Ch... moreElizabeth Ingleson is a lecturer in U.S. foreign policy at the United States Studies Centre and teaches American history at the University of Sydney’s history department.
She was awarded her PhD in American history from the University of Sydney in 2017. In 2015-16, she was a recipient of the National Fellowship at the University of Virginia's Miller Center. A mandarin speaker, in 2017, she was based in Guilin, China.
Elizabeth’s research explores the relationships between trade, politics, and labour. Her current book project, Making Made in China: Race, Politics, and Labor in Sino-American Trade 1972-1978, examines these issues through a social and political history of the origins of the contemporary Sino-American trade relationship.
Elizabeth holds a First-Class Honours degree from the University of New South Wales and was a recipient of the Commonwealth Government’s Australian Postgraduate Award.
Interested in both social and foreign policy, she has worked at the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet in Canberra, and completed internships with the Social Policy Research Centre and UNICEF Australia.edit
Op-ed on Taiwan-based company, Foxconn, and the deceptive alignment between the interests of corporations and US workers.
Op-ed on the contemporary US rapprochement with Cuba, and lessons from 1970s US rapprochement with China
Op-ed in East Asia Forum
