NEW GRADUATE PROGRAM PROPOSAL OF PHD IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Submitted to the Ontario Universities Council on Quality Assurance

VOLUME II – FACULTY CURRICULA VITAE

February 2019

Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science

CURRICULA VITAE TABLE OF CONTENTS

BOYCHUK, Gerard ...... 3 CARTER, Angela V...... 8 CATTAPAN, Alana…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………17 COOPER, Andrew Fenton ...... 30 DRAKE, Anna ...... 43 ESSELMENT, Anna Lennox ...... 49 HABIB, Jasmin ...... 55 HELLEINER, Eric ...... 81 HENSTRA, Daniel ...... 91 JINGJING, Huo ...... 97 KITCHEN, Veronica ...... 101 LANOSZKA, Alexander ...... 106 MACFARLANE, Emmett ...... 110 MOMANI, Bessma ...... 116 MUFTI, Mariam ...... 126 RAVENHILL, John ...... 130 RUS, Horatiu A...... 137 WANG, Hongying ...... 141 WELCH, David...... 147 WHITESIDE, Heather ...... 156

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a) NAME:

BOYCHUK, Gerard, full professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Political Science, Queen’s University, 1995 M.A., Political Science, , 1991 B.A., Political Science, University of Alberta, 1990

c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2010- Full Professor, Dept. of Political Science, 2004-10 Associate Professor, Dept. of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2000-4 Assistant Professor, Dept. of Political Science, University of Waterloo

d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

2009 Donald V. Smiley Award (Canadian Political Science Association) for the Best Book in Canadian Politics 2009 University of Waterloo Outstanding Performance Award (Awarded by Vice- President for Outstanding Performance in Teaching and Scholarship) 2004 University of Waterloo Outstanding Performance Award (Awarded by Vice-President for Outstanding Performance and Teaching and Scholarship) e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2011-2015 Co-Editor, Global Social Policy: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Public Policy and Social Development.

2004-2015 Co-Editor, American Governance and Public Policy, Georgetown University book series

2013/2014 Juror. Canadian Political Science Association Smiley Prize for the Best Book on Canadian Government and Politics 2013.

2013 Co-Organizer (with Stephen McBride and Rianne Mahon.) Global Financial Crisis and Social Policy, Workshop, McMaster University, September 2013.

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2012- International Advisory Board of Public Administration and Policy: An Asia- Pacific Journal. f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 3 M.A., 2 Ph.D. In progress: 1 M.A.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

PhD

2012 Clint Abbot 2007-2012 Networked Governance and Summit Diplomacy: Shaping the Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Agenda. Doctoral Dissertation.

2012 Leah McMillan 2008-2012 The Impact of Global Education Policy: Missing Out on the 'Local' in Southeastern Africa. Doctoral Dissertation.

MA

2016 Robyn Walter. MRP 2015-2016 Measure Twice, Cut Once: The Use of Evidence-Based Policy-Making in Canadian Social Assistance Policy

2012 Alexandrova, Elena MRP 2010-2012 The Bigger Picture: Analysis of Euroscepticism Through the Prisim of Trust in Mass Media Channels

Vannessa Gestaldo MRP 2011-2012 A Network Undecided is a Network Divided: An Evaluation of Transnational Advocacy Network Response to the 2010 G8's Maternal and Child Health (Muskoka) Initative

In progress

Major Advisor to Master’s Thesis for (student name): Casey, Christopher. MA, Political Science. Fall 2018- Field, Dylan. MA, Political Science. Fall 2018- McCaffrey, Kevin. MA, Political Science. Fall 2018-

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

2012 PS 617 Values and Ethics in the Public Service 2013 PSCI 601 Research Applications in Political Science 2014 PSCI 661 Canadian Politics 2015 PSCI 661 Canadian Politics 2016 PSCI 663 Comparative Politics: American Politics 2018 PSCI 685 Readings in International Politics – American Politics 2019 PSCI 661 Topics in Canadian Politics

h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2016 SSHRC, Aid to Scholarly Publishing Program, ($8000) 2013 SSHRC Connection Grant, Collaborator with S. McBride (Applicant) ($23,757)

*Type: C-Granting councils; G-Government; F-Foundations; O-Other ** Purpose: research, travel, publication, etc.

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

2018 UW/SSHRC Seed Grant, “Female Suffrage in the Canadian Prairie Provinces,” 1910- 1920. ($6386) 2015 UW/SSHRC 4Award (SSHRC #435-2013-0042) ($8000) 2014 Balsillie School of International Affairs. Grant-in-Aid of Publication – Global Financial Crisis and Social Policy. Applicant: Gerard Boychuk. ($2144) 2013/14 UW/SSHRC 4Award (SSHRC #435-2013-0042) ($8000)

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 2 - Books edited ...... 1 - Chapters in books ...... 23 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 14 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... - Technical reports ...... - Abstracts and/or papers read ...... - Others (workshops presented) ......

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

Books edited:

After ’08: The Global Financial Crisis and Social Policy. Edited with Stephen McBride, Rianne Mahon. University of British Columbia Press, 2015. [Blind referee process with two referees.]

Chapters in Books:

1. “Federal Policies, National Trends, Provincial Systems: A Comparative Analysis of Recent Developments in Social Assistance in Canada, 1990-2013,” In Daniel Béland and Pierre-Marc Daigneault, ed., Welfare Re-Form in Canada. University of Toronto Press, 2015.

2. “Seven Lean Years: The US Response to Financial Crisis, 2008-2014.” In Stephen McBride, Rianne Mahon and Gerard Boychuk, ed., After ’08: The Global Financial Crisis and Social Policy. University of British Columbia Press, 2015. [Blind referee process with two referees.]

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3. “Introduction: Global Financial Crisis and Social Policy.” Rianne Mahon, Stephen McBride and Gerard W. Boychuk. In Stephen McBride, Rianne Mahon and Gerard Boychuk, ed., After ’08: The Global Financial Crisis and Social Policy. University of British Columbia Press, 2015. [Blind referee process with two referees.]

4. “Conclusion: Global Financial Crisis and Social Policy.” Gerard W. Boychuk, Rianne Mahon, and Stephen McBride. In Stephen McBride, Rianne Mahon and Gerard Boychuk, ed., After ’08: The Global Financial Crisis and Social Policy. University of British Columbia Press, 2015.

5. “Comparing Federations: Testing the Model of Market-Preserving Federalism in Canada, Australia and the United States.” With Jennifer Wallner. In Luc Bernier et al., ed., Canada Compared. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2014: 198-221.

6. “Territorial Politics, Federalism and Income Redistribution.” In John Myles and Keith G. Banting, ed., The New Politics of Redistribution in Canada. (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2014.)

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. “’Studying Public Policy’: Historical Institutionalism and the Comparative Method.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 49:4 (December 2016): 743-61. (Acceptance rate: 22%)

2. “Social Protection as Legal Rights?: The ILO’s Global Social Protection Floor Initiative, the United States, and the American ‘National Context.’.” Global Social Policy 14, 1 (December 2014): 319-332.

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

CARTER, Angela V., Assistant Professor, (tenure track; tenure file submitted July 2018) Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D., Government, Cornell University, U.S., 2011 M.A., Government, Cornell University, U.S., 2006 M.A., Political Economy, Carleton University, 2003 B.A. (Honours), Communication, Concentration in French, University of Ottawa, 2001 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2012- Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2008-12 Assistant Professor, Environmental Policy Institute and Political Environmental Studies Units, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Grenfell Campus d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

2003-4 Fulbright Foundation Scholar, Canada-U.S. Program

e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

Professional Service Ongoing referee for: scholarly journals (Review of Policy Research, Energy Policy, Journal of Canadian Studies, Alternate Routes, Journal of Newfoundland and Labrador Studies, and Case Studies in the Environment); manuscripts (ie. Notre Golfe: État des connaissances en lien avec l'exploration et l'exploitation des hydrocarbures); and policy reports for the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

2017- Policy Advisor, Climate Watch NL 2012 SSHRC Insight Grant referee

Departmental Service (Political Science, University of Waterloo) 2019 Member, Annual Performance Review Committee 2018 Member, Arts First Definite Term Lecturer Departmental Hiring Committee 2018 Member, Political Science Undergraduate Committee

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2017-8 Faculty Coordinator, Federal-Provincial Simulation Conference 2017 Member, Political Science Outreach Committee 2012-17 Member, Master of Public Service Program Committee 2015 Chair, Political Science Outreach Committee 2014-15 Member, Political Science Outreach Committee 2012-13 Member, Political Science Undergraduate Committee

Faculty Service (Arts, University of Waterloo) 2018-20 Associate Director, Arts First Program 2015 Member, Department of Political Science Chair Nominating Committee 2015 Volunteer, World Wide Views on Climate Change and Energy conference (organized by the Faculty of Arts and Faculty of Environment)

University Service (Waterloo) 2019 Member, Interdisciplinary Centre on Climate Change (IC3) Director Hiring Committee 2013-14 Board Member, University of Waterloo’s Bright Starts Co-Operative Early Learning Centre Inc.

Departmental Service (Environmental Studies Unit, Memorial University, Grenfell Campus) 2012 Member, hiring committee for term position in Environmental Studies

Community Engagement & Knowledge Mobilization 2018 Speaker, "Rise for Climate" rally at Waterloo Town Square (part of a global action with participation from 90+ countries), hosted by Citizens Climate Lobby Waterloo Region, Divest Waterloo, and TransitionKW (September 8). 2018 Keynote speaker, “Peoples Town Hall on the Trans Mountain Pipeline” at Kitchener Public Library’s Central Branch, alongside Rev. Rosalyn Kantaht'nta Elm and Chief Myeengun Henry, with 3 local MPs in attendance, organized by 350.org (July 12). 2018 Expert Panelist, “Where Do Ontario Parties Stand on the Environment?,” a panel discussing political parties’ positions on the environment in advance of the Ontario provincial election, hosted by GreenPAC (May 3). 2016 Organizer, “After the Sands: Energy and Ecological Security for Canadians,” a public event featuring Gordon Laxer and a community panel held at Kitchener’s central public library (April 6). 2014 Co-organizer, Community/Academic Workshop and Panel on oil and gas development in Saskatchewan with Eaton (University of Regina), Regina, Saskatchewan (January 24-25). 2011-12 Co-organizer, Oil and Gas Cross-Canada Community Workshop, a SSHRC- funded community workshop, including non-governmental organization representatives from six provinces, with Fraser and Zalik, Bonne Bay, Newfoundland (April 13-15).

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2008-12 Facilitator/Co-Facilitator, Environmental Policy Institute, Grenfell Campus, Memorial University. These positions involved developing and implementing numerous research dissemination / pubic outreach projects such as a speaker series (over 20 events), cross-provincial public events (3), a film series, and multi-stakeholder meetings/conferences (7) on key environmental policy issues: food security, climate change and energy, the Lower Churchill Hydroelectric Generation Project, Vale Inco’s hydromet facility in Long Harbour, wetlands, green jobs/economy, regional air quality, and forestry.

f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 1 In progress: 0 M.A., 1 Ph.D.

. Bradley Noonan (MA), The Nordic Approach: How Denmark, Finland, and Sweden are Facilitating Sustainable Water Development in Developing African States. 2017-18 (MA Thesis)

. Justine Salam (PhD), Understanding Alberta's Provincial Oil Policy: The Role of Institutions, Interests, and Ideas during the 2007 & 2015 Oil Sands Royalty Reviews. 2017- (PhD Thesis)

g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

2013, 15, 18 Government, Business, Civil Society 2013, 15, 17 The State & Economic Life: Current Debates in Political Economy

h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Amount per Principal Year Source Type Purpose year Investigator 2018- SSHRC C $32,000 Angela Carter R 20

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$2.5 million (total grant, 2015- William Carroll SSHRC C used by R 21 Shannon Daub multiple co- investigators) 2009- SSHRC C $39,475 Gail Fraser R 15 Government of 2011- Newfoundland and G $25,000 Angela Carter R 12 Labrador Government of 2009- Newfoundland and G $8,053 Angela Carter R 12 Labrador

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

Principal Year Source Type Amount per year Purpose Investigator Balsillie School of 2017 International $3,466 Angela Carter R -18 O Affairs 2018 UW/SSHRC O $1,400 n/a T Memorial 2011 University of O $25,000 Angela Carter R -12 Newfoundland

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 0 (1 under review)

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- Books edited ...... 0 - Chapters in books ...... 11 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 8 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 0 - Technical reports ...... 5 - Abstracts and/or papers read ...... 25 - Others (workshops presented) ...... 5

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

Currently under review: Carter, A. Environmental Policy in Canada’s Petro-Provinces (under contract with UBC Press; sent for peer review in October 2018).

Books edited:

N/A

Chapters in Books:

1. Carter, A. “Engaging the Public to Avert the Risks of Oil Dependency.” In A. Marland and L. Moore (eds.), The Democracy Cookbook: Recipes to Renew Governance in Newfoundland and Labrador (St. John’s: ISER Books, 2017) pp 314-17. 2. Carter, A. “The Petro-Politics of Environmental Regulation in the Tar Sands.” In L. Adkin (ed.), First World Petro-Politics: The Political Ecology and Governance of Alberta (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2016) pp 152-89. 3. Carter, A., and A. Zalik. “Fossil Capitalism and the Rentier State: Towards a Political Ecology of Alberta’s Oil Economy.” In L. Adkin (ed.), First World Petro-Politics: The Political Ecology and Governance of Alberta (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2016) pp 51-77. (contribution: 60%) 4. Haluza-DeLay, R. and A. Carter. “Social Movements Scaling Up: Strategies and Opportunities in Opposing the Oil Sands Status Quo.” In L. Adkin (ed.), First World Petro-Politics: The Political Ecology and Governance of Alberta (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2016) pp 456-98. (contribution: 40%) 5. Carter, A. “Environmental Policy and Politics: The Case of Oil.” In D. VanNijnatten (ed.), Canadian Environmental Policy and Politics: The Challenges of Austerity and Ambivalence (4th Ed.) (Don Mills: Oxford University Press, 2016) pp 292-306. 6. Carter, A. “Petro-Capitalism and the Tar Sands.” In T. Black, S. D'Arcy, T. Weis and J. Russell (eds.), A Line in the Tar Sands: Struggles for Environmental Justice (Toronto: Between the Lines, 2014) pp 23-35.

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7. Peters, J., A. Carter, and S. Cadigan, S. “The Political Economy of the Labour Market in Newfoundland and Labrador.” In A. Marland and M. Kerby (eds.), First Among Unequals: The Premier, Politics, and Policy in Newfoundland and Labrador (Montréal: McGill-Queen's UP, 2014) pp 247-64. (contribution: 40%) 8. Haluza-Delay, R., and A. Carter. “Joining Up and Scaling Up: Analyzing Resistance to Canada’s ‘Dirty Oil’.” In L. Bencze and S. Alsop (eds.), Activist Science and Technology Education (Springer Netherlands, 2014) pp 343-62. (contribution: 30%) 9. Le Billon, P., and A. Carter. “Securing Alberta's Tar Sands: Resistance and Criminalization on a New Energy Frontier.” In M. Schnurr & L. Swatuk (eds.), Natural Resources and Social Conflict: Towards Critical Environmental Security (London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2012) pp 170-92. (contribution: 30%) 10. Carter, A. “Moral Economy, Market Economy and the Environment: Which Fundamental

Tensions?” Proceedings of the VII Student Research Conference on Political Science, Political Science: New Approaches? New Realities? (Montréal: Université de Montréal, 2004) pp 23-37. 11. Carter, A. “Joys and Agonies in Newfoundland Resettlement: Enduring Rupture through Art.” In D. Bélanger (ed.), Le Canada: rupture et continuité / Canada: Rupture and Continuity (Montréal: McGill Institute for the Study of Canada, 2002) pp 145-72.

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. Thistlethwaite, J., M. Wood, A. Carter, T. Dordi. “Northern Gateway Pipeline: Seeking Consensus is a Slippery Business.” Sustainability [teaching case series within SAGE Business Cases]. Accepted November 2018. Forthcoming 2019. (contribution: 15%) 2. Carter, A. “Policy Responses to the Climate Crisis in Canada’s Petro-Provinces: Varieties of Carbon Entrenchment.” Studies in Political Economy. 99(2): 151-174, 2018. 3. Fraser, G. and A. Carter. “Seabird Attraction to Artificial Light in Newfoundland and Labrador’s Offshore Oil Fields: Documenting Failed Regulatory Governance.” Ocean Yearbook. 32: 267-82, 2018. (contribution: 30%) 4. Carter, A., G. Fraser, and A. Zalik. “Environmental Policy Convergence in Canada’s Fossil Fuel Provinces? Regulatory Streamlining, Impediments, and Drift.” Canadian Public Policy / Analyse de politiques. 43(1): 61-76, 2017. (contribution: 70%) 5. Carter, A. and L. Fusco. “Western Newfoundland’s Anti-Fracking Campaign: Exploring the Rise of Unexpected Community Mobilization.” Journal of Rural and Community Development. 12(1): 98-120, 2017. (contribution: 50%) 6. Fusco, L. and A. Carter. “Toward an Anti-Fracking Mobilization Toolkit: Ten Practices from Western Newfoundland’s Campaign.” Interface. 9(2): 276-99, 2017. (contribution: 50%) 7. Carter, A., and E. Eaton. “Subnational Responses to Fracking in Canada: Explaining Saskatchewan’s ‘Wild West’ Regulatory Approach.” Review of Policy Research. 33(4): 393-419, 2016. (contribution: 50%) 8. Bourgault, D., F. Cyr, D. Dumont and A. Carter. “Numerical Simulations of the Spread of Floating Passive Tracer Released at the Old Harry Prospect.” Environmental Research Letters 9: 1-14, 2014. (contribution: 20%)

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Technical Reports

1. Fraser, G. and A. Carter. Submission to the Minister of Natural Resources, Government of Canada, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Government of Canada, and Minister of Natural Resources, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador: “Recommendation to Establish an Independent Environmental Authority for Newfoundland and Labrador’s Offshore Oil and Gas Sector,” Jan 10, 2019. 2. Carter, A. and G. S. Fraser. “A Framework for Effective Environmental Regulation in Newfoundland and Labrador’s Offshore Oil and Gas Sector: Applying Lessons from the Offshore Helicopter Safety Inquiry.” Submitted to the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, the Government of Canada, the Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board, and the Commissioner of the Inquiry into Matters Respecting Helicopter Passenger Safety for Workers in the Newfoundland and Labrador Offshore Area, Jan 20, 2011. 3. Bauer, I., W. Bowers, S. Carson, A. Carter, K. Daniels, M. Levesque, C. Pike, S. Pottle, T. Randell, and G. Sabau. “Response to Newfoundland & Labrador Public Discussion Document ‘Climate Change: Responding to Climate Change in Newfoundland & Labrador’.” Submitted to the Office of Climate Change, Energy Efficiency and Emissions Trading, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, July 31, 2010. 4. Carter, A. Environmental Policy Institute, Western Environment Centre and College of the North Atlantic. Submission to “People’s Food Policy Project,” December 14, 2009. 5. Tanner, A., A. Carter, J-P. Ranger, J. Jacobs, M. Rudd, N. Pritchett, P. Trela, S. Pottle, and S. Mills. “Response to Lower Churchill Hydroelectric Generation Project Environmental Impact Statement.” Submitted to M. Pineau, Panel Co-Manager, Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency, and T. Graham, Panel Co-Manager, Lower Churchill Joint Review Panel Secretariat, May 22, 2009.

Articles in Professional Journals

1. Carter, A., and E. Eaton. “Saskatchewan’s ‘Wild West’ Approach to Fracking.” CCPA Monitor 23(3): 20-24, 2016. (contribution: 50%) 2. Carter, A. “Extracting Stories of Resistance,” a review of P. Bowles and H. Veltmeyer (eds.) The Answer Is Still No. CCPA Monitor 21(9): 33, 2015. 3. Bourgault, D., D. Dumont, F. Cyr, and A. Carter. “Oil and Gas Exploitation in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence: What Role for Government and University Researchers?” CMOS Bulletin SCMO 42(1): 30-32, 2014. (contribution: 20%) 4. Carter, A. Review of Humphreys, Sachs and Stiglitz (eds.) Escaping the Resource Curse (2007). Canadian Journal of Political Science 41(1): 215-217, 2008. 5. Carter, A. “Economic Development Benefits of the Oil and Gas Industry in Newfoundland and Labrador: Conference Report,” St. John’s: Leslie Harris Centre of Regional Policy and Development, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 2007.

Papers read

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1. Carter, A. “The Political Economy of ‘Keeping It In the Ground’: Toward a Comparative Framework.” Atlantic Provinces Political Science Association annual meeting, St. John’s, NL, October 13, 2018. 2. Carter, A. “The Political Economy of Decarbonization Policy in Petro-States: Toward a Comparative Framework.” Climate Change and Energy Futures Workshop, St. John’s, October 10, 2018. 3. Strauch, Y., T. Dordi, & A. Carter. “Operationalizing Decarbonization Paradigms in Political and Financial Spheres: The Role of 2°C Carbon Budgets.” 2nd Conference on Fossil Fuel Supply & Climate Policy, Oxford UK, September 24, 2018. 4. Carter, A. “A ‘Keep It In the Ground’ Policy Research Agenda: From Comparative Cases to Canadian Application,” From Corporate Power to Climate Justice: Towards an Agenda for Transformation panel, Socialist Studies Society’s Annual Conference, University of Regina, May 30, 2018. 5. Carter, A. “Policy Responses to the Climate Crisis in Canada’s Petro-Provinces: Varieties of Carbon Entrenchment,” Environmental Politics: Comparative Environmental Policy panel, Canadian Association of Political Science's Annual Conference, Ryerson University, June 1, 2017. 6. Carter, A. “Policy Responses to the Dual Oil / Climate Crisis in Canada’s Petro-Provinces: Circumventing or Entrenching Carbon Capitalism?” Ontario Network for Sustainable Energy Policy, Picton, April 26, 2017. 7. Carter, A. and L. Fusco. “Explaining Anti-Fracking Mobilization in Western Newfoundland: A Conversation with McAdam and Boudet,” Workshop on Environmental Policy IV, Canadian Association of Political Science's Annual Conference, University of Calgary, May 31, 2016. 8. Carter, A. “Confronting Newfoundland and Labrador’s ‘Economic Saviour’: Energy and Environmental Policy on the Rock(s),” Challenges and Opportunities for Governance of Socio-Ecological Systems in Comparative Perspective conference, organized by the Balsillie School of International Affairs with support from the Faculty of Environment and the Department of Knowledge Integration at the University of Waterloo, and the Waterloo Institute for Complexity and Innovation, Waterloo, April 21, 2016. 9. Eaton, E. and A. Carter. “Fracking for Oil in Saskatchewan: Social & Regulatory Absences in North American Context,” Canadian Association of Geographers Annual Meeting, Memorial University of Newfoundland, August 12, 2013. 10. Carter, A. and L. Fusco. “Political-Economics of Contentious Politics in New Canadian Petro- Provinces,” Petrocultures: Oil, Energy, Culture Conference, University of Alberta, Sept 6- 8, 2012. 11. Carter, A. “Explaining Environmental Regulation in Petro-States: Petro-Politics in Alberta’s Tar Sands,” Session B13(a): Challenges of Governance V: The Environment, Canadian Political Science Association’s Annual Conference, Concordia University, June 3, 2010. 12. Carter, A. “Regulating the Environmental Impacts of Alberta's Tar Sands,” Canadian-United States Energy Issues After Copenhagen: Oil Sands and Energy Interdependence Conference, Buffett Center for International and Comparative Studies, Northwestern University, May 28, 2010.

