Tim Soutphommasane

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Tim (Thinethavone) Soutphommasane (pronounced "Soot-pom-ma-sarn"[1]) is an Australian academic, political philosopher, social commentator, writer, and columnist. He has previously been a columnist with The Age and The Australian newspapers, an academic at Sydney and Monash Universities, and a research fellow with the Per Capita think tank. He is a member of the board of the National Australia Day Council,[2] and an ex officio member of the Australian Multicultural Council.[3] On 20 August 2013 Soutphommasane commenced a five-year appointment as Australia's Race Discrimination Commissioner at the Australian Human Rights Commission.[1]

Early life

Thinethavone 'Tim' Soutphommasane[4] was born in Montpellier, France in 1982 to Chinese and Lao parents who had fled Laos as refugees in 1975.[2]

His family was resettled by the Family Reunion Program of the Australian Department of Immigration and Ethnic Affairs to Sydney's south-western suburbs in 1985,[5] where he was raised. He was educated at Hurlstone Agricultural High School.[5]

Academia

He graduated from the University of Sydney with a first-class honours degree.[1] He was then a Commonwealth Scholar and Jowett Senior Scholar at Balliol College of the University of Oxford[5] where he completed a Master of Philosophy with distinction and a Doctor of Philosophy in political theory.

From 2010 to 2012 he was a Lecturer in Australian Studies and a Research Fellow at the National Centre for Australian Studies of Monash University.[citation needed] He was one of six chief investigators on an Australian Research Council Linkage project studying the history of ANZAC Day.[4][6]

Journalism

Soutphommasane was a regular writer for The Australian newspaper, to which he contributed feature articles and the Ask the Philosopher column each Saturday. He also wrote for The Monthly magazine. While living in England, Soutphommasane was a freelance journalist, contributing blog entries to The Guardian and The Financial Times, as well as opinion pieces and reviews to the The Spectator, The Australian, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.[7] He has also had work published on various online sites, including New Matilda.

Writing

Soutphommasane is the author of three books: The Virtuous Citizen: Patriotism in a Multicultural Society (Cambridge University Press, 2012), Don't Go Back To Where You Came From: Why Multiculturalism Works (New South Books, 2012) which in 2013 won the NSW Premier's Literary Award in the 'Community Relations Commission Award' section,[8] and Reclaiming Patriotism: Nation-Building for Australian Progressives (Cambridge University Press, 2009).

He was also co-editor (with Nick Dyrenfurth) of All That's Left: What Labor Should Stand For (New South Books, 2010).

Soutphommasane's first book Reclaiming Patriotism: Nation-Building for Australian Progressives was published in 2009. Loosely based on research undertaken toward his doctoral thesis, the book argues that people with progressive politics must re-engage with ideas of patriotism and national identity, which Soutphommasane claims were surrendered to the right during the Prime Ministership of John Howard.

Political activity

Soutphommasane joined the Australian Labor Party in 1998, aged 15.[5] He later worked on the speechwriting staff of then New South Wales Premier Bob Carr,[5] and in late 2007 he returned from Oxford to work as a research officer in the office of Kevin Rudd during that year's federal election campaign.[5]

Books

  • Reclaiming Patriotism: Nation-Building for Australian Progressives (Port Melb: Cambridge University Press, 2009) Paperback, ISBN 978-0-521-13472-9
  • Don't Go Back To Where You Came From: Why Multiculturalism Works (New South Books, 2012)
  • The Virtuous Citizen: Patriotism in a Multicultural Society (Cambridge University Press, 2012)

References

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  7. Soutphommasane, Reclaiming Patriotism (Port Melb: Cambridge University Press, 2009), p.i. Paperback, ISBN 978-0-521-13472-9
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External links