Dr Louis Halewood

    Overview

    Profile summary

    Philip Nicholas Lecturer in Maritime History
    Postgraduate Research Co-ordinator, School of Society and Culture
    I am a historian of war and diplomacy in the ninteteenth and twentieth centuries. My current research focuses on the relationship between sea power and world order in British and American strategic thought during the first half of the twentieth century, and during 2023 I held a Kluge Fellowship at the Library of Congress to start work on my next book project, which examines these themes in the decades following the First World War.
    I joined the University of Plymouth in 2019 from Merton College, Oxford, where I completed my DPhil thesis titled 'Internationalising Sea Power: Ideas of World Order and the Maintenance of Peace, 1890-1919'. At Merton, I held the John Roberts MC3 (Great War) scholarship between 2015-18, and a Smith Richardson Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship at International Security Studies, Yale University, between 2018-19. I previously completed my BA in War Studies at King's College London, and my MA in History at the University of Calgary.

    Professional memberships

    Roles on external bodies

    Councillor of the Navy Records Society 

    Supervised research degrees

    Teaching interests

    First Year
    • HIS4001: What is History?
    • HIS4004: Fractured Isles: Britain and Ireland, 1640-1990
    Second Year
    • HIST528: First World War at Sea
    Third Year
    • HIST625: Anglo-American Relations in Maritime Perspective
    Postgraduate
    • MAHI729: Sea Power in History
    • MAHI730: All at Sea: Research Skills for Maritime History
    Areas of expertise for postgraduate supervision
    • Maritime and Naval History
    • The First World War
    • The League of Nations
    • Grand Strategy
    • The History of Strategic Thought

    Additional information

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