Editorial board

Editor:
David Carment

Managing Editor:
Racheal Wallace

Book Review Editor:
Jean-Christophe Boucher

International Advisory Board:
Manjiao Chi ( [email protected])
Daryl Copeland ( [email protected])
Michael Hawes ( [email protected]; [email protected])
Patrick James ( [email protected])
Gilbert Khadiagala ( [email protected])
Audie Klotz ( [email protected])
Chung-in Moon ( [email protected])
Kim Richard Nossal ( [email protected])
Geoffrey Underhill ( [email protected])

Editorial Board:

David Black ( [email protected])
Duane Bratt ( [email protected])
John Calvert ( [email protected])
Maxwell A. Cameron ( [email protected]; [email protected])
Andrea Charron ( [email protected])
Petra Dolata ( [email protected])
Patricia Goff ( [email protected])
David J. Hornsby ( [email protected])
Laura Macdonald ( [email protected])
Besmma Momani ( [email protected])
Richard Nimijean ( [email protected])
Stéphane  Roussel ( [email protected])
Christopher Sands ( [email protected])

International Advisory Board:

Manjiao Chi
Manjiao Chi is Professor and Founding Director, Center for International Economic Law and Policy (CIELP), Law School, University of International Business and Economics (UIBE), Beijing. His research and teaching focus on international trade and investment law and policy, dispute settlement, global development and cooperation, and publishes extensively in these fields. Among his many academic affiliations, he is headquarter member, ILA Committee of Rule of Law and International Investment Law; Advisor, UNESCAP; Steering Committee member, Academic Forum on ISDS; Executive Council member, Chinese Society of International Law; and Scientific Advisory Board member, Centre for Global Cooperation Research (GCR Center). Prior to joining UIBE, he was Professor and Deputy Director, International Economic Law Institute, Law School, Xiamen University; Senior Fellow, GCR Center; and Counsel-in-Residence (on Secondment), Department of Treaty and Law, Ministry of Commerce of China. He holds or held visiting professorship and fellowship at a number of international organizations, leading law schools and research institutions in Asia, America and Europe. He is frequently invited to present in major international conferences, sits in the board of several academic journals of international law and relations, and serves as arbitrator, expert and legal advisor in foreign related disputes. He holds BA, LLM and Ph.D in law degrees.

Daryl Copeland
Analyst and consultant Daryl Copeland is the author of  Guerrilla Diplomacy: Rethinking International Relations (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2009) and has written over 100 articles and book chapters for the scholarly and popular media. A former Canadian diplomat who served in Thailand, Ethiopia, New Zealand and Malaysia, he is now Research Fellow at the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, and has recently held teaching appointments at Ottawa, Otago (NZ), and East Anglia (UK) Universities. Mr. Copeland is a peer reviewer for the University of Toronto Press, the  International Journal, and  The Hague Journal of Diplomacy. He is a member of the Editorial Board of the journal Place Branding and Public Diplomacy. In 2009 he was Research Fellow at the Center on Public Diplomacy, University of Southern California and from 2009-11 he served as Adjunct Professor at the Munk School of Global Affairs. In 2000 he received the Canadian Foreign Service Officer Award for his “tireless dedication and unyielding commitment to advancing the interests of the diplomatic profession.”; in 2012 he received the Molot Prize for foreign policy analysis.

Mr. Copeland grew up in downtown Toronto, and received his formal education at the University of Western Ontario (Gold Medal, Political Science; Chancellor’s Prize, Social Sciences) and the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs (Canada Council Special MA Scholarship). Among his positions at the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT) in Ottawa, Mr. Copeland worked as Senior Intelligence Analyst, South and Southeast Asia; Deputy Director for International Communications; Director for Southeast Asia; Senior Advisor, Public Diplomacy; Director of Strategic Communications Services; and, Senior Advisor, Strategic Policy and Planning. He was DFAIT representative to the Association of Professional Executives (APEX) 2001-06. He has spent years backpacking on six continents. For more information and commentary, see 

www.guerrilladiplomacy.com, and follow Daryl Copeland on Twitter @GuerrillaDiplo.


