Introductory Section One – Mission Statement

NOTE All reports must include a covering letter signed by the Centre Director containing: • A summary of the year’s highlights • The coming year’s priorities • A paragraph describing the funding impact of SDF dollars on activities

What is the Centre’s mission statement? • Provide a brief description

The Queen’s Centre for International Relations (QCIR) was established in 1975 with a mandate to conduct research in matters of national and international security and other aspects of international relations. It supports teaching in the field of security and defence and, through its publications and other activities of its members, contributes to public debate on Canadian foreign and defence policy and on issues of international peace and security.

The QCIR’s mission is to endeavour to be among the best research centres in Canada working on questions of national and international security, and to continue to be recognized for: the high quality of the research and publications produced by its faculty, fellows and students, especially in the areas identified above; the contribution it makes to the teaching of undergraduate and graduate students in courses related to national and international security both at Queen’s University and at the Royal Military College of Canada; and the service it provides to society at large, locally and nationally, in engaging the Canadian public, debating issues of foreign and defence policy, and fostering networks among research institutions and other non-governmental organizations in the field of national and international security.

What is the relationship between the mission statement and the activities of the SDF Centre? • Provide a brief description

For almost a decade the QCIR’s agenda has been defined by two principal themes, both flowing from its core research mission. The first is transatlantic security – particularly Canada’s role in NATO and its relations with the European Union in matters of peace and security. QCIR researchers have explored the policy challenges confronting Canada in the restructuring and enlargement of NATO and the globalization of its security role, and in the growing aspirations and capabilities in defence and security of an enlarging European Union. The second theme is the security and defence of North America which, especially since September 2001, has provided the QCIR with an unexpectedly intense conference, research and publication agenda, focused on threats, scenarios, institutional changes both military and civilian, and the management of the Canada-US security community.

In recent years, a third research theme has emerged: regions in transition, prone to conflict and inhabited by failed or fragile states, where Canada and the European Union have the interests and the potential to coordinate their efforts in conflict management, development and democratization. The regions of prime concern are Africa, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe.

These three themes provide the overall framework for the Centre’s activities, and are reflected in the topics of its regular publications, in the books and articles produced by its personnel, and in the subjects of its conferences, workshops, National Security Seminars, and public forums. They are broad enough to capture the main activities of most QCIR researchers, while still providing the Centre with structure, priorities, and a degree of external visibility.

In addition, because the QCIR’s mandate from Queen’s University extends beyond security and defence to international relations generally, and because it must be able to respond to current events and emerging trends in world politics, some of its activities will always fall outside this thematic framework. Those activities are often driven by requests or proposals from government, the media, the public or other academic centres, or by the changing interests of Centre personnel. Done well, they can serve to strengthen the QCIR’s capacity to conduct research, teaching and service to society in its core areas.

How do the activities undertaken in the current fiscal year match with those in the original five- year funding proposal? • List and provide a brief description

Of the eighteen National Security Seminars held during the past year, four dealt with issues of North American security and defence, three with transatlantic relations, three with other aspects of Canadian foreign and defence policy, and six with regional security issues. The seminars drew speakers from the Binational Planning Group, Foreign Affairs and the Canadian Forces, as well as a wide range of academic experts from Canada, the US and Europe.

The QCIR sponsored or co-sponsored four conferences. The annual spring conference in May, 2006, on Suez Plus 50: Peace Operations Today, examined the evolution of peacekeeping and Canada’s part in it, drawing contrasts between the classic model of the Cold War era and new forms, instruments and purposes of international intervention that have emerged in recent years. In June, in cooperation with the Chair of Defence Management Studies, the LFDTS and the US Army War College, the QCIR organized a major international conference on Defence, Development and Diplomacy, drawing over 130 participants from governments, NGOs, the military and academe. In September, the Centre, again working with the Chair, hosted the SDF conference in Kingston, on the theme Canadian Security and Defence Studies: In Transition? And the QCIR was a co-sponsor and organizer of the CDFAI conference held in late October in Ottawa, aiming at an interim assessment of Canada’s foreign policy under the Conservative government.

On a smaller scale, the QCIR organized one-day workshops on civil conflict in Africa, on lessons and trends in the application of international sanctions and, in collaboration with the UN Association of Canada, on prospects for the development of multilateral rapid-reaction forces. We also co-sponsored with RMC a small conference of the Association Franco-Canadienne d’Études Strateégiques on Régionalismes et sécurité internationale held in Kingston in October. The Centre continued its support for the CDAI’s annual Graduate Student Symposium. We initiated, with the two SDF Centres in Montreal, what we hope will be an annual graduate workshop on transatlantic issues. The first was held in Montreal in March 2007, with papers presented by ten graduate students from four universities.

An important innovation this past year was the inaugural Transatlantic Crisis Simulation for graduate students held in Bad Urach, Germany, in which the Centre collaborated with the Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik in Berlin and the State Education Commission of Baden- Wuerttemberg. A three-day simulation of the Darfur crisis, combined with a series of NATO briefings and a one-day conference, drew some forty graduate students from Germany and other NATO members, as well as fourteen graduate students from Queen’s and RMC.

Over the past year the QCIR has organized four Public Forums, with mixed success. In all cases, the presentations were excellent, but attendance was uneven, ranging from over eighty for a discussion of Afghanistan led by Col Mike Capstick, to about thirty for a heavily-promoted forum on Darfur. Others were held on UN peacekeeping and on African conflicts. It appears that we have not yet got the formula right for such events so as to ensure larger turnout.

The QCIR’s publications program produced two Martello Papers, on Germany and the European Security and Defence Policy, and on NATO, as well as an Occasional Paper comparing Canadian and Australian concepts of national security. Joseph Jockel’s history of Canada in NORAD, with financial support from the QCIR, is currently in press. The research and publications of the Centre’s Fellows can be found listed in later sections of this report. Like the activities mentioned above, the great majority of this work meets the Centre’s overall mandate and fits in at least one of its three thematic areas.

It is important to mention here some projects which have not been realized. The proposed collaboration with the Centre for the Study of the Presidency in Washington did not come to fruition. What began as a multilateral project for the renewal of the Atlantic alliance took a turn toward more of a reflection on the Iraq war and its aftermath – a worthy project but not one for which the QCIR is well-equipped. With respect to outreach, secondly, the proposed arrangement with the Whig-Standard for regular op-ed pieces is not yet in place, although individual Fellows have had such articles published over the past year.

What activities are planned for next year? How do they match the original five-year funding proposal? • List and provide a brief description

For the first nine months of the new fiscal year, six conferences are in the works. The QCIR’s annual May conference will focus on NORAD and North American defence, examining the history of the bilateral agreement and its prospects for adapting to a much-altered security environment. In June the second Queen’s – US Army War College Conference will be held, examining how governments and militaries learn operational and strategic lessons from stability operations.

In October the QCIR will again contribute to the funding and planning of the CDFAI conference in Ottawa, whose theme will be Canada: An Emerging Energy Superpower? In November the Centre will help sponsor an international conference on Pluralism and the Military, organized by Senior Fellow Christian Leuprecht. In the same month it will run a conference on Frozen Conflicts in the Former Soviet Space, and another on Liberal Realism in International Relations.

In July the Centre will host the second Transatlantic Crisis Simulation. Our German partners have secured funding to bring sixteen graduate students to Kingston for a week consisting of the simulation, a one-day conference and a series of briefings. They will be joined by graduate students from Queen’s, RMC and SDF Centres across Canada. This exercise develops the transatlantic dimension of the Centre’s work, focuses on a crisis of concern to both Canada and Europe, and builds networks among graduate students in security and defence.

The National Security Seminar series will continue on its twice-monthly basis. In addition, two research workshops are planned. One, in April, on the “frozen conflicts” is a prelude to the conference in November; the other – postponed to September – will look at “track two” diplomacy. Renewed effort will be devoted to establishing the public forums as a regular local feature, and to other forms of outreach.

With respect to publications, Joseph Jockel’s book should appear in the late spring. Three Martello Papers are planned, on NATO transformation, the 1996 Zaire case, and the Responsibility to Protect. We also plan to ramp up the production of Occasional Papers.