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13. Carter, A. “Environmental Policy & Petro-Polities: Regulation Trends in Oil-Dependent Canada & the U.S.” Rethinking Extractive Industries Conference, Center for Research on Latin America and the Caribbean & the Extractive Industries Research Group, York University, March 6, 2009. 14. Carter, A. “Environmental Policy and Petro-Politics in Oil Dependent States: Comparing Alberta and Alaska,” Session C1b Comparative Politics, Industrialized, Canadian Political Science Association’s Annual Conference, UBC, June 4, 2008. 15. Carter, A. “Defining Alaska’s ‘Oil Curse’ (and Forewarning Newfoundland and Labrador?),” Atlantic Provinces Political Science Association’s Annual Conference, Fredericton, September 30, 2007. 16. Carter, A. “Cursed by Oil?: Institutions and Environmental Impacts in Alberta’s Tar Sands,” Session C12(a) The Design of Institutions, Canadian Political Science Association’s Annual Conference, University of Saskatchewan, June 1, 2007. 17. Carter, A. “Settler Environmental Activism: A Transnational/National Paradox?” Panel C10, New Social Movements Revisited (Comparative Politics, Industrialized), Canadian Political Science Association’s Annual Conference, University of Western Ontario, June 4, 2005. 18. Carter, A. “Rooted Ecopolitics or Transnational Environmental Activism? New Directions in Settler Societies,” Mediating Environments: Nature, Culture, Power Session, joint panel of the Environmental Studies Association of Canada and the Canadian Communication Association, University of Western Ontario, June 4, 2005. 19. Carter, A. “The Canadian Water Export Debate, Since Bocking,” American Political Science Association’s Annual Conference, Chicago, September 1, 2004. 20. Carter, A. “Inserting Ecology in the Moral Economy-Market Economy Divide,” New York State Political Science Association’s Annual Conference, Binghampton University, April 23, 2004. 21. Carter, A. “Moral Economy, Market Economy and the Environment: Which Fundamental Tensions?,” Colloque de Recherche Étudiante en Science Politique, Université de Montréal, May 1, 2004. 22. Carter, A. “An Innovative Solution or the Well-Worn Path?: Newfoundland’s Gisborne Lake, A Case Study of Bulk Water Export Interpretations,” Atlantic Province Political Science Association’s Annual Conference, Memorial University of Newfoundland, September 27, 2003. 23. Carter, A. “Enduring Rupture through Art: Newfoundland Resettlement,” Canadian Studies Association National Graduate Student Conference, McGill University, March 15, 2002. 24. Carter, A. “Envisioning Nature: From Social Construction to Political Economy,” Progressive Works in Political Economy Graduate Student Conference, Carleton University, March 13, 2002. 25. Carter, A. “A Constructed Environment? Debates and Consequences,” Works-in-Progress Graduate Student Conference, Environmental Studies / Sociology and Anthropology Departments, Carleton University, March 8, 2002.

DATE: January 31st, 2019

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CURRICULUM VITAE a) NAME:

Cattapan, Alana, assistant professor Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES

Ph.D. Political Science, York University, Canada, 2015 M.A. Political Science/Women’s Studies, University of Toronto, Canada, 2007 B.Soc.Sc. Political Science/Women’s Studies, University of Ottawa, Canada, 2006 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY

2019- Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2017-2019 Assistant Professor, Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy, University of Saskatchewan 2015-2017 Canadian Institutes of Health Research Postdoctoral Fellow, Faculty of Medicine, Dalhousie University d) HONOURS: e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES:

2018-2019 Co-section head and co-organizer of pre-conference workshop, Women, Gender and Politics, Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference 2018-2019 Jill Vickers Prize in Gender and Politics Jury, Canadian Political Science Association 2017- Organizer, Congress Interdisciplinary Feminist Sessions 2015- Women’s Caucus Steering Committee, Canadian Political Science Association 2014-2016 Undergraduate essay prize committee, Women and Gender Studies et récherches feminists (also 2019) 2015-2017 Founder/Organizer, Dalhousie Feminist Seminar Series (Dalhousie University) 2013 Editorial Board Member, Journal of the Motherhood Initiative (Mothering and Education)

f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS

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In progress: 2 M.P.P.

Katelin Loseth (MPP), TBD, 2018 - ___ Jennifer Chouinard (MPP), Working title: Employers’ Responsibility for Preventing Injury First Responders, 2015 - ___ g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Winter 2019 Advanced Policy Analysis (University of Saskatchewan) Winter 2018 Gender and Public Policy (University of Saskatchewan) Fall 2018 Public Policy Analysis

h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING:

Year Source/Purpose** Type* Amount per year

2019-2024 SSHRC Insight Grant (co- C $51 800 applicant)

**Research

2018-2019 SSHRC Partnership Engage C $17 263 Grant

**Research

2018-2020 James Kreppner Award F $43 275 (Canadian Blood Services)

**Research

2017-2020 CIHR New Investigator Award C/G $18 755 (w/ matching funds from University of Saskatchewan and the Saskatchewan Health Research Foundation)

**Research

2017-2018 Social Sciences and C $15 382 Humanities Research Council of Canada Connections Grant (co- applicant)

**Research 2017-2019 Banting Postdoctoral C $70 000 Fellowship (declined)

**Research

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2016-2018 SSHRC Partnership C $65 931 Development Grant (co- investigator)

**Research

2015-2017 CIHR Postdoctoral Fellowship C $45 000

**Research

2014 Royal Society of Canada F $3 000 Open Academy (co-applicant)

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING:

2015 Social Justice Brock University $25 000 Research Institute Symposium Grant (co-applicant)

Research 2015 Council for Brock University $2 000 Research in the Social Sciences (co-applicant) 2015 Brock SSHRC Brock University $4 000 Institutional Grant (Brock University) (co-applicant) 2015 Faculty of Medicine Dalhousie $16 000 Project Grant University (Dalhousie University) (co- applicant)

i) PUBLICATIONS:

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 0

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- Books (and special issues) edited ...... 3 - Chapters in books ...... 2 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 20 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 0 - Technical reports ...... 0 - Abstracts and/or papers read ...... 31 - Others (workshops presented, op-eds, blogs) ...... 56

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above:

Books and special issues edited:

1. Gruben, Vanessa, Alana Cattapan, & Angela Cameron, eds. Surrogacy in Canada: Critical Perspectives in Law and Policy. (Toronto: Irwin Law, 2018), 330 pp. (All chapters individually peer-reviewed).

2. Cattapan, Alana, Andrea Doucet, Robyn Lee, & Lindsey McKay. Studies in Social Justice. (Guest editors of a special issue on “Consuming Intimacies: Bodies, Labour, Care, and Social Justice”) 10.2 (2016).

3. Cattapan, Alana and Dave Snow. Monash Bioethics Review (Guest editors of a special issue on “Biobanking Reproductive Tissues for Research”) 33.4 (2015).

Chapters in Books:

1. Baylis, F. & Cattapan, A. Personalized medicine and the politics of human genome transfer, in Personalised Medicine, Individual Choice, and the Common Good. Britta van Beers, Sigrid Sterckx, and Donna Dickenson, eds (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2018) pp.17-36.

2. Cattapan, A. “On Reproductive Citizenship: Thinking About Social Rights and Assisted Reproduction in Canada.” In Fertile Ground: Exploring Reproduction in Canada. Stephanie Paterson, Francesca Scala, and Marlene Sokolon, eds. (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2014) pp.152-177.

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. Cattapan, A. “Medicalization and the politics of in vitro fertilization in Ontario.” Canadian Journal of Political Science. (accepted, 2019).

2. Bisaillon, L, Cattapan A., Anton, L., Driessen, A., et. al. My body literally shut

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down: Doing academia differently.” Feminist Studies. (accepted, forthcoming 2019).

3. Tessaro, L., Cattapan, A., Haw, J., & Mykitiuk, R. “Toxic conceptions: The assessment of male-mediated transgenerational effects of chemical exposures.” Canadian Journal of Women and the Law. (accepted, forthcoming 2019)

4. Cattapan, A., Browne K., Halperin, D.M., Di Castri, A., et. al. Motivation for participating in Phase I vaccine trials: Comparison of an influenza and Ebola randomized controlled trial. Vaccine 37.2: 289-285, 2019.

5. Baylis, F., Cattapan, A., & Snow, D. “Editorial misconduct: What are scholars to do?” Public Affairs Quarterly 31.2: 143-150, 2017.

6. Cattapan, A. & Snow, D. “Everything and nothing: Regulating embryo research in Canada.” New Genetics and Society. 36.1: 43-65, 2017.

7. Cattapan, Alana. Precarious labour: On egg donation as work. Studies in Political Economy 97.3: 234-252, 2016.

8. Cattapan, A. & DuPont, Q. Moving forward, looking back: Taking Canadian feminist histories online. Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture, and Social Justice 37.2: 225-237, 2016.

9. Cattapan, A. “Good eggs? Evaluating consent forms for egg donation. Journal of Medical Ethics 42.7: 455-459, 2016.

10. Cattapan, A. and Doyle, A. Patient decision making on the disposition of surplus cryopreserved embryos in Canada.” Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Canada. 38.1: 60-66, 2016.

11. Cattapan, A. and Baylis, F. Frozen in perpetuity? “Abandoned embryos” in Canada.” Reproductive Biomedicine and Society Online. 1.2: 104-112, 2015.

12. Cattapan, A. and Snow, D. Of research and reproduction: Defining embryo research in Canada. Monash Bioethics Review. 33.4: 379-395, 2015.

13. Snow, D., Cattapan, A. and Baylis, F. Contesting estimates of cryopreserved embryos in the United States. Nature Biotechnology. 33.9: 909, 2015.

14. Petropanagos A., Cattapan A., Baylis, F., and Leader, A. Social egg freezing: Risk, benefits and other considerations. Canadian Medical Association Journal. 187.9: 666-669, 2015.

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15. Cattapan, A., Mykitiuk, R. and Pioro, M. “Notions of harm in Canadian law: Addressing exposures to household chemicals as reproductive torts. Canadian Journal of Comparative and Contemporary Law. 1.1: 79-136, 2015.

16. Cattapan, A.. “Risky business: Surrogacy, egg donation, and the politics of exploitation.” Canadian Journal of Law and Society. 29.3: 361-379, 2014.

17. Cattapan, A., Hammond, K., Haw J., and Tarasoff, L. “Breaking the ice: Young feminist scholars of reproductive politics reflect on egg freezing.” International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics. 7.2: 236-247, 2014.

18. Cattapan, A. “Rhetoric and Reality: ‘Protecting’ Women in Canadian Public Policy on Assisted Human Reproduction.” Canadian Journal of Women and the Law 25.2: 202-220, 2013.

19. Cattapan A., and Cohen, S. The devil we know: The implications of Bill C-38 for assisted human reproduction in Canada.” Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Canada. 35.7: 654-656, 2013.

20. Cattapan, A. “(Re)Writing ‘feminism in Canada’: Wikipedia in the feminist classroom.” Feminist Teacher. 22.2:125-136, 2012.

Abstracts and/or Papers Read

1. Storytelling for policy change: Evidence, experience, and feminist pedagogies. Prairie Political Science Association Annual Conference, Banff Centre for the Performing Arts, Banff, AB. 16 September 2019.

2. Like mother: Women of childbearing age in Canadian public health policy. Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference, University of Regina, Regina, SK. 1 June 2018. (Revised paper presented at the American Political Science Association Annual Conference, Boston, MA. 1 September 2018).

3. Maintenance and the status quo: Challenging ‘innovation’ policy. Canadian Association for Programs in Public Administration Annual Conference, University of Regina, Regina, SK. 31 May 2018.

4. Public engagement from the ground up. Society for Socialist Studies Annual Conference. University of Regina, Regina, SK. 30 May 2018.

5. Surrogacy and the sharing economy. Society for the Social Study of Science Annual Conference. Boston, MA. 31 August 2017.

6. Personalized medicine and the politics of mitochondrial disease. Canadian

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Political Science Association Annual Conference. Toronto, ON. 1 June 2017.

7. Responsibility and reproduction after the Royal Commission. Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference. Ryerson University, Toronto, ON. 30 May 2017.

8. Alice and Bob: Metaphor and the gendered politics of cryptography. Canadian Society for the Digital Humanities /Women and Gender Studies et recherches féministes Annual Conference. Ryerson University, Toronto, ON. 28 May 2017. (w/ Quinn DuPont).

9. Potentially, perpetually pregnant: The emergence of “women of reproductive age” in clinical research and public health policy. National Women’s Studies Association Conference. Montreal, QC. 13 October 2016.

10. Everything and nothing: Regulating embryo research in Canada. Atlantic Provinces Political Science Association Annual Conference. University of New Brunswick, Saint John, NB. 15 October 2016.

11. Medical necessity and the public funding of in vitro fertilization. Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference. University of Calgary, Calgary, AB. 2 June 2016.

12. The limits of necessity: Funding in vitro fertilization and gender confirmation surgery in Ontario.” Women’s and Gender Studies et recherches féministes Annual Conference. University of Calgary. Calgary, AB. 29 May 2016.

13. Motivations to participate in Phase I clinical vaccine trials. Canadian Centre for Vaccinology/Infectious Disease Symposium 2016. IWK Health Centre, Halifax, NS. 26 April 2016.

14. Like lost property at a railway station: Theorizing ‘abandonment’ in embryos.” Consuming Intimacies: Bodies, Labour, Care, and Social Justice. St. Catharines, ON. 16 October 2015.

15. Cryopreserved embryos in Canada: Clinic survey results. Poster Presentation. Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society Annual Conference. Halifax, NS. 2 October 2015. (w/ Dave Snow)

16. Of federalism and fertility: Assisted human reproduction as an issue of intergovernmental relations in health care.” Atlantic Provinces Political Science Association Annual Conference. Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, NS. 27 September 2015. (w/ Dave Snow)

17. Federal regulations on embryonic research: A view from the clinics. Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference. University of Ottawa. Ottawa,

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ON. 3 June 2015. (w/ Dave Snow)

18. Precarious labour: Theorizing egg donation as work. Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference. University of Ottawa. Ottawa, ON. 2 June 2015.

19. Orphaned, deserted, left behind? Challenging the language of ‘abandoned embryos.' Women and Gender Studies et recherches féministes Annual Conference. University of Ottawa. Ottawa, ON. 2 June 2015.

20. Research and reproduction: Theorizing the embryo in Canadian fertility clinics. Canadian Bioethics Society Annual Conference. Winnipeg, MB. 29 May 2015.

21. Neoliberal feminism and egg freezing. Canadian Bioethics Society Annual Conference. Winnipeg, MB. 27 May 2015.

22. Best practices in consent forms for oocyte donation. Poster presentation. Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society Annual Conference. Quebec City, QC. 12 September 2014.

23. Cryopreserved embryos in Canada: Implications for future research. Poster presentation. Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society Annual Conference. Quebec City, QC. 12 September 2014. (with Dave Snow)

24. The maid needs a maid: Egg donation as precarious labour.” Canadian Bioethics Society Annual Conference. Vancouver, BC. 30 May 2014.

25. An ill wind: On egg donation, morality policy, and harm reduction.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference. Brock University. St. Catharines, ON. 28 May 2014.

26. Eggs on ice: The domestic and transnational implications of egg freezing. Women and Gender Studies et recherches féministes Annual Conference. Brock University. St. Catharines, ON. 27 May 2014.

27. Risky business: Surrogacy, egg donation, and the politics of exploitation. Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference. University of Victoria. Victoria, BC. 4 June 2013.

28. Mechanical motherhood: Egg donation as precarious labour. Women and Gender Studies et recherches féministes Annual Conference. University of Victoria, Victoria, BC. 5 June 2013.

29. Rhetoric and reality in public policy on assisted human reproduction in Canada. Mothering and Technology (Conference). Toronto, ON. 18 October 2012.”

30. The devil we know: The socio-legal implications of R. v Quebec and C-38.

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Annual Meeting of the Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society. Ottawa, ON. 6 September 2012. (with Sara Cohen)

31. Of steering, rowing, and pipers unpaid: Assisted human reproduction and federal-provincial relations in health care.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference. University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB. 16 June 2012.

Others

Non-peer reviewed academic articles/interviews/reviews

1. Cattapan, A. Reflections on the commercialization of surrogacy.” Health Law in Canada Journal 39.4: 86-93, 2019.

2. Dickenson, D., & Cattapan, A. On bioethics and the commodified body: An interview with Donna Dickenson. Studies in Social Justice 10.2: 342-351, 2016.

3. Cattapan, A., Copeland, S., and Snow, D. Meeting report: Biobanking eggs and embryos for research.” The Gazette (of the Society for the Social History of Medicine). 68: 6-7, 2015.

4. Cattapan, A. Film review: What does it mean to eat? A review of Rodrigo Prieto’s Likeness. Journal of Ethics in Mental Health, Open Volume, 2014. 2pp.

Invited lectures

5. Ethical and legal issues in human reproductive cryopreservation. Extreme Cryo 2019: Frozen Fertility! University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK. 3 February 2019.

6. On compensable altruism and reproductive work. Invited presentation at Regulating Creation and the Assisted Human Reproduction Act – part of the Mary and Philip Seeman Health Law Seminar Series. Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON. 23 November 2018.

7. Purity, power, and altruism? Motivations to participate in Phase I clinical vaccine trials. Global Health Conference. University of Saskatchewan, Faculty of Medicine, Saskatoon, SK. 20 October 2018.

8. Freelancing fertility: Surrogacy in the ‘sharing economy.’ Invited lecture as part of the Greenberg Speaker Series in Feminism and the Law. University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON. 21 March 2018.

9. Hands clean: Purity and power in biomedical research. Keynote speaker at

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Difficult Dialogues III. University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, PEI. 10 March, 2017.

10. Constructing necessity: The politics of funding IVF in Ontario, Canada. Invited seminar as part of the Reproduction Research Group seminar series. De Montfort University, Leicester, UK. 30 November 2016.

11. Ill-conceived: Discourse and the regulation of assisted reproduction in Canada. Invited seminar as part of the Interdisciplinary Humanities MA Program Speakers’ Series. Laurentian University, Sudbury, ON. 19 October 2016.

Workshop presentations

12. Surrogacy in the sharing economy. Surrogacy in Canada: Critical Perspectives in Law and Public Policy. University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON. 17 May 2017.

13. Choice, justice, citizenship: Reproduction since the Royal Commission.” Shifting Paradigms, Enduring Legacies; Reflections on the Royal Commission on the Status of Women at 50. York University, Toronto, ON. 19 April 2015.

14. (Mis)Placing value: Challenging assumptions about the use of embryos for research.” Biobanking Eggs and Embryos for Research. Halifax, NS. 5 December 2014.

15. A matter of choice: Social egg freezing and neoliberal feminism.” Postponed Motherhood and the Ethics of Family. Göttingen, Germany. 16 October 2014.

16. The reproductive citizen: Subject formation in Canadian public policy on assisted human reproduction.” Roundtable presentation. Institute for Feminist Legal Studies Reproduction Roundtable. Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto, ON. 26 October 2012.

Policy papers and submissions

17. Gruben, V., Cattapan, A., Cameron, A., Busby, K., et. al. Joint submission on proposed regulations (Assisted Human Reproduction Act). 10 January 2019.

18. Baylis, F., Cattapan A., Angela Cameron, et. al. Media advisory and fact sheet – Proposed Changes to the Assisted Human Reproduction Act. 29 May 2018.

19. Baylis, F., & Cattapan, A.. Submission to Health Canada on Discussion Document (Proposed Regulations for the Assisted Human Reproduction Act). 9 September 2017.

20. Cattapan, A. Submission to Health Canada on prepublication of proposed

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regulations to the Assisted Human Reproduction Act. 29 November 2016.

21. Cattapan, A. Submission on Canadian Standards Association, Comments on proposed amendment (Annex A) to CAN/CSA Z900.2.1-12. 15 September 2015.

22. Cattapan, A., & Petropanagos, A. Submission on revisions to Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society draft guideline on third party reproduction. 27 July 2015.

23. McLeod, C., Baylis, F., Downie, J., Ryman, E., & Alana Cattapan. Submission on professional obligations and human rights. (Feedback on revisions to policy 5- 08). 20 February 2015.

24. Cattapan, A. & Petropanagos, A. Submission on maximizing safety and inclusive language. (Submission on Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society draft guideline on third party reproduction). 11 August 2014.

25. McLeod, C., Baylis, F., Downie, J., Cattapan, A., & Lloyd-Smith, G.. Submission on conscientious objection (Submission to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario on proposed changes to policies 4-07 and 5-08). 1 August 2014.

26. Cattapan, A. Submission on research involving women. (Submission to the Panel on Research Ethics on proposed changes to the Tri-Council Policy Statement). 15 January 2014.

Public/media commentary

27. Cattapan, A., Gruben, V., & Cameron, A. “New reproductive technology regulations don’t go far enough.” Policy Options. 15 April 2019.

28. Cattapan, A. “Who gets the frozen embryos in the divorce.” The Conversation. 8 August 2018.

29. Cattapan, A. “Changing the law to allow payment for surrogacy is fraught with complications.” CBC Opinion. 22 May 2018.

30. Cattapan, A. & Baylis, F. “Argument of paying for surrogacy, sperm and eggs based on misinformation.” The Toronto Star. 1 May 2018.

31. Baylis, F., & Cattapan, A. “Paying surrogates, sperm, and egg donors goes against Canadian values.” The Conversation (reposted to ipolitics.ca and Impact Ethics). 2 April 2018.

32. Hanson, C., Cattapan, A., Paterson, S., Stinson, J., & Neapole, J. “Budget misses on the diversity of women’s experience.” Policy Options. 2 March 2018.

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33. Béland, D., Cattapan, A. & Schwartz, E. “Paying attention to the mundane policy issues.” Policy Options. 5 December 2017.

34. Baylis, F., & Cattapan, A. “Canada’s prohibition on altering the human genome.” Impact Ethics. 2 October 2017.

35. Cattapan, A. & Baylis, F. “Egg donors and surrogates need high quality care.” The Conversation. 27 September 2017.

36. Cattapan, A. “Attend meetings or perish…” Hook and Eye: Fast Feminism, Slow Academe. 22 September 2017.

37. Cattapan, A., Cameron, A. & Gruben, V. “When women are surrogate mothers: Is that work.” The Conversation (reposted in the National Post online). 25 July 2017.

38. Cattapan, A. “Notes on digital humanities and (Canadian) feminist archives.” Mediacommons (Field Guide on Digital Humanities and the Future of the Archive). 18 April 2017.

39. Cattapan, A., Hanson, C., Stinson, J., Levac, L, & Paterson, S. “The budget’s baby steps on gender analysis.” Policy Options. 27 March 2017.

40. Cattapan, A. “Have they thought about what they’re asking?: The inequity of job applications.” Hook and Eye: Fast Feminism, Slow Academe (reposted on rabble.ca). 16 March 2017.

41. Cattapan, A. “Clarifying the AHR Act after twelve long years.” Impact Ethics. 18 November 2016.

42. Cattapan, A. “Sex-selective abortion is about more than wishing for male children.” TVO.org. 19 April 2016.

43. Cattapan, A. & Baylis, F. “The trouble with paying for sperm.” Toronto Star. 9 April 2016.

44. Cattapan, A. “The curious case of informed consent for egg donation.” BMJ: Journal of Medical Ethics blog. 17 March 2016.

45. Cattapan, A. & Baylis, F. “Don’t commercialize women’s bodies.” Letter, Montreal Gazette. 12 March 2016.

46. Cattapan, A. “Ontario should focus on preventing infertility instead of treating it.” Healthydebate.ca. 11 November 2015.

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47. Cattapan, A. “Why Ontario’s IVF funding structure is not the answer.” TVO.org. 26 October 2015.

48. Fletcher, A, & Cattapan, A. “Shifting paradigms, enduring legacies: Reflecting on the 1970 Royal Commission on the Status of Women.” Blogging for Equality. 19 May 2015.

49. Cattapan, A. “For love or money: The ‘shortage’ of Canadian sperm donors.” Impact Ethics. 24 April 2015.

50. Cattapan, A. “A fictive reality: Science fiction, dystopia, and assisted reproduction.” International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics Blog. 11 March 2015.

51. Lippman, A., Cattapan, A., & Holloway, K. “Evidence and the marketing of the HPV vaccine.” Impact Ethics. 4 November 2014.

52. Cattapan, A. “Limited funding for IVF does not go far enough.” Toronto Star. 15 April 2014. A15.

53. Cattapan, A. “The (unknown) costs of private-for-profit IVF.” Impact Ethics. 21 December 2013.

54. Cattapan, A., Eichler, M, & Weir, L. “The governance gap in assisted human reproduction.” Canadian Women’s Health Network - Network Magazine. 1 December 2013.

