Education
He was educated at Cambridge and Oxford in economics and anthropology, and was formerly a consultant for Non-governmental organizations and development agencies, and a journalist.
He was educated at Cambridge and Oxford in economics and anthropology, and was formerly a consultant for Non-governmental organizations and development agencies, and a journalist.
Keen is a theorist of contemporary conflict, notably in African society. He has done fieldwork in Sudan, Sierra Leone and Iraq, and archival research. In Endless War and in several articles he has argued that "winning war is rarely an end in itself.
Rather, war tends to be part of a wider political and economic game that is consistent with strengthening the enemy".
The "war on terror" is, for Keen, an extension of the Cold War. The Benefits of Famine explored how the 1980s famines in Sudan were of use to certain groups.
Famines have powerful beneficiaries including political elites and traders. International intervention "may offer significant political and bureaucratic benefits for international donors".