As planned, for 2007-9 the Centre has taken on a Postdoctoral Fellow, Pierre Jolicoeur, who works on ethnic conflict in the Balkans and the former Soviet Union. In addition, we will be hosting Ulrich Petersohn, a junior Visiting Fellow from the Stiftung in Berlin until the end of July, and a senior scholar, Peter Schmidt, from the same institution, in the first half of 2008. Their presence will give the QCIR additional strength in both the transatlantic and the regional- conflict aspects of its research agenda.

Section 2 – Performance Indicators

2.1 Resident academic research population focused on security and defence issues (i.e. core group affiliated and residing with the Centre)

What is the number of faculty attached to the Centre Current Total Last Year’s Total involved in research? 16 14

What is the number of Centre staff involved in research? Current Total Last Year’s Total 1 1

What is the number of graduate students involved in Current Total Last Year’s Total research? 11 PhD 8 PhD 12 MA 8 MA

Describe the relationship and work of research associates

The QCIR has three kinds of research associate. The Visiting Defence Fellows (VDFs) are serving officers from the Canadian, German and US armed forces. They provide resident expertise on military and defence issues from their national perspectives; they conduct policy- related research on security and defence for both the QCIR and their respective services; they assist in teaching a course on national and international security in the Department of Political Studies; and they conduct outreach to the military and civilian communities.

A second group consists of the Senior Fellows. They are either academics from Queen’s or RMC – in some cases cross-appointed between the two universities – or former diplomats. One of the latter – Peter Jones - has a part-time position in the federal public service while conducting research and practicing conflict-management under the auspices of the QCIR.

The role of the Fellows is foremost to conduct and publish research, some or all of which will focus on questions of security and defence. Their work over the past year is catalogued in this report. They are encouraged to report on their research periodically to the QCIR via the National Security Seminar and other venues as, for example, Oded Haklai did on his work on Israeli- Palestinian relations, and Sean Maloney on his field-work in Kandahar province over the summer of 2006.

Another obligation of the Fellows is to provide themes and suggest names for the QCIR’s regular series of seminars, workshops, forums and conferences. We expect them to look for ways to integrate their research into such events, and to use their networks of contacts to find participants from outside. For example, Jane Boulden and her PhD student Andrea Charron organized a very successful workshop on sanctions, while David Haglund continues to help develop our relations with the German and French academic communities. Needless to say, Fellows are also expected to attend as many QCIR-sponsored events as they can.

Finally, all QCIR Senior Fellows teach, even the three without full-time academic appointments. Their courses are listed elsewhere in this report.

The third group consists of Visiting Fellows, including postdoctoral researchers. Over the past year Richard Shimooka has been working on a major study of decision-making in the Canadian government’s 1996 Zaire initiative. Ulrich Petersohn, from the Stiftung in Berlin, will be with us from March to July working on humanitarian intervention and the role of private security firms. And Pierre Jolicoeur, with the QCIR part-time this past year, will become a full-time postdoctoral researcher for two years, as of this summer.

Current research projects by members: Andrew Grant “Global Governance and the Kimberley Process: The Case of Conflict Diamonds.”

“Parallel Markets, Parallel States? The Political Economy of Organized Criminal Networks.” (with Kendra L. Koivu, Northwestern University).

“Can Global Governance Initiatives Promote Human Security?”

Helmut Fritsch Areas of interest: European Security and Defence Policy, NATO-EU Relations, and German Foreign and Security Policy.

Manuscript completed on recent ESDP mission EUFORFD Congo,

Matthew Glunz US-Canada framework for Defence and Security Cooperation: manuscript completed

Wayne Cox “From Peacekeeping to Peace Enforcement: Canada’s ‘Imperial’ Turn”, with Bruno Charbonneau (). Research is complete and the article is partially complete. To be submitted to International Journal in the Spring of 2007.

Co-organizer (with Bruno Charbonneau, Laurentian) of conference tentatively entitled Articulations and Re-articulations of the Ideas and Practices of National Security in the Post 9/11 Era. The conference is to be hosted at Laurentian University in October 2007 and will include 15-25 participants and some aspect of student participation (likely an essay contest). Preliminary discussion on funding with National Defence and SSRCH begun in October 2006, conference definition meetings started in the Fall of 2006, and discussion of possible participants is now underway. Discussions are also underway as to the links this conference might have to the QCIR conference series. Publication of an edited volume produced through this conference is also an option.

David Haglund Best of Enemies? America, France and Their Strategic-Culture Clash (a book-length manuscript in preparation for submission by or near the end of 2007.

Oded Haklai Currently involved in 3 ongoing projects related to research on ethnic-national mobilization and the state.

1. Palestinian civil society activism in Israel. A manuscript, entitled “Ethnic Civil Society: Lessons from the Palestinian Citizens of Israel,” was submitted to the journal Comparative Politics in August 2006. The manuscript was rejected following mixed reviews. It has recently been submitted to the International Journal of Middle East Studies. 2. The relationship between international Jewish donor agencies and Palestinian NGOs in Israel 3. Settler mobilization in Israel and the West Bank since the Oslo Peace Accords – SSHRC funded project. 4. “Beyond the Clash of Civilization” –a project on “the state of the art”, or the contemporary research agenda in the politics of the Middle East. 5. An invited chapter on Israel and Canadian Foreign Policy in the Middle East for the book Canada and the Middle East eds. Paul Heinbecker and Bessma Momani (Wilfrid Laurier Press, expected Fall 2007)

Houchang Hassan-Yari Iran’s nuclear programme; Iran Revolutionary Guards Corps

Kim Nossal Strategic Culture in Canada Australian and Canadian defence policy comparisons

Charles Pentland Role of NATO and EU in the Balkans EU Enlargement and European Neighbourhood Policy: Security aspects Ukraine, EU and NATO

Three book-chapters in press, two more in preparation on the above topics

Richard Shimooka The main research project remains a monograph on Canada’s response to the 1996 Great Lakes Crisis, code named Operation Assurance. This research examines the senior level decision- making occurring at the time, Though the project had an initial end date of fall 2006, the research had to be extended given the amount of primary source material uncovered, including through Access to Information documents and interviews. To this point over 10,000 pages of documentation have been uncovered and 40 interviews conducted. Over 175 pages of the monograph have been written as well. This will be used for two products, the first a 120 page Queen’s Martello Paper, which would focus only on Canada’s response to the Zairian Crisis. The second will be a much larger 200+ page book entitled: Crises of Conscience and the Policy of Regret: Canada, Africa, and the 1996 Great Lakes Crisis. Secondary areas of research include transatlantic issues and Canada’s involvement in Afghanistan.

Joel Sokolsky Social Science and Humanities Council of Canada grant for a project on Canada-U.S. Crisis Diplomacy (co-researcher). Several paper presentations (see above) and articles.

Chapter for a book being produced by the Fulbright Center, University of Arkansas on Canada and U.S. foreign policy.

Chapter for a book on U.S. Naval leadership for the United States Naval War College.

Bob Wolfe 'From Reconstructing Europe to Constructing Globalization: The OECD in Historical Perspective,' in Mahon, Rianne and Stephen McBride, eds, The OECD and Global Governance (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press)

Describe any post-doctoral accomplishments

Speaker series session for QCIR Jolicoeur, Pierre, “International Sources of the Russo-Georgian Crisis”, Centre for International Relations, Queen’s University, Kingston, 6 December 2006. (Speaker).

Publications non-Peer reviewed Jolicoeur, Pierre, “L’engagement des États-Unis au Caucase; la rupture du 11 septembre 2001”, in Michèle Rioux (Ed.), Débordement sécuritaire, Montréal: Athéna éditions, 2007 (submitted).

Jolicoeur, Pierre, “Les sources internationales de la crise russo-géorgienne”, Points de mire, vol. 7, no 9 (8 novembre 2006).

Courses Winter 2007, Politics 464: Russian Foreign Policy (11 students) Outline: This course seeks to understand Russia’s foreign policy and change. The course is designed to provide students with a comprehensive coverage of Russia’s foreign policy after Soviet dissolution, particularly as viewed from Russia’s perspective. (100 % of the content concerns security, defence and foreign policy)

2.2 Publications (authored by core group affiliated and residing with the Centre)

2005-2006 Total Last Year’s Total External or Academic Press (includes books, book 32 42 chapters, journals, reviews, etc.) Internal or In-House Publications 5 2

External or Academic Press Include author, title of publication, name of publisher, publication title (if a book chapter or journal article) and description (i.e. book, edited collection, journal article, review, etc.) • Place in alphabetical order and separate each publication with a space Example Doe, Jane. “Canadian CF Missions Since 2000”, book chapter in The Canadian Forces, Oxford University Press

Smith, John. “Canada-US Border Security Since 9/11”, journal article in “Journal of North American Studies”, Vol. 2, No. 1

Blaxland, John C. Strategic Cousins: Australian and Canadian Expeditionary Forces and the British and American Empires, McGill-Queen’s University Press.