55. Cattapan, A. “Rethinking sex selection: A feminist critique.” Impact Ethics. 13 August 2013.

56. Cattapan, A. & L’Espérance, A. “Surrogate mothers and the cash nexus.” Toronto Star. 1 March 2013. A19.

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

COOPER, Andrew Fenton, full professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

D.Phil. Political Studies, University of Oxford, U.K. 1980 M.A. Political Science, University of Waterloo, Canada, 1973 B.A. Political Science, University of Waterloo, Canada, 1972 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2011 – Professor, Balsillie School of International Affairs

1994 - Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo

2010 – 12 Distinguished Fellow, The Centre for International Governance Innovation

2003 – 10 Associate Director and Distinguished Fellow, The Centre for International Governance Innovation

1988 – 94 Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo

1980 – 94 Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo

d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

Recipient, Distinguished Scholar, Diplomatic Studies Section, International Studies Association, 2018-19 Recipient, Arts Research Award, University of Waterloo, 2014 Associate Research Fellow - UNU CRIS (Institute on Comparative Regional Integration) Bruges, Belgium, April |2013 - present Associate Senior Fellow, Centre for Global Cooperation Research, Duisburg, Germany, December 2012 - present Listed in the Canadian Who’s Who?, 1997 -

e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

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Member of the Editorial Board, Rising Powers Quarterly, 2016 to present. Member of the Editorial Board, International Studies Perspectives, 2016 to present Convener of the first module on Contemporary Diplomacy, the Diplomatic Academy of the Caribbean, Institute of International Relations of the University of the West Indies in St. Augustine, May 7-13, 2014

f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 19 M.A., 3 Ph.D. In progress: 0 M.A., 0 Ph.D. (on sabbatical)

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

Anne Arko (MA), A Critical Study of the Voluntary Carbon Offset Market: The Creation and Rise of Private Transnational Regulatory Organizations in Global Climate Governance 2017-18

YongHao Wang (MA) Parallel Institutions in Global Economic Governance: A Comparative Analysis of the NDB, AIIB and the Silk Road Fund, 2017-18.

Olivia Auston (MA), The 5 Eyes and Canadian Intelligence, 2015- 16

Xin Jiang (MA), What Will AIIB and NDB do differently?, 2015-16

Aracy Selvakumar (MA), Statelessness and ASEAN as Regional Actor, 2015-16

Dan Herman (PhD), Responses to Change in the Global Political Economy of Innovation – The Role of Sub-National States in Industrial Transition, 2012-16.

Richard Bent (MA), Central Bank Liquidity Swaps during the Time of Economic Crises, 2014-15

Leeann Perkins (MA), Controlling for Corruption In Africa: Who Does it is Better the Traditional West or or the “New” Chinese, 2014-15

Chen Nanyuan (MA), Development Models: A Comparative Political Economy Analysis of the Development Banks in China and Brazil (From the 1990s to Present),2014- 15

Zhenyu Li (MA), China’s “New Silk Roads” Strategy: Economic Statecraft in Foreign Policy, 2014- 15

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Michael Stevenson (PhD, Committee Member), Agency Through Adaptation: Explaining The Rockefeller and Gates Foundation’s Influence in the Governance of Global Health and Agricultural Development, 2008- 2014

Madeliene Merrick (MA), The Changing Nature of Norm Diffusion: Actors, Crisis, and Human Rights, 2013-14

Shane McCaughey (MA), BRICS and governance reform in the UNSC and IMF, 2013-14

Ize Ahimie (MA) Strategies of Small States, 2013-14

Tamara Simao (MA), Regional Followership and Development Assistance, 2013-14

David Kempthorne (PhD, Committee Member), Governing International Securities Markets: IOSCO and the Politics of International Securities Market Standards, 2012-13

Jasmine Bélanger- Guilic (MA), Canada's Position in the Agricultural Negotiations of the Doha Round, 2012-13

Ekavi Beh (MA), Following the US? The Old and the New of Canadian Foreign Policy in Latin America, 2012-13

Agnivesh Mishra (MA), Bollywood Diplomacy: Changing Contours of Indian Soft Power & Opportunities for Canada, 2012-13

Daniel Chirilenco (MA), North American Integration, 2012-13

Evan Cinq-Mars (MA), Emerging Powers and the Responsibility to Protect (R2P): The View from Brasilia and Beijing, 2012-13

Ryan Hilimoniuk (MA) “A Theorization of the Role and Function of the G-20 Leaders’ Forum in the Post-2008 International Political Economy and Governance Architecture: A Balance of Functional and Political Purpose, 2011-12

g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars: 2018 PSci 657/GGov 650 International Organizations

2018 Psci 684 Diplomacy

2017 Psci 657/GGov 650 International Organizations

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2016 Psci 657/GG650 International Organization

2015 Psci 684 Diplomacy

2015 Psci 657/GG 650 International Organizations

2014 Psci 657/GG650 International Organization

2013 Pci 657/Global Governance 650 International Organizations

2012 Psci 657/Global Governance 650 International Organizations

Other Graduate :

Supervisor, Jérémie Cornut, SSHRC Post-doctoral Fellow, Psci, University of Waterloo

External Examiner, PhD, Antti Myllymaa, internet Gambling in the Europen Union, Helsinki University, 2017.

External Examiner: Lynelle Clarke, “Sustainable Tourism and Development and Network Governance: A Critical Examination of Sustainable Tourism Networks in Three Caribbean Destinations – Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago”, PhD, UWI, Nov 2017

External Examiner, PhD, Awidya Santikajaya, Pivot States, Australian National University, 2016

External Examiner, Ali Naseer Mohamed, PhD, Australian National University, “The Powers of Small: The Diplomacy of Small States in Regional Organizations”, 2014 h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2015 PI, (with Jérémie Cornut), “The Changing Practices of Frontline Diplomacy”, SSHRC Connection Grant ($CAD) 9120,

2015 PI (with Bessma Momani and Richard Stubbs) “The 'Thickening' of Regional Institutions in the Americas, Asia-Pacific and the Middle East: A Comparative Analysis”, SSHRC Insight Grant, ($CAD) $123,264.

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2014 “Proliferating Institutionalization of Regions,” Hamburger Kolleg, University Duisburg- Essen, (Euros) 40,000,

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 3 - Books edited ...... 5 - Chapters in books ...... 14 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 29 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 3 - - Others: Policy Papers ...... 13 Others – Keynote addresses ...... 18

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored: 3

1. The BRICS – A Very Short Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016), 144 pp.

2. Diplomatic Afterlives (Cambridge: Polity, 2014), pp. 185.

3. Co-author (with Ramesh Thakur), The Group of Twenty (G20) (New York: Routledge, 2012) (Foreword by the Rt. Hon. Paul Martin, former Prime Minister of Canada), pp. 169.

Books edited: 5

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Co-editor, Special Issue, “Positioning the third wave of middle power diplomacy: Institutional elevation, practice limitations”, International Journal, 71, 4, December 2016.

Co-editor, Moving Health Sovereignty in Africa (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, 2014), pp 324.

Co-editor (with Emel Parlar Dal), Special Issue, “Foreign Policy Strategies of Emerging Powers in a Multipolar World,” Third World Quarterly, 34, 6, 2013.

Co-editor, Africa’s Health Challenges (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, 2013), pp. 278.

Co-editor (with Jorge Heine and Ramesh Thakur), Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), pp. 953; paperback version, 2015 (‘Spotlight” book, American Political Science Association, July 2013), pp. 953.

Chapters in Books: 14

1 “Bringing hyper-empowered individuals back into Global Affairs: The Contested Terrain between Hero and Anti-Hero”, in Veronica Kitchen and Jenny Mathers, eds, Heroism and Global Politics (London: Routledge, 2018), pp. 147-168

2 “The BRICS in the evolving architecture of global governance (with Ramesh Thakur), in Thomas Weiss and Rorden Wilkinson, eds, International Organization and Global Governance, 2nd edition (New York: Routledge, 2018).

3 “The Organization of American States: Promise and limitations as a hub institution”, in Pia Riggirozzi, Christopher Wylde, eds, Handbook of South American Governance (New York: Routledge, 2018), pp. 111-123.

4 “Celebrity Diplomats: Differentiation, Recognition and Contestation,” in David Marshall and Sean Redmond, eds., A Companion to Celebrity Studies (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2015), pp. 258- 272.

5 “BRICS and re-shaping the model of summitry: Subordinating the regional to the global,” in Gordon Mace, Jean-Philippe Therien, Diana Tussie, Olivier Dabène, eds., Summits & Regional Governance: The Americas in Comparative Perspective: The Americas in Comparative Perspective (New York: Routledge, 2015), pp. 193-2010.

6 “The G20 and Rising Powers: An Innovative but Awkward Form of Multilateralism,” in Dries Lesage and Thijs Van de Graaf, eds., Rising Powers and Multilateral Institutions (Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave MacMillan), pp. 280-294.

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7 “Soft Power and the Recalibration of Middle Powers: Comparing South Korea as an East Asian Leader with Canada as the Exemplar of the Traditional Model,” in Jan Melissen and Yul Sohn, eds,. Understanding Public Diplomacy in East Asia. Middle Powers in a Troubled Region (New York: Palgrave, 2015), pp. 31-50.

8 “ G20 Middle Powers and Initiatives on Development,” in Mo Jongryn, ed., MIKTA, Middle Powers, and New Dynamics of Global Governance (New York: Palgrave, 2014), pp. 32-46

9 “The Group of Twenty: Input and Output Legitimacy, Reforms, and Agenda” in Masahiro Kawai, Peter J. Morgan, and Pradumna B. Rana, eds., New Global Economic Architecture: The Asian Perspective (Tokyo: Asian Development Bank Institute Series on Asian Economic Integration and Cooperation, 2014), pp. 27-54

10 ‘The BRICS in the New Global Economic Geography,” (with Ramesh Thakur), in Thomas Weiss and Rorden Wilkinson, eds., International Organizations and Global Governance (New York: Routledge, 2014), pp. 265-278.

11 “Introduction: the challenges of 21st-century diplomacy,” (with Jorge Heine and Ramesh Thakur), in Andrew F. Cooper, Jorge Heine and Ramesh Thakur, eds.. Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), pp. 1-35.

12 “The changing nature of diplomacy,” Andrew F. Cooper, Jorge Heine and Ramesh Thakur, eds., Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), pp. 35-53.

13 “Small states in a world of crisis & divergence: more/less vulnerability or resilience?’ in The Diplomacies of Small States: Between Vulnerability and Resilience (with Timothy M. Shaw) (London: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. xvi-xxv.

14 “Celebrity Diplomats as Mobilizers? Celebrities and Activism in a Hypermediated Time” (with Joseph F. Turcotte), in Tristan Anne Borer, eds., Media, Mobilization and Human Rights (London: Zed, 2012), pp. 181-215.

Papers in refereed Journals: 29

1 COOPER, A., Cornut, J. “The changing practices of frontline diplomacy: New directions for inquiry” (Review of International Studies, First View 21 December 2018 https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210518000505

2 COOPER, A., “U.S. public diplomacy and sports stars: mobilizing African-American athletes as goodwill ambassadors from the cold war to an uncertain future”, Place Branding Public Diplomacy, First View 11 December 2018 https://doi.org/10.1057/s41254-018-00114-2

3 COOPER, A., “Entrepreneurial states versus middle powers: Distinct or intertwined frameworks?” International Journal, First View 8 December 2018

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4 COOPER, A., Bishop, M. “The FIFA Scandal and the Distorted Influence of Small States” Global Governance: A Review of Multilateralism and International Organizations, 24, 1, 2018: 21-40.

5 COOPER, A., Zhang, Y.,, “Chinese Leadership in the Evolution of “Hub” and “Parallel” Globally Oriented Institutions” Chinese Political Science Review, 3, 1, 2018: 28–47.

6 COOPER, A., “Between Hub Status and Parallelism: Examining the G20-BRICS Dynamics in Global Governance”, International Organisations Research Journal, 12, 2, 2017: 146–163

7 COOPER, A., “The BRICS’ New Development Bank: Shifting from Material Leverage to Innovative Capacity Global Policy,” Global Policy, First published: 6 July 2017 .

8 COOPER, A., Stubbs, R., “Contending regionalisms: hubs and challengers in the Americas and the Asia-Pacific” The Pacific Review. First published 1 June 2017 < DOI: 10.1080/09512748.2017.1332083>

9 COOPER, A., Dobson, H., Wheeler, M., “Introduction to a Special Report on "Non-Western Celebrity Politics and Diplomacy" Celebrity Studies, 8, 2, 2017, pp. 312-317.

10 COOPER, A., Farooq, A., “The Role of China and India in the G20 and BRICS: Commonalities or Competitive Behaviour?” (with special issue of the Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, 45, 3, 2016, pp. 73-106.

11 COOPER, A., Parlar Dal, E., “Positioning the third wave of middle power diplomacy: Institutional elevation, practice limitations” International Journal, 71, 4, 2016, pp/ 516–528.

12 COOPER, A., “Testing middle power’s collective action in a world of diffuse power,” International Journal, 71, 4, 2016, pp. 529–544

13 COOPER, A., Farooq, A., “Emerging Donors: The Promise and Limits of Bilateral and Multilateral Democracy Promotion” Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 29, 4, 2015, pp. 15201541. < DOI 10.1080/09557571.2015.1062686.>

14 COOPER, A., “MIKTA and the Global Projection of Middle Powers: Toward a Summit of Their Own?” Global Summitry Journal, 1, 1, 2015: 95-114.

15 COOPER, A., Farooq, A., “Stretching health diplomacy beyond ‘Global’ problem solving: Bringing the regional normative dimension in,” Global Social Policy 15, 3, 2015, pp. 313-328.

16 COOPER, A., “Beyond the middle power model: Canada in a reshaping global order,” South African Journal of International Affairs, 22, 3, 2015, pp. 185-201.

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17 COOPER, A., Pouliot, V., “How much is global governance changing? The G20 as international practice” Cooperation and Conflict, 50, 3, 2015, pp. 334-350.

18 COOPER, A., Farooq, A., "The Advocacy of Democratic Governance by India and China: Patterns of Consistency/Inconsistency between Declaratory and Operational Practice", India Quarterly, 71.3, 2015, pp. 221-238.

19 COOPER, A., Farooq, A., “Testing the Club Dynamics of the BRICS: The New Development Bank from Conception to EstablishmentInternational Organization Research Journal, 10, 2, pp. 32-44.

20 COOPER, A., Farooq, A., “Testando a Cultura de Clube dos BRICS: A Evolução de um Novo Banco de Desenvolvimento,” Contexto Internacional: publication of the Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro, Instituto de Relações Internacionais 37, 1, 2015: 13-46.

21 COOPER, A., Momani, B., and Farooq, A., “The United States and Bahrain: Interpreting the Differentiated U.S. Responses to the Arab Spring”, Digest of Middle East Studies 23, 2, 2014, pp. 360–384.

22 COOPER, A., Momani, B.,”The Harper government's messaging in the build-up to the Libyan Intervention: was Canada different than its NATO allies?”, Canadian Foreign Policy, 176-188 (in special issue, “Transformation, ambiguity and reversal: Harper's foreign policy under the microscope”)

23 COOPER, A., Momani, B.,”"Re-balancing the G-20 from Efficiency to Legitimacy: The 3G Coalition and the Practice of Global Governance”, Global Governance: A Review of Multilateralism and International Organizations, 20, 2, 2014: 213-232.

24 COOPER, A., “Middle Power Leadership and the Evolution of the G20”, Global Summitry Journal, 1, 1, 2013: 1-22.

25 COOPER, A., “Squeezed or revitalized? Middle Powers, The G20 and the evolution of global governance,” Special Issue of Third World Quarterly,” Foreign Policy Strategies Of Emerging Powers in a Multipolar World”, 34, 6, 2013: 963-984.

26 COOPER, A., “Foreign Policy Strategies of Emerging Powers in a Multipolar World: an introductory review,” Special Issue of Third World Quarterly, “Foreign Policy Strategies of Emerging Powers in a Multipolar World,” 34, 6, 2013: 943-962

27 COOPER, A., “Civil Society Relationships with the G20: An Extension of the G8 Template or Distinctive Pattern of Engagement?” Global Society, 27, 2, 2013: 179-200.

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28 COOPER, A., “Canada’s Engagement with the Americas in comparative perspective: Between declaratory thickness and operational thinness,” Annual John. W. Holmes issue on Canadian Foreign Policy, International Journal, September 2012: 707-723.

29 COOPER, A., “Las potencias emergentes y el nuevo multilateralismo,” Revista Mexicana de Política Exterior, 94, November 2011 – February 2012: 139- 162.

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings 3

1 “Afterword”, in Dorothée Vandamme ,Tanguy Struye de Swielande, Tom Wilkins, David Walton, eds., Rethinking Middle Powers in the Asian Century: New Theories, New Cases (London: CRC Press, 2018).

2 “Populism and the Domestic Challenge to Diplomacy”, In Volker Stanzel, ed, New Realities in Foreign Affairs: Diplomacy in the 21st Century (Berlin: SWP Research Paper, 11 November. 2018).

3 “Stephen Clarkson’s ‘Foundational Text’ on Canadian Foreign Policy”, Progressive Economics Forum, 20 November, 2017, prepared for “A Tribute to Stephen Clarkson I – Multiple Governance Dilemmas in the ‘new’ North America post-NAFTA-CETA” , Tuesday May 30, 2017, CPSA, Ryerson University.

Others: policy papers 13

1 Contributor, Vision 20-The Hangzhou G20 Summit, A Blue report to the G20 Presidency, 19 May 2016.

2 “Low-profile forums making a big impact,” G20 Turkey: The Antalya Summit 2015, (London: Newsdesk, October 2015), pp. 77-79.

3 Policy brief, “The Recalibration of Middle Powers under Conditions of Stress and Opportunity,” South African Institute of International Affairs, Economic Diplomacy Programme, March 2015.

4 Contribution, “What Are the Top Issues Facing the OAS' Next Leader?, Inter-American Dialogue's Latin American Advisor, March 18, 2015

5 ‘What is the future of the OAS, Americas Quarterly, Winter 2015, pp. 60-64.

6 “Recalibrating Middle Power Diplomacy: The Changing ‘Soft Power’ Brands of Republic of Korea and Canada in Comparative Perspective,” EAI Middle Power Diplomacy Initiative Working Paper 11, MacArthur Asia Security Initiative, February 2015.

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7 “Testing the Club Culture of the BRICS: The Evolution of a New Development Bank,” (with Asif Farooq), working paper, Federalismi.it, No. 20, 29 October 2014.

8 ‘The Evolution of the G20,” in Melissa Conley Tyler and Nick Snelling, eds., G20: Words into Action Brisbane 2014 (Australian Institute of International Affairs and Faircount Media, Sydney: 2014).

9 Contribution to a Forum on the G20, "The G20 and Contested Global Governance: BRICS, Middle Powers and Small States," Caribbean Journal of International Relations & Diplomacy, 3, 1, 2015.

10 “With new expectations: German Foreign Policy is too complex to be left only to political insiders,” Bonn: German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE), The Current Column, 28 February 2014.

11 “The Group of Twenty: Input and Output Legitimacy, Reforms, and Agenda,” ADBI Working Paper, No. 372 (Tokyo: Asian Development Bank Institute, August 2012): 25.

11 “Beyond Activism: Emerging Models of Celebrity Diplomacy,” special feature on “Not the Usual Suspects: The Other Nonstate Actors,” World Policy Review, June 12, 2012.

12 “BRICS and IBSA: present and potential synergies” (with Ryan Hilimoniuk) special issue on “India and Latin America,” the Foreign Policy Research Centre, 3, 2012: 100-112,

13 “At the heart of global governance: achievements and future challenge,” Munk School/Newsdesk publication, G20: The Mexico Summit, June 2012, pp. 188-189,

Others: Keynote Addreses 18

1 Keynote presentation, “Re-examining the agency of the Global South: contestation over hub/parallel summit institutions”, The G20 @ 10: Benefits, limitations and the future of global club governance in turbulent times. 26 October 2018 Bonn.

2 Keynote, “Measuring Global Footprints Across the BRICS/MIKTA Cluster of ‘’Rising Countries”, 6th Blue Black Sea Congress, 24 September 2018, Marmara University, Istanbul.

3 Closing Presentation: “Justin Trudeau and the Redefinition of the “Celebrity Politician”, Celebration of the academic life of John English, Festschrift People, Politics, and Purpose: Biography and the Structure(s) of Canada since 1939, Trinity College University of Toronto 17 May 2018

4 “The Agency of the Global South: Struggles over Institutional Inclusion/Exclusion”, Keynote presentation, for the conference, The ‘global South’ in the 21st century Rhetoric, political

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science realities and cooperation perspectives, 14 June, 2018. Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP), Berlin.

5 “Scenarios for international cooperation – perspectives of the territory performance,” Presentation to Event Mundo Gerais - International Law Center, Belo Horizonte, Brazil, October 24, 2017.

6 “The Disintermediation Dilemma and its Impact on Diplomacy”, Keynote address, Conference on the Future Foreign Service, under the auspices of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark, Copenhagen, 27 January 2017.

7 Keynote address, “The Contested World of Celebrity Diplomacy,” Popular Culture and World Politics Conference, BSIA, 11 November 2016.

8 The Ascendancy of Informalism in World Politics, Global Governance Meets Geo-Politics, invited presentation, CPG 7th Annual International Conference, The great Game re-loaded: Order and Disorder in Geopolitics and Global Governance, Bangkok, Thailand, 14 October, 2016.

9 Keynote address, “The Ascendancy of Informalism in Global Governance: Implications for the UN, the Global South, and Middle Powers,” Istanbul Security Conference 2015, “UN at 70 and Global Governance,” Marmara University, December 4, 2015.

10 Keynote address, “The Ascendancy of Informalism in Global Politics,” Associação Brasileira de Relações Internacionais, 5º Encontro Nacional, Belo Horizonte, no campus Coração Eucarístico da PUC Minas, July 29, 2015.

11 “The Contested Nature of the ‘Afterlives’ of Former Leaders.” Eighth Coverdell Chair Public Policy Colloquium Lecture, Georgia College, Milledgeville, April 20, 2015.

12 Keynote addresses, “MIKTA,” the 26th Reunion of Mexico’s Ambassadors and Consul Generals, Mexico City, January 2015.

13 8th Käte Hamburger Lecture, "The Rise of Informal Summitry Implications for Global Governance,” Duisburg, Germany, April 2014.

14 Evening Public Seminar, "India and the Search for Fairness in Global Governance: “Catching up” with Formal Organizations Versus Adapting to Informalism," at an International Symposium, “Towards a Desirable Future for India in an Increasingly Globalised Society," Organized by the Institute for Human Development (IHD), India International Centre, New Delhi. March 2014.

15 Concluding Session, BPC-GIGA Conference on Rising Powers and Contested Orders in the Multipolar System, Rio de Janeiro, September 2013.

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16 Keynote address. FROM A-LISTER TO AID WORKER: CELEBRITY DIPLOMACY (with Israel Idonije, Defensive Lineman, Chicago Bears, and Founder, The Israel Idonije Foundation), Chicago Council on Global Affairs, March 2013.

17 Special public lecture, “Winners and losers from the Crisis: on financial prudence and the reconfiguration of generosity,” the German Development Institute (DIE) in Bonn Germany, July 2012.

18 Speaking tour sponsored by the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, “The G20 after the Los Cabos Summit,” Berlin and Brussels, June 2012.

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

DRAKE, Anna, assistant professor, tenure-track Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Political Studies, Queen’s University, Canada, 2009 M.A. Political Science and Cultural, Social and Political Thought, University of Victoria, Canada, 2003 B.A. Political Science and History (Honours), University of Waterloo, Canada, 2001 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2015- Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2012-14 Assistant Professor (definite term), Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2012 Sessional Lecturer, Department of Political Science, University of Victoria 2010-12 Researcher, Environment and Trade in a World of Interdependence (ENTWINED), International Institute for Sustainable Development (ISSD), “Accountability in Global Governance” project. 2010-12 Affiliate, Centre for Studies on Democracy and Diversity, Queen’s University d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

Member, Graduate Committee. Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo, July 2012-present.

Faculty Advisor for the Annual Political Science Graduate Student Conference, 2011-present.

Faculty Advisor for the Political Science Graduate Student Conference Inquiry & Insight, 2011- present.

Member, Outreach Committee, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo, September 2017-2018. f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 9 M.A.

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In progress: 1 M.A.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

Jamie Vinken (MA), “A Critical Discourse Analysis of the Representation of Women in Canadian Armed Forces Policies and its Connection to Sexual Assault.” Sept. 2016-Aug. 2017. (Thesis)

Gwyneth Bergman (MA), “Manifesting Belief in Canadian Law: What is ‘Freedom of Conscience’?” Sept. 2015- Aug. 2016, (Thesis)

Reshem Khan (MA), “Progress or the Status Quo? Systems-Thinking and Targeted Practice in Development.” Sept. 2015-Sept. 2016, (Thesis)

John MacLachlan (MA). “European Gender Roles and the Case of the Russian Outlier.” Sept. 2015-May 2016.

