Dr Matthew Heaslip
Biography
I joined the 1024ºË¹¤³§ in 2018 where I am a Senior Lecturer in Naval History teaching on 1024ºË¹¤³§'s MA in Naval, Maritime and Coastal History. I am also a Visiting Fellow at the .
My research focuses upon the twentieth century Royal Navy and its role within Britain's wider imperial system, during both peace and war. In particular, my first book explores the Royal Navy's China Station and Britain's East Asian Empire during the 1920s. It examines the reasons behind a number of the most violent clashes involving British service personnel during the interwar period and reveals how the Admiralty secretly sought to circumvent the Washington Treaty. I have also had recent journal articles published in the Journal of Strategic Studies and The International History Review.
Research interests
My research focuses on the application of naval power in littoral environments, both in peace and war. In particular, I am interested in the use of the nineteenth and twentieth century Royal Navy in defending and maintaining the British Empire. Looking at how the Royal Navy exploited its global dominance through gunboat diplomacy, amphibious operations, and imperial policing. In doing so, I explore the importance of naval power in Britain's efforts to exert influence over other nations and groups of people on a day-to-day basis and consider its applicability to present-day global geopolitics.
I am on the editorial board of the Coastal Studies and Society and The Northern Marine/Le marin du nord journals and I am also a member of the .
Teaching responsibilities
I teach on the MA in Naval, Maritime and Coastal History. I also supervise student dissertations on the BA in History.
I supervise PhD students on a range of topics, if you are interested in starting doctoral research under my supervision then please get in touch.
Media availability
I am happy to take calls and emails from media on my research, and am aware of the need to respond to journalists in a timely manner. Please contact me via: matthew.heaslip@port.ac.uk.
Interested journalists can also contact the University's Media and Communications team for support and advice on all media engagement, including out of hours.
Research outputs
2023
Heaslip, M.
1 Nov 2023, In: The International History Review. 44, 6, p. 1230-1247