Jane Boulden. “Double Standards, Distance and Disengagement: Collective Legitimization in the Post-Cold War Security Council,” vol. 37, no. 3, September 2006, pp. 409-423.

Jane Boulden, Monica Serrano. Guest Editors, Special Issue of International Journal, Security and Prosperity Partnership, vol. 61, no. 3, Summer 2006.

----- “Introduction,” International Journal, vol. 61, no. 3, Summer 2006.

Jane Boulden, Thomas G. Weiss, “The United States and the United Nations in Light of Wars on Terrorism and Iraq,” in Ramesh Thakur, Waheguru Pal Singh Sidhu, eds., The Iraq Crisis and World Order: Structural, Institutional and Normative Challenges, United Nations University, November 2006.

Delvoie, Louis. “Iraq: A Politico-Military Quagmire” in On Track, Vol. 11, No. 1, Spring 2006, pp. 25-26.

-----. Review of Zachary Lachman, “Contending Visions of the Middle East: The History and Politics of Orientalism” in International Journal, Vol. LXI, No. 1, Winter 2005-2006, pp. 272- 274.

-----. “Afghanistan: Realistic Expectations” in Canadian Military Journal, Vol. 7, No. 3, Autumn 2006, pp. 88-90.

Grant Andrew J. 2006. “Locating Citizen Agency in the Governance of Justice: Reflections on the Sierra Leone Truth and Reconciliation Commission.” In Catherine Slakmon, Maira Rocha Machado, and Pierpaolo Cruz Bottini, eds. New Directions in the Governance of Justice and Security. New York and Brasilia: United Nations Development Programme, 301-316.

----- 2006. “NGO Power?” (double book review), Sarah Michael. Undermining Development: The Absence of Power among local NGOs in Africa. Oxford: James Currey Publishers, 2004, and William E. DeMars. NGOs and Transnational Networks: Wild Cards in World Politics. London: Pluto Press, 2005, published in The European Journal of Development Research 18 (September) 481-483.

Haglund, David. Book chapter (With Christa M. Waters) "De la théorie de la paix démocratique à la différence dans les perceptions de la menace: Le 'moment Clemenceau-Poincaré' des États- Unis et ce qu'il signifie pour les relations transatlantiques à l'époque de la terreur," in Lutte antiterroriste et relations transatlantiques, ed. Alex Macleod (Brussels: Bruylant, 2006), pp. 41- 61.

Haglund, David. "Brebner’s North Atlantic Triangle at Sixty: A Retrospective Look at a Retrospective Book," London Journal of Canadian Studies 20 (2004-2005): 117-40. (Despite date of publication, this appeared in 2006.)

----- Review of Le Canada dans l'orbite américaine: La mort des théories intégrationnistes?, ed. Albert Legault, International Journal 61 (Winter 2005-6): 265-67.

----- Review of France in Crisis: Welfare, Inequality and Globalization since 1980, by Timothy B. Smith, International Journal 61 (Spring 2006): 522-25.

----- Review of Defending Europe: The EU, NATO and the Quest for European Autonomy, ed. Jolyon Howorth and John T. S. Keeler, Contemporary Security Policy 27 (August 2006): 357-61.

Haklai, Oded. “Authoritarianism and Legitimacy: Mobilizing Islam in the Middle East,” UNB Law Journal 55 (September 2006), pp. 200-207.

----- “The Mobilization of Palestinian NGOs in Israel and Ethnonationalism,” in Santap Sanhari Mishra and Amrita Mukherjee, eds., NGOs for Socioeconomic Development (Hyderabad, India: ICFAI University Press, March 2007), Reprint of “Palestinian NGOs in Israel: A campaign for Civic Equality or Ethnic Civil Society,” Israel Studies 9:3 (2004)

----- Book Review of Ellen Lust-Okar. 2005. Strurcturing Conflict in the Arab World: Incumbents, Opponents and Institutions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. In Canadian Journal of Political Science (2006) 39:1, pp. 207-208.

----- Book Review of Mira M. Sucharov. 2005. The International Self: Psychoanalysis and the Search for Israeli-Palestinian Peace. SUNY Press. In International Journal (2006) 61:4, pp. 1012-1014.

Hassan-Yari, Houchang. "The Changing Image of Iran in Lebanon", in Houchang .E. Chehabi, ed., Distant relations: Iran and Lebanon in the last 500 years, Oxford: Centre for Lebanese Studies, London: In association with I.B. Tauris; New York: St. Martin's Press, 2006.

----- Le modèle d’Helsinki de démocratisation: comment combattre le terrorisme?, avec Abdelkérim Ousman, in Alex Macleod, sous la direction de, Lutte antiterroriste et relations transatlantiques, Bruxelles, Bruylant, 2006, pp.235-255

Jolicoeur, Pierre. “Les sources internationales de la crise russo-géorgienne”, Points de mire, vol. 7, no 9 (8 novembre 2006).

Jones, Peter. “The Gulf Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone: Some Ideas for the Next Steps,” Security and Terroism Research Bulleting, Issue 3, Dubai, Gulf Research Centre, July, 2006.

Nossal, Kim Richard. “A Question of Balance: The Cult of Research Intensivity and the Professing of Political Science in Canada: Presidential Address to the Canadian Political Science Association, , , June 2, 2006,” Canadian Journal of Political Science 39:4 (December/décembre 2006)

-----. (with Ann Capling) “Blowback: Investor-State Dispute Mechanisms in International Trade Agreements,” Governance: An International Journal of Policy, Administration, and Institutions 19 (April 2006): 151-72.

----. “Les objectifs politiques des examens de politique étrangère: Étude comparée de l’Australie et du Canada” Études internationales 37 (mars 2006), 57-69

-----. “World Politics: Global Anarchy, Global Governance,” in Rand Dyck, ed., Studying Politics: An Introduction to Political Science, 2nd ed. (Toronto: Thomson Nelson, 2006), 375-94

-----. “Canada: Fading Power or Future Power?” in George A. MacLean and Brenda O’Neill, eds., Ideas, Interests, and Issues (Toronto: Pearson Education Canada, 2006), 241-46; reprinted from Behind the Headlines 59 (Spring 2003), 9-16

Pentland, Charles. “Studying International Relations in Canada: A View from Queen’s” (with K.R. Nossal), Embassy, February 22, 2006: 14.

Sokolsky, Joel. “Walking the Line: Canada-U.S. Security Relations and the Global War on Terrorism,” Breakthroughs 15 (Spring 2006).

-----. (With Joseph Jockel) “Renewing NORAD-Now If Not Forever,” Policy Options 27 (July 2006).

-----. (With Philippe Lagassé ) “Suspenders and a Belt: Perimeter and Border Security in U.S.- Canada Relations,” Canadian Foreign Policy 12 (Winter 2005/2006).

Internal or In-House Publications Include author, title of publication, name of publisher, publication title (if a book chapter or journal article) and description (i.e. book, edited collection, journal article, review, etc.) • Place in alphabetical order and separate each publication with a space • Use examples from previous section

Braun, Daniel. “NATO Enlargement and the Politics of Identity”, Martello Paper 31. School of Policy Studies, Queen’s University. March 2007.

Delvoie, Louis. “Mideast Wars and Canadian Interests”, Queen’s International Observer, Vol. 3, No. 1, Sept-Oct 2006, pp. 16-18.

Fritsch, Helmut. “ESDP and German Contributions: Back on Earth?” Martello Paper 30. School of Policy Studies, Queen’s University. October 2006.

Pentland, Charles. “The European Union: Enlargement and After”, Queen’s International Observer, 2:3, January-February 2006: 18-21

Rostek, Michael. “Approaches to National Security: a Canadian Australian Comparison”, Occasional Paper 60. School of Policy Studies, Queen’s University. April 2006.