Michael Hawes

Canadian Foreign Policy Journal

Patrick James
Patrick James is Dornsife Dean’s Professor of International Relations at the University of Southern California (PhD, University of Maryland, College Park). James specializes in comparative and international politics. His interests at the international level include the causes, processes and consequences of conflict, crisis and war. With regard to domestic politics, his interests focus on Canada, most notably with respect to the constitutional dilemma.

James is the author or editor of 30 books (e.g.,  Canada and Conflict, Oxford, 2012) and over 150 articles and book chapters. Among his honors and awards are the Louise Dyer Peace Fellowship from the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, the Milton R. Merrill Chair from Political Science at Utah State University, the Lady Davis Professorship of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Thomas Enders Professorship in Canadian Studies at the University of Calgary, the Senior Scholar award from the Canadian Embassy, Washington, DC, the Eaton Lectureship at Queen’s University in Belfast, the Quincy Wright Scholar Award from the Midwest International Studies Association (ISA), the Beijing Foreign Studies University Eminent Scholar, Eccles Professor of the British Library and Donner Foundation Medal in Canadian Studies. He is a past president of the Midwest ISA and the Iowa Conference of Political Scientists. James has been Distinguished Scholar in Foreign Policy Analysis for the ISA, 2006-07, and Distinguished Scholar in Ethnicity, Nationalism and Migration for ISA, 2009-10. He served as President of the Association for Canadian Studies in the United States (2007-09), President of the International Council for Canadian Studies (2011-13), President of the Peace Science Society (2017-18) and President of the International Studies Association (2018-19). James also served a five-year term as Editor of  International Studies Quarterly.

Gilbert Khadiagala
Gilbert M. Khadiagala is the Jan Smuts Professor of International Relations and Director of the Centre for the Study of the United States (ACSUS) at the University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. He previous taught African politics and international relations at Kent State University, Kent, Ohio (1991-1997), The School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), Johns Hopkins University, Washington DC (1997-2006). In September 2007 he was appointed Jan Smuts Professor of International Relations and Head of Department at the University of the Witwatersrand, a position he held for ten years.

Prof. Khadiagala holds a doctorate in international studies from SAIS and an M.A in political science from McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario. He has published widely on African politics, foreign policy, security, mediation, and conflict resolution. He is the recent editor of War and Peace in Africa’s Great Lakes Region (New York: Palgrave-MacMillan, 2017) and author of Regional Cooperation on Democratization and Conflict Management in Africa (Washington DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2018), and How Can Democratic Peace Work in Southern Africa? Trends and Trajectories after the Decade of Hope (Maputo: The Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, 2018).

Maureen Appel Molot
Maureen Appel Molot is Distinguished Research Professor at the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs (NPSIA), Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada. She was Associate Director of NPSIA from 1982 to 1989 and Director from 1993 to 2002. Her BA and MA are from McGill University and her PhD from the University of California, Berkeley.

Dr. Molot was the Editor of  Canadian Foreign Policy from 2002 to the end of 2009. She was also was the founding co-editor of the  Canada Among Nations series. Her research on Canada-US relations, Canadian foreign economic policy, NAFTA, and various topics relating to the Canadian and global automobile industries has appeared in leading journals and books in North America and Europe. She is currently involved in the Citizens Academy, a local effort to promote municipal literacy and encourage Ottawa’s citizens and community leaders to work together to promote a vibrant, innovative and resilient city.

Kim Richard Nossal
Kim Richard Nossal is director of the Centre for International and Defence Policy and a professor in the Department of Political Studies at Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. He received his B.A. (1972), M.A. (1974), and Ph.D. (1977) from the University of Toronto, and taught at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, from 1976 to 2001, serving as chair of the Department of Political Science from 1992 to 1996. In 2001, he was appointed to head the Department of Political Studies at Queen’s University, a position he held until 2009. Between 2008 and 2013, he was the Sir Edward Peacock Professor of International Relations and from 2013 to 2015 served as the director of the School of Policy Studies.

