Dr Laura Mills

Dr Laura Mills

Lecturer

Phone
+44 (0)1334 46 2941
Email
ljm33@st-andrews.ac.uk

 

Biography

Dr Laura Mills is the Associate Director of the Centre for Art and Politics. She is the founding co-convenor of the British International Studies Association (BISA) Critical Military Studies Working Group and also serves as Associate Editor of the journal Critical Military Studies.

Prior to joining the University of ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø' School of International Relations, Dr Mills was a Teaching Fellow in American Politics and Foreign Policy and Coordinator of the Institute of North American Studies at King's College London. At King's, she was also invited to become a Visiting Research Fellow in the Department of War Studies. 

Dr Mills undertook her undergraduate studies at the University of Oxford, before completing her MA and PhD in International Relations at Queen's University Belfast.

Teaching

Dr Laura Mills is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and was invited to become a member of the University’s Enterprise Education Network. She currently serves on the University of ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Entrepreneurial Education Working Group. Her innovative pedagogies have been recognised and awarded at international and national levels.

In 2023, Dr Mills was honoured by the British International Studies Association with . 

In 2021, she was one of the inaugural winners of the University of ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Entrepreneurial Education Fund, enabling her to develop a website on s, showcasing her innovative pedagogical practice and her students' extraordinary creative work.

In 2020, Dr Mills was conferred the McCall-MacBain Foundation Teaching Excellence Award in recognition of outstanding contributions to teaching and the advancement of teaching and learning scholarship.

She was awarded the 2019-20  with Dr Lydia Cole, Dr Faye Donnelly and Dr Natasha Saunders for introducing engagement with conflict textiles in the teaching of politics and international relations and challenging both established pedagogies and ways of understanding the discipline through this innovative approach.

Research areas

Dr Laura Mills’ research explores two largely under-analysed areas of enquiry in IR – the cultural and the everyday – and argues that culture and everyday life co-constitute global politics. Her work draws on and seeks to contribute to contemporary interdisciplinary debates around aesthetics, identity, global governmentality, performativity, everyday practice and power through critical interrogations of cultural diplomacy, (the afterlives of) war, militarism, and security. More recently, her work is interested in and driven by creative engagements with international relations.

Dr Mills’ research has been awarded grants and fellowships by the British Academy, the Northern Ireland Department of Employment and Learning, the International Studies Association (ISA), and the British International Studies Association (BISA). Her first monograph – Post-9/11 US Cultural Diplomacy: The Impossibility of Cosmopolitanism â€“ is forthcoming with . Her research has also been published in leading interdisciplinary journals such as ,  , and , in disciplinary blogs such as  and in edited volumes spanning topics such as , , and . Her current projects engage with the Invictus Games and military and veteran artwork through (auto)ethnography, visuality, narrative, poetry, and performance. 

Dr Mills is the founding co-convenor of the new BISA working group - . She currently serves as Associate Editor of the journal . She was also the founding co-editor of , a creative interventions section of the journal . 

In addition to her academic research, Dr Mills is also a published poet with her work appearing in Anodyne Magazine, Last Stanza Poetry Journal, Survive and Thrive, and The Candid Review among other publications. 

Dr Mills is a member of Women in International Security UK and the Scotland Feminist Politics and International Relations Network. Within the University, in addition to serving as Associate Director of the Centre for Art and Politics, she is a Steering Committee Member of the Visualising War and Peace Project. She has also been recognised as an Academic Affiliate of the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø Institute for Gender Studies (StAIGS) and is a member of the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, the Early Career Women’s Network, and the Cultural Identity and Memory Studies Institute. 

PhD supervision

  • Molly Reeves
  • Sahngmin Shin

Selected publications

  • Mills, L., 1 Nov 2024, In: The Manchester Review. 26, 1 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review

  • Mills, L., 2024, In: Amaranth: A Journal of Food Writing, Art and Design. 3, 1, p. 25-25 1 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review

  • Open access
    Mills, L., 3 Jan 2024, British International Studies Association.

    Research output: Other contribution

  • Mills, L., 2024, In: Aimsir. Lúnasa 2024, p. 21-21 1 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review

  • Mills, L., 1 Dec 2024, In: The Stony Thursday Book: A Collection of Contemporary Poetry. 46, 20, p. 16 1 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review

  • Mills, L., 1 Dec 2024, In: The Stony Thursday Book: A Collection of Contemporary Poetry. 46, 20, p. 17 1 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review

  • Mills, L., 2024, In: Amaranth: A Journal of Food Writing, Art and Design. 3, 1, p. 25-27 3 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review

  • Mills, L., 1 Oct 2024, In: Inter-View. 2, p. 7-7 1 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review

  • Open access
    Mills, L., Aug 2023, 7 p. Online : University of ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø.

    Research output: Other contribution

  • Mills, L., 2023, In: Last Stanza Poetry Journal. 14, p. 145-145 1 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review