Samuel Hmung
Salai Samuel Hmung is a PhD student at the Department of Political and Social Change of the Australian National University. He received a Master of Political Science (Advanced) from the ANU, under an Australian Awards scholarship. His master’s thesis applied an original power-sharing framework to explore and compare the preferences of Myanmar’s elite political actors for power-sharing through their public statements. He has worked as a researcher for institutions and projects, including the ARC-funded project ‘Constitutional Change in Authoritarian Regimes: The Case of Myanmar’ at the Faculty of Law and Justice of the University of New South Wales, the Australian National University’s Myanmar Research Centre, the Southeast Asia Rules-Based Order (SEARBO) project, and the United States Institute of Peace. Samuel’s PhD project explores the relationship between non-violent and violent movements in Myanmar and beyond. His broader research interests include non-state armed actors, revolutions, power-sharing institutions, and rebel governance.
Research Interest
Non-state armed actors, revolutions, power-sharing institutions, and rebel governance.
HDR Supervisor/s
Nick Cheesman George Lawson Ardeth ThawnghmungThesis Title/Topic
The Relationship between Unarmed and Armed Struggles of Myanmar's Spring Revolution