Nossal served as editor of International Journal, the quarterly journal of the Canadian International Council from 1992 to 1997 and sits on the boards of a number of journals. He served as president of the Canadian Political Science Association (2005-2006).

He has authored or edited a number of books on Canadian foreign and defence policy, including The Politics of Canadian Foreign Policy, 4th edition, with Stéphane Roussel and Stéphane Paquin (2015), Charlie Foxtrot: Fixing Defence Procurement in Canada (2016), and, with Jean-Christophe Boucher, The Politics of War: Canada’s Afghanistan Mission, 2001–14 (2017).

Geoffrey R.D. Underhill
Geoffrey R.D. Underhill is the Professor of International Governance at the University of Amsterdam, the founder of the Political Economy and Transnational Governance research programme in the Amsterdam School for Social Science Research, and he also twice served as the programme’s research director, stepping down most recently in 2018. He served as Associate Dean of Studies for the Social Sciences from 2003-2006, and has filled many other university functions during his professorship. This includes the co-ordination of both the university’s submission for the social sciences domain to the national research assessment exercise and the national teaching/degree programme assessment and accreditation review. He has served as a Visiting Professor at the School of Advanced International Studies (Johns Hopkins University Bologna Centre), at the Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Bordeaux; the Faculté des Sciences Économiques et de Gestion, Université de Paris 13 (Nord); and the University of British Columbia. He is currently Editor-in-Chief of the European Journal for International Relations.

Professor Underhill received his BA (hons., First Class) from Queen’s University at Kingston, and his D.Phil in Politics at St. Antony’s College, University of Oxford (1987). He taught briefly at the University of Stirling in Scotland, and was appointed assistant professor at McMaster University in 1988. He returned to Europe as Lecturer/Senior Lecturer at the University of Warwick (1991), and was instrumental in establishing the graduate programme in International Political Economy and securing competitive funding for the ESRC-sponsored Warwick Research Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation. He was appointed to the Chair of International Governance in Amsterdam in 1998. Underhill has published widely on the political economy of international trade, on global financial governance (particularly financial supervision) and the problem of financial stability; and on theories of political economy. He has held multiple research grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (Canada); the Economic and Social Research Council (UK); the Scientific Research Council of the Netherlands (NWO); the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs (International Development); the EU Socrates Programme; and the European Research Council/each of the Framework 5, 6, and 7 research programmes. He has served on multiple editorial committees/boards for scholarly journals in public policy and international relations. He was invited as a member of the Bretton Woods Committee (Washington, DC) in 2014.

Editorial Board:

David Black 
David Black's current research interests focus on Canada and Sub-Saharan Africa, with emphases on human security, development assistance, multilateral diplomacy and extractive industry investment. He has also written on human rights in Canadian and South African foreign policies, on the role of post-apartheid South Africa in Africa, and on Sport and World Politics. Among his recent publications are an edited section of the  Canadian Journal of Development Studies (XXVIII, 2007) on 'Canadian Aid Policy in the new Millennium: Paradoxes and Tensions';  A Decade of Human Security: Global Governance and New Multilateralisms, co-edited with Sandra MacLean and Timothy Shaw (Ashgate 2006), and a Special Issue of  Third World Quarterly (Vol. 25, 2004) on 'Global Games', co-edited with Janis van der Westhuizen. He has been a member of the Executive Committee of the Canadian Association for the Study of International Development (CASID) and the Executive Council of the Canadian Consortium on Human Security (CCHS). From 1999-2006 and 2007-8 he was seconded to the Department of International Development Studies as Program Coordinator and Department Chair.

