Skidmore's work in anthropology began in Cambodia and combined religious, political and medical anthropology, exploring the psychological strategies Cambodians used to survive in the aftermath of the Khmer Rouge genocide. This work was awarded the international H.B.M. Murphy Prize in Medical Anthropology.[2][3]
Skidmore moved to Montreal to pursue graduate studies in Southeast Asia and also studied the Burmese language at the University of Wisconsin. She received the Wenner Gren Foundation funding for doctoral fieldwork in Myanmar and in 1996 was given the first unrestricted fieldwork research visa for Burma (Myanmar) since the advent of military dictatorship in 1988.[4]
Skidmore's work revealed the depths of fear, repression and self-censorship Burmese people suffered under successive Burmese military regimes[5] and meticulously documents the many survival strategies used to remain hopeful for the future when terror and fear threaten to overwhelm the population.[6]Karaoke Fascism: Burma and the Politics of Fear[7] was published by University of Pennsylvania Press (a shorter article appeared in American Ethnologist[8]), a book-length expose of living under a repression of fear in contemporary Myanmar.
Skidmore's work in Burma covered diverse cultural, medical, political, and religious aspects of everyday life at a time when the world was largely excluded from entering Myanmar and when foreigners were heavily restricted in their interactions with Burmese people and places. Skidmore worked and lived in peri-urban slums in Mandalay and Rangoon (Yangon) as well as the Yangon Psychiatric Hospital, Yangon Drug Rehabilitation Hospital, and the Yangon Traditional Medicine Clinic. Much of this work centred on the cultural beliefs and practices as well as structural inequalities and state repression that impact the psychological and psychiatric health of women and children.[7][9]
Academic career
Skidmore began academic life as a tenured lecturer at the University of Melbourne and then as a senior postdoctoral research fellow in the Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peacekeeping Studies at the University of Notre Dame.[10] After winning several Australia Research Council Grants, Skidmore returned to Australia to work as a research and Associate Dean Research at the Australian National University. It was here that she developed an interest in the relevance of public anthropology[11] to her ongoing interest in contemporary conflicts.[12]
Skidmore went on to hold executive leadership positions in Australian universities including Dean and Pro Vice-Chancellor International at the University of Canberra from 2008, Deputy Vice-Chancellor International and Vice-President of the University of Queensland from 2014, and Deputy Vice-Chancellor Global and Vice-President of the University of Tasmania in 2016.[13] In 2021 she became a Research Professor in the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation, Deakin University and a Board Member and the Director of the Australia Myanmar Institute.[14]
Publications
Ware, Anthony; Skidmore, Monique (2023). After the Coup: Myanmar's Political and Humanitarian Crises. Canberra: Asia Pacific Press: Australian National University E Press. ISBN 9781760466138
Cheesman, Nick; Skidmore, Monique; Wilson, Trevor (2012). Myanmar's Transition: Openings, Obstacles, and Opportunities. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. ISBN978-981-4414-16-6.
Cheesman, Nick; Skidmore, Monique; Wilson, Trevor (2010). Ruling Myanmar: From Cyclone Nargis to National Elections. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. ISBN978-981-4311-47-2.
Skidmore, Monique; Wilson, Trevor; Myanmar/Burma Update Conference (2007). Myanmar: the state, community and the environment. Canberra: Asia Pacific Press : Australian National University E Press. ISBN978-0-7315-3811-9. OCLC171113250.
^"Monique Skidmore". Policy Forum. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
^Skidmore, Monique (1996). "In the Shade of the Bodhi Tree: Dhammayietra and the Re-awakening of Community in Cambodia". Crossroads. 10 (1): 1–32. JSTOR40860548.
^Skidmore, M. (1995). "The Politics of Space and Form: Cultural Idioms of Resistance and Remembering". Santé culture. 10 (1–2): 33–72. INIST3293991.
^Monique, Skidmore. "About me". Archived from the original on 27 September 2020. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
^Skidmore, Monique (February 2003). "Darker than midnight: Fear, vulnerability, and terror making in urban Burma (Myanmar)". American Ethnologist. 30 (1): 5–21. doi:10.1525/ae.2003.30.1.5.