
Challenges students to grow and excel.
Brings enthusiasm and expertise to class.
Always fair, encouraging, and motivating.
Inspires students to love learning.
Always supportive and understanding.
Dr. Antony Mullins serves as a Lecturer in the School of Management and Marketing within Curtin Business School at Curtin University, which falls under the Faculty of Business and Law. His academic qualifications include a PhD, Master of Commerce (Information Systems), Postgraduate Diploma in Commerce (Information Systems), and Bachelor of Commerce. Mullins has progressed in his career at Curtin University from Associate Lecturer to his current lecturing position. He is affiliated with the Australian Computer Society and holds ITIL certification. His teaching responsibilities encompass units such as ISYS3012 Advanced Business Technologies and ISYS5003 Technological Infrastructure, focusing on business information systems and technological infrastructure.
Mullins' research centers on information security and related domains. Key interests include e-government security, cybersecurity self-assessment tools, technostress in information security contexts, sports information system frameworks for data analytics, and the influence of privacy concerns on AI adoption. He has co-authored several impactful publications, including 'Does high e-government adoption assure stronger security? Results from a cross-country analysis of Australia and Thailand' published in Government Information Quarterly in 2020, which examines security vulnerabilities across 800 pages of 40 e-government websites in Australia and Thailand and has garnered 83 citations. Other notable works are 'Education Cybersecurity Assessment Tool: A cybersecurity self-assessment tool for the Australian K-12 sector' (2022), 'Technostress and Information Security–A review and research agenda of Security-Related Stress' in Computers & Security (2025), 'Design Science Guided Sports Information System Framework Development for Sports Data Analytics' (2020), and 'The influence of privacy concern on AI adoption-a meta-analysis of studies in the age of ChatGPT' (2025). These contributions address critical challenges in digital security, organizational stress from technology, and emerging AI technologies, enhancing cybersecurity practices in public sector, educational, and business environments. His collaborative research, often with colleagues like Nik Thompson, underscores practical applications for security enhancement and data-driven decision-making in sports and government services.