Duane Bratt
Duane Bratt is a political science Professor and Chair in the Department of Economics, Justice, and Policy Studies at Mount Royal University (Calgary, Alberta). He was educated at the Universities of Windsor (BA 1991, MA 1992) and Alberta (Ph.D 1996). He teaches in the area of international relations and Canadian public policy. His primary research interest is in the area of Canadian nuclear policy. Recent publications include: co-editor, Orange Chinook: Politics in the New Alberta (University of Calgary Press, 2019), co-editor, Readings in Canadian Foreign Policy: Classic Debates and New Ideas 3rd edition (Oxford University Press, 2015) and author of Canada, the Provinces, and the Global Nuclear Revival (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2012). Current projects include the risk assessment of Canada’s nuclear waste site selection process. Duane is also a regular commentator on political events.

John Calvert
Dr. Calvert is a political scientist with a specialization in public policy and an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences at Simon Fraser University. He completed his BA and MA at the University of Western Ontario and, subsequently, obtained a PhD from the London School of Economics. His teaching and research interests are in the areas of global health policy, occupational health, electricity policy, climate change and international trade agreements. He is a member of the Global Health Group of SFU’s Health Sciences Faculty. Prior to his appointment at Simon Fraser University, Dr. Calvert worked for a number of years as an analyst in the trade policy division of the BC government, as well as in the Crown Corporations Secretariat and the Cabinet Policy and Planning Secretariat.

He is on the Board of the Wilderness Committee, BC’s largest membership-based environmental NGO, and a member of the Research Advisory Committee of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. He was a participant in the recently completed 5-year SSHRC-funded Climate Justice Project and is currently on the Committee of Management of the SSHRC-funded Work in a Warming World (W3) research project. He is also co-chair of the BC cluster of a 7-year SSHRC-funded research project that is assessing Canada’s disability and return to work programs.

Max Cameron
Maxwell A. Cameron (Ph.D., California, Berkeley, 1989) specializes in comparative politics (Latin America), constitutionalism, democracy, and political economy. He wrote Democracy and Authoritarianism in Peru (St. Martin's 1994), Strong Constitutions: Social-Cognitive Origins of the Separation of Powers (Oxford University Press 2013), co-edited The Peruvian Labyrinth (Penn State University Press, 1997), The Political Economy of North American Free Trade (McGill-Queen's 1993), Democracy and Foreign Policy (Carleton, 1995), To Walk Without Fear: The Global Movement to Ban Landmines (Oxford, 1998), Latin America's Left Turns: Politics, Policies and Trajectories of Change (Lynne Rienner, 2010), Democracia en la Region Andina: Diversidad y desafios (Lima: IEP, 2010), New Institutions for Participatory Democracy in Latin America (Palgrave 2012) and co-authored The Making of NAFTA: How the Deal Was Done (Cornell, 2000), as well as over 50 peer reviewed articles and chapters. His most recent book is Political Institutions and Practical Wisdom (Oxford University Press, 2018). Cameron is Director of the Centre for the Study of Democratic Institutions and co-founder of the Institute for Future Legislators.

Andrea Charron
Dr. Charron holds a PhD from the Royal Military College of Canada (Department of War Studies). She obtained a Masters in International Relations from Webster University, Leiden, The Netherlands, a Master’s of Public Administration from Dalhousie University and a Bachelor of Science (Honours) from Queen’s University. Dr. Charron worked for various federal departments including the Canadian Privy Council Office in the Security and Intelligence Secretariat. She is now Associate Professor at the University of Manitoba, Political Studies and Director of the Centre for Defence and Security Studies, member of DND’s advisory Board and Operations Director for the Arctic for the Canadian Defence Security Network.