Danny Holmes, (MA), Is Bosnia Ready for Reconciliation? Peace Education in the Aftermath of the “Bosnian Spring.” Sept. 2014-Aug. 2015, (Major Research Paper)

Chelsea Winn (MA), “The Postmemory Generation in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Challenging Ethnic Divisions Via Third Space.” Sept. 2013-Aug. 2014, (Major Research Paper)

Ryan Phillips (MA), “The Proposed Keystone XL Pipeline: A Rawlsian Justification of Radical Environmental Protection Tactics.” Sept. 2013-Sept. 2014, (Major Research Paper)

Stephanie Grensewich (MA), “The Unlucky Inclusion of Luck Egalitarianism.” Sept. 2012- Aug. 2013, (Major Research Paper)

Chris Bordeleau (MA), “Making Truth Commissions Work: Evading the paradox of deliberative reconciliation.” Sept. 2012-Aug. 2013, (Major Research Paper) g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

Fall 2018, Democratic Theory and Practice Fall 2017, Democratic Theory and Practice Winter 2017 [Parental leave] Fall 2016 [Parental leave] Fall 2015, Democratic Theory and Practice Winter 2015, Justice and Gender Fall 2015, Democratic Theory and Practice Winter 2014, Justice and Gender

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Fall 2013, Democratic Theory and Practice Winter 2013, Justice and Gender Fall 2012, Democratic Theory and Practice

Directed Studies: Winter 2014, Political Theory Readings, Alex Winikoff (MA) h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books ……………………………………………………………………………………… .(1) - Chapters in books ...... 2 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 3 - Technical reports ...... 3 - Others ...... 26

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books:

Activism and Deliberative Democracy. Book manuscript with an advanced contract with UBC Press. The manuscript has undergone two rounds of peer review, and I am making (minor) revisions in response to one reviewer (the other accepts it enthusiastically as is).

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Chapters in Books: 1. “Secularism, Religious Diversity, and Democratic Politics.” 2013. Secular States and Religious Diversity. Eds. Bruce Berman, Rajeev Bhargava, and André Laliberté. Vancouver: UBC Press, 293-309. 2. “Normative Justifications for Democratic Design: The Case of Canadian Electoral Reform.” Forthcoming Spring/Summer 2019. Canada: The State of the Federation 2017: Canada at 150: Federalism and Democratic Renewal. Eds. Elizabeth Goodyear- Grant and Kyle Hanniman, 1-24. McGill-Queen’s University Press. (Co-authored with Margaret Moore: 50%).

Papers in refereed Journals:

“Deliberating and Learning Contentious Issues: How Divided Societies Represent Conflict in History Textbooks.” 2013. Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism 13 (3): 277-294. (Co-authored with Allison McCulloch: 50%)

Deliberative Consociationalism in Deeply Divided Societies.” 2011. Contemporary Political Theory 10 (3): 372-392. (Co-authored with Allison McCulloch: 50%)

“Group Difference and Institutional Accommodation: Deliberative Resources and Activist Challenges.” 2007. Les ateliers de l’éthique 2 (1): 41-46.

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings

Conference Papers

“Resistance and the Limits of an Inclusion Framework,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Regina, May 30, 2018.

“Deliberative Systems and the Obligation to Engage,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Regina, May 30, 2018.

“Democratic Engagement in Deliberative Systems,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Toronto, May 30, 2017.

“Deliberative Systems and Democratic Institutions,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Calgary, May 31, 2016.

“Deliberative Mini-publics and the Obligation to Outsiders,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Ottawa, June 3, 2015.

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“The Limits of Activist Participation in Deliberative Mini-publics,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, St. Catharines, May 27, 2014.

“Deliberative Mini-publics and Democratic Contestation,” paper presented to the Atlantic Provinces Political Studies Association Conference, Charlottetown, October 6, 2013.

“Deliberative Mini-publics and Democratic Contestation,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Victoria, June 4, 2013.

“Post-conflict States, Outsiders, and the ‘All-Affected Principle’” Co-authored paper (with Allison McCulloch), presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Victoria, June 4, 2013.

“Deliberating and Learning Contentious Issues: How Divided Societies Represent Conflict in History Textbooks,” Co-authored paper (with Allison McCulloch), presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Edmonton, June 13, 2012, and to the annual meeting of the International Political Science Association, Madrid, July 9, 2012.

“Deliberative Mini-publics and Contestation,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association, Portland, March 24, 2012.

“Problems of Democratic Legitimacy in Deliberative Mini-publics” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Waterloo, May 18, 2011.

“Power-Sharing, Outsiders, and the ‘All-Affected Principle’” Co-authored paper (with Allison McCulloch) presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Waterloo, May 16, 2011.

“Power-Sharing, Outsiders, and the ‘All-Affected Principle’,” Co-authored paper (with Allison McCulloch) presented to the annual meeting of the International Studies Association, Montréal, March 16, 2011.

“Inclusion and Representation in Deliberative Mini-publics,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Northeastern Political Science Association, Boston, November 11, 2010.

“Inclusion and Institutional Design in Deliberative Mini-publics,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Montréal, June 3, 2010. “Inclusion and Institutional Design in Deliberative Mini-publics,” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, April 23, 2010. “Inclusion, Voice, and Loudness: Institutional Design in Divided Societies” Co-authored paper (with Allison McCulloch) presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Ottawa, May 27-29, 2009.

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“Who Decides Who Decides? Lessons for Constitutional Design in New Democracies” Co- authored paper (with Allison McCulloch), presented to the Association for the Study of Nationalities Convention, New York, April 24, 2009. “Who Decides Who Decides? Lessons for Constitutional Design in New Democracies” Co- authored paper (with Allison McCulloch), presented to the Democratization and Ethnic Communities Workshop, Toronto, April 18, 2009. “Deep Value Difference and Consensus-Building: Confronting and Avoiding Conflict” paper presented to the Immigration, Minorities and Multiculturalism in Democracies conference, Montréal, 26 October, 2007.

“Pluralism and Protest: The Organization of Protest Groups and the Impact on Justice Claims” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Saskatoon, 1 June 2007.

“Dissent in Deliberative Democracy: Addressing the Challenge for Public Reason” paper presented to the annual meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Toronto, 1 June, 2006.

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

ESSELMENT, Anna Lennox, Associate Professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Political Science, University of Western Ontario, Canada, 2009 M.A. Political Science, Dalhousie University, Canada, 2000 B.A., Political Science, McMaster University, Canada, 1999 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2017-present Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2011-2017 Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2010-2011 Instructor, Department of Political Science, King’s University College, Western University 2009-2010 Limited Term Instructor, Department of Political Science, Wilfrid Laurier University (2009-2010)

d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2015-present Director, Canadian Study of Parliament Group 2012-present Management Board Member, Laurier Study of Public Opinion and Policy (LISPOP) f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 5 M.A. In progress: 2 M.A.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

Ph.D

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Monique Kampherm (PhD), Social Suasion: How Political Rhetoric is Shaped by Social Media (committee member) September 2017-

M.A.

Shields, Gordon (MA), Tax Choice in Canadian Municipal Government. September 2018-

Fielding, Dylan (MA), Negative Partisanship in Canada. September 2018-

Jnawali, Hari Har (MA), Politics of Fear: Unitary Bias of a Federal Design in Nepal. Sept 2017- August 2018 (MA thesis).

Brown, Christopher (MA), Canadian Constitutional Conventions and the Cabinet Manual. Sept. 2013-August 2014 (MRP)

Illankeswaran, Isaac (MA), #GenerationFlux: New Considerations of Youth Voter Turnout Decline in Canada. September 2012-August 2013 (MRP).

Chera, Satinder (MA), Placing Spending Limits on Third Parties during Provincial Elections in Ontario. September 2011-April 2013 (MRP)

Kamadia, Aly (MA), The 2008 American Election: Branding Barack Obama. September 2011 - April 2013 (MRP)

g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

Fall 2012 Canadian National Politics (PSCI 661) Fall 2013 Canadian National Politics (PSCI 661) Fall 2014 Canadian National Politics (PSCI 661) Fall 2015 Canadian National Politics (PSCI 661) Winter 2016 The Practice of Politics (PSCI 663)

h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science

2012-2014 Lois Claxton Humanities $3519 and Social Sciences Award

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 0 - Books edited ...... 1 - Chapters in books ...... 10 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 7 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 6

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books edited (*refereed):

1. *Permanent Campaigning in Canada ed. by Alex Marland, Thierry Giasson, and Anna Lennox Esselment, UBC Press, 2017, 362 pp.

a) *Alex Marland, Anna Lennox Esselment, and Thierry Giasson: Welcome to Non-Stop Campaigning (Chap.1) p.3-27

b) *Anna Lennox Esselment and Paul Wilson: Campaigning from the Centre (Chap.12) p. 222-240

c) *Anna Lennox Esselment, Alex Marland, and Thierry Giasson : Permanent Campaigning : Changing the Nature of Canadian Democracy (Chapt.16) p. 298-321

Chapters in Books (*indicates refereed):

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1.*Alex Marland and Anna Lennox Esselment. “Tips and Tactics for Securing Interviews with Political Elites”, in Marland, Alex, Thierry Giasson and Andrea Lawlor, (eds), Political Elites in Canada. (UBC Press, 2018) pp 29-50

2. *Anna Esselment. “Federal Feet in Provincial Pools: The Conservatives and Federalism in Canada”, in J.P. Lewis and Joanna Everitt (eds), The Blueprint: Conservative Parties and their Impact on Canadian Politics. (University of Toronto Press, 2017) pp 290-313

3. Anna Esselment. “An Inside Look at the Ontario Liberals in Power”, in Cheryl N. Collier and Jonathan Malloy (eds), The Politics of Ontario. (University of Toronto Press, 2016) pp 229-250

4. Anna Esselment.“Political Parties: Imperfect but Essential”, in Christopher G. Anderson and Rand Dyck (eds), Studying Politics: An Introduction to Political Science, 5th Edition. (Nelson Education Ltd., 2016) pp 304-331

5. Anna Esselment, Thierry Giasson, Andrea Lawlor, Alex Marland, and Tamara A. Small. “Editors’ Remarks: Recapping The 2015 Canadian Election”. In Alex Marland and Thierry Giasson (eds.). Canadian Election Analysis 2015: Communication, Strategy, and Democracy. (UBC Press, 2015) pp 1-3

6. Anna Esselment. “The Political Science Professor and the Media”, in Alex Marland and Thierry Giasson (eds.). Canadian Election Analysis 2015: Communication, Strategy, and Democracy. (UBC Press, 2015) pp 76-77.

7.* Anna Lennox Esselment. “The Governing Party and the Permanent Campaign.” In Thierry Giasson, Alex Marland, and Tamara Small (Eds.), Political Communication in Canada (24-38). (UBC Press, 2014) pp

8. Anna Esselment. “The Case for Effective Minority Government”, in Mark Charlton and Paul Barker (eds), Crosscurrents: Contemporary Political Issues (Nelson Education, 2013) pp 189- 202.

9. *Anna Esselment. “Market Orientation in a Minority Government: The Challenge of Product Delivery”, in Thierry Giasson, Jennifer Lees-Marshment and Alex Marland (eds), Political Marketing in Canada: The Practice of Political Marketing and how it is Changing Canadian Democracy (UBC Press, 2012) pp 123-138.

10. Anna Esselment. “Delivering in Government and Getting Results in Minorities and Coalitions”, in Jennifer Lees-Marshment (ed), Routledge Handbook of Political Marketing (Routledge, 2012) pp 303-315

Papers in refereed Journals:

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1. Alex Marland and Anna Lennox Esselment. “Negotiating with Gatekeepers to Get Interviews with Politicians: Qualitative Research Recruitment in a Digital Media Environment”. Qualitative Research. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1468794118803022, 2018.

2. Jay Roy and Anna Lennox Esselment. “Partisans without Parties: Party Systems as Partisan Inhibitors”. Canadian Journal of Political Science, 49: 21-39, 2016

3. Anna Lennox Esselment. “Designing Campaign Platforms.” The Informed Citizens’ Guide to Elections: Electioneering Based on the Rule of Law. Spec. issue of Journal of Parliamentary and Political Law. Pp, 2015.

4. Anna Lennox Esselment, Jennifer Lees-Marshment, and Alex Marland. “The Nature of Political Advising to Prime Ministers in Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United Kingdom”. Commonwealth and Comparative Politics. 52: 358-375, 2014.

5. Anna Lennox Esselment. “A Little Help from my Friends: The Partisan Factor and Intergovernmental Relations in Canada.” Publius: The Journal of Federalism. 43: 701-727, 2013.

6. Anna Lennox Esselment. “Birds of a Feather? The Role of Partisanship in the 2003 Ontario Liberal Transition.” Canadian Public Administration. 54: 465-486, 2011.

7. Anna Lennox Esselment. “Fighting Elections: Cross-Level Political Party Integration in Canada.” The Canadian Journal of Political Science. 43: 871-892, 2010.

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings

May 2017, Toronto. “Getting Interviews with Political Elites in the Digital Media Age: A Cross- National Study” (with Alex Marland). (Canadian Political Science Association).

June 2015, Ottawa. “Political Staff and the Permanent Campaign” (Canadian Political Science Association)

May 2015, Toronto. “Political Staff and the Permanent Campaign” (Canadian Association for Programs in Public Administration)

May 2014, St. Catherines. “From the Shadows and Into the Light? An Accountability Framework for Political Advisors” (Canadian Political Science Association)

October 2013, Charlottetown, PEI. “The Boat Only Floats with Watertight Compartments” (Atlantic Provinces Political Science Association)

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June 2012, Edmonton . “The Governing Party and the Permanent Campaign in Canada” (Canadian Political Science Association).

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME: HABIB, Jasmin

Associate Professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) EDUCATION Ph.D. Anthropology, McMaster University, 2000 M.A. International Peace Studies, Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame, 1993 B.A. (Honours), Sociology, Trent University, 1986 c) ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT HISTORY (last 7 years only)

2018 Associate Chair, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2016- Director, Global Engagement Seminar Program, University of Waterloo 2015- Coordinator, International Trade + Cultural Literacy Program, Faculty of Arts 2015-18 Editor in Chief & Editor of English Manuscripts, Anthropologica 2011- Associate Professor, Political Science, University of Waterloo 2010-11 Director, MA Public Issues Anthropology, U Waterloo & U Guelph 2010-11 Associate Chair, Graduate Affairs, Anthropology, University of Waterloo 2010 Associate Chair, Undergraduate Affairs, Anthropology, University of Waterloo 2008- Faculty Fellow, Balsillie School of International Affairs 2008- Cross-appointed, Department of History, University of Waterloo 2008- Graduate Faculty, University of Guelph 2008- Graduate Faculty, Wilfrid Laurier University 2012-13 Visiting Scholar, Anthropology, Columbia University, New York. 2012-13 Visiting Scholar, Sociology +Anthropology, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv. d) HONOURS AND AWARDS (last 7 years only)

2018 Outstanding Performance Award, Faculty of Arts, University of Waterloo 2018 Residential Research Fellow, International Forum for U.S. Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 2017 Faculty of Arts Service Award 2015 Teaching Stories Profile, Centre for Teaching Excellence, University of Waterloo 2012/13 Residential Research Fellow, International Forum for U.S. Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES

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2018- Undergraduate Affairs Committee, Political Science 2018- Department Tenure and Promotion Committee 2018- Co-Chair, Task Force, Duty of Care, Waterloo International 2018- CEPT Committee, University of Waterloo, appointed by FAUW 2018- Department Appointment Committee, Political Science 2017-18 Department Tenure and Promotion Committee, Political Science 2017- Research Committee, Indigenization Strategy, University of Waterloo 2017- Founding Co-Chair, Indigenous Peoples, Decolonization and the Global Research Cluster, Balsillie School for International Affairs 2017-18 Working Group, Waterloo International, appointed by FAUW 2017- PhD Design Committee, Political Science 2017-18 Academic Panel, President’s Committee on Student Mental Health 2017- Dean of Arts Honours and Awards Committee, Faculty of Arts 2017 PhD Program Design Committee, Political Science 2017 Graduate Awards Committee, Global Governance 2017 Admissions Committee, PhD, Global Governance 2015-17 Chair, Hagey Lectures Committee, University of Waterloo 2016- Academic Freedom and Tenure Committee Member, University of Waterloo 2016 Editorial Board Member, Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies 2015 Arts First Steering Committee, University of Waterloo 2015 Fall Break Task Force Member, University of Waterloo 2015 Hiring Committee, Academic & Freedom and Tenure and Policy Officer 2015 External Reviewer, Canada Research Chair Program 2015 Travel Planning and Approval Policy committee, Waterloo International 2014-17 Chair, Examinations and Standings, Standing Committee, Faculty of Arts 2014-18 Board of Directors, Balsillie School of International Affairs 2014 Undergraduate Affairs Group Member, University of Waterloo 2013-16 Chair, Research Committee, Balsillie School of International Affairs 2013-15 Admissions Committee, MA in Global Governance 2013 Search Committee, Associate Vice-President, Human Resources 2013-15 OCUFA Director, University of Waterloo 2013-15 Board Member, Faculty Association of University of Waterloo 2012-14 Communications Committee, Balsillie School of International Affairs 2012 Chair, Adjudication Panel, “International Studies”, Ontario Graduate Scholarships, Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities, Ontario. 2012 Administrative Operating Committee (AOC), American Anthropology Association 2011-12 Faculty Coordinator, Graduate Students Conference, Political Science 2011-12 Graduate Affairs Committee, Political Science 2011-13 Events + Programming Committee, Balsillie School of International Affairs 2011-14 Committee on Minority Issues in Anthropology, American Anthropology Association (AAA) (Appointed by President of the Association) 2011-14 Standing Committee on Examinations and Standings, Faculty of Arts

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2011-14 Arts Faculty Representative, Hagey Lecture Committee 2010- Editor, Cultural Spaces Series, University of Toronto Press 2010- Editorial Board, Reviews in Cultural Theory f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS

PhD COMPLETED: 0 IN PROGRESS: 5

Supervision

• Bukola Solomon, PhD Global Governance, University of Waterloo, 2018- • Nicole Georges, PhD Global Governance, University of Waterloo, 2018- • Nawroos Shibli, PhD Global Governance, University of Waterloo, 2018- • Cynthia Leal Garza (ABD) Global Governance, University of Waterloo, 2018- • Rowland Keshena (ABD), Sociology, University of Waterloo, 2014- (co-supervisor)

PhD Committees

COMPLETED: 4 IN PROGRESS: 3

• Tamara Lorenz, (ABD), Global Governance, Laurier, 2018- • Carleigh Cartwell, (ABD, Global Governance, Waterloo, 2018 • Maysa Al-Mustapha (ABD), Global Governance, Wilfrid Laurier, 2014- • Rebecca Granato, From Fellahin to Fatah: The Birth of Civil Society Amongst Palestinian Prisoners, History, Laurier, 2012-17 • Andrew McLaughlin, “The best covered war in history”: Intimate Perspectives from the Battlefields of Iraq, History, University of Waterloo. 2009- 17 • Amir Locker-Biletksy, Identity, Holidays, Symbols and Myths in Banki (Young Israeli Communist League) and Maki (Israeli Communist Party), 1919-1965, History, University of Guelph, 2008-13 • Christine Hillier, Unsettling the spatial imaginary: Settler narratives of re-cognizing Indigenous rights and relations to land, Faculty of Social Work, Laurier University, 2008- 2014

MA Committees

Supervisions:

COMPLETED: 24

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IN PROGRESS: 4

• Britney Lyn Raby, Global Governance • Devoniesh Heather Aransevia, Global Governance • Zeynep Arslangiray Yasar, Political Science • Karolina Victoria Szymczyk, Political Science • Laura Sanchez, Immigration Policy in France and Canada: The Case of the Roma as an • Ethnic Minority Political Science, 2018-19 • Stuart McGhie, Populism and Social Media, Political Science, 2017-18. • Chloe Wynne, Everest Inc.: Who holds power at the top of the world? A critical cartography of Nepal’s ecotourism sector in the context of the 2014 Sherpa guide strike, Global Governance, 2017-18 • Dani Marcheva, Conceptualizing Energy Poverty in Central and Eastern Europe after the End of the Cold War: Intersections between Soviet Legacies and the Global Neoliberal Order, Global Governance, 2017 • Emilie Turner, From the Ground-Up: A Look at the Trajectory of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas, Global Governance, 2017 • Sebastian Murdoch-Gibson, Humanitarian Sovereignty and the Syrian Civil War, Global Governance, 2017 • Nikita Shah, Threads of Migration: A Decolonial Unravelling of British Kenyan Asian Identity, Belonging and Citizenship, Global Governance, 2015-17 • Marlena Flick, What is Meaningful Work and Who Gets it? Towards improved understanding and evaluation of equality and access to meaningful work in pluralist contexts, Political Science, 2015-17 • Aramide Odutayo, Expulsion and Emplacement: A Critical Study of the Lives of (Dharavi) Settlers, Global Governance, 2016 • Lorna Jantzen, Investigating the Canadian Immigration Selection System: Are Global Economic Principal Applicants with a STEM Education Under-Employed within the Canadian Labour Force? Political Science, 2016-18 • Nicole Georges, Guantánamo Bay as Imperial Ruin, Global Governance, 2016 • Michael Opatowski, The US-Saudi-Yemeni Connection: Methodological Nationalism, Orientalism and the 'Failed State', Global Governance, 2016 • Stacey Haugen, Engendering Conflict and Post-Conflict Rebuilding: A Critical Analysis of the Roles and Potential of NGO Involvement, Global Governance, 2016 • Lee Shan Tse, Navigating the Borderland(s) of Southeast Asian Border Towns Located in Economic Growth Corridors – Critical Perspectives from the Borders of Mae Sot, Global Governance, 2016 • Ognjen Oroz, Serbian Remittances in the 21st Century: Examining the Politico-Economic Forces and Underlying Social Structures, Global Governance, 2014-16 • Saba Husain, Countering Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism In Canada: A Root Cause Approach, Political Science, 2014-15 • Betina Borova, Another discursive sleight of hand: Hiding the roots of expulsion in the agential environmental migrant, Global Governance, 2015-17

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• Joelle Charboneau, The United Nation’s Humanitarian Education Strategy New Problems with an Integrated Approach - A Case Study of Lebanon, Global Governance, 2014-15 • Nawroos Shibli, “They Hate Us for Our Freedom:” [Mis]Representations of Islam in Western Media A Discourse Analysis, Global Governance, , 2014-15 • Jaclynn Chiodini, They Call it ‘Development’: Neoliberal Imaginaries and the Commodification of Nature, Global Governance, 2014-15 • Aaron Taylor Francis, Political Determinants and Representations of Nigerian Criminality in China, Political Science, 2013-15 • Sakhi Naimpoor, The Effects of Geopolitical and Cultural Complexities on Security Building Efforts in Afghanistan: An Analysis into Central Asian Security, Political Science, 2013-14 • Aracy Selvakumar, On the role of international intervention in human rights crises in the case of stateless refugees: The Rohingya in Burma/Myanmar and Bangladesh, Political Science. 2013-2016 • Taryn Husband, Widowhood and Global Social Policy Post-conflict. Global Governance, 2011-13 (co-supervisor)

READER:

COMPLETED: 14 IN PROGRESS: 0

• Michael Fleet, Global Governance, A Complexity Approach to Understanding a Society and its Discontents, Global Governance, 2017 • Stephan Jovanovic, Ruptures in Canada’s Nationalist Narrative: Situating Toronto’s Former- Yugoslav Immigrants in the Indigenous-Settler Context, Public Issues Anthropology, 2017 • Zahra Hussain Rizvi, Problematizing the Homogenous Muslim in America, Political Science, 2017 • Yuet Chan, Living as a Self-sufficient Second-class Citizen: Chinese International Undergraduate Students’ Journey to Permanent Residency in Canada, Public Issues Anthropology, 2017-18. • Rachel Beals, PolitiReform, Risk, and Rural Migrants: A Case Study of Shenzhen’s Healthcare System and its Impact on Socioeconomic Risk for Chinese Migrants, Political Science, 2016 • Alysa Devers, A Comparison of Alberta and Ontario; who is incorporating Indigenous content better within its high school curriculum? Political Science, 2016 • Ramina Ghassemi, How Successful is Foreign Aid?:The Gaps between Aid Organizations and Recipient Countries, Global Governance, 2014-16 • Katie Dyer, Understanding how Terrorism and Police Powers Courses are Being Incorporated in Higher Education in Ontario, Political Science, 2014-15 • Aisha Shibli, Unintended Consequences: A Political Legacy of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples and the Idle No More Movement, Political Science 2014-15 • Jonathan Diab, Exclusions to Credibility: Gay Men Seeking Refugee Status in a Hetero- normative System, Global Governance, 2014-15

