Background
Burton was born in Melbourne, the son of the Reverend John Wear Burton Methodist Minister.
Burton was born in Melbourne, the son of the Reverend John Wear Burton Methodist Minister.
He was educated at Newington College (1924–1932) and went on to graduate from the University of Sydney in 1937.
He joined the Department of External Affairs in 1941 and served as private secretary to Herbert Vere Evatt. In 1947, aged 32, he became Secretary of the Department of External Affairs and held that position until June 1950. At the beginning of 1951 he took up the position of Australian High Commissioner for Ceylon, but resigned to return home and contest the Federal election of that year in the electorate of Lowe.
As ALP candidate he was beaten by William McMahon, a future Prime Minister of Australia.
While writing his first book, The Alternative, Burton farmed outside Canberra and in 1960 was awarded a fellowship at the Australian National University. Two years later the Rockefeller Foundation awarded him a grant to study neutralism in Africa and Asia.
In 1963, while a Reader in International Relations at University College University of London, he established the Centre for the Analysis of Conflict. He then went on to hold fellowships at numerous universities while living in Canberra.
In introducing Burton as a guest on Radio National, Phillip Adams said.
"John Burton was probably the most controversial and visionary public servant of the 20th Century. Branded a pink eminence of the Labor Party by conservative critics, he was clearly one of the most important intellectuals and policy-makers associated with the Curtin Labor Government of the 1940s. John Burton"s theoretical work on conflict resolution has been highly influential in setting up conflict resolution as an academic discipline in its own right, which is very much needed in the modern globalised world because of the greater potential for disputes between different ethnic and religious communities.
In Australia, Burton"s work greatly influenced the pioneering course in conflict resolution at Macquarie University, Sydney
Scholarship - London School of Economics (1941)
Fellowship - Australian National University (1960)
Grant - Rockefeller Foundation (1962)
Fellowship - University of South Carolina (1982)
Fellowship - University of Maryland (1983)
Fellowship - George Mason University (1982).
In 1937 he became a member of the Commonwealth Public Service from where he was granted a Commonwealth scholarship to pursue a doctorate at the London School of Economics.