Petra Dolata
Dr. Petra Dolata is Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair (Tier II) in the History of Energy at the University of Calgary, Canada. She holds a Master's degree in American Studies from Ruhr-Universität Bochum, where she also received her PhD in International Relations with a study on US-German (energy) relations in the late 1950s and early 1960s, which was published as a monograph in 2006 ( Die deutsche Kohlenkrise im nationalen und transatlantischen Kontext). Before joining the University of Calgary, she was Assistant Professor of North American History at the Freie Universität Berlin, Germany and Lecturer in International Politics at King’s College London, UK. She is a Senior Research Associate with the European Centre for Energy and Resource Security (EUCERS) at King’s College London. Her current research focuses on European and North American energy history after 1945 as well as the history and politics of the Canadian and circumpolar Arctic. She has published on Canada’s natural resources, foreign and Arctic policies, and the concept of energy security. She is currently working on a research project funded by the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council entitled “The 1970s Energy Crises and Energy Security: A Cross-national and Transatlantic History.”

Patricia Goff

Patricia Goff (PhD Northwestern) is an Associate Professor of political science at Wilfrid Laurier University and Senior Fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), both in Waterloo, Ontario. She has held visiting positions at the School of International Relations, University of Southern California and the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva. She served for two years (2008-2010) as the Executive Director of the Academic Council on the United Nations System (ACUNS). She is the author of Limits to Liberalization: Local Culture in a Global Market Place (Cornell University Press, 2007) and co-editor of Identity and Global Politics: Empirical and Theoretical Elaborations (with Kevin Dunn; Palgrave MacMillan 2004), Irrelevant or Indispensable: The UN in the 21st Century (with Paul Heinbecker; Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2005) and The Multilevel Politics of Trade (with Jörg Broschek, University of Toronto Press, forthcoming).

Her research interests include the intersection of trade and culture and the politics and governance of trade. She is the author of the Cultural Diplomacy chapter in the Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy and the Cultural Diplomacy entry in the Oxford Bibliographies series. Recent publications include ‘Limits to Deep Integration: Canada between the EU and the US,’ Cambridge Review of International Affairs (2018); ‘Federalism and International Trade Policy: The Canadian Provinces in Comparative Perspective’ (co-authored with Jörg Broschek), Institute for Research on Public Policy Insight No. 23 (2018); ‘NAFTA 2.0: Whither the Cultural Exemption? ’ International Journal (2017); and “The Museum as a Transnational Actor,” Arts and International Affairs 2(1) (2016): 117-140.

David J. Hornsby
David J. Hornsby is a Professor of International Affairs and the Associate Vice-President (Teaching and Learning). David’s research interests pertain to the politics of science and expertise in the international political economy, Canadian foreign policy in Sub-Saharan Africa, South African foreign policy, Middle Power Cooperation, Development in the Global South and Pedagogy in Higher Education. David has published in both the biological and social sciences, and is a recognized lecturer having been awarded the Faculty of Humanities Teaching and Learning Award and the Vice Chancellor’s Teaching Award (Individual) at Wits University, Johannesburg. David currently sits on the Boards of Canadian Foreign Policy Journal, and Active Learning in Higher Education.

David completed his BA (Hons.) and MA in Political Science at the University of Guelph and was a Visiting Fulbright Student at The Fletcher School, Tufts University. He read for his PhD in the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Cambridge, UK.

David’s research interests pertain to a number of different themes as it relates to the International Political Economy including the politics of science and risk in the multilateral trading system, Canadian foreign policy in Sub-Saharan Africa, middle power cooperation, and large class pedagogy. David has published in both the biological and social sciences, and is a recognized teacher having been awarded the 2013 Faculty of Humanities Teaching and Learning Award and the Vice Chancellor’s Teaching Award (Individual) at Wits University. David has recently published a book through the Palgrave IPE series entitled:  Risk Regulation, Science, and Interests in Transatlantic Trade Conflicts, and is the lead editor of Large Class Pedagogy: Interdisciplinary Perspectives for Quality Higher Education with SUN Press.