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• Kara Totze, Ineffective Security Institutions Giving Rise to Warlordism: The Case of Akhmad & Ramzan Kadyrov in Chechnya, Political Science. 2013- 14 • Chelsea Winn, Where Consociationalism Falls Short: Fostering a Sustainable Peace in Bosnia through Grassroots Reconciliation, Political Science, 2013-14 • Amanda Sadowski, Diaspora Activism and the Arab Spring, Political Science. 2013-17 • Lu Ma, Comparing Japanese and Canadian Refugee Policies, Political Science, 2012-13

UNDERGRADUATE THESIS/HONOURS ESSAYS SUPERVISIONS

IN PROGRESS: 1 COMPLETED: 5

• Brooklyn Lester, Children, Art + Music Therapy in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, International Development Studies, Faculty of Environment, 2018- • Erin Yantzi, Embodying Refusal: Resistance, Pathologicalization And Mental Health Exemption in the IDF, Anthropology, 2017-18. • Christabel Polacco, Nurturing the Seeds of Conflict: An Analysis of the Effects of Identity Narratives on Israeli and Palestinian Youth Perspectives of Peace, Political Science, 2016-17. • Lindy Van Vliet, Making the Invisible Canadian-Canadian Visible: An Examination of the Federal Government’s Influence on the Dominant Identity in Canada, Political Science, 2014-15. • Zainab Ramahi, Multiplex Identities: Confronting Intertwined Hierarchies of Knowledge, Power, and Place, Knowledge Integration, 2014-15 • Marcie Loghren, Security and Arctic Relocations, Political Science, 2013-14

EXTERNAL EXAMINATIONS

PhD - External Examiner

• Gabrilla Djerrahian (PhD) Black Matters: young Ethiopian Jews and Race in Israel, Anthropology. McGill University. May 2014

PhD - Internal/External Examiner

• Emily Milne (PhD) Renegotiating family-school relationships among Aboriginal Peoples in southern Ontario, Sociology and Legal Studies, September 2015 • Fadi Kayal (PhD) Nostalgie et messages revolutionnaires chez Amin Maalouf, French Language and Literature, University of Waterloo, January 2015 • Kirk Goodlet (PhD In the Shadow of the Sea: the Destruction and Recovery of Zeeland, the Netherlands, 1940-1948, History, University of Waterloo, August 2014 • Jonathan Crossen (PhD) Decolonization, Indigenous Internationalism, and the World Council of Indigenous Peoples, History. University of Waterloo, May 2014

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• Luke Stewart (PhD) A New Kind Of War: The Nuremburg Principles And the Vietnam War, 1964-1968, History, University Of Waterloo. May 2014

MA - External Examiner

• Amrit Kaur Phull (Masters of Architecture) Hunting For: Lessons on Architecture in Cree Territory, School of Architecture, University of Waterloo, 2015. g) GRADUATE COURSES

2019 GG701 Methods Course, PhD Global Governance, Core course 2018 GG701 Methods Course, PhD Global Governance, Core course 2017 GG600 Globalization and Global Governance, MA Global Governance, Core Course 2016 GG600 Globalization and Global Governance, MA Global Governance, Core Course 2015 GG600 Globalization and Global Governance, MA Global Governance, Core Course 2011 ANTH 614 Qualitative Methods, Core Course 2012 ANTH 608 Anthropological Theory, Core Course

DIRECTED STUDIES

2019 GG649 Tracing Empire (Nicole Georges) 2016 GG649 Mediating Conflict in Middle East: Ethnographic Approaches (Michael Opatowski) 2016 GG649 Political Ethnography and Studying De-coloniality (Lee Shan Tse) 2015 PSCI685 Indigeneity and Well-Being (Alysa Devers) 2015 GG649 Statelessness and Palestinian Refugees (Maissa Al-Mustapha) 2014 GG649 Globalization, Transnationalism and Justice Tourism (Jessica Pietryszyn) 2014 PSCI685 Nigerians in China: Exploring a Political Ethnographic Approach (Aaron Francis) 2014 PSCI685 Conflict and Culture in Afghanistan (Sakhi Naimpoor)

PhD Comprehensive Examinations

• Carleigh Cartmell, Global Governance Exam, Spring 2018. • Roger Boyd, Global Governance Exam, Spring 2018. • Tamara Lorinz, Global Governance Exam, Spring 2018. • Ali Hosseini, Global Governance Exam, Spring 2018. • Allison Petrozziello, Global Governance Exam, Spring 2018. • Nisar Chatta, Global Governance Exam, Spring 2018. • Melsen Babe, Global Governance Exam, Spring 2018.

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• Cynthia Geal, Global Governance Exam, Spring 2018. • Scott Morton Ninomiya, Global Governance Exam, Spring 2018. • Rowland Robinson, Social Equity Exam, Sociology, 2016. h) RESEARCH, WORKSHOP & TRAVEL FUNDING

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2018 SSHRC / CRSH C $ 37,517 Research + Film Production Co-applicant with Frederic Laugrand

2018 IDRC C $ 15,000 CARE Canada O $ 10,000 Research Supervisor/collaborator*

2018 IFUSS O $ 5,000 Research + Travel Principal Investigator

2017 IFUSS O $ 2,000 Conference Travel Principal Investigator

2016 Waswanipi First Nation G $190, 560 Research + Publication Co-PI

2016 SSHRC C $199,062 Research Principal Investigator

2016 SSHRC C $ 37,330 Research + Film Production Collaborator with Frederic Laugrand

2013 International Forum for U.S. Studies O $ 5,500 Research Principal Investigator

2012 International Forum for U.S. Studies O $ 5,500 Research + Travel

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Principal Investigator 2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

2015 Balsillie School of International Affairs Workshop Grant $ 8,500 Principal Investigator

2015 Canada Research Chair in Human Rights SSHRC Grant, Laurier $ 8,500

2013 Watson Institute, Brown University $ 7,884 Workshop Grant Co-PI with Cetta Mainwaring

2013 UW/International Research Partnership $ 7, 884 Workshop Grant Co-PI, with Cetta Mainwaring

2012 Robert Harding Award UW/SSHRC $ 3,400 Research i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 2 - Edited volumes (books, journals) ...... 2 - Chapters in books ...... 9 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 13 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings……………………………………………….57 - Technical reports ...... 0 - Abstracts and/or papers read………………………………………………………………..60 - Others (workshops presented) ...... 8 book reviews ...... 174 films …………………………………………………………………………………………….23 media ……………………………………………………………………………………37 guest lectures

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2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

1. 2004. Israel, Diaspora and the Routes of National Belonging. (University of Toronto Press). 2. Forthcoming: Second edition, Israel, Diaspora and the Routes of National Belonging. (University of Toronto Press).

Edited Volumes (books, journals):

1. 2018. Special Issue: Who Shares the Land: Algonquian Territoriality and Land Governance.” Editors, Melanie Chaplier, Jasmin Habib and Colin Scott, Anthropologica. volume 60, no. 1, Pp. 1 to 166. 2. 2017. Virginia Dominguez and Jasmin Habib, Editors, America Observed: International Anthropology of the U.S., Berghan Publishers, 285 pp.

Chapters in Books:

1. 2018. “The Political Economy of Donald J. Trump” with Michael Howard, In J. Kowalski (ed), Reading Donald Trump: A Parallax View of the Campaign and Early Presidency, Evolving American Presidency Series. Palgrave MacMillan, pp. 103-125. 2. 2017. with Virginia Dominguez, “Introduction: Can the US Be “Othered” Usefully? On an International Anthropology of the United States”. In Virginia Dominguez and Jasmin Habib, Editors, America Observed: On an International Anthropology of the United States. Berghan Books, pp. 1-28. 3. 2017. “Is It Un-American to Be Critical of Israel?: Criticism and Fear in the U.S. Context.” In V. Dominguez and Jasmin Habib (eds.), America Observed: On an International Anthropology of the United States. Berghan Books, Pp. 4. 2013. “On the Matter of Return: Autoethnographic Reflections,” in Fran Markowitz (ed), Ethnographic Encounters in Israel, University of Indiana Press, Pp. ??? 5. Property Rites: Narrating Palestinian Presence.” In Property Rights Contestation and Autonomy, Eds. William Coleman and Scott Prudham. University of British Columbia Press, Pp. ?? 2011.

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. 2018. “Documenting Presence” in Who Shares the Land: Algonquian Territoriality and Land Governance.” Edited by Melanie Chaplier, Jasmin Habib, and Colin Scott. Anthropologica. 60 (1): 133-148. 2. 2018. “Wall Art and the Presence of Absence,” Review of International American Studies RIAS. Spring–Summer 11(1): 175-189

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3. 2018. with Amir Locker-Biletzki. “Hama ve nehederet (Hot and Wonderful): Home, Belonging, and the Image of the Yored in Israeli Pop Music.” Shofar, Interdisciplinary Journal for Jewish Studies. 36 (1): 1–28. 4. 2017. "On the Production of Knowledge and the Anthropology of Tourism." American Anthropologist. December. 119: 741–744. 5. 2017. Northern Affairs and Relations: An Interview with Gunther Abrahamson, conducted by Jasmin Habib with commentary by Harvey Feit, Anthropologica, 59(2): 89-100. 6. 2014. Encounters and the Diasporic Arts of Africa. Anthropologica. 56 (????): 229- 237. 7. 2013. Boyce Richardson: Reflections on Activism and Filmmaking Among the Cree. Anthropologica, 55 (??): 211-218. 8. 2012. An Accidental Editor: An interview with Andrew P. Lyons. Anthropologica, 53(2):335-48. 9. 2012. Some Remarks on a New Series and on Bruner’s ‘Remembering My Jewish Father.’ Anthropologica. 52 (??):189-90.

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings

1. “On Israel's "Transparency Law" and Civil Society-State Relations” in Investigating accountability: practices and performances [LAW NET] session. Annual Meetings the European Association for Social Anthropology, Stockholm, Sweden, July, 2018 2. “The Political Economy of Donald J. Trump”, Canadian Political Science Association, University of Regina, Regina, June, 2018 3. Walls that build bridges to peace. International American Studies Association, Texas A+M at Laredo,Texas, July, 2017 4. “Social Justice Research in Israel/Palestine: Ethnographic Perspectives”, CASCA/IUAES, University of Ottawa, May, 2017. 5. An ‘Other’ Within? On Israel’s “Transparency Law” and Civil Society-State Relations in The ‘Other’ in Israel: Analyzing Social, Political and Educational Organisations in Israel’s Democracy, Canadian Political Science Association, Ryerson University, Toronto, June, 2017. 6. “The future of publishing Anthropologica: promises and challenges” for the Roundtable Discussion On The Future Of Academic Journals In Anthropology. Wenner Gren Foundation (Preeminent Foundation For Anthropological Research And Publications). November 2016. 7. “Israeli Emigres’ perspectives on Home,” Popular Culture and World Politics Conference. Balsillie School of International Affairs, November 2016. 8. “Re/Markable Landscapes: Re-Membering Israel as Palestine,” Middle East Studies Association, Denver, Colorado, November 2015. 9. Re/Markable Landscapes: Re-Membering Israel as Palestine”, Canadian Anthropology Society Annual Meetings, University of Laval, Quebec City, May 2015. 10. “The future of publishing Anthropologica: promises and challenges” for the Roundtable Discussion On The Future Of Academic Journals In Anthropology. Organised by the

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President of the Wenner Gren Foundation (Preeminent Foundation For Anthropological Research And Publications). November 2016. 11. “Two Songs and an Image of Home” with Amir Locker- Blitezky, European Association of Israel Studies, School for Oriental and African Studies, London, England, June 2014. 12. “US Jewish Peace Activism and the Israel-Palestine conflict.” Meetings of the International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Tokyo, Japan, May 2014. 13. “On Difference and (States of) Belonging,” International Studies Association Annual Meetings, Toronto, March 2014. 14. Discussant, “Everyday Israel: States of Contention, Existential States.” American Anthropology Association Annual Meetings, Chicago, November 2013. 15. “Jewish Peace and Social Justice Activists and American Identity,” in “America Observed,” Canadian Association for American Studies Annual Meetings, Waterloo, October 2013. 16. “Practitioners’ and Advisors’ Reflections” in “A Dialogue on the Histories, Practices and Relations of Indigenous Governance in the Regions Around James Bay.” Peace and Justice Association Annual Meetings, October 2013. 17. “Practitioners’ and Advisors’ Reflections” in “A Dialogue on the Histories, Practices and Relations of Indigenous Governance in the Regions Around James Bay.” Canadian Anthropology Society Annual Meetings, May 2013. 18. Discussant, Mobility and Minoritizing Identities Across Borders and Within Boundaries, Invited Session, American Anthropology Association Annual Meetings, San Francisco, November 2012. 19. “Vulnerable Subjects, Jewish Activism and the Israel/Palestine Conflict.” Association for Israel Studies Annual Meetings, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel. June 2012. 20. Discussant, Session on Pilgrimage. American Anthropological Association Annual Meetings, Montreal. November 2012. 21. Chair and Participant, “Roundtable on Cree Histories and Anthropologies,” Annual Meetings of the American Anthropology Association, Montreal, November 2011. 22. “On the Matter of Return.” Mediterranean Network of the European Association for Social Anthropologists, Co'Foscari University, Venice, Italy, October 2011. 23. “A future-past for Israel/Palestine: Diaspora Palestinian Memories and their Implications for the Future.” Association for Israel Studies, Brandeis University, June 2011.

Guest Lectures/Other Conference Duties (selected)

1. Guest lecture, “1948 to 1967: Critical years in the Middle East,” Middle East Politics, University of Waterloo, May, 2018. 2. Organiser, with Jane Desmond, “The ‘Other’ Border” Symposium, International Forum for US Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, March. 2018. 3. Discussant, “On Migrant Memories and the Making of Citizenship,” Unsettling Canada Workshop, York University, November 2017. 1. Editors Roundtable, American Anthropology Association, Washington, November, 2017.

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2. Chair and Discussant. The ‘Other’ in Israel: Analyzing Social, Political and Educational Organisations in Israel’s Democracy, Canadian Political Science Association, Ryerson University, Toronto, June, 2017. 3. Editors Discuss Implications of Open Source Publishing, Canadian Association of Learned Journals Annual Meetings, Ryerson University, Toronto, June, 2017. 4. Guest Lecture, Israel and Palestine, Middle East Politics, Laurier University, May 2017. 5. Coordinator, Publications Workshops, International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences Conference Organisation /Joint With CASCA, Ottawa, May, 2017. 6. Moderator, John Ralston Saul, Author Event sponsored by The University Bookstore and The Waterloo Aboriginal Education Centre, Hagey Hall, January, 2017. 7. Organiser and Chair, Roundtable, “Social Justice Research in Israel/Palestine: Ethnographic Perspectives”, CASCA/IUAES, University of Ottawa, May, 2017. 8. Coordinator, Publications Workshops, International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences Conference Organisation /Joint With CASCA, Ottawa. May 2017. 9. Moderator, John Ralston Saul, Author Event Sponsored By The University Bookstore And The Waterloo Aboriginal Education Centre, Hagey Hall, January 2017. 10. Co-organizer and Co-Chair, (with Simon Dalby), Popular Culture and World Politics (International Conference), Balsillie School of International Affairs, November 2016. 11. “Israeli Emigres’ perspectives on Home,” Popular Culture and World Politics Conference. Balsillie School of International Affairs, November 2016. 12. “Performance, reflexivity and the diplomatic self. A perspective on frontline diplomacy from anthropology.” The Changing Practices of Frontline Diplomacy Symposia. Balsillie School of International Affairs. June 27, 2016. 13. Panelist, Israel and Palestine, Current Politics of the Middle East conference, Balsilie School of International Affairs, June 8, 2016. 14. Co-organiser, with Audra Mitchell, Workshop on Mass Extinction: Indigenous Perspectives, Balsillie School of International Affairs, June 1-3, 2016. 15. Coordinator, “Getting It Published” Presentation and Workshop. Joint Session of the Canadian Anthropology Society (CASCA) and the Society For Anthropology of North America (SANA) Annual Meetings, Dalhousie University, May 2016. 16. He-for-She Roundtable, By Invitation. Office of Vice-President Human Resources, University of Waterloo + President’s Advisor on Women’s Issues, December 2015. 17. Discussant, “Migrant Resistance: Remaking Citizenship at the Margins,” Governing Migration from the Margins Conference, Balsillie School of International Affairs, November 2015. 18. Panelist, On the Federal Election, Women’s Centre, University of Waterloo, October 2015. 19. Panelist, On Syrian Refugee Crisis, Women of Waterloo Roundtable, October 2015. 20. Organiser and chair, “Israeli Emigres, Human Rights and the Israel/Palestine Conflict,” Introduction to the Workshop on Israeli Emigres, Human Rights and the Israel/Palestine Conflict, Balsillie School of International Affairs, Waterloo. June 2015.

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21. Moderator/Discussant, “Addressing The Gap: Between Western Science, Indigenous Knowledge And Practice,” Groundswell Conference On Groundwater Innovation, University Of Guelph, June 17, 2014. 22. Discussant, Through Egyptian Eyes book workshop, Balsillie School of International Affairs, May 2014. 23. Discussant, Subjects of Equality and Deservedness, Society for North American Anthropology, John Jay College, New York, April 2015. 24. University delegate, “Future U: Creating The Universities We Want,” OCUFA, Toronto, February 2014. 25. University delegate, workshop on Workplace Harassment Investigations, OCUFA, Toronto, January 2014. 26. “Is Israel An Apartheid State: The Debate”. Sponsored by the Canada Research Chair on Human Rights, Wilfrid Laurier University, November 2013. 27. “Fieldwork: Ethics and Responsibilities”, Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign. February 2013. 28. “Edward Said’s Oevre and Anthropology,” Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign. October 2012. 29. “Ethics and the unexpected in fieldwork,” Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign. October 2012.

Non-refereed:

Media

1. 2018. A Communist is standing and singing… Since the establishment of the Communist Party in Israel, her music has combined Hebrew songs of the Land of Israel, Palestinian national songs and works associated with the international left. (my translation), Haaretz, Israel’s national newspaper, December 8, 2018. 2. Creating a Palestinian State. Australian Outlook. Australia Institute of International Affairs. 2015. Reprint: http://www.internationalaffairs.org.au/australian_outlook/creating-a-palestinian-state- 3/ 3. Creating a Palestinian State. Open Canada. http://opencanada.org/features/creating-a- palestinian-state/ June 8, 2015 4. CTV News, Israeli elections, consult, March 31, 2015 5. TVO The Agenda, Israeli elections consult, March 26, 2015 6. Curated photo exhibit by Waterloo photographer Mike Seto entitled “The Impermanent Valence” at Belmont Café in Kitchener 7. One state, two states, three… The Agenda, TV Ontario. December 2014 8. Gaza Ground War, CTV National News, July 2014 9. CBC Newsworld’s Power And Politics, July 2014 10. CTV’s Canada AM (July 6 And July 13, declined) 11. CTV’s National News (July 28 and August 5, declined) 12. Israel’s response, CTV News, August 2014

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13. TVO’s The Agenda (declined, February 15) 14. TVO, Consult, on Palestine, Palestinians, and peace talks, November 2013. 15. CBC Radio’s The Current, Consult, on peace talks in Israel, October 2013. 16. Organiser and Chair, “America Observed,” Canadian Association for American Studies Annual Meetings, Waterloo, ON, October 2013. 17. CBC Newsworld’s, Power and Politics, On Israel/peace talks, August 2013. 18. Organiser and Chair, “Practitioners’ and Advisors’ Reflections” in “A Dialogue on the Histories, Practices and Relations of Indigenous Governance in the Regions Around James Bay.” Canadian Anthropology Society, May 2013. 19. Panelist, “Preparing for the job interview”. Sponsored by Career Action Centre for the Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences, June 2012.

Book Reviews

1. 2017. Book Review of Amalia Saʾar, Economic Citizenship: Neoliberal Paradoxes of Empowerment. New York: Berghahn Books, 2016. In Review of Middle East Studies, August, 51 (2). Pp. 309-312. 2. “Citizenship Maneuvers Among Israel's Military 'Other.'” Review of Surrounded: Palestinian Soldiers in the Israel Military by Rhoda Kanaaneh. For H-Net. 2011.

Documentary Films Selected titles with release dates:

“Anthropologists in their Worlds: A Series” series films at: Anthropologie et Societies at https://www.anthropologie-societes.ant.ulaval.ca/les-possedes-et-leursmondes as well as on the Canadian Anthropology Society’s website at http://www.cas-sca.ca. Film production is partially supported by the SSHRC Connections Grants (2018 + 2016) with F. Laugrand, Laval University.

1. Françoise Morin. Livre 3. Les Shipibo-Conibo face à l’ethnocide et les Haïtiens en France. Madame Morin est professeure émérite, département d’anthropologie, Université Lyon II (France). 21 Décembre 2018. 2. David Turner. Film 8. Why being interested in the Other, and in a Non-Verbal Languages? Monsieur Turner est professeur retraité au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 20 Décembre 2018. 3. Alain Romaine. Livre 2. L'affirmation de l'Identité créole et du métissage ou... Monsieur Romaine est prêtre engagé et historien (Île Maurice). 19 Décembre 2018. 4. John Galaty. Film 7. Pastoralism as a Cultural System: the Case of the Maasai. Monsieur Galaty est professeur titulaire en anthropologie à l'Université McGill. 17 Décembre 2018. 5. Jean-Guy Goulet. Livre 10. La transformation de l'anthropologue sur le terrain et... Monsieur Goulet est professeur retraité en sciences humaines de l'Université Saint- Paul. 14 Décembre 2018. 6. Guy Lanoue. Livre 2. Les Athapascans et le cas des Sekani de la Colombie-Britannique. Monsieur Lanoue est professeur au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 12 Décembre 2018.

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7. Regna Darnell. Film 8. At the University of Western Ontario: Lands, Languages and Identity. Madame Darnell est professeure au département d'anthropologie de l'Université Western Ontario. 11 Décembre 2018. 8. Mondher Kilani. Livre 2. Partir, et sortir de l’évolutionnisme et de l’exotisme. Monsieur Kilani est professeur honoraire, Faculté des sciences sociales et politiques de l'Université de Lausanne (Suisse). 09 Décembre 2018. 9. Richard B. Lee. Film 9. Being an Anthropologist in the XXth Century and Today. Monsieur Lee est professeur émérite, département d’anthropologie, Université de Toronto. 06 Décembre 2018. 10. Jean-Claude Véder. Livre 1. « Ce métissage qui m'habite »: enfance et vocation à la prêtrise. Monsieur Véder est prêtre engagé et anthropologue, directeur de l'ICJM (Île Maurice). 05 Décembre 2018. 11. Mathias Guenther. Film 6. Rock Art and Bushmen Identity Politics. Monsieur Guenther est professeur émérite, département d’anthropologie, Université Wilfrid Laurier. 04 Décembre 2018. 12. Françoise Morin. Livre 2. Premiers terrains chez les Shipibo-Conibo : missions chrétiennes,… Madame Morin est professeure émérite, département d’anthropologie, Université Lyon II (France). 03 Décembre 2018. 13. Asen Balikci. Livre 16. Le film ethnographique (...) sous le patronage de M. Mead. Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 30 Novembre 2018. 14. Michael Asch. Film 7. Aboriginal Peoples and their Relationships to the State in Canada. Michael Asch is retired professor from Alberta and Victoria Universities. 29 Novembre 2018. 15. Claude Chapdelaine. Livre 1. Enfance et découverte de l'archéologie... Monsieur Chapdelaine est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 28 Novembre 2018. 16. Deirdre Meintel. Livre 6. Étudier l’expérience religieuse et susciter la curiosité (...) Madame Meintel est professeure titulaire de l’Université de Montréal. 27 Novembre 2018. 17. Jean-Maurice Labour. Livre 1. « Comment je suis devenu prêtre et vicaire général à Maurice » ... Jean-Maurice Labour est prêtre engagé et vicaire général (Île Maurice). 26 Novembre 2018. 18. Harvey Feit. Film 6. Cree Hunters, Conflicting Views, James Bay Agreement and History 3/3. Monsieur Feit est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université McMaster. 22 Novembre 2018. 19. Mondher Kilani. Livre 1. Le choix du regard anthropologique et du décentrement. Monsieur Kilani est professeur honoraire, Faculté des sciences sociales et politiques de l'Université de Lausanne (Suisse). 20 Novembre 2018. 20. Marie-Françoise Guédon. Livre 10. Matricultures, systèmes chamaniques et visions du monde. Madame Guédon est professeure retraitée de l’Université d’Ottawa. 19 Novembre 2018. 21. Guy Lanoue. Livre 1. Enfance et vocation pour l'anthropologie: entre le Canada et l'Italie. Monsieur Lanoue est professeur au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 15 Novembre 2018.