2.3 Participation in relevant off-campus external events Professors/Associates & Students & Number of What is the number of resident staff who Number of Events (i.e. _ Events (i.e. _ students participated in domestic conferences? professors attended _ events) attended _ events) 14 Professors/Associates 16 Students attended 4 attended 48 events events Professors/Associates & Students & Number of What is the number of resident staff who Number of Events (i.e. _ Events (i.e. _ students participated in international professors attended _ events) attended _ events) conferences? 12 Professors/Associates 16 Students attended 3 attended 35 events events

Please describe your use of the SDF International Conference Fund: include the Centre participant, conference title, date, location and a brief description of participation (i.e. name of presented paper, panel, etc.) • Separate each conference participant with a space Example Jane Doe: “NATO Transformation”, 1-3 December 2006, London, UK; presented paper entitled “Should NATO admit more members?” on a panel discussing the potential for NATO to expand its membership.

Massie, Justin: “48th Annual ISA Convention”, 28 Feb – 3 March 2007, Chicago, IL. USA; presented paper titled “National Unity and the Social Construction of Myths in Canadian Foreign Policy” on the panel “Myths in Canadian Foreign Policy: An Interparadigmatic Dialogue”.

Onea, Tudor: “48th Annual ISA Convention”, 28 Feb – 3 March 2007, Chicago, IL. USA; presented paper titled “Bringing Honour Back In: Honour in World Politics” on the panel “Foreign Policy, Security and Intelligence”.

Onea, Tudor: “ACSUS in ALASKA”, 28-30 September 2006, Anchorage, Alaska, USA; presented paper titled “Thymos and IR: The Alaskan Boundary Dispute and the Question of “Honour” in US Foreign Policy Making” in the session “Contact, Boundaries, Identity: North Pacific History”.

Please describe your use of the SDF National Conference Fund: include the Centre participant, conference title, date, location and a brief description of participation (i.e. name of presented paper, panel, etc.) • Separate each conference participant with a space Example John Doe: “NATO Transformation”, 1-3 December 2006, London, ON; presented paper entitled “Should NATO admit more members?” on a panel discussing the potential for NATO to expand its membership.

Chisholm, Amanda: “War and Security: The Costs of Conflict”, SMSS Ninth Annual Student Conference, 2-3 March 2007, Calgary, AB., presented paper entitled “Vectors of Insecurity – Peacekeepers and HIV/AIDS” on the panel “Conflict and Civilians”.

Massie, Justin: Transatlantic Young Researchers Workshop, Université de Montréal and McGill University, 16 March 2007, Montréal, QC., presented paper entitled “Légitimité politique et atlantisme: L’usage de la force militaire par le Canada dans l’après-guerre froide”, in session “Dilemmes nord-américains et relations transatlantiques’’

Paxton, Jay: Transatlantic Young Researchers Workshop, Université de Montréal and McGill University, 16 March 2007, Montréal, QC., presented paper entitled “Transatlantic Military Capabilities: Defining and Comparing European and American Capabilities”, in session on “Dilemmes nord-américains et relations transatlantiques”.

Salam, Ali: Transatlantic Young Researchers Workshop, Université de Montréal and McGill University, 16 March 2007, Montréal, QC., presented paper entitled “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner – The Transatlantic States and Islam” in the session “Les relations transatlantiques et l’environnement international.”

Shimooka, Richard: Transatlantic Young Researchers Workshop, Université de Montréal and McGill University, 16 March 2007, Montréal, QC., presented paper entitled “A Post-Modernist Scramble for Africa? The United States, Europe and Africa’s New Strategic Context” in the session “Les relations transatlantiques et l’environnement international.”

Zyla, Ben:Transatlantic Young Researchers Workshop, Université de Montréal and McGill University, 16 March 2007, Montréal, QC., presented paper entitled “Canada and NATO in the 1990s: a realist middle power?” in the session “Dilemmes nord-américains et relations transatlantiques.”

2.4 Courses with significant security and defence content • Separate each course with a space

Course Name and Calendar Description Instructor Course (at least 50% of the course must be related to security and defence) Enrolment (# of students registered on accounting day) POE 316 – Introduction to International Relations (Fall) Jane Boulden 42

PEO 490 – Directed Reading – Genocide in Africa (Winter) Jane Boulden 1

WS 589 – Issues in National and International Security (Fall) Jane Boulden 22

WS 591 – Issues in National and International Security Jane Boulden 19 (Winter)

POLS 261b – International Politics (Fall) Wayne Cox 128

POLS 463 – International Relations Theory (Fall) Wayne Cox 24

POLS 491 – Topics in Political Studies (Fall) Wayne Cox 23

POLS 461 – International Regimes (Winter) David Elder 17

POLS 462 – Studies in National & International Security Joel Sokolsky 32 (Fall) Helmut Fritsch Matthew Glunz Stephen McCluskey

POLS 860 – International Politics: Graduate Seminar (Fall) Andrew Grant 6

POLS 261a – International Politics (Fall) David Haglund 175

POLS 862 – American Foreign Policy David Haglund 12

POLS 440 – The Politics of Nationalism and Ethnicity (Fall) Oded Haklai 25

GPD529 – Politique étrangère et de défense du Canada (M.A, Houchang 3 Gestion et politique de défense / Defence Management and Hassan-Yari Policy ) Fall 2006

POLS 464 – Russian Foreign Policy (Winter) Pierre Jolicoeur 11

POLS 470 – Track Two Diplomacy (Spring) Peter Jones 24

POLS 491 – The Middle East Peace Process (Winter) Peter Jones 25

POLS 369 – Canadian Foreign Policy (Fall) Kim Nossal 60

POLS 366 – The United Nations (Fall) Charles 76 Pentland

POLS 867/MPA 855 – Approaches to Global Governance Charles 22 (Fall) Pentland

POLS 469 – Canadian Foreign Policy (Winter) Joel Sokolsky 12

Politics 412B (Undergraduate)– American Foreign Policy Joel Sokolsky 7 1776 to Present (Winter)

WS595 – Armed Forces and Society (Summer) Joel Sokolsky 12

WS531 (Graduate) – American Foreign Policy 1776 to Joel Sokolsky 13 Present (Winter)

STST651.40 – Contemporary US Defence Policy (September) Joel Sokolsky 8

2.5 Student research activities on security and defence issues (i.e. dissertations, theses, major papers) • Separate each activity with a space

Student Name Type of Activity – Activity Description/Title indicate level (BA, MA, PhD) and if in progress Andrea Charron PhD Thesis in progress Sanctions and the United Nations

Mike Rostek PhD Thesis in progress Impact of International Norms on National Militaries

Brent Beardsley MA in progress Genocide in Rwanda

Scott Davy MA in progress The Legality and Legitimacy of Self Defence

Heather Hrychuk MA in progress 3Ds in Afghanistan

Katie Pellat MA in progress The Role of Natural Resources in Russian and Georgian Foreign Policy

Bruno Charbonneau PhD – completed 09/06 The Making of (in)Security and the Relegitimization of French Security Policy in Sub-Saharan Africa

Khajag Aghazarian MA – completed 02/07 Islamic Activism Through the Lens of Social Movement Theory: The Case of Hamas

Amanda Chisholm MA in progress Market of Force: A Gendered Perspective of Private Security Firm Operations in Africa

Orrick White PhD in progress The Accommodation of Europe’s Minority Nations in the Changing International Order

Matthew Williams PhD in progress Transatlantic Defence-Industrial Base

Tudor Onea PhD in progress A Realist Theory of Competing US Foreign Policy Motivations

Richard Evraire PhD in progress Canadian Foreign Policy and Quebec: A National Unity Issue

Khuloud Alhouli MA in progress Soft Authoritarianism in the Gulf States

John Cappucci MA in progress Islam and Democracy in Iran

Chad Kohalyk, MA in War Studies; Japan’s Energy Needs

JES Boucher MA in War Studies Civil-Military relations in the Middle East

Todd Hataley PhD completed (2006) Border Security in the Canada-United States

Alan Bloomfield PhD in progress Strategic Culture in Australia, Canada, and South Africa

Alroy Fonseca MA completed (2006) Canadian Policy in Haiti

Elizabeth Parkinson MA completed (2006) Building Bridges: Ukraine’s Multi-vector Foreign Policy 1994-2006

Benjamin Zyla PhD in progress Canada and NATO in the 1990s

Beth Sneyd MA in progress Arctic Security Issues

Bernard Brister PhD Canada-US Defence Relations After 9/11

2.6 Media Contact Media Interviews (print, broadcast, radio etc.) • Please send samples where appropriate (e.g. newspaper clipping, interview transcript, etc.)