Laura Macdonald
Laura Macdonald (PhD York) is a Professor in the Department of Political Science and the Director of the Institute of Political Economy at Carleton University. She has published numerous articles in journals and edited collections on such issues as the role of non-governmental organizations in development, global civil society, citizenship struggles in Latin America, Canadian development assistance and the political impact of the North American Free Trade Agreement on human rights and democracy in the three member states.

She is author of  Supporting Civil Society: The Political Impact of NGO Assistance to Central America, (Macmillan/St. Martin’s 1997), co-author of  Women, Democracy, and Globalization in North America: A Comparative Study (Palgrave Macmillan 2006), and co-editor of  Post-Neoliberalism in the Americas (Palgrave Macmillan 2009, with Arne Ruckert);  Contentious Politics in North America (Palgrave Macmillan 2009, with Jeffrey Ayres), and of  North America in Question: Regional Integration in an Era of Economic Turbulence(University of Toronto Press, 2012), with Jeffrey Ayres.

Bessma Momani
Dr. Bessma Momani is Professor of Political Science at the University of Waterloo and Senior fellow at the Centre for International Governance and Innovation (CIGI). She was a Non-Resident Senior Fellow at both the Brookings Institution and Stimson Center in Washington, D.C., a consultant to the International Monetary Fund, and formerly a visiting scholar at Georgetown University's Mortara Center. She was a 2015 Fellow of the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation and now sits on its board of directors. She is also a Fulbright Scholar.

She has authored and co-edited ten books and over 80 scholarly, peer reviewed journal articles and book chapters that have examined international affairs, diversity and inclusion, Middle East affairs, and the global economy. She is recipient of a number of research grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), International Development Research Council, and the Department of National Defence. Dr. Momani is a regular contributor to national and international media on the global security and economic policy issues. She has written editorials for the New York Times, The Economist, The Globe and Mail, The Toronto Star, Newsweek, and Time Magazine.

Richard Nimijean
Richard Nimijean is a political scientist and a member of the School of Indigenous and Canadian Studies at Carleton University. He is a co-editor of the International Journal of Canadian Studies/Revue internationale d’études canadiennes. His research focuses on brand politics and the Canadian national identity.

Stéphane Roussel
Stéphane Roussel is professor of political science at the École nationale d’administration publique (ENAP). He is director of the Centre interuniversitaire de recherche sur les relations internationales du Canada et du Québec (CIRRICQ), and a co-author of The Politics of Canadian Foreign Policy (2015). He is a graduate in political science from the Université de Montréal (Ph.D., 1999). He was President of the “Canada” section of the International Studies Association (ISA) in 2004-2005 and President of the Société québécoise de Science politique (SQSP) in 2010-2011.

Christopher Sands
Christopher Sands (Ph.D. Johns Hopkins 2009) is Senior Research Professor and Director of the Center for Canadian Studies at the Johns Hopkins University Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, D.C. He a nonresident Senior Fellow of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Senior Fellow of Massey College at the University of Toronto, and an affiliated researcher with the Chaire Raoul-Dandurand en études stratégiques et diplomatiques à l’Université du Québec à Montréal. He is a board member of the Institute for Research on Public Policy, the Canada-United States Law Institute, the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, and the Association for Canadian Studies in the United States.

Sands’ research focuses on Canadian public and foreign policy, U.S.-Canadian relations, and North American economic integration. He is the author of Political Vehicles: Making Sustainable Policy Choices for the North American Auto Industry (Hudson Institute 2012), Toward a New Frontier: Improving the U.S.-Canadian Border (Brookings Institution 2009) and co-editor with David Carment of Canada-U.S. Relations: Sovereignty or Shared Institutions (Palgrave Macmillan 2019), with Greg Anderson of Forgotten Partnership Redux: Canada United States Relations in the 21st Century (Cambria Press, 2011), and with Sidney Weintraub of The North American Auto Industry Under NAFTA (CSIS Press, 1998). He has served as guest editor for special issues of the American Review of Canadian Studies and International Journal.