
Position: Visiting Fellow
School and/or Centres: School of Politics & International Relations
Email: daniel.casey@anu.edu.au
Phone: +61402484210
Location: Level 2, RSSS Building, 146 Ellery Crescent
Qualification: PhD, BA/LLB (1st Class Honours)
Website: http://www.daniel-casey.org
I am a lecturer in politics and international relations at the Australian Catholic University (ACU) and a Visiting Fellow at the ANU School of Politics and International Relations.
I completed my PhD in 2024, after a 15-year career in the Australian Public Service. I spent a significant amount of time reading and responding to letters from members of the public, on behalf of the Prime Minister and other Ministers. I saw letters from pensioners, seeking changes to means testing arrangements; letters from parents unable to afford school supplies for their children; and letters from people wishing the Prime Minister good luck at the next election. I saw how Ministers and their offices engaged with these letters; how they informed policy development and perceptions of public opinion. This experience drives my research.
My PhD research examined who writes, why they write, and the impact of the letters on public policy and the political agenda. I am studying this by examining the letters of members of the public to Prime Minister Howard. This includes developing the first dataset of the volume and topic of letters to a Prime Minister, on a fortnightly basis, coded against the internationally recognised Comparative Agendas Project topic list. Currently, this dataset covers from March 1996 (when Mr Howard was elected) to December 2000. This dataset allows for a much finer-grained analysis of public opinion than traditional annual datasets.
My main research interests include the responsiveness of political elites to public opinion, political participation, public opinion, and how the political and public agenda is set. I also have research interests in freedom of information, archival research, and the structure of doctoral programmes and the training of doctoral candidates.
To keep up with my research, follow me on Twitter (@DanielCasey_CBR) or Bluesky @danielcaseycbr.bsky.social
CanberraInbox: Political Communication, the Personal Vote and Representation Styles—Studying Legislators’ e-Newsletters in Australia Legislative Studies Quarterly (2025)
How did public service leaders talk to staff about Robodebt? What they said – or didn’t – is revealing The Conversation (2024)
The Opinion-Agenda Linkage: How Letters From the Public to the Prime Minister Impact the Policy Agenda (PhD dissertation, 2024)
Punctuated equilibrium and the dynamics of political participation: the case of letter writing Policy Studies (2024)
Selective rememberings? Access to ‘private’ documents of former Ministers and Prime Ministers at the National Archives of Australia Humanities Research Journal (Lead author, with Josh Black) (2024)
Access to documents about Australia’s political history is fraught and inadequate. It needs to change The Conversation (2024)
ChatGPT in Public Policy Teaching and Assessment: An Examination of Opportunities and Challenges Australian Journal of Public Administration (2024)
Encyclopedia of Political Communications – Letters to leaders (accepted – forthcoming) (Lead author, with Brandon Rottinghaus)
Analysing Policy Success and Failure in Australia: Pink Batts and Set-Top Boxes Australian Journal of Public Administration (2024) (Solo author)
Bridging the expectation gap: A survey of Australian PhD candidates and supervisors in politics and international relations Australian Journal of Political Science (Lead author, with Serrin Rutledge-Prior) (2023)
'An Isolating experience aggravated by COVID': Disconnection between political science PhD candidates and supervisors in the wake of COVID-19 PS: Political Science and Politics (with Serrin Rutledge-Prior) (2023)
Hard Work and You Can’t Get it: An International Comparative Analysis of Gender, Career Aspirations, and Preparedness Among Politics and International Relations PhD Students. PS: Political Science and Politics (Lead author, with Serrin Rutledge-Prior, Lisa Young, Jonathan Mally and Loleen Berdahl) (2023)
Proudly ‘disinterested’ – A public administration career for social science PhD graduates. In Non-Academic Careers for Quantitative Social Scientists: A Practical Guide to Maximizing Your Skills and Opportunities, edited by Natalie Jackson. Springer. (Lead author, with Mark Fletcher)
How letters to leaders can improve our understanding of public opinion. – ECPR The Loop, September 2022.
'Dear John…’: Letters from the Public to Prime Minister Howard – Policy Perspectives Series, John Howard Prime Ministerial Library (UNSW) (ANU repository version) (2022)
Accessing Documents of Former Ministers – Plugging the Accountability Gap. Public Law Review 33: 91-96 (SSRN version) (2022)
Book Review: Dear Prime Minister: Letters to Robert Menzies 1949–1966. By Martyn Lyons (Sydney: UNSW Press, 2021), pp. vi+ 266. AU $39.99 (pb). Australian Journal of Politics and History 67: 533-534 (2022)
Managing and sustaining the APS workforce: a graduate perspective. Public Administration Today 6: 35-36 (2006).