Total: 27 Provide a short summary of the nature of the interviews

Oded Haklai: The Israeli-Hezbollah War, Summer 2006 11 Cross-country interviews, CBC Radio Canada, July 26, 2006: Halifax, Charlottetown, Thunder Bay, Quebec City, Corner Brook, Newfoundland, Yellowknife, Calgary, Regina, Kelowna, Victoria, Vancouver Interview on CBC Newsworld, CBC News: Today from Calgary (live national broadcast), July 26, 2006 Expert commentary on Kingston-Whig Standard, “Queen’s Professor Grateful to be in Canada”, July 28, 2006, p.1-2. Interview on CBC Newsworld, CBC News: Today from Calgary (live national broadcast), July 31, 2006. 12 Cross-country interviews, CBC Radio-Canada, August 21, 2006: Ottawa, Saint John, Sydney, Calgary, Quebec City, Charlottetown, St. John’s, Victoria, Montreal, Windsor, Thunder Bay, Winnipeg

Charles Pentland: Interview with Embassy on Canada – EFTA agreement, February 8, 2007

OpEd Articles Published • Please send samples where appropriate

Total: 3 Provide the following for each article: author, title, newspaper where published, date published Example John Smith: “The Mission in Afghanistan”, Ottawa Citizen, 12 December 2006

Oded Haklai. “Hezbollah is no IRA,” The Ottawa Citizen, August 24, 2006, p. A13. “Hezbollah is no IRA,” Reprinted in the Queen’s Gazette, September 11, 2006.

John Schram. “Canada’s Africa Potential”, The Kingston Whig Standard, March 21, 2007, A9.

“What About Zimbabwe?”, The Globe and Mail (web edition), March 2007

Media Background Briefings

Total: 0 Provide a brief description of the briefing topics and the media outlets receiving them

2.7 Outreach Strategy: Briefly outline how the Centre attempted to meet the outreach strategy outlined in the five-year funding proposal

Louis Delvoie: 5 lectures to Later Life Learning, Kingston on The Instruments of Foreign Policy 5 lectures to Later Life Learning, Belleville on Conflict in World Affairs Lecture to Iyr Ha Melech Synagogue on Israelis and Palestinians

Helmut Fritsch: Presentation to the Peace Operations Summer Institute, Kingston on “Peace Operations: The European Union Perspective” Lecture given to RMC class on “Germany and Afghanistan”, Kingston

Matthew Glunz: Lecture given to RMC class on “Afghanistan”, Kingston

David Haglund Paper presented to the Association France-Canada d’Études Stratégiques, Kingston Keynote speaker at the Network on North American Studies in Canada, Ottawa

Charles Pentland Lecture to the Peace Operations Summer Institute, Kingston on “International Organizations for Peace and Security” Lecture to Later Life Learning, Kingston on “The United Nations: Images, Expectations, Realities” Panellist/Chair and co-host of the Public Symposium on “Darfur: Crisis and Response”, Kingston

Joel Sokolsky Talk to the National Press Club, Ottawa on Canadian Foreign Policy Lecture to Later Life Learning, Kingston on Canadian Foreign Policy

Centre sponsored events on security and defence (e.g. conferences, seminars, workshops, roundtables, simulations, guest lecturers/speakers, engagements with general public and those beyond traditional Centre audience, etc.)

Total Number of Events: 36 • Separate each event with a space a) All Centre sponsored events on security and defence NOTE: All events in Table a) will also likely appear in Table b) and/or Table c) and/or Table d) below Event (please provide a brief description Number of Audience Description (i.e. which segments of of the event purpose and indicate if event Attendees the security and defence community were present- was held in partnership with other gov’t, academics, students, private sector, NGO’s, universities or organizations) etc.; use specific names when appropriate)

Conferences

Annual QCIR Conference, 46 Queen’s and visiting academics, NGO’s “Suez+50: Peace Operations Today” (Kate White – UNAC; Andy Tamas - Queen’s University, May 2006. UNDP), Canadian Forces personnel (Col. L. Lafreniere), students, government officials (Wendy Gilmour, FAC)

Conference on “Defence, 136 Canadian (LGen A. Leslie; LGen M. Development & Diplomacy: the Gauthier; MGen S. Beare) & US military Canadian and US Military (MGen C. Jacoby; BGen F. Rudesheim), Perspectives” co-sponsored with the Can & US academics (Dr. W. Olsen, Chair of Defence Management NDU), students, Gov (Wendy Gilmour – Studies, US Army War College, and FAC), NGOs, International organizations the LFDTS (CF), June 2006. (D. Riggio – NATO, H. Edleston – Transparency Intl (UK))

Canadian-German International 50 Graduate students from Queen’s & RMC, Simulation Crisis on Darfur, Bad + 2 Queen’s/RMC faculty joined 30 other Urach, Germany. Also visit to international students from across Europe NATO HQ. Partnered by QCIR & and their faculty. the Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP), June 2006.

Annual conference of the SDF, 63 Academics, SDF community members, partnered with the Chair of Defence government officials, students, private Management Studies, Queen’s (Ken Calder) University, September 2006.

Association Franco-Canadienne 20 Academics, international experts: Anne- d'Études Stratégique on Laure Nicot, Doctorante à l’IEP de Lyon; Régionalismes et sécurité Josiane Tercinet, Professeur à la Faculté internationale. RMC Politics and de droit de l’Université de Grenoble 2; Economics conference, co- Daniel Colard, Professeur à l’Université sponsored by QCIR, Kingston, de Franche-Comté; Yves Jeanclos, October 2006. Professeur à l’Université Robert Schuman (Strasbourg)

CDAI Graduate Students 40 Academics, students and military officers Symposium, Royal Military College, Kingston, partnered with CDAI and RMC, October 2006.

CDFAI Conference “Foreign Policy 150 Government, academics, general public. Under a Conservative Government: An Interim Report Card” co- sponsored by QCIR, Ottawa, October 2006.

Roundtables

QCIR/UNA Round Table on UN 18 Academics, government officials and Rapid Reaction and Crisis Response, military officers, NGO. Kingston, October 2006.

Workshops

“Civil Conflict in Africa” April 22 QCIR, Queen’s faculty, VDFs, Grad 2006: students (4), visiting academics

“Human Security and UN 20 Visiting academics (Dr. George Lopez – Sanctions”, partnered with Canada NDU, Dr. T. Bierstecker – Brown), Research Chair in International RMC/Queen’s faculty, graduate students, Relations and Security Studies and NGO (James Cockayne – IPA, Allan the War Studies Programme, Royal Bowman – Permanent Mission to the UN), Military College of Canada, FAC (Amb. Robert Fowler, Charles February 2007 Arnott).

Public Lectures/Speakers

Costas Melakopides: “Unfair Play: 35 Queen’s members, 30 general public Cyprus, Turkey Greece, the EU and (Greek & Turkish communities) the UK”, May 2006.

Dr. Iyhan Aktar (Turkey) on “From 18 Faculty, students and general public Country to Fatherland: The Case of Turkification”, January 2007.

Col Mike Capstick, Canadian Forces 80+ General community, military, students and on “Strengthening the Weak: faculty/staff. Canada’s Mission in Afghanistan”, January 2007.

Dr. Don Abelson, University of 30 mix of faculty & staff (School Policy Western Ontario on “A Capitol Idea: Studies), and students Think Tanks and US Foreign Policy” co-hosted with School of Policy Studies, Westcoast Lecture series, November 2006.

Public Forums/Symposia

“Canadian Strategies for Rapid 36 General public, QCIR members, students, Response to Crisis” partnered with military, NGOs. Peter Langille, Univ. UNAC, October 2006. Western Ontario; Col Michael Hanrahan, director of peacekeeping policy, DND; Stephen Kinloch-Pichat, UNDP, Haiti; BGen (Retd) Greg Mitchell, former comd. SHIRBRIG, Sudan; LCol Michael Voith, CO, DART, October 19, 2006

“New and Old Conflicts in Africa: 28 VDFs, staff, QCIR/RMC faculty & What can be done? November 2006 Research associates, students, general public

“Darfur: Crisis and Response” co- 36 Queen’s faculty/staff, RMC, students, sponsored with the Ethnicity and general public, NGOs. Democratic Governance group, March 2007.

