Samuel White

Samuel  White
  • Biography/ Background

    Dr Samuel White is an Associate Professor at the National University of Singapore, where he is the Senior Research Fellow in Peace and Security at the Centre for International Law. Dr White entered academia as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Adelaide Law School. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society, an Editor of the United States Military Academy’s Articles of War and an Editor of the Adelaide Law Review. He entered academia as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Adelaide Law School (2022 - 2024) where he remains heavily engaged, teaching within the Military Law Masters program and being a RUMLAE affiliate. 

     

    Dr White holds titles as Visiting Fellow at the Australian Defence Force Academy (2023 – 2025) and the Army Visiting Fellow at the Australian War Memorial (2024 – 2027). In 2024, he was made an Associate Fellow of the Royal Historical Society for his work on cross-cultural understandings of warfare. In 2025, he was appointed a Fellow of the National Library of Australia for his research on Australian legal history. He holds positions as an Adjunct Associate Professor at the University of New England & at the University of Adelaide.

     

    Concurrently to his academic pursuits, Samuel has served as both a Royal Australian Infantry Corps and an Australian Army Legal Corps officer in a variety of tactical, operational and strategic level postings. These include platoon command in the 9th Royal Queensland Regiment; Staff Officer in the Directorate of Operations and International Law; Deputy Command Legal Officer - Headquarters Maritime Border Command; and as a Reserve Legal Officer within Special Operations Command. As of 2025, Samuel is serving as a Liaison Officer within the Singaporean Defence Force.

     

    His military experiences focused his doctoral studies, which addressed the constitutional ambit and limitations of responding to foreign interference (both traditional and modern forms) via military responses. Relying upon practical and operational experience, Samuel completed his doctorate in under two years. Whist writing his PhD, he concurrently published his first monograph, Keeping the Peace of the Realm (LexisNexis, 2021), which assessed the limits on executive power in Australia’s federal construct. He is the editor of another multi-volume series, called The Laws of Yesterday’s Wars (Brill Nijhoff) which critically questions how international the laws of war are. This arose from his military service, and later work as a Senior Legal Officer in the Office of International Law, Commonwealth Attorney-General’s Department. 

  • Qualifications

    PhD - ADL

    LL.M - ADL

    M. War Studies - UNSW 

    LL.M (Hons I) - Melb

    GDLP - ANU

    BA/LL.B (Hons) - UQ

  • Research Interests

    Public law / industrial law

    Constitutional law

    Comparative constitutional law 

    Administrative law 

    Military law 

    - Law of armed conflict

    - International law 

    - International criminal law

The information in this directory is provided to support the academic, administrative and business activities of the University of Adelaide. To facilitate these activities, entries in the University Phone Directory are not limited to University employees. The use of information provided here for any other purpose, including the sending of unsolicited commercial material via email or any other electronic format, is strictly prohibited. The University reserves the right to recover all costs incurred in the event of breach of this policy.

Entry last updated: Thursday, 16 Jan 2025