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22. Jean-Jacques Nattiez. Livre 10. Le travail de terrain du musicologue: l'étude d'une danse à (...). Monsieur Nattiez est professeur émérite de la faculté de musique de l'Université de Montréal. 14 Novembre 2018. 23. Pierrette Désy. Livre 6. Poésie, sensibilité et littérature amérindienne. Madame Pierrette Désy est professeure retraitée des départements de géographie et d’histoire de l’UQAM. 13 Novembre 2018. 24. Richard J. Preston. Film 8. Cree Conjuring Stories, Control, Power and Sorcery 2/2. Monsieur Preston est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université McMaster. 12 Novembre 2018. 25. Alain Romaine. Livre 1. « Celui qui avait la tête forte » ou comment je suis devenu prêtre… Monsieur Romaine est prêtre engagé, historien et anthropologue (Île Maurice). 11 Novembre 2018. 26. Regna Darnell. Film 7. The Study and the History of American Anthropology. Regna Darnell is Full Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Western Ontario. 07 Novembre 2018 27. Mike Singleton. Livre 17. Les pièges et les problèmes du développement : et après il y a quoi? Monsieur Singleton est professeur émérite d’anthropologie de l'Université catholique de Louvain (Belgique). 06 Novembre 2018. 28. Christopher G. Trott. Film 8. “The Story is Continuing, not Over”: Return to Arctic Bay. Monsieur Trott est Associate Professor, Department of Native Studies, University of Manitoba. 05 Novembre 2018. 29. David Turner. Film 7. Australian Aborigines... and Taking Distance from the University. Monsieur Turner est professeur retraité de l'Université de Toronto. 02 Novembre 2018. 30. Marie-Françoise Guédon. Livre 9. Professeure à l’U. d’Ottawa et à la recherche des sociétés (...). Madame Guédon est professeure retraitée de l'Université d'Ottawa. 01 Novembre 2018. 31. Asen Balikci. Livre 15. La fin de l’aventure afghane et le retour à l’Université de Montréal. Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 30 Octobre 2018. 32. Mathias Guenther. Film 5. Bushmen Societies and Animals: Hunters and Prey. Monsieur Guenther est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université Wilfrid Laurier. 29 Octobre 2018. 33. Margaret Lock. Film 6. Japan, a Modern Country?, and Beyond the Body. Madame Lock est professeure émérite au Department of Social Studies of Medicine, McGill University. 28 Octobre 2018. 34. Bernard Chapais. Livre 8. L’interdisciplinarité réelle est l’avenir de l’anthropologie. Monsieur Chapais est professeur titulaire au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 25 Octobre 2018. 35. Richard B. Lee. Film 8. Eleonor Leacock, Research with Hunters-Gatherers and the History of (...). Monsieur Lee est professeur émérite du département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 24 Octobre 2018. 36. Francine Saillant. Livre 8. Ce qui arrive à l’anthropologie et à ses objets (…) Madame Saillant est professeure émérite du département d'anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 23 Octobre 2018.

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37. Harvey Feit. Film 5. When Cree and Inuit Negotiate with the Federal and Provincial Governments. Monsieur Feit est professeur émérite au département d’anthropologie de l'Université McMaster. 23 Octobre 2018. 38. Robin Ridington. Film 6. The Animals among the Dane-Zaa. The Continuity of a Hunting Culture. Monsieur Ridington est professeur émérite au département d’anthropologie de UBC. 21 Octobre 2018. 39. Lucienne Strivay. Livre 12. La taxidermie et sa pratique, le trouble du vivant.... Madame Lucienne Strivay est professeure titulaire d’anthropologie de l’Université de Liège (Belgique). 18 Octobre 2018. 40. John Galaty. Film 5. Pastoral Systems, Land Tenure and the State. Monsieur Galty est professeur titulaire au département d'anthropologie de l'Université McGill. 17 Octobre 2018. 41. Jean-Guy Goulet. Livre 8. La vie sociale des textes. La réincarnation, (...) et les berdaches. Monsieur Goulet est professeur retraité en sciences humaines de l'Université Saint-Paul. 17 Octobre 2018. 42. Mike Singleton. Livre 16. L’anthropologie impliquée: sortir de l’impasse égologique et (...) Monsieur Singleton est professeur émérite d’anthropologie de l'Université catholique de Louvain (Belgique). 15 Octobre 2018. 43. Jim Freedman. Film 6. The World has changed. Anthropology, Development and Justice. Monsieur Freedman est consultant et professeur émérite de l'Université de Western Ontario. 14 Octobre 2018. 44. Michael Asch. Film 6. Dene Hunting Activities, Land Use and Political Activism. Monsieur Asch est professeur retraité de l'Université d'Alberta et de l'Université de Victoria. 11 Octobre 2018. 45. Gavin Smith. Film 6. Immediate Struggles, Spanish Republicans and the State of Anthropology (...). Monsieur Smith est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 09 Octobre 2018. 46. Richard J. Preston. Film 7. Cree Narratives and Conjuring Stories. Monsieur Preston est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l’Université McMaster. 04 Octobre 2018. 47. Marie-Françoise Guédon. Livre 8. L’interculturel, la différence et la spécificité culturelle. Madame Guédon est professeure retraitée de l’Université d’Ottawa. 03 Octobre 2018. 48. Asen Balikci. Livre 14. Loin des villes, filmer la vie des montagnards nomades de l’Afghanistan. Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 02 Octobre 2018. 49. Harvey Feit. Film 4. Cree Hunters, Environmental Issues and Governance. Monsieur Feit est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l’Université McMaster. 02 Octobre 2018. 50. Deirdre Meintel. Livre 5. Expériences avec les spiritualistes de Montréal et (...). Madame Meintel est professeure titulaire de l’Université de Montréal. 30 Septembre 2018. 51. Jean-Jacques Nattiez. Livre 11. La musique des Inuit du Canada. Monsieur Nattiez est professeur émérite de la faculté de musique de l'Université de Montréal. 28 Septembre 2018.

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52. David Turner. Film 6. Playing the Didgeridu and Aboriginal Music in Australia. Monsieur Turner est professeur retraité du Département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 27 Septembre 2018. 53. Mathias Guenther. Film 4. Folktales, Religion and the Romantization of the Bushmen. Monsieur Guenther est professeur émérite au département de d"anthropologie de l'Université Wilfrid Laurier. 23 Septembre 2018. 54. Richard B. Lee. Film 7. Film and Audio-Visual Projects with the !Kung San of the Kalahari. Monsieur Lee est professeur émérite au département de d"anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 19 Septembre 2018. 55. Margaret Lock. Film 5.Organ Transplants, Brain Death, Genetics and Genetic Testing in Japan. Madame Lock est professeure émérite au Department of Social Studies of Medicine, McGill University. 17 Septembre 2018. 56. Mike Singleton. Livre 15. Adieu à la mission et coopération en Belgique et au Sénégal. Monsieur Singleton est professeur émérite d’anthropologie de l'Université catholique de Louvain (Belgique). 17 Septembre 2018. 57. Robin Ridington. Film 5. A Narrative Ethnography with the Dane-Zaa. Ethnopoetics and Vision Quests. Robin Ridington is professor emeritus from UBC. 14 Septembre 2018. 58. Jean-Guy Goulet. Livre 7. "Nous t'enseignerons". Pouvoir et savoir ancestral des Dènès Tha. Monsieur Goulet est professeur retraité en sciences humaines de l'Université Saint-Paul. 13 Septembre 2018. 59. Pierrette Désy. Livre 4. L’étude des berdaches et des récits de captivité. Madame Pierrette Désy est professeure retraitée des départements de géographie et d’histoire de l’UQAM. 12 Septembre 2018. 60. John Galaty. Film 4. Pastoral Systems, Territorial Resources, and Change. Monsieur Galaty est professeur titulaire au département d’anthropologie de l'Université McGill. 11 Septembre 2018. 61. Asen Balikci. Livre 13. Des Balkans au monde inuit et le projet Macos. Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 10 Septembre 2018. 62. Lucienne Strivay. Livre 11. L’étude du castor et de sa vie sociale : de Buffon à Morgan... Madame Lucienne Strivay est professeure titulaire d’anthropologie de l’Université de Liège (Belgique). 07 Septembre 2018. 63. Jim Freedman. Film 5. Key issues in Development and Anthropology. Monsieur Freedman est consultant et professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l'Université Western. 06 Septembre 2018. 64. Raymond Massé. Livre 7. Anthropologie de l’éthique, philosophie et morale : des normes et…. Monsieur Massé est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 05 Septembre 2018. 65. Regna Darnell. Film 5. Cree Language, Multiculturalism in Alberta and Gambia. Madame Darnell est professeure au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Western Ontario. 04 Septembre 2018. 66. Michael Asch. Film 5. Drum Dances and Kinship among the Dene. Monsieur Asch est professeur retraité des universités d'Alberta et de Victoria. 03 Septembre 2018,

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67. Marie-Françoise Guédon. Livre 7. Professeure à UBC et rencontre des Gitskan et des Mosuo en Chine. Madame Guédon est professeure retraitée de l’Université d’Ottawa. 30 Août 2018. 68. Richard J. Preston. Film 6. Cosmology, Respect and Learning from the Animals in Cree Communities. Monsieur Preston est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université McMaster. 29 Août 2018. 69. Bernard Chapais. Livre 7. Les constances biologiques de la nature humaine... Monsieur Chapais est professeur titulaire au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 28 Août 2018. 70. Susan Rowley. Film 7. Colonial History, Place Names, Language and Repatriation issues in Canada. Susan Rowley est professeure à UBC et conservatrcice au Musée d'anthropologie (MOA) de Vancouver. 26 Août 2018. 71. Harvey Feit. Film 3. First Contacts, Fieldwork and Research with the Cree of Quebec. Harvey Feit est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie, Université McMaster. 24 Août 2018. 72. Bernard Saladin d'Anglure. Livre 20. De l’infra au supra-humain: mouvance du monde,… Monsieur Saladin d'Anglure est professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l’Université Laval. 23 Août 2018. 73. Gavin Smith. Film 5. Research on History and Memory in Spain and Politically Engaged Anthropology. Gavin Smith is professor emeritus, Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto. 22 Août 2018. 74. Deirdre Meintel. Livre 4. Recherches interdisciplinaires sur la diversité urbaine et la religion. Madame Meintel est professeure titulaire de l’Université de Montréal. 21 Août 2018. 75. David Turner. Film 5. “One phone call...”. Healing, Renunciation and Spiritual Experiences. David Turner is a retired professor from the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto. 20 Août 2018. 76. David Young. Film 5. The Mouse Woman: a Petroglyph Site from Gabriola Island (BC, Canada). David Young is professor emeritus, Department of Anthropology, University of Alberta. 17 Août 2018. 77. Christine Jourdan. Livre 4. Faire du terrain (...) et l’anthropologie comme rencontre. Madame Jourdan est professeure titulaire, département de sociologie et d’anthropologie, Université Concordia. 16 Août 2018. 78. Christopher G. Trott. Film 6. The Making of Men and Women among the Inuit and the Problem of (...). Monsieur Trott est Associate Professor, Department of Native Studies, University of Manitoba. 15 Août 2018. 79. Jean-Jacques Nattiez. Livre 9. (...) Constantin Brailoiu et critique de Claude Lévi-Strauss. Monsieur Nattiez est professeur émérite de la faculté de musique de l'Université de Montréal. 14 Août 2018. 80. Margaret Critchlow Rodman. Film 7: Social Isolation and Connexions: Holistic Centres, Utopia (...). Madame Critchlow Rodman est professeure émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université York. 13 Août 2018. 81. Mike Singleton. Livre 14. L’équivoque de l’expertise: avec les coptes d’Éthiopie. Monsieur Singleton est professeur émérite d’anthropologie de l'Université catholique de Louvain (Belgique). 09 Août 2018.

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82. Margaret Lock. Film 4. Research with Japanese Women on Menopause. Madame Lock est professeure émérite au Department of Social Studies of Medicine, U. McGill. 08 Août 2018. 83. John Barker. Film 7. Long-Term Fieldwork and Slow Research, Films and Texts in Papua (...) Monsieur Barker est professeur au département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Colombie-Britannique. 07 Août 2018. 84. Asen Balikci. Livre 12. Finalisation de la thèse à l’Université Columbia et collecte d’objets (...) Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 06 Août 2018. 85. Francine Saillant. Livre 6. Transcender les frontières et écouter. L’humanitaire et (...). Madame Saillant est professeure émérite du département d’anthropologie de l’Université Laval. 02 Août 2018. 86. Richard B. Lee. Film 6. Without a Truck. Working again with the !Kung San. Monsieur Lee est professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l’Université de Toronto. 01 Août 2018. 87. Jérôme Rousseau. Livre 13. Professeur-chercheur en France et au Québec (...). Monsieur Rousseau est professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l’Université McGill. 31 Juillet 2018. 88. Robin Ridington. Film 4. Oral Curation, Narrative Technology and Recording Dane-Zaa Stories. Monsieur Ridington est professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de UBC. 29 Juillet 2018. 89. Raymond Massé. Livre 6. Santé publique, respect des savoirs populaires et anthropologie de la santé. Monsieur Massé est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 27 Juillet 2018. 90. Regna Darnell. Film 4. Looking for a Job in Anthropology and Research with the Cree. Madame Darnell est professeure au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Western Ontario. 26 Juillet 2018. 91. Jean-Guy Goulet. Livre 6. Apprendre en marchant. Les Dènès Tha du nord-ouest de l'Alberta. Monsieur Goulet est professeur retraité en sciences humaines de l'Université Saint-Paul. 25 Juillet 2018. 92. John Galaty. Film 3. A Fascination for the Field, the Maasai and their Ritual System. Monsieur Galaty est professeur au département d'anthropologie de l’Université McGill. 15 Juillet 2018. 93. Marie-Françoise Guédon. Livre 6. Au Musée national de l’homme et sur la côte du Pacifique (...) Madame Guédon est professeure retraitée de l’Université d’Ottawa. 13 Juillet 2018. 94. Jim Freedman. Film 4. Quebec Anthropology and Black Communities of Nova Scotia. Monsieur Freedman est consultant et professeur émérite du département d'anthropologie de l'Université Western. 12 Juillet 2018. 95. Michael Asch. Film 4. The Dene Mapping Project, CASCA and Teaching activities. Monsieur Asch est professeur retraité de l'Université d'Alberta et de l'Université de Victoria. 11 Juillet 2018. 96. Deirdre Meintel. Livre 3. Le Cap-Vert, les femmes et la migration. Madame Meintel est professeure titulaire de l’Université de Montréal. 10 Juillet 2018.

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97. Richard J. Preston. Film 5. CASCA meetings, Applied Anthropology and Filming activities. Monsieur Preston est professeur émérite du département d'anthropologie de l'Université McMaster. 06 Juillet 2018. 98. Susan Rowley. Film 6. A Partnership with Peoples. 05 Juillet 2018. 99. Patrick Fougeyrollas. Livre 8. Recherches interdisciplinaires en réadaptation au Québec (...). Monsieur Fougeyrollas est professeur associé au département d'anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 04 Juillet 2018. 100. Margaret Critchlow Rodman. Film 6: Research in the Pacific and Looking at Houses At and Far.... Madame Rodman est professeure émérite du département d’anthropologie de l'Université York. 02 Juillet 2018. 101. Asen Balikci. Livre 11. Les films ethnographiques de la série Netsilik (...). Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 29 Juin 2018. 102. Mike Singleton. Livre 13. Au service de Pro Mundi Vita, de l’espionnage ecclésiastique? Monsieur Singleton est professeur émérite d’anthropologie de l'Université catholique de Louvain (Belgique). 28 Juin 2018. 103. Regna Darnell. Film 3. Anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania. Madame Darnell est professeure du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Western Ontario. 27 Juin 2018. 104. Gavin Smith. Film 4. An Anglophone Anthropologist working in the Mediterranean. Monsieur Smith est professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 26 Juin 2018. 105. Raymond Massé. Livre 5. Enjeux éthiques en santé publique, valeurs en conflit, moralization. Monsieur Massé est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 25 Juin 2018. 106. Marie-Françoise Guédon. Livre 5. Le système de parenté des Athapascans, la Côte-Ouest et.... Madame Guédon est professeure retraitée de l’Université d’Ottawa. 22 Juin 2018. 107. Joseph Lévy. Livre 9. Anthropologie du baiser, entretiens avec des anthropologues et … Monsieur Lévy est professeur associé du département de sexologie de l’Université du Québec à Montréal. 21 Juin 2018. 108. John Barker. Film 6. Back with the Maisin people (...) and Professor in Anthropology at UBC. 20 Juin 2018. 109. Francine Saillant. Livre 5. Nouvelles recherches sur le Brésil (...). Madame Saillant est professeure émérite du Département d'anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 18 Juin 2018. 110. Harvey Feit. Film 2. The choice for Anthropology and Ecology. Monsieur Feit est professeur émérite du département d'anthropologie de l'Université McMaster.18 Juin 2018. 111. Andrew P. Lyons. Film 8. Perspectives on Anthropologists. Monsieur Lyons est professeur émérite du département d'anthropologie de l'Université Wilfried Laurier. 15 Juin 2018. 112. Jean-Jacques Nattiez. Livre 8. Relier la musique à d'autres forms d'expression:(...).Monsieur Nattiez est professeur émérite de la faculté de musique de l'Université de Montréal. 14 Juin 2018. 113. John Galaty. Film 2. Choosing Canada and Teaching at McGill University. Monsieur Galaty est professeur au département d’anthropologie de l'Université McGill. 12 Juin 2018.

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114. Asen Balikci. Livre 10. À l’écoute des histoires et des traditions inuit de Pelly Bay.Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 11 Juin 2018, 115. Margaret Lock. Film 3. Doing Research (...) in Japan, and Linking the Mind to the Body. Margaret Lock est professeure émérite au Department of Social Studies of Medicine de l'Université McGill. 04 Juin 2018. 116. David Turner. Film 4. “The day when everything changed…” Monsieur Turner est professeur retraité de l’Université de Toronto. 31 Mai 2018. 117. Deirdre Meintel. Livre 2. De l’U. Brown à l’Université de Montréal et terrains au Cap- Vert. Madame Meintel est professeure titulaire de l’Université de Montréal. 30 Mai 2018. 118. Richard B. Lee. Film 5. Going back to the Kalahari and the DeVore-Lee collaboration. Monsieur Lee est professeur émérite du département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 30 Mai 2018. 119. Jean-Guy Goulet. Livre 5. Des objets qui parlent chez les Wayuu. Monsieur Goulet est professeur retraité en sciences humaines de l'Université Saint-Paul. 28 Mai 2018. 120. Jilian Ridington. Film 3. Open your Ears and Listen! Life and Work with the Dane-Zaa. Madame Ridington est consultante et travaille avec Robin Ridington. 27 Mai 2018. 121. Lucienne Strivay. Livre 10. Les histoires surprenantes et les figures du lapin européen… Madame Lucienne Strivay est professeure titulaire d’anthropologie de l’Université de Liège (Belgique). 24 Mai 2018. 122. Susan Rowley. Film 5. When First Nations are educating us. (...). Madame Rowley est professeure à UBC et conservatrice au Musée d'anthropologie. 22 Mai 2018. 123. Richard J. Preston. Film 4. Perspectives on Aboriginal Residential Schools... Monsieur Preston est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université McMaster. 20 Mai 2018. 124. Mike Singleton. Livre 12. J’étais réputé être un sorcier. Chez les Wakonongo de Mapili. Monsieur Singleton est professeur émérite d’anthropologie de l'Université catholique de Louvain (Belgique). 18 Mai 2018. 125. Marie-Françoise Guédon. Livre 4. Aventure en Alaska avec F. de Laguna chez les Atna. Madame Guédon est professeure retraitée de l’Université d’Ottawa. 17 Mai 2018. 126. Mathias Guenther. Film 1. Education, Inspirations and an Ecclectic Anthropology. Monsieur Guenther est professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Wilfrid Laurier. 16 Mai 2018. 127. Raymond Massé. Livre 4. Combiner les méthodologies en santé communautaire et .... Monsieur Massé est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 15 Mai 2018. 128. Regna Darnell. Film 2. Across Disciplines but going for a PhD in Anthropology. Madame Darnell est professeure au département d'anthropologie à la University of Western Ontario. 14 Mai 2018. 129. Jérôme Rousseau. Livre 12. Du Jardin botanique de Montréal au Musée (...). Monsieur Rousseau est professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l’Université McGill. 11 Mai 2018.

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130. Francine Saillant. Livre 4. L’anthropologie de la santé, des soins et l’ethnomédecine. Madame Saillant est professeure émérite du Département d'anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 09 Mai 2018. 131. John Barker. Film 5. Changes among the Maisin (...) and the Anthropology of Christianity. Monsieur Barker est professeur au département d’anthropologie de l'Université de UBC. 08 Mai 2018. 132. Bernard Saladin d'Anglure. Livre 19. Les dangers du rationalisme moderne et de (...). Monsieur Saladin d'Anglure est professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l’Université Laval. 06 Mai 2018. 133. Pierrette Désy. Livre 1. Origines familiales, enfance et parcours universitaire. Madame Pierrette Désy est professeure retraitée des départements de géographie et d’histoire de l’UQAM. 04 Mai 2018. 134. David Young. Film 4. Cross-Cultural Research, Experiential Anthropology and the (...). Monsieur Young est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de l'Alberta. 03 Mai 2018. 135. Michael Asch. Film 3. Professor at the U. of Alberta and Working with the Dene as an Activist. Monsieur Asch est est professeur retraité de l'Université d'Alberta et de Victoria. 01 Mai 2018. 136. Christine Jourdan. Livre 2. L’étude du changement linguistique aux îles Salomon, (...). Madame Jourdan est professeure titulaire, département de sociologie et d’anthropologie, Université Concordia. 01 Mai 2018. 137. Andrew P. Lyons. Film 7. Culture, Anthropologica, and Training Students in Anthropology. Monsieur Lyons est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université Wilfrid Laurier. 29 Avril 2018. 138. John Galaty. Film 1. Childhood, Education in Kenya and Looking for Cultural Systems. Monsieur Galaty est professeur au département d’anthropologie de l'Université McGill. 27 Avril 2018. 139. Lucienne Strivay. Livre 9. L’analyse des relations entre l’homme et l’animal : saisir des coactions. 26 Avril 2018. 140. David Turner. Film 3. Back to Australia with the Aborigines. Monsieur Turner est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 25 Avril 2018, 141. Asen Balikci. Livre 9. La vie quotidienne des Inuit de Pelly Bay. Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 24 Avril 2018. 142. Richard B. Lee. Film 4. With the !Kung Bushmen. Monsieur Lee est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 20 Avril 2018. 143. Jean-Jacques Nattiez. Livre 7. L'encyclopédie de la musique (2/2). Monsieur Nattiez est professeur émérite de la faculté de musique de l'Université de Montréal. 19 Avril 2018. 144. Deirdre Meintel. Livre 1. Enfance, parcours universitaire et vocation pour l’anthropologie. Madame Meintel est professeure titulaire de l’Université de Montréal. 18 Avril 2018.