National Security Speaker Series

Bi-National Planning Group 12 QCIR, VDFS, graduate students Queen’s Briefing “A Continental Approach to & RMC Defence and Security”, April 2006.

Louis Delvoie, QCIR on “Iraq: A 9 Queen’s faculty, VDFs, QCIR fellows Politico-military Quagmire”, April 2006.

Dr. Amir Hajyousefi, Director of the 12 Queen’s, RMC faculty, QCIR fellows, 1 Department of Political Science at student, 2 CF. the University of Shaeed Beheshti in Tehran on “Iranian Foreign Policy, Continuity and Change”, July 2006.

Andy Tamas, Tamas Consultants on 25 Queen’s faculty, QCIR fellows, Queen’s “Development-Military & RMC students, PSTC personnel, Collaboration in Counter-Insurgency military personnel Campaigns: Challenge of the New Reality”, September 2006.

Dr. Oded Haklai, Political Studies, 15 Queen’s/RMC Faculty, VDFs, Queen’s & Queens, on “Domestic Influence on RMC students, CF personnel the Conflict and Peace-making in the Middle East”, September 2006:

Dr. Franz Kernic, University of 9 Queen’s/RMC faculty, VDFs, students Innsbruck, on “Recent Trends in Austria’s Security and Defence Policy”, October 2006.

Dr. Karsten Voigt, Coordinator for 15 Queen’s/RMC, VDFs, students German-American Cooperation, Federal Republic of Germany on: “Germany’s new international role in a world with global and regional challenges”, October 2006.

Sean Maloney, RMC, on: “Canadian 16 Queen’s/RMC faculty, 4 students, VDFs Operation in Afghanistan, Summer campaign 2006”, October 2006.

Carol McQueen, Conflict Prevention 15 VDFs, students, Queen’s faculty, and Peacebuilding Group, Foreign Affairs Canada, on “Making the Democratic Republic of Congo Safe: MONUC and the Robust Use of Force in UN Peacekeeping”, November 2006.

Dr. Sean Kay, Ohio Wesleyan 17 VDFs, students, Queen’s & RMC fellows University on “NATO in and faculty Afghanistan”, November 2006.

Dr. Pierre Jolicoeur, Queen’s 8 3 VDFs, 1 student, QCIR fellows University on “The International Sources of the Russo-Georgian Crisis”, December 2006.

Dr. Richard Gimblett, Canadian 20 QCIR fellows, Queens/RMC faculty, Navy Command Historian, National military, students Defence on “Coalition Naval Command: A Canadian Naval Niche”, January 2007.

Susan Pond, Head, NATO’s 12 Invited faculty, student and QCIR Partnership for Peace and members. Cooperation Programmes on “New NATO”, January 2007.

Dr. J.J. Jockel, St. Lawrence 30 QCIR fellows, VDFs, Queen’s/RMC University, on “Canada in NORAD faculty, military, graduate students - RMC 1957-2007: A History”. January & Queen’s 2007.

Anthony Obeng, (ret) FAO Head 22 QCIR fellows, Queen’s/RMC faculty, OAU/ECA Liaison Unit, Ethiopia, VDFs, graduate students Queens on “Defence, Development, & Diplomacy in the Age of Globalization: An African Perspective”, February 2007,

Phil C.W. Chan, Visiting Professor 16 fellows, faculty, graduate students on “Human Rights Dialogues with China through Trade: Where to Begin?”, February 2007.

LCol Matthew Glunz, US Army, 13 QCIR members, SPS staff, RMC, RCMP, QCIR VDF on "The Bi-national and general public. Framework for US-Canada Security and Defence Cooperation", March 2007.

LCol Mike English et al., CF, 26 QCIR fellows, CF personnel, graduate Directorate Land Concepts and students Doctrine, on “The Army of Tomorrow”, March 2007. b) Interaction with Government Departments and with Canadian Forces Event (please provide a brief description Number of Audience Description (i.e. which segments of of the event purpose and indicate if event Attendees the security and defence community were present- was held in partnership with other gov’t, academics, students, private sector, NGO’s, universities or organizations) etc.; use specific names when appropriate)

Conferences

Annual QCIR Conference, 46 Queen’s and visiting academics, NGO’s “Suez+50: Peace Operations Today” (Kate White – UNAC; Andy Tamas - Queen’s University, May 2006. UNDP), Canadian Forces personnel (Col. L. Lafreniere), students, government officials (Wendy Gilmour, FAC)

Conference on “Defence, 136 Canadian (LGen A. Leslie; LGen M. Development & Diplomacy: the Gauthier; MGen S. Beare) & US military Canadian and US Military (MGen C. Jacoby; BGen F. Rudesheim), Perspectives” co-sponsored with the Can & US academics (Dr. W. Olsen, Chair of Defence Management NDU), students, Gov (Wendy Gilmour – Studies, US Army War College, and FAC), NGOs, International organizations the LFDTS (CF), June 2006. (D. Riggio – NATO, H. Edleston – Transparency Intl (UK))

Annual conference of the SDF, 63 Academics, SDF community members, partnered with the Chair of Defence government officials, students, private Management Studies, Queen’s (Ken Calder) University, September 2006.

CDAI Graduate Students 40 Academics, students and military officers Symposium, Royal Military College, Kingston, partnered with CDAI and RMC, October 2006.

CDFAI Conference “An Interim 150 Government, academics, general public. Report” co-sponsored by QCIR, Ottawa, October 2006.

Roundtables

QCIR/UNAC Round Table on UN 18 Academics, government officials, military Rapid Reaction and Crisis Response, officers, NGOs. Kingston, October 2006.

Workshops

“Human Security and UN 20 Visiting academics (Dr. George Lopez – Sanctions”, partnered with Canada NDU, Dr. T. Bierstecker – Brown), Research Chair in International RMC/Queen’s faculty, graduate students, Relations and Security Studies and NGO (James Cockayne – IPA, Allan the War Studies Programme, Royal Bowman – Permanent Mission to the UN), Military College of Canada, FAC (Amb. Robert Fowler, Charles February 2007 Arnott).

Public Lectures/Speakers

Col Mike Capstick, Canadian Forces 80+ General community, military, students and on “Strengthening the Weak: faculty/staff. Canada’s Mission in Afghanistan”, January 2007.

Public Forums/Symposia

“Canadian Strategies for Rapid 36 General public, QCIR members, students, Response to Crisis” partnered with military community, NGOs. Peter UNAC. October 2006 Langille, Univ. Western Ontario; Col Michael Hanrahan, director of peacekeeping policy, DND; Stephen Kinloch-Pichat, UNDP, Haiti; BGen (Retd) Greg Mitchell, former comd. SHIRBRIG, Sudan; LCol Michael Voith, CO, DART,

Jane Boulden

Lecture on “Use of Force”, Canadian 25 Military officers, civilians. Forces College, October 2006.

Witness for Democracy and Peace- building. Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Commons, Ottawa, December 2006.

Louis Delvoie:

Four lectures and a case study on 10 Officers of the Department of Citizenship Canada’s foreign and security and Immigration policy, Ottawa, March 2007.

Lecture on South Asia to the 20 Senior military officers National Security Studies Course, Canadian Forces College, Toronto, May 2006.

Four lectures and a case study on 55 Foreign Service Officers of the Canada’s foreign and security Department of Foreign Affairs policy, Ottawa, September 2006.

QCIR/UNA Round Table on UN 18 Academics, government officials and Rapid Reaction and Crisis Response, military officers Kingston, October 2006.

Annual conference of the SDF, 63 Academics, SDF community members, partnered with the Chair of Defence government officials, students, private Management Studies, Queen’s (Ken Calder) University, September 2006.

CDAI Graduate Students 40 Academics, students and military officers. Symposium, Royal Military College, Kingston, partnered with CDAI and RMC, October 2006.

Four lectures and case study on 10 Officers of the Dept. of Foreign Affairs Canada’s foreign and security policy for, Ottawa, February, 2007.

Helmut Fritsch:

Presentation on “Peace Operations: 25 Military officers, academics. The European Union Perspective” to Peace Operations Summer Institute, RMC. June 2006.

Lecture on “Germany and 26 Military cadets, academics. Afghanistan” to RMC class. November 2006.

