Glenda Anna Sluga FAHA (born May 29, 1962, Melbourne), is an Australian historian who has contributed significantly to the history of internationalism, nationalism, diplomacy, immigration, and gender, in Europe, Britain, France, Italy, Yugoslavia, and Australia.
[1][2][3] However, in 1988, Sluga attended the University of Sussex using a British Council Commonwealth Scholarship where she received her DPhil in 1993 with her thesis “Liberating Trieste, 1945–1954: nation, history, and the Cold War”.
[1][2] In 2014 she was awarded a prestigious five year Australian Research Council Kathleen Fitzpatrick Laureate Fellowship for her project Inventing the International.
She worked with a young team that included Natasha Wheatley, Philippa Hetherington, Sophie Loy-Wilson, Benjamin Huf, Yves Rees, Marigold Black, Beatrice Wayne, Sarah Dunstan, and Sabine Selchow amongst others.
[5][6] Sluga is currently directing the five-year research project: Twentieth-Century International Economic Thinking, and the Complex History of Globalization (ECOINT).