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145. Christopher G. Trott. Film 4. Writing a PhD on Inuit Social Structure, Naming and Kinship Systems. Monsieur Trott est professeur au Department of Native Studies, University of Manitoba. 17 Avril 2018. 146. Harvey Feit. Film 1. Childhood, Political Actions and Intellectual Influences in Philosophy. Monsieur Feit est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université McMaster. 16 Avril 2018. 147. Marie-Françoise Guédon. Livre 3. L’anthropologie comme carrefour et voyage chez les Inuit. Madame Guédon est professeure retraitée de l’Université d’Ottawa. 13 Avril 2018. 148. Asen Balikci. Livre 8. À la rencontre des Inuit de Pelly Bay. Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 12 Avril 2018. 149. Kenelm Burridge. Film 7. In the Way…The Anthropology of Missionaries. Monsieur Burridge est professeur éméritus au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de UBC. 11 Avril 2018. 150. Margaret Critchlow Rodman. Film 5: Field Experiences in Vanuatu and Research on Housing (...). Madame Critchlow Rodman est professeure émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université York. 10 Avril 2018. 151. Jean-Guy Goulet. Livre 4. Qui as-tu tué? Relations et conversations avec les Wayuu. Monsieur Goulet est professeur retraité en sciences humaines de l'Université Saint-Paul. 08 Avril 2018. 152. Mike Singleton. Livre 11. Les mots font être et naître des choses et l’approche par Projets. Monsieur Singleton est professeur émérite d’anthropologie de l'Université catholique de Louvain (Belgique). 06 Avril 2018. 153. Regna Darnell. Film 1. Childhood and Studies at Bryn Mawr College. Madame Darnell est professeure au département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Western Ontario. 05 Avril 2018. 154. Raymond Massé. Livre 3. Thèse de doctorat et recherches en santé communautaire. Monsieur Massé est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 04 Avril 2018. 155. David Turner. Film 2. “The man who never stops for lunch.” Fieldwork in Australia… Monsieur David Turner est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 03 Avril 2018. 156. Patrick Fougeyrollas. Livre 7. Le handicap dans tous ses états: (...). Monsieur Fougeyrollas est professeur associé au département de d"anthropologie de l'Université Laval. 29 Mars 2018. 157. Robin Ridington. Film 2. Professor at (...) UBC and Work with the Dane-Zaa and the Omaha tribes. Robin Ridington est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de UBC. 28 Mars 2018. 158. Margaret Lock. Film 1. Childhood Memories, Education and Intellectual Influences. Margaret Lock est professeure émérite, Department of Social Studies of Medicine, McGill University. 25 Mars 2018. 159. Joseph Lévy. Livre 8. Les médicaments et l'Internet : détournements, expériences, …. Monsieur Lévy est professeur associé du département de sexologie de l’Université du Québec à Montréal. 23 Mars 2018.

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160. Harriet D. Lyons. Film 6. The Anthropology of Sexuality as a Field of Study. Harriet D. Lyons est professeure émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Waterloo. 22 Mars 2018. 161. Dominique Legros. Livre 7. Lorsque les Blancs méprisent les Amérindiens et .... Monsieur Legros est professeur émérite du département de sociologie et d'anthropologie de l'Université Concordia. 21 Mars 2018. 162. John Barker. Film 4. Ethnography of Missionaries, Maisin Traditions and the Creativity… Monsieur Barker est professeur au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de UBC. 20 Mars 2018. 163. Lucienne Strivay. Livre 8. La sorcellerie en Europe : résistance, ... et cohabitation des ontologies Madame Lucienne Strivay est professeure titulaire d’anthropologie de l’Université de Liège (Belgique). 19 Mars 2018. 164. Bernard Saladin d'Anglure. Livre 18. Un Inuk en Amazonie, à la CAF et à l’ONU... Monsieur Saladin d'Anglure est professeur émérite du département d’anthropologie de l’Université Laval. 16 Mars 2018. 165. Jean-Jacques Nattiez. Livre 6. La musicologie générale: sortir des catégories et…. Monsieur Nattiez est professeur émérite de la faculté de musique de l'Université de Montréal. 15 Mars 2018. 166. Gavin Smith. Film 2. Student at Sussex University (England) and Research on Peasant Mobilization. Gavin Smith est professeur éméritus au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 14 Mars 2018. 167. Susan Rowley. Film 4. The Uqalurait Project and Experiences within the MOA (UBC, Vancouver). Susan Rowley is professor at UBC and curator at the Museum of Anthropology. 13 Mars 2018, 168. Asen Balikci. Livre 7. Les Inuit de Great Whale River (Poste à la baleine). Monsieur Balikci est professeur retraité du département d’anthropologie de l'Université de Montréal. 12 Mars 2018. 169. Mike Singleton. Livre 10. Les questions religieuses chez les Wakonongo. Monsieur Singleton est professeur émérite d’anthropologie de l'Université catholique de Louvain (Belgique). 09 Mars 2018. 170. Marie-Françoise Guédon. Livre 2. L’imprévu, la liberté et l’enseignement: un héritage familial. Madame Guédon est professeure retraitée de l’Université d’Ottawa. 08 Mars 2018. 171. David Turner. Film 1. A Continuing Present. Memory, Recollection and the Collapsing of Time. Monsieur Turner est professeur retraité du département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 07 Mars 2018. 172. Richard B. Lee. Film 3. Fieldwork with the !Kung Bushmen of the Kalahari. Monsieur Lee est professeur émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université de Toronto. 06 Mars2018. 173. Jean-Guy Goulet. Livre 3. Le terrain chez les Wayuu de Colombie (1975-76). Monsieur Goulet est professeur retraité en sciences humaines de l'Université Saint-Paul. 05 Mars 2018. 174. Margaret Critchlow Rodman. Film 4: Teaching (...) Doing Research on the Social Construction of Space. Madame Critchlow Rodman est professeure émérite au département d'anthropologie de l'Université York. 02 Mars 2018.

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME: HELLEINER, Eric

Full professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. International Relations, University of London (LSE), U.K., 1991 M.Sc. Politics of the World Economy, University of London (LSE), UK, 1987 B.A., Economics and Political Science, University of Toronto, 1986 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2012-2017 Faculty of Arts Chair in IPE, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2005-12- CIGI Chair in International Governance, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2007- Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2005-2007 Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2001-2005 Canada Research Chair, Dept. of Political Studies, Trent University 1997-2005 Associate Professor, Department of Political Studies, Trent University 1995-1997 Visiting Professor, Department of Political Science, York University 1991-1995 Assistant Professor, Dept. of Political Studies, Trent University d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

Killam Research Fellowship (Canada Council for the Arts), 2017-19 Francesco Guicciardini Prize for Best Book in Historical International Relations, International Studies Association, 2016 Excellence in Arts Award, University of Waterloo (Awarded “in recognition of exceptional research achievement” in the Faculty of Arts), 2016 Outstanding Performance Award, University of Waterloo, 2016 Elected Fellow, Royal Society of Canada, 2015 Canadian Political Science Association Prize in International Relations, 2015 Outstanding Performance Award, University of Waterloo, 2013 Outstanding Performance Award, University of Waterloo, 2010 Trudeau Foundation Fellows Prize, Trudeau Foundation, 2007-2010 Outstanding Performance Award, University of Waterloo, 2007 Donner Book Prize, Donner Canadian Foundation, 2007 Donner Book Prize ($35,000 award for best book on Canadian public policy), 2007 Symons Award for Excellence in Teaching, Trent University, 2004

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Academic Merit Award, Trent University, 1998, 2003 President's Prize for Promising Scholars, York University, 1996 Marvin Gelber Essay Prize in International Relations, Canadian Institute for International Affairs, 1991

e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2015, 2016 Member, Adjudication Committee for Insight Grants, SSHRC, Committee 435-2C 2015 External Appraiser for International Relations undergraduate program at Trinity College, U of Toronto 2011, 2012 Chair of Adjudication Panel for Insight Development Grants, SSHRC 2003- Co-Editor of book series Cornell Studies in Money (Cornell University Press) 2013-17 Member, Editorial Board, Global Governance 2015- Member, Editorial Board, Journal of Cultural Economy 2011- Member, International Advisory Board, Review of International Political Economy 2007- Member, Editorial Board, Contemporary Politics 2003- Member, International Advisory Board, Journal of International Relations and Development 2003- Member, International Advisory Council of book series Routledge Series in IPE 2011- Member, International Advisory Board, The Sheffield Political Economy Research Institute 2013 -2017 Co-coordinator, Waterloo Political Economy Group 2011 Member, High Level Panel on the Governance of the Financial Stability Board (convened by the Brookings Institution), 2010- 2012 Member, Editorial Board, International Studies Review 2007-12 Member, Viessmann Advisory Board, Viessmann Research Centre on Modern Europe, Wilfrid Laurier University

f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 34 M.A., 8 Ph.D., Postdoc 1 In progress: 1 M.A., 2 Ph.D.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

• Ryan Hilimoniuk (MA, Global Governance, Waterloo) “A Theorization of the Role and Function of the G-20 Leaders’ Forum in the Post-2008 International Political Economy and Governance Architecture”, 2011-12

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• Dustyn Lanz, (MA Global Governance), The Green Growth Action Alliance: Global Governance at the Nexus of Economic Transition and Environmental Sustainability, 2012-13, • Skylar Brooks, (MA, Global Governance), “The Political Economy of Global Imbalances in the Post-Crisis Period”, 2012-13 • Anastasia Ufimtseva (MA PSCI), “Chinese and Western models of development and their impact on the resource curse in Angola” , 2013-14 • David Lark (MA PSCI) , “The Political Context of the Modern Investment Regime: Contestation in the Global South and the Rise of China as a Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing”, 2013-14 • Denys Elliot (MA PSCI), “Latin American resource curse”, 2013-14 • Brigitte Belanger (MA PSCI), Improving the Efficiency of Microfinance Institutions through Commercialization: The Adoption of the For-Profit Model of Microfinance, 2014-15 • Antony Noga (MA PSCI), “Beyond Dispossession: Accumulation by Dispossession and the Governing of Access” 2014-15 • Richard Bent (MA PSCI), “Central bank liquidity swaps during the time of economic crises”, 2014-15 • Melsen Babe (MA PSCI), “The Distributional Effects of the Federal Reserve's Unconventional Monetary Policies in Response to the 2007-2008 Global Financial Crisis”, 2015-16 • Jacob Hayes (MA Global Governance), “American Trade Negotiation in the 21st Century: How the US has successfully avoided a decline in power in international trade” 2015-17 • Alex Mochid (MA, PSCI), Reforming the Status Quo in the Financial Sector: A comparison of post- 2008 Financial Governance Reforms in the United States and United Kingdom, 2016-17 • Jeremiah Johnson (MA, PSCI), 2016- • Jay Thistlethwaite (PhD, Global Governance), “Planet Finance: The Governance of Climate Change Risks in Financial Markets” 2007-2011. • Stefano Pagliari (PhD, Global Governance), “Public Salience and International Financial Regulation: Explaining the International Regulation of OTC Derivatives, Rating Agencies, and Hegde Funds”, 2008-2013 • David Kempthorne (PhD, Global Governance), “Governing International Securities Markets: IOSCO and the Politics of International Securities Market Standards”, 2009-2013 • Vic Li (PhD, Global Governance), “On Again, Off Again: Domestic Political Origins of China’s Financial Opening”, 2008-2013 • Veronica Rubio Vega (PhD, Global Governance), “From lending in the Andes to thriving in Latin America: CAF’s continuity, growth and long-term financing in the region” 2010-15 • Anton Malkin (PhD, Global Governance) “Agents of Change: The Role of Foreign Financial Institutions in China’s Financial Transformation Since the early 1990s” 2010-216 (supervisor) • Antulio Rosales (PhD Global Governance), “Stringent, open and hybrid state treatment of foreign investment: three eras of the oil industry in Venezuela and Ecuador”, 2012-17

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• Irene Spagna (PhD Global Governance), “Dealer bank influence and the international political economy of over-the-counter derivatives regulation: the introduction of mandatory margin requirements for non-centrally cleared derivatives after the global financial crisis of 2008”, 2012-18 (supervisor) • Skylar Brooks (PhD, Global Governance), 2014- (supervisor) • Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn (postdoc), 2015-7 (supervisor) g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

Winter 2011 Research Applications in Political Science Winter 2013 Governance of the Global Economy Fall 2017 Governance of the Global Economy Winter 2017 Governance of the Global Economy

Directed Studies (reading courses):

Irene Spagna, PhD, 2013 Antulion Rosales, PhD, 2013 David Lark, MA, 2014 Skylar Brooks, PhD, 2015 Melsen Babe, MA, 2015

h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2017-19. Killam Research Fellowship F $70,000

2015-20 SSHRC. C $20,000 research Principal investigator: E.Helleiner

2011-14 SSHRC C $20,000 research Principal Investigator: E.Helleiner

*Type: C-Granting councils; G-Government; F-Foundations; O-Other ** Purpose: research, travel, publication, etc.

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2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

2015 Balsillie School Major Workshop Grant, $800

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories. 1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- books and monographs ...... 5 - edited books ...... 6 - chapters in books and monographs ...... 74 - refereed journal articles ...... 61 - refereed conference proceedings...... - presentations at conferences ...... 121 - technical reports ...... 16 - invited/keynote addresses ...... 80 - workshops organized/co-organized ...... 21

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

1. Eric Helleiner, Forgotten Foundations of Bretton Woods: International Development and the Making of the Postwar Order (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2014). 304pp

2. Eric Helleiner, The Status Quo Crisis: Global Financial Governance After the 2008 Meltdown (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014), 233pp

Books edited:

1. Eric Helleiner, Stefano Pagliari and Irene Spagna, eds., Governing the World’s Biggest Market: The Politics of Derivatives Regulation After the 2008 Crisis (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), 288pp.

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a) Eric Helleiner, Stefano Pagliari and Irene Spagna, “Introduction: Governing the World’s Biggest Market: The Politics of Derivatives Regulation After the 2008 Crisis”. pp.1-27. b) Eric Helleiner, “Positioning for Stronger Limits? The Politics of Regulating Commodity Derivatives Markets.” pp.199-225

2. Eric Helleiner and Jonathan Kirshner, eds., The Great Wall of Money: Politics and Power in China’s International Monetary Relations (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2014) a) Eric Helleiner and Jonathan Kirshner, “Politics and Power in China’s International Monetary Relations” b) Eric Helleiner and Bessma Momani, “The Hidden History of China and the IMF”

Edited Journal Issues/Special Sections of Journals

1. E. Helleiner, ed., Principles from the Periphery: The Neglected Southern Sources of Global Norms, Special section of Global Governance 20(3)(2014): 359-418. 2. Eric Helleiner, ed., The Greening of Global Financial Markets, Special section of Global Environmental Politics 11(2)(2011): 51-119.

Chapters in Books:

1. “The Macro Social Meaning of Money: From Territorial Currencies to Global Money.” in Nina Bandelj, Frederick F. Wherry, and Viviana Zelizer, eds., Money Talks (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017), pp.145-59 2. “Forgotten Foundations of Bretton Woods”. In Atish Ghosh and Mahvash Qureshi, eds., From Great Depression to Great Recession (Washington: IMF, 2017), pp.107-117 3. “The Inter-American Origins of Bretton Woods.” In Matias Margulis, ed., Global Political Economy of Raúl Prebisch (London: Routledge, 2017), pp.78-93 4. “What’s Been Missing From Conventional Histories of Bretton Woods?” In Giles Scott-Smith and J.Simon Rolfe, eds Global Perspectives on the Bretton Woods Conference and the Post-War World Order (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), pp.17-34 5. “The Evolution of the International Monetary and Financial System” in J.Ravenhill, ed., Global Political Economy, 5th edition (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017), pp.199-224 6. “Incremental Origins of Bretton Woods,” in International Politics and Institutions In Time, edited by Orfeo Fioretos (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017), pp. 214-30. Also published in O.Fioretos, Tulia Falleit, and Adam Sheingate, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Historical Institutionalism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016), pp.627-41 7. “Finance”, in Amitav Acharya, Why Govern? Rethinking Demand, Purpose and Progress in Global Governance (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016)

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8. “Still an Extraordinary Power After All These Years: US and the Global Financial Crisis of 2008” in R.Germain, ed., Susan Strange and the Future of Global Political Economy: Power, Control and Transformation (London: Routledge, 2016) 9. “History and Ideological Change in the Global Political Economy” in Greg Anderson and Christopher Kukucha, eds., Global Political Economy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016) 10. “Why Understanding the History of Bretton Woods Matters Today”, M.Uzan, Bretton Woods: The Next Seventy Years (New York: Reinventing Bretton Woods Committee, 2015) 11. “Regulating the Regulators: The Emergence and Limits of the Transnational Financial Legal Order” in Gregory Shafer and Terrence Halliday, eds., Transnational Legal Orders (Cambridge University Press, 2015) 12. “Restoring the Development Dimension of Bretton Woods” in A.Calcagno, S.Dullien, and J. Priewe, eds., Development Strategies After the Financial Crisis (Geneva: UNCTAD, 2015). 13. “The Future of the Euro in a Global Monetary Context” in M.Blyth and Matthias Matthijs, eds., The Future of the Euro (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015). 14. “Ambiguous Transformations: The First World Debt Crisis and Changing Economic Roles of the State” in Stephan Leibfried, Frank Nullmeier, Evelyne Huber, Matthew Lange, Jonah Levy, John Stephens, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Transformations of the State (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015). 15. “Out from the Shadows: Governing OTC Derivatives After the 2007-08 Financial Crisis” in Jacquie Best and Alexandra Gheciu, eds., Public as Practice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014). 16. “Towards Cooperative Decentralization: The Post-Crisis Governance of Global OTC Derivatives” in T.Porter Transnational Financial Regulation After the Crisis (London: Routledge, 2014). 17. “The Evolution of the International Monetary and Financial System” in J.Ravenhill, ed., Global Political Economy, 4th edition (Oxford University Press, 2014) [revised version of the chapter with the same title below]. 18. “Inclusiveness and Creativity at the Creation: Canada and the Bretton Woods Negotiations” in R.Medhora and D.Rowlands, eds., Crisis, What Crisis? Canada and the International Financial System (Waterloo: Centre for International Governance Innovation, 2014). 19. “Financial officials as diplomats: Evolving issues, actors and techniques since the 1920s” in A.Cooper, J.Heine, and R.Thakur, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013). 20. “Multilateralism Reborn? International Cooperation and the Global Financial Crisis” in J.Pontasson and N.Bermeo, eds., Coping with Crisis: Government Reactions to the Great Recession (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2012). 21. “Reining in the Market: Global Governance and the Regulation of Derivatives” in Dag Harald Claes and Carl Henrik Knutsen, eds., Governing the Global Economy (London: Routledge, 2011). 22. “The Evolution of the International Monetary and Financial System” in J.Ravenhill, ed., Global Political Economy, 3rd edition (Oxford University Press, 2011)

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23. “Contemporary Reform of Global Financial Governance: Implications of and Lessons from the Past” in Jomo Kwame Sundaram, ed., Reforming the International Financial System for Development (New York: Columbia University Press, 2011).

Papers in refereed Journals: 1. “Beyond the Tributary Tradition of Chinese IPE: The Indigenous Roots of Early Chinese Economic Nationalism" Chinese Journal of International Politics 11(4)(2018): 451-483. Co-authored with Hongying Wang. 2. “Sun Yat-sen as a Pioneer of International Development.” History of Political Economy 50(S1)(2018): 76–93. 3. “Civilisational Values and Political Economy Beyond the West: The Significance of Korean Debates at the Time of Its Economic Opening” Contemporary Politics 24(2)(2018): 191-209. Co-authored with Hyoung-kyu Chey. 4. “Debt Politics as Usual? Reforming the Sovereign Debt Restructuring Regime After 2008.” International Affairs 93: 5 (2017): 1085–1105. Co-authored with Skylar Brooks. 5. “Peripheral Thoughts for Global IPE: Latin American Ideational Innovation and the Diffusion of the Nineteenth Century Free Trade Doctrine” International Studies Quarterly 61(2017): 924-34. Co-authored with Antulio Rosales. 6. “Towards Global IPE: The Neglected Significance of the Haya-Mariátegui Debate” International Studies Review 19(4)((2017): 667-91. Co-authored with Antulio Rosales. 7. “Downsizing the Dollar in the Age of Trump? The Ambiguities of Key Currency Status” Brown Journal of World Affairs 23(2)(2017): 9-27 8. “Legacies of the 2008 Crisis for Global Financial Governance” Global Summitry 2(1)(2016): 1-12 9. “Controlling capital flows ‘at both ends’: A neglected (but newly relevant) Keynesian innovation from Bretton Woods.’ Challenge 58(5)(2015): 413-27 10. “Globalizing the Classical Foundations of IPE” Contexto Internacional 37(3)(2015): 975- 1010 11. “Back to the Future? The Social Protection Floor of Bretton Woods." Global Social Policy 14(3)(2014): 298-318 12. “Southern Pioneers of International Development.” Global Governance 20(3)(2014): 375- 88 13. “Did the Financial Crisis Generate a Fourth Pillar of Global Economic Architecture?” Swiss Political Science Review 19(4)(2013): 558-63. 14. “Subprime Catalyst: Financial Regulatory Reform and the Strengthening of US Carbon Market Governance.” Regulation and Governance 7(4)(2013): 496-511. Co-authored with Jason Thistlethwaite. 15. “The Limits of Incrementalism: The G20, FSB and the International Regulatory Agenda.” Journal of Globalization and Development 2(2)(2012): 1-19. 16. “International Political Economy and the Environment: Back to Basics?” International Affairs 88(3)(2012): 485-501. Co-authored with Jennifer Clapp.

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17. “Sectoral Interests and Global Money: Renminbi, Dollars and the Domestic Foundations of International Currency Policy.” Open Economies Review 23(1)(2012): 33-55. Co-authored with Anton Malkin. 18. “Troubled Futures? The Global Food Crisis and the Politics of Agricultural Derivatives Regulation.” Review of International Political Economy 19(2)(2012): 181-207. Co-authored with Jennifer Clapp. 19. “The End of an Era in International Financial Regulation? A Post-Crisis Research Agenda.” International Organization 65(2011): 169-200. Co-authored with Stefano Pagliari. 20. “Understanding the 2007-08 Global Financial Crisis: Lessons for Scholars of International Political Economy?” Annual Review of Political Science. 14(2011): 67-87. 21. “International Financial Reform After the Crisis: The Costs of Failure.” Socio-Economic Review 9(3)(2011): 268-73.

Technical and policy-oriented reports/publications 1. National inequalities and the political economy of global financial reform, Working Paper #303, Initiaive for Policy Dialogue, Columbia University, January 2018 2. International Policy Coordination for Development: The Forgotten Legacy of Bretton Woods. UNCTAD Discussion Paper No. 221, May 2015. 3. E.Helleiner, E.Rauchway, and K.Schuler, What Have We Learned About Bretton Woods from Recent Research? (New York: Center for Financial Stability, 2014). 9 pages. 4. “Financial Stability Board” Global Financial Governance and Impact Report, 2013 (Washington: New Rules for Global Finance, 2013), pp.9-12. 5. “Banking Regulations” Global Financial Governance and Impact Report, 2013 (Washington: New Rules for Global Finance, 2013), p.14. Co-authored with Lesley Wentworth. 6. Reluctant Monetary Leaders: The New Politics of International Currencies. The BRICS and Asia, Currency Internationalization and International Monetary Reform, Paper No.6 (Waterloo: CIGI, July 2013). 19 pages. 7. “The Financial Stability Board: An Arduous Road to Mission Accomplished” in Perspectives on the G20: The Los Cabos Summit (Waterloo: Centre for International Governance Innovation, May 18, 2012). Co-authored with Bessma Momani. 8. “Unfinished Business: Priorities for the International Financial Regulatory Agenda” in M.Brem, ed., Prescriptions for the G20: The Cannes Summit and Beyond (Waterloo: CIGI, 2011), pp.8-9. 9. “Advances in Global Economic Governance amid the Obstacles at the Seoul G20 Summit” Social Europe Journal 5(2)(2011). Co-authored with Andrew Cooper.

Other Publications

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1. “Author’s Response” H-Diplo Roundtable Review 16(29)(June 29, 2015), pp.23-6 (http://www.tiny.cc/Roundtable-XVI-29) 2. “India and the Neglected Development Dimensions of Bretton Woods” Economic and Political Weekly 50(29)(2015): 31-39. 3. “Forward” to Japanese translation of my 1994 book States and the Reemergence of Global Finance (Hosei University Press, 2015) 4. “Money doctors” in Louis-Philippe Rochon and Sergio Rossi, eds., Elgar Encyclopedia of Central Banking (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2015) 5. “Introduction” to Special Section on Principles from the Periphery: The Neglected Southern Sources of Global Norms, Global Governance 20(3)(2014): 359-60. 6. 7. Review of Michael Schiltz, The Money Doctors from Japan: Finance, Imperialism and the Building of the Yen Bloc, 1895-1937 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2012) for Business History Review 87(3)(2013): 618-20

8. “Forward” to Andrew Cooper, Internet Gambling Offshore (Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan, 2011), pp.xi-xii. 9. “Introduction: The Greening of Global Financial Markets?” Global Environmental Politics 11(2)(2011): 51-53.