Participant in briefings at Foreign 42 Prime Minister Harper, MP Peter Affairs Canada, the PCO, Speaker’s Milliken, govt officials, military officers, office, February 2007. RMC cadets.

Matthew Glunz

Invited to attend the 218th meeting of Canada/US military advisors, officers. the Permanent Joint Board of Defense (PJBD), Ottawa, September 2006.

Lecture on “Afghanistan” to RMC 26 Military cadets, academics. class. November 2006.

Participant in briefings at Foreign 42 Prime Minister Harper, MP Peter Affairs Canada, the PCO, Speaker’s Milliken, govt officials, military officers, office, February 2007. RMC cadets.

David Haglund

Lecture on “Canada and NATO’, 25 Senior military officers, civilians, Canadian Forces College, February academics. 2007

Participant in “Policy Choices: Improving our Relations with the United States”, Public Policy Forum, Ottawa, April 2006

Lecture on “The North American Security Community”, Canadian Forces College, May 2006

Houchang Hassan-Yari

Paper on “Iran and Regional Security: Troublemaker of Accommodating Power?” Canadian Institute of Strategic Studies, Ottawa, December 2006.

Pierre Jolicoeur

Lecture on “Le Fédéralisme 26 Military cadets, academics. canadien”, RMC, Kingston, February 2007.

Kim Nossal

Presentation on “Minority 150 Academics, government, military officials, Governments” to the Canadian think tanks, students. Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute (CDFAI) Conference, co- sponsored by QCIR, Ottawa, October 2006.

Charles Pentland

Commentator at Policy workshop on 25 Academics and government. the Transatlantic Triangle, Ottawa, June 2006

Lecture on “International 40 Military officers, academics, government, Organizations for Peace and students Security” to the Peace Operations Summer Institute, RMC, Kingston, June 2006.

Presentation on “Canada, Europe 18 Government, NGOs, academics, military. and Rapid Response” to the UNAC Experts Roundtable, Kingston, October 2006.

Chair/organizer of panel on 150 Academics, government, military officials, “Multilateralism” for Canadian think tanks, general public. Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute (CDFAI) Conference, co- sponsored by QCIR, Ottawa, October 2006.

Commentator on syndicate EU 120 Government and military. presentation “Global Express” Exercise, Canadian Forces College, November 2006.

Participant, Canada-Poland Seminar 30 Military, academics, foreign government on “Afghanistan” at RMC, Kingston, officials, military and academics. March 2007

John Schram

10 Lectures on “Canadian Foreign Ghanian public policy and government Policy, Canadian Development officials, academics and military. Policy, Canadian Peacemaking and Peacekeeping Interventions in Africa, Challenges of Peace Building in Africa, Perspectives on Conflict in Africa and the Canadian Response” to the University of Ghana, and the Ghana Institute of Public Management, Ghana, Africa, April 2006

Panellist in the Africa-Canada Government officials. dialogue for parliamentarians, the Parliamentary Centre, Ottawa, November 2006

Richards Shimooka

Participant in DND/SDF Government, students, military, SDF “Afghanistan Briefing”, Ottawa, centre members. November 2006

Observer in LFDTS “Information Military Operations Course”, CFB Kingston, October 2006.

Joel Sokolsky

Lecture on “Policy Choices: Government, academics, NGOs, general Improving our Relations with the public. United States” to the Public Policy Forum, Ottawa, April 2006

Presentation on US Defence Policy Government, academics, public to the Civitas Conference, Kanata, organizations. May 2006 c) Interaction with Nov-Governmental Organizations Event (please provide a brief description Number of Audience Description (i.e. which segments of of the event purpose and indicate if event Attendees the security and defence community were present- was held in partnership with other gov’t, academics, students, private sector, NGO’s, universities or organizations) etc.; use specific names when appropriate)

Conferences

Annual QCIR Conference, 46 Queen’s and visiting academics, NGO’s “Suez+50: Peace Operations Today” (Kate White – UNAC; Andy Tamas - Queen’s University, May 2006. UNDP), Canadian Forces personnel (Col. L. Lafreniere), students, government officials (Wendy Gilmour, FAC)

Conference on “Defence, 136 Canadian (LGen A. Leslie; LGen M. Development & Diplomacy: the Gauthier; MGen S. Beare) & US military Canadian and US Military (MGen C. Jacoby; BGen F. Rudesheim), Perspectives” co-sponsored with the Can & US academics (Dr. W. Olsen, Chair of Defence Management NDU), students, Gov (Wendy Gilmour – Studies, US Army War College, and FAC), NGOs, International organizations the LFDTS (CF), June 2006. (D. Riggio – NATO, H. Edleston – Transparency Intl (UK))

Canadian-German International 50 Graduate students from Queen’s & RMC, Simulation Crisis on Darfur, Bad + 2 Queen’s/RMC faculty joined 30 other Urach, Germany. Also visit to international students from across Europe NATO HQ. Partnered by QCIR & and their faculty. the Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP), June 2006.

Roundtables

QCIR/UNA Round Table on UN 18 Academics, government officials and Rapid Reaction and Crisis Response, military officers, UNAC - NGO Kingston, October 2006.

Workshops

“Human Security and UN 20 Visiting academics (Dr. George Lopez – Sanctions”, partnered with Canada NDU, Dr. T. Bierstecker – Brown), Research Chair in International RMC/Queen’s faculty, graduate students, Relations and Security Studies and NGO (James Cockayne – IPA, Allan the War Studies Programme, Royal Bowman – Permanent Mission to the UN), Military College of Canada, FAC (Amb. Robert Fowler, Charles February 2007 Arnott).

“Track Two Diplomacy – A Workshop for Practitioners” presented by Peter Jones for the staff of the Old City of Jerusalem project at the .

Public Forums/Symposia

“Canadian Strategies for Rapid 36 General public, QCIR members, students, Response to Crisis” partnered with military, NGOs. Peter Langille, Univ. UNAC, October 2006. Western Ontario; Col Michael Hanrahan, director of peacekeeping policy, DND; Stephen Kinloch-Pichat, UNDP, Haiti; BGen (Retd) Greg Mitchell, former comd. SHIRBRIG, Sudan; LCol Michael Voith, CO, DART.

“Darfur: Crisis and Response” co- 36 Queen’s faculty/staff, RMC, students, sponsored with the Ethnicity and general public, NGOs. Democratic Governance group, March 2007.

Joel Sokolsky

Lecture on “Policy Choices: Government, academics, NGOs. Improving our Relations with the United States” to the Public Policy Forum, Ottawa, April 2006

d) Efforts to speak to the general public and those beyond the regular audience of the Centre Event (please provide a brief description Number of Audience Description (i.e. which segments of of the event purpose and indicate if event Attendees the security and defence community were present- was held in partnership with other gov’t, academics, students, private sector, NGO’s, universities or organizations) etc.; use specific names when appropriate)

Conferences

Conference on “Defence, 136 Canadian (LGen A. Leslie; LGen M. Development & Diplomacy: the Gauthier; MGen S. Beare) & US military Canadian and US Military (MGen C. Jacoby; BGen F. Rudesheim), Perspectives” co-sponsored with the Can & US academics (Dr. W. Olsen, Chair of Defence Management NDU), students, Gov (Wendy Gilmour – Studies, US Army War College, and FAC), NGOs, International organizations the LFDTS (CF), June 2006. (D. Riggio – NATO, H. Edleston – Transparency Intl (UK))

Canadian-German International 50 Graduate students from Queen’s & RMC, Simulation Crisis on Darfur, Bad + 2 Queen’s/RMC faculty joined 30 other Urach, Germany. Also visit to international students from across Europe NATO HQ. Partnered by QCIR & and their faculty. the Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP), June 2006.

CDFAI Conference “An Interim 150 Government, academics, general public. Report” co-sponsored by QCIR, Ottawa, October 2006.

Public Lectures/Speakers

Costas Melakopides: “Unfair Play: 35 Queen’s members, 30 general public Cyprus, Turkey Greece, the EU and (Greek & Turkish communities) the UK”, May 2006.

Dr. Iyhan Aktar (Turkey) on “From 18 Faculty, students and general public Country to Fatherland: The Case of Turkification”, January 2007.

Col Mike Capstick, Canadian Forces 80+ General community, military, students and on “Strengthening the Weak: faculty/staff. Canada’s Mission in Afghanistan”, January 2007.

