Rory Miller

Professor

Rory Miller

International Politics

Room Number

0D45

Contact

+974 4457 8416

EmailRory Miller

Rory Miller is Professor of International Politics, Director of the Energy Studies Certificate program and Co-Director of the Small States Research program at Georgetown University in Qatar. He teaches and researches on international relations, small state and regional security, international security, and alliances and theories of external intervention. 

Professor Miller is the author or editor of 11 books, including Desert Kingdoms to Global Powers: The Rise of the Arab Gulf (Yale University Press, 2016), and, most recently, Overcoming Smallness: Challenges and Opportunities for Small States in Global Affairs (Hamad Bin Khalifa University Press, 2022, with Fahad Al-Marri). He has published extensively in academic and policy journals and across international media, including in Foreign Affairs magazine, the National Interest, the Economist, the Wall Street Journal, Foreign Policy magazine, and the New Republic, and has made television and radio appearances, including in Al Jazeera, BBC, Bloomberg, CNBC Europe, CNN International, NPR, Turkish State Television, and Voice of America. He is co-editor of the Cambridge University Press book series, Intelligence and National Security in Africa and the Middle East.

Professor Miller is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society and serves on several advisory boards. He was a visiting professor in the War Studies Department at King’s College London (2014-2017) and a visiting research professor at Trinity College Dublin (2020-2021). He is the lead principal investigator on two major multi-year funded research projects: a four-year project on “Managing National Security Risk During and After the Blockade: Strategic Challenges and Opportunities for Qatar’s Energy Sector” (QNRF, 2020-2024) and a three-year project on “The Maritime Sector and Resilience-building in a Small State: The Qatar Case Study” (QNRF, 2024-2027).

Professor Miller received his Ph.D. in Middle East and Mediterranean Studies Program of the War Studies Department of King’s College London.