Catherine Zara Raymond Explained

Catherine Zara Raymond is an international maritime security expert. She is an Associate at the Corbett Centre for Maritime Policy Studies, based at the Joint Services Command and Staff College, Defence Academy of the United Kingdom.

Career

Raymond is also a PhD student at King's College London, where she is writing her thesis on political Islam.[1] Raymond worked as an analyst for the security consultancy, Control Risks,[2] and as an associate research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

She is a coeditor and contributing author of the volume "Best of Times, Worst of Times: Maritime Security in the Asia-Pacific", and the policy paper titled "Safety and Security in the Malacca and Singapore Straits".[3] Her articles have been published in the Harvard Asia Quarterly, the Maritime Studies Journal, Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Monitor,[4] the Journal of the Australian Naval Institute, The Straits Times, and a number of other publications. Her latest papers were published in the Journal of Terrorism and Political Violence, in an edited volume produced by Routledge titled "Maritime Security in Southeast Asia" and in an edited volume entitled, "Lloyd's MIU Handbook of Maritime Security".[5] Recently she was interviewed by CNBC regarding security in the Strait of Malacca, and was consulted by The Economist on piracy off the coast of Somalia.

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. ISCR (2010). "Al Muhajiroun and Islam4UK: The group behind the ban"
  2. IMSS (2006). "International Maritime Security Symposium speaker biographies "
  3. RSIS (2006). "Safety and Security in the Malacca and Singapore Straits "
  4. Jamestown Foundation Terrorism Monitor (2006). "The Threat of Maritime Terrorism in the Malacca Straits"
  5. Taylor and Francis (2008). "Lloyd's MIU Handbook of Maritime Security"
  6. Piracy and Maritime Crime: Africa, Asia, and Southeast Asia, edited by Bruce Elleman and S.C.M. Paine (US Naval War College, 2009), p. 31-42.
  7. "Security in the Maritime Domain and Its Evolution Since 9/11" in Lloyd's MIU Handbook of Maritime Security, S. Bateman, R. Herbert-Burns and P. Lehr (Eds.), Taylor and Francis, 2008., p. 3-11.
  8. HKS (2005). "Peril in the Straits of Malacca "
  9. Harvard University Press (2005). "Piracy in Southeast Asia: New Trends, Issues and Responses "