Don Abelson, University of Western 30 mix of faculty & staff (School Policy Ontario on “A Capitol Idea: Think Studies), and students Tanks and US Foreign Policy” co- hosted with School of Policy Studies, Westcoast Lecture series, November 2006.

Public Forums/Symposia

“Canadian Strategies for Rapid 36 general public, QCIR members, students, Response to Crisis” partnered with military, NGOs. Peter Langille, Univ. UNAC, October 2006. Western Ontario; Col Michael Hanrahan, director of peacekeeping policy, DND; Stephen Kinloch-Pichat, UNDP, Haiti; BGen (Retd) Greg Mitchell, former comd. SHIRBRIG, Sudan; LCol Michael Voith, CO, DART.

“New and Old Conflicts in Africa: 28 VDFs, staff, QCIR/RMC faculty & What can be done? November 2006 Research associates, students, general public

“Darfur: Crisis and Response” co- 36 Queen’s faculty/staff, RMC, students, sponsored with the Ethnicity and general public, NGOs. Democratic Governance group, March 2007.

Louis Delvoie:

Lecture series to Kingston Later Life 350 General public Learning, March-April 2006

Talk on “Israelis and Palestinians: 25 General public New Political Equations” to Iyr Ha Melech Synagogue Congregation, Kingston, April 2006

Lecture series to Belleville Later 140 General public Life Learning, October-November 2006.

David Haglund

Presentation to the Association of France-Canada d’Études Stratégiques, Kingston, October 2006.

Keynote speaker to the Network on North American Studies in Canada, Ottawa, March 2007-03-20

Houchang Hassan-Yari

Paper on “L’Intervention militaire en 20 Afghanistan: des États-Unis, au Canada à l’OTAN”. Régionalisme et sécurité internationale conference, Kingston, October 2006

Charles Pentland

Chair/organizer of panel on 150 Academics, government, military officials, “Multilateralism” for Canadian think tanks, general public. Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute (CDFAI) Conference, co- sponsored by QCIR, Ottawa, October 2006.

Lecture on “The United Nations: 300 General public Images, Expectations, Realities” to Later Life Learning group, Kingston, February 2007

Participant at the Canada-Poland 15 Military, academics, foreign government seminar hosted by RMC, Kingston, officials, academics and military. March 2007-03-21

Lecture on “The EU Neighbourhood 15 Students and faculty Policy and the Former Soviet Union: the Limits of Soft Power” to McGill University, Montreal, March 2007

John Schram

Plenary speaker on “Governance in Africa” to Group of 78, Ottawa, September 2006.

Panel Speaker “3-D and Africa” at Development community, students. Queen’s Development Studies Forum, Kingston, December 2006

Keynote Speaker ”Why Canadians Should Choose Africa” at 20th Annual Educational conference on World Issues, , Ottawa, February 2006.

Joel Sokolsky

Lecture on “Policy Choices: Government, academics, NGOs, general Improving our Relations with the public. United States” to the Public Policy Forum, Ottawa, April 2006

Presentation on US Defence Policy Government, academics, public to the Civitas Conference, Kanata, organizations. May 2006

Lecture on “Canadian Foreign 300 General public. Policy” to Later Life Learning group, Kingston, February 2007.

Section 3 – Financial Information

3.1 What is the overall budget for the Centre? NOTE: This figure must include all sources of revenue, including the SDF grant, ICF money, Special Projects money, other DND money, funds from other government departments and outside sources of funds.

Name of Awarding Organization Amount Awarded • Separate each award with a space DND/SDF Grant $115,000.00

DND/SDF Special Projects 19,000.00

DND/SDF – International Conference/National Conference Funds 10,530.39

QUAWC - 3D Conference (a) 35,108.44

Workshops, Darfur Simulation 6,732.98

Publication Sales/Royalties 1,537.18

HRDSC Wage funding 966.00

Total: $188,878.09

3.2 What research grants/awards on security and defence issues were awarded to the academic and research population within the Centre? NOTE: Please list all grants and who the recipient(s) were

Name of Granting Organization and Recipient(s) Amount Awarded • Separate each grant with a space Queen’s University Research Initiation Grant (RIG) – J. Andrew Grant. $10,000.00

SSHRC – Oded Haklai, Standard research grant 2006-2008 $42,771.00

Fonds FQRSC– Pierre Jolicoeur, Postdoctoral grant 2006-2008 (per year) $32,000.00

Department of National Defence (SDF) – Pierre Jolicoeur, Postdoctoral $35,000.00 grant 2006-2007

SSHRC – Kim Richard Nossal, Human Security and Humanitarian $58,000.00 Intervention in Canadian Foreign Policy grant 2002 – present ($11,600 remaining)

Department of National Defence (SDF) – Richard Shimooka, Travel Grant $650.00 2006

SSHRC – Joel Sokolsky, Canada-US Crisis Diplomacy 2005-2007 ($5,000 $15,000.00 remaining)

SSHRC – Robert Wolfe, The contribution of good institutional design to $93,588.00 effective global governance: the case of the WTO 2006-09.

Total: $287,012.20

3.3 Complete Financial Information NOTE: Illustrates where SDF money is spent in relation to the Centre’s total budget. Centres that do not receive funds outside of DND will see little difference between “Total Budget” and “SDF Grant Breakdown”. Please fill out the two columns nevertheless. Please provide the financial statements (detailed balance sheet of revenues and expenditures) you prepare for your internal bookkeeping or university administration.

Type of Disbursement Total Budget SDF Grant Actual Projected Breakdown Disbursement Disburseme s to Date nts for Remainder a) Research Faculty Salaries or Top-Ups Research Associates 7,452.00 7,452.00 7,452.00 Research Assistants 5,734.00 5,734.00 5,734.00 Publication Costs 8,730.70 8,730.70 8,730.70 Research-Related Travel 1,527.93 1,527.93 1,527.93 Research Total: $23,444.63 $23,444.63 $23,444.63 b) Hosting Conferences Administrative Personnel 5,797.85 0.00 5,797.85 (i.e. food, Hospitality Costs 30,879.42 23,779.72 30,879.42 beverage, entertainment, gifts) (accommodation Travel Costs 29,265.85 23,049.55 29,265.85 and per diems) Advertising 0.00 0.00 0.00 Other 2,635.10 886.22 2,635.10 Hosting Conferences Total: $68,578.22 $47,715.49 $68,578.22 c) Teaching (full time and Faculty Salaries 12,000.00 12,000.00 12,000.00 sessionals) Teaching Assistants 0.00 00.0 00.0 Course Supplies and 863.90 863.90 863.90 Development Other 0.00 00.0 00.0 Teaching Total: $12,863.90 $12,863.90 $12,863.90 d) Student Initiatives Scholarship Money 0.00 0.00 0.00 Student Research Grants 00.0 0.00 0.00 Student Associations 600.00 600.00 600.00 Other 0.00 0.00 0.00 Student Initiatives Total: $ 600.00 $ 600.00 $ 600.00

e) Attendance at Academic st Conferences (1 column includes ICF funds, 2nd column should not) Airfare/Hotel/Per Diems 22,274.78 17,038.88 22,274.78 Registration 6,451.10 6,451.10 6,451.10 Other 0.00 0.00 0.00 Attend Conference Total: $28,725.88 $23,489.98 $28,725.88

f) Outreach Activities Travel 250.80 250.80 250.80 Hospitality 1,056.83 1,056.83 1,056.83 Advertising 2,031.54 2,031.54 2,031.54 Outreach Activities Total: $3,339.17 $3,339.17 $3,339.17

g) Miscellaneous Administration Salaries 38,994.58 38,994.58 38,994.58 (secretarial support) University Overhead 0.00 0.00 0.00 Computer/Technology 6,181.60 6,181.60 6,181.60 Purchase Software 420.60 420.60 420.60 Website Maintenance 1,600.00 1,600.00 1,600.00 General office management 9,540.45 9,539.31 9,540.45 General Hospitality/SDF 226.62 226.62 226.62 Business Miscellaneous Total: $56,963.85 $56,962.71 $56,963.85

GRAND TOTAL: $194,515.65 $168,415.88 $194,515.65

(a) The QUAWC - 3D conference was a joint venture between QCIR and the Chair of Defence Management Studies. Amounts on this report reflect ½ of the income and expenditures.