DATE: December 31, 2018

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

HENSTRA, Daniel, Associate professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Political Science, University of Western Ontario, Canada, 2007 M.A. Political Science, University of Western Ontario, Canada, 2002 B.A., Honours Political Science, University of Windsor, Canada, 2001 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2015-2019: Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2013-2015: Director, Master of Public Service and Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2011-2013: Director, Master of Public Service and Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2007-2011: Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Windsor d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

Outstanding Performance Award, University of Waterloo (conferred by Vice President for outstanding contributions in teaching and scholarship), 2014 Excellence in Service Award, University of Waterloo, Faculty of Arts (conferred by Dean of Arts for excellence in University service), 2014 e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2017-19 Senior Fellow, Centre for International Governance Innovation 2017-19 Member, Editorial Board, International Journal of Emergency Management f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: masters, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 18 M.A., 7 Ph.D. In progress: 2 M.A., 3 Ph.D.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

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• Danny Bednar (PhD), The Governance of Climate Change Adaptation in Canada: Two Multilevel Case Studies, Geography, Western University, Sept. 2013-Nov. 2018 (supervisory committee member) • Shanaya Vanhooren (MA), Profiling Municipal Decision Agendas: A Pilot Study of Southern Ontario, Sept. 2017-Aug. 2018 (thesis) • Johanu Botha (PhD), Two Floods, a Wildfire, and a Hurricane: The Role of the Canadian Armed Forces in Emergency Management, Public Policy & Administration, Carleton University, Sept 2014-Aug 2018 (supervisory committee member) • Kate An, Doug Campbell, Jasmine Ceh, Harman Deol, Jillian Fernandez, JC Mutuku (Master of Public Service [MPS]), Leveraging Community Benefits Agreements to Mitigate Climate Change and Reduce Poverty, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2017- April 2018 (Major Team Project) • Elizabeth Barber, Brayden Kalef, Drazo Kraishnik, Olivia Mattan, Emmanuel Rombe, Wing Ka Tsang (MPS), Preparing the Policy Community of the Ontario Public Service for the Future Labour Market, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2017-April 2018 (Major Team Project) • Dellarue Howard (PhD), Exploring the Linkages Between Planning and the Barriers to Climate Change in Caribbean Small Island Developing States, Geography, University of Waterloo, Sept 2013-May 2018 (supervisory committee member) • Amber Silver (PhD), Public Attention to Environmental Hazards, Geography, University of Waterloo, Sept 2013-Oct. 2017 (supervisory committee member) • Dave Guyadeen (PhD), Evaluation in Planning: An Investigation into Plan Quality and its Application to Official Plans in the Ontario-Greater Golden Horseshoe (GGH) Region, School of Planning, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2013-Aug. 2017 (supervisory committee member) • Richard Camman, James Cook, Nena Gvozdenovic, Marlene Morrison Hernandez, Michelle Stinson (MPS), An Analysis of Carbon Reduction Strategies for Saskatchewan's Grain and Oilseed Farmers, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2016-April 2017 (Major Team Project) • Purvi Badani, Joanne Cheung, Naureen Khan, Paula LaGamba, Derek Totzke (MPS), Ontario's Basic Income Pilot: An Analysis and Recommendations, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2016-April 2017 (Major Team Project) • Monica Lee (MA), Assessing the United Nations’ Effectiveness in Tackling Sexual and Gender Based Violence in Conflict, Sept. 2015-Aug. 2016 (major research paper) • Brennan Vogel (PhD), Adapting to Climate Change: The Case of Local Governance and Municipal Planning in Nova Scotia, Canada, Geography, Western University, Sept. 2011-Oct. 2015 (supervisory committee member) • Indira Gopaul, Arezou Hayeri, Supriya Hooda, Meghan Townsend (MPS), Moving Forward through Collaboration: A Backgrounder on Community Hubs Policy for Ontario, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2014-April 2015 (Major Team Project) • Colin Boland, Julian Greer, Shaed Hashimkhial, Saharia Kanak (MPS), Assessing the Potential Barriers to the Effective Implementation of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) in Ontario, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2014-April 2015 (Major Team Project)

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• Christian Eng, Calvin Ostner, Justin Riese, Kamaldeep Singh (MPS), Cost Reduction Strategies for Municipal Police Services in Ontario, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2013- April 2014 (Major Team Project) • Michael Adeyemi, Setor Awuye, Christopher Gunn-Isaacs, Melanie Gunness, Raj Sian (MPS), Improving Rail Transit Infrastructure along the Kitchener-Toronto (KiTo) Corridor, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2013-April 2014 (Major Team Project) • Amad Abdullah, Karan Jandoo, Tamish Tariq, Athar Zia (MPS), Rural Schools and Unequal Access to Quality Education: An Analysis and Recommendations for a New Program Funding Model, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2013-April 2014 (Major Team Project) • Gerard Farjou, Kevin Klingenberg, Abira Rajalingam (MPS), A Youth Employment Strategy for the Province of Ontario, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2012-April 2013 (Major Team Project) • Wishnu Bagoes Oka, Stella Choi, Amanda Leigh, Masooda Mehdizada, Abeer Rahman (MPS), Municipal Design & Transportation Policy Framework for an Age-Friendly Ontario, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2012-April 2013 (Major Team Project) • Itai Chikowore, Umair Farooqi, Alex Hori, Sarah Mazhar, Biraveena Pathmasiri (MPS), Immigration and Integration: An Analysis of the Employment Barriers Facing Immigrants in Canada, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2011-April 2012 (Major Team Project) • Carly Gasparini, Magdalena Surma, Irene Vien (MPS), Downtown Revitalization: A Briefing Book, University of Waterloo, Sept. 2011-April 2012 (Major Team Project) g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars: 2018-2019 Public Policy Development (MPS) 2017-2018 Public Policy Development (MPS) 2016-2017 Public Policy Development (MPS) 2016-2017 Government, Politics and the Public Service (MPS) 2015-2016 Government, Politics and the Public Service (MPS) 2014-2015 Public Policy Development (MPS) 2014-2015 Government, Politics and the Public Service (MPS) 2013-2014 Public Policy Development (MPS) 2013-2014 Government, Politics and the Public Service (MPS) 2012-2013 Public Policy Development (MPS) 2012-2013 Government, Politics and the Public Service (MPS) h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

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2018 MEOPAR O (NCE) $80,522 [x3yrs] research Network Investigator Grant Principal investigator: D. Henstra.

2018 SSHRC C $48,498 [x5yrs] research Insight Grant Principal investigator: J. Thistlethwaite.

2017 SSHRC C $66,752 [x3yrs] research Partnership Development Grant Principal investigator: M. Haan.

2017 MEOPAR O (NCE) $70,000 [x2yrs] research Community of Practice Grant Principal investigator: J. Thistlethwaite.

2017 SSHRC C $41,587 [x1yr] research Connection Grant Principal investigator: M. Therrien.

2016 SSHRC C $16,306 [x5yrs] research Insight Grant Principal investigator: D. Henstra.

2012 SSHRC C $9,346 [x2yrs] research Insight Development Grant Principal investigator: D. Henstra.

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

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- Books authored ...... 0 - Books edited ...... 1 - Chapters in books ...... 3 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 19 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 0 - Technical reports ...... 7 - Abstracts and/or papers read ...... 0 - Others (workshops presented) ...... 23

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

Books edited:

1. Multilevel Governance and Emergency Management in Canadian Municipalities ed. by Daniel Henstra, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2013, 232 pp.

a) Henstra, Daniel: Multilevel Governance and Canadian Emergency Management Policy (Chap.1) p.3-24

Chapters in Books:

1. “Policy Analysis in Local Government”, in L. Dobuzinskis and M. Howlett (eds), Policy Analysis in Canada (Policy Press, 2018) pp. 121-144

2. “Local Government and Politics in Ontario”, in C.N. Collier and J. Malloy (eds), The Politics of Ontario (University of Toronto Press, 2016), pp. 118-134

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. Guyadeen, D., Thistlethwaite, J., Henstra, D., “Evaluating the Quality of Municipal Climate Change Plans in Canada,” Climatic Change in press, 2018, 23 pp.

2. Vogel, B., Henstra, D., G. McBean, “Sub-National Government Efforts to Activate and Motivate Local Climate Change Adaptation: Nova Scotia, Canada,” Environment, Development and Sustainability in press, 2018, 21 pp.

3. Henstra, D., J. Thistlethwaite, C. Brown, D. Scott, “Flood Risk Management and Shared Responsibility: Exploring Canadian Public Attitudes and Expectations,” Journal of Flood Risk Management in press, 2018, 10 pp.

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4. Bednar, D., Henstra, D., “Applying a Typology of Governance Modes to Climate Change Adaptation,” Politics and Governance 6: 147-158, 2018.

5. Coaffee, J., Therrien, M.-C., Chelleri, L., Henstra, D., Aldrich, D.P., Mitchell, C.L., Tsenkova, S., Rigaud, É., “Urban Resilience Implementation: A Policy Challenge and Research Agenda for the 21st Century,” Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management 26: 403-410, 2018.

6. Thistlethwaite, J., Minano, A., Blake, J.A., D. Henstra, Scott, D., “Application of Re/Insurance Models to Estimate Increases in Flood Risk Due to Climate Change,” Geoenvironmental Disasters 5: 1-13, 2018.

7. Towns, W., Henstra, D. “Federal Policy Ideas and Involvement in Canadian Urban Transit, 2002-2017,” Canadian Public Administration 61: 65-90, 2018.

8. Thistlethwaite, J., Henstra, D., Brown, C., Scott, D., “How Flood Experience and Risk Perception Influences Protective Actions and Behaviours Among Canadian Homeowners,” Environmental Management 61: 197-208, 2018.

9. Thistlethwaite, J., Henstra, D., “Municipal Flood Risk Sharing in Canada: A Policy Instrument Analysis,” Canadian Water Resources Journal 42: 349-363, 2017.

10. Henstra, D., “Climate Adaptation in Canada: Governing a Complex Policy Regime,” Review of Policy Research 34: 378-399, 2017.

11. Henstra, D., McGowan, R., “Millennials and Public Service: An Exploratory Analysis of Graduate Student Career Motivations and Expectations,” Public Administration Quarterly 40: 78-104.

12. Henstra, D., “The Tools of Climate Adaptation Policy: Analysing Instruments and Instrument Selection,” Climate Policy 16: 496-521.

13. Vogel, B., Henstra, D., “Studying Local Climate Adaptation: A Heuristic Research Framework for Comparative Policy Analysis,” Global Environmental Change 31: 110-120.

14. Henstra, D., “Toward the Climate-Resilient City: Extreme Weather and Urban Climate Adaptation Policies in Two Canadian Provinces,” Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis 14: 175-194.

DATE: January 12, 2019

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

JINGJING, Huo, associate professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Political Science, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, 2006 B.A. English, Xian Foreign Languages University, China, 2000 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2012- Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2007-12 Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2006-07 Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Drew University d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 5 M. A. In progress: 1 M.A.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

. Brandon Meyer (MA), Technological Innovation : a Top-up and Bottom-down Explanation for Wage Inequality. Sept. 2013-August 2014 (major research paper)

Drew Snider (MA), Direct Democracy and the Liberalization of Cannabis Laws in the US States. Sept. 2012-August 2013 (major research paper)

Agnivesh Mishra (MA), Bollywood Diplomacy: Changing Contours of Indian Soft Power & Opportunities for Canada. Sept. 2011-August 2013 (major research paper) Lu Ma (MA), Exploring the Problematic Points of the Japanese Refugee Recognition System and the Future Prospects for its Improvement from the Canadian Approaches to Refugees and Immigration. Sept. 2011-August 2013 (major research paper)

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g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

2007-2018: Research Methods

Directed Studies:

h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 3 - Books edited ...... 2 - Chapters in books ...... 4 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 15 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 3 - Technical reports ...... 1 - Abstracts and/or papers read ...... 6 - Others (workshops presented) ...... 2

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

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Books authored:

1. How Nations Innovate: the Political Economy of Technological Innovation (Oxford University Press, 2015), 277 pp.

2. Third Way Reforms: Social Democracy after the Golden Age (Cambridge University Press, 2009), 374 pp.

Books edited:

Chapters in Books: 1. Jingjing Huo and John D Stephens, From Industrial Corporatism to the Social Investment State, in Stephan Leibfried, Frank Nullmeier, Evelyne Huber, Matthew Lange, Jonah Levy, and John D. Stephens (eds), Oxford Handbook on Transformation of the State (Oxford University Press) pp.

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. Huo, J., Left Partisanship and Top Management Pay in Affluent Capitalist Economies. Social Forces Forthcoming

2. Huo, J., Stephens, J. Power, Policy, and Top Income Shares. Socio-Economic Review Forthcoming

3. Huo, J., Insider and public information in varieties of capitalism. Socio-Economic Review 12:489-151, 2014.

4. Huo, J., Feng, H. The political economy of technological innovation and employment. Comparative Political Studies. 43:329-352, 2010

5. Huo, J., The role of inter-firm networks in technological innovation. Comparative Political Studies. 42:587-610, 2009

6. Huo, J., Nelson, M., Stephens, J., Social democracy and the labor market: activation or decommodifcation? Journal of European Social Policy. 18:5-20, 2008

5. Hooghe, L., Huo, J., Marks, G., Does occupation shape attitudes on Europe? Acta Politica. 42:329-351, 2007

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings

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“From Industrial Corporatism to the Social Investment State,” presented at the Conference of Europeanists, Amsterdam, June 25th 2013

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

KITCHEN, Veronica, associate professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D, Political Science, Brown University, 2006 A.M., Political Science, Brown University, 2003 B.A. (Hons) with high distinction, International Relations (with a minor in Economics), University of Toronto, 2001 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

July 2012-present Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Waterloo & Balsillie School of International Affairs

2018-July 2019, Acting Director, TSAS (Canadian Research Network on Terrorism, Security and Society) August

May 2012-December 2015, Associate Chair, Undergraduate Studies, Department of Political Science,

July 2007- July 2012, Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Waterloo & Balsillie School of International Affairs,

SSHRC Post-Doctoral Fellow, Centre of International Relations, Liu Institute for Global Issues, University of British Columbia, Sept 2006- July 2007. d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

Faculty of Arts Distinguished Service Award, 2015

e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2018-present Editorial Board Member, International Journal f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Career Completed: 29 M.A., 2 Ph.D. (Committee Member) In progress: 1 M.A., 1 Ph.D. (Primary Supervisor), 1 PhD (Committee Member)

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NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

I have not tracked project title or year of first registration.

PhD:

In progress Kayla Grant (Supervisor) Annahita Mirsalari (Committee Member)

2017 Jessica West (Committee Member)

2013 Warren Clarke (Committee Member)

MA:

In progress:

Francis Engli

Completed:

2017

Brett Hockley Jamie Vinken

2016 Katie Dyer

2014 Mark Richardson Quinton Doiron Jerry Chang Mark Zygowski Justin Anstett Jesse MacLean

2013

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Jeff Chalifoux Mike Tierney Joe Yang Karina Sangha Daniel Koscinski Daniel Chirilenco

2012 Rachel Emery Gregoire Baribeau

g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

2018: None (on leave) 2017: PSCI 620 Gender and Global Politics 2016: None (on leave) 2015: PSCI 620 Gender and Global Politics 2014: PSCI 680 Critical Security Studies 2012: PSCI 685 Readings in International Politics (Terrorism) GG 650/PSCI 657 International Organizations

h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Total Source / Type Grant Project Education and Training in National TSAS (Subgrant from Security and Counter- SSHRC partnership Terrorism in Canada 2017 $40 000 C / research grant) and Australia BISA @40 Workshop Grant (with Jennifer Heroism & Global 2015 £ 1,000.00 O / workshop Mathers) Politics Canadian Network for ~$2M + equivalent SSHRC Partnership the Study of matching funds / in Grant - TSAS (Co- Terrorism, Security, 2015 kind contributions C/ research Investigator) and Society

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SSHRC / Kanishka Canadian Network for Project Partnership the Study of Development Grant Terrorism, Security, 2012 ~$200 000 C / Research (collaborator) and Society

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

Workshop for Women in 2017 $590 C/ travel UW / HeForShe International Security UW/ SSHRC Travel 2015 $1,400 C / travel Grant Heroism & Global Politics BISA @40 Workshop £ Grant (with Jennifer 2015 1,000.00 O / workshop Mathers) Heroism & Global Politics SSHRC 4A Research The Politics and Practices of Grant (co-PI with Kim North American Security 2013 $8,000 C / research Rygiel) Governance

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 1 - Books edited ...... 1 - Chapters in books ...... 8 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 8

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

Kitchen, Veronica M. 2010. The Globalization of NATO: Intervention, Security and Identity (New York: Routledge).

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Books edited:

Kitchen, Veronica and Jennifer Mathers, editors. Heroism in Global Politics. Routledge, 2019.

Chapters in Books: Kitchen, Veronica. “Heroism and the Construction of Political Community” in Kitchen, Veronica and Jennifer Mathers, editors. Heroism in Global Politics. Routledge, 2019.

Kitchen, Veronica and Jennifer Mathers. “Introduction” in Kitchen, Veronica and Jennifer Mathers, editors. Heroism in Global Politics. Routledge, 2019. Kitchen, Veronica and Jennifer Mathers. “Conclusion” in Kitchen, Veronica and Jennifer Mathers, editors. Heroism in Global Politics. Routledge, 2019.

Kitchen, V. “The Ethics of Mega-Event Security: When the World Comes to Visit” in Unsettled Balance ed. Rosalind Warner, UBC Press 2015. [refereed]

Kitchen, Veronica M. and Kimberly Rygiel, “Integrated Security Networks: Less, Not More Accountability” Putting the State on Trial: The Policing of Protest during the G20 Summit eds. Margaret Beare, Nathalie Des Rosiers, and Abigail C. Deshman. UBC Press, 2015. [refereed]

Kitchen, Veronica, and Adam Molnar. “The Promise and Perils of Integrated Models of Public Safety in Canada.” In Researching Terror Networks: From Radicalization to Counter- Terrorism Policies, edited by Martin Bouchard. Routledge, 2015. [refereed]

Kitchen, Veronica M. “Where is Internationalism?: Canada-US Relations in the Context of the Global and the Local” in Heather A. Smith and Claire Turenne Sjolander, eds. Canada in the World: Perspectives on Canadian Foreign Policy. 2012.

Papers in refereed Journals:

Kitchen, Veronica. "Veterans and military masculinity in popular romance fiction." Critical Military Studies (2016): 1-18.

Kitchen, Veronica and Kimberly Rygiel “Privatizing Security, Securitizing Policing: The Case of the G20 in Toronto, Canada” International Political Sociology 8(2), p. 201-217, June 2014; 50/50 co-authorship

Dunton, Caroline and Veronica Kitchen “Paradiplomatic Policing and Relocating Canadian Foreign Policy” International Journal 69(2), p. 183-197; June 2014. 50/50 co-authorship

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LANOSZKA, Alexander, assistant professor, tenure-track Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Politics, Princeton University, NJ, 2014 B.A.,International Relations, University of Windsor, ON, 2008 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2018- Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2016-18 Lecture, Department of International Politics, City, University of London d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

Modern War Institute, Nonresident Fellow, 2016-17 Postdoctoral Fellowship, Dickey Center for International Understanding Dartmouth College, 2015-16 Stanton Postdoctoral Fellowship, Security Studies Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2014-2015 e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2017- Editorial Board Member, Contemporary Security Policy f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master’s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 5 M.A.

g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

2018-2019, PSCI 687, Explaining Interstate War, University of Waterloo 2017-18, IMP101 Understanding Security in the 21st Century, City, University of London

2016-17, IMP101 Understanding Security in the 21st Century, City, University of London

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h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2017 Strategic Studies Institute G $15,000 USD US Army War College

Research and travel for monograph

Principal investigator: Michael A. Hunzeker and Alexander Lanoszka

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

Internal start-up grant from the Faculty of Arts at the University of Waterloo, 2018-20.

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 3 - Books edited ...... 0 - Chapters in books ...... 1 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 13 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 0 - Technical reports ...... 0 - Others (workshops presented) ...... 0

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

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1. Conventional Deterrence and Landpower in Northeastern Europe, with Michael A. Hunzeker (U.S. Army War College’s Strategic Studies Institute, 2019), under production. 2. Atomic Assurance: The Alliance Politics of Nuclear Proliferation (Cornell University Press, 2018), 216 pp. 3. A Question of Time: Enhancing Taiwan’s Conventional Deterrence Posture, with Michael A. Hunzeker (Arlington, VA: George Mason University Center for Security Policy Studies, 2018), 125 pp.

Books edited:

Chapters in Books:

Lanoszka, A., Don’t Make Me a Target: Alliance Management, Threat, and Forward Deployments, IN Center of Strategic and International Studies, Nuclear Scholars Initiative: A Collection of Papers from the 2014 Nuclear Scholars Initiative, ed. Sarah Minot (Washington, D.C.: CSIS/Rowman and Littlefield, 2015).

Papers in refereed Journals:

Lanoszka, A., Nuclear Proliferation and Nonproliferation among Soviet Allies, Journal of Global Security Studies 3:217-233, 2018.

Lanoszka, A., The Belarus Factor in European Security, Parameters 47:75-84, 2018.

Lanoszka, A., Tangled Up in Rose? Theories of Alliance Entrapment and the 2008 Russo- Georgian War, Contemporary Security Policy 39:234-257, 2018

Kim, T., Yarhi-Milo, K., Lanoszka, A., and Cooper, Z. Correspondence: Arms, Alliances, and Patron-Client Relationships, International Security 42:183-186, 2017/18.

Lanoszka, A. and Scherer, T.L., Nuclear Ambiguity, No-First-Use, and Crisis Stability in Asymmetrical Crises, Nonproliferation Review 24:343-355, 2017.

Lanoszka, A., From Ottawa to Riga: Three Tensions in Canadian Defence Policy, International Journal 72: 520-537, 2017.

Lanoszka, A. and Hunzeker, M.A., Confronting the Anti-Access/Area Denial and Precision Strike Challenge in the Baltic Region, The RUSI Journal 161:12-18, 2016.

Yarhi-Milo, K., Lanoszka, A., and Cooper, Z. To Arm or To Ally? The Patron’s Dilemma and the Strategic Logic of Arms Transfers and Alliances, International Security 41:90-139, 2016.

Lanoszka, A., Russian Hybrid Warfare and Extended Deterrence in Eastern Europe, International

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Affairs 92:175-195, 2016.

Hunzeker, M.A. and Lanoszka, A., Landpower and American Credibility, Parameters 45:17-26, 2016.

Lanoszka, A. and Hunzeker, M.A., Rage of Honor: Entente Indignation and the Lost Chance for Peace in the First World War, Security Studies 24:662-695, 2015.

Lanoszka, A., Do Allies Really Free Ride? Survival: Global Politics and Strategy, 57:133-152, 2015.

Lanoszka, A., Beyond Consent and Coercion: Using Republican Political Theory to Understand International Hierarchies, International Theory 5:382-413, 2013.

DATE: 12 January 2018

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a) NAME:

MACFARLANE, Emmett, associate professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Political Studies, Queen’s University, 2010 M.A., Political Studies, Queen’s University, 2005 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2018- Associate Chair, Graduate Studies, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2017- Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2012-17 Assistant Professor, Department of Political Sceince, University of Waterloo 2011-12 Senior Instructor, Department of Political Science, University of Victoria 2010-11 Visiting Research and SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow, Harvard Law School, Harvard University 2009-10 Associate, Canada Program, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs and SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow, Harvard University d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...) e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2017-18 Co-chair, 2018 meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association, Regina, SK 2015- Founder, and Member, Courts & Politics Research Group 2014-16 Member, Editorial Board, and Fellow, Mowat Centre, School of Public Policy & Governance, University of Toronto f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 8 M.A..

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

Hari Jnawali (MA), 2018 (thesis)

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Mackenzie Smith (MA), 2018 (Master’s Research Paper)

Sarah Howard (MA), 2017 (Master’s Research Paper)

Petras Augustinavicius (MA), 2017 (thesis)

Gwyneth Bergam (MA), 2016 (thesis)

Alexis Shamess (MA), 2015 (Master’s Research Paper)

Minh Do (MA), 2014 (thesis)

Drew Snider (MA), 2013 (Master’s Research Paper)

g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Lectures:

2018 MPS – The Politics of Difference 2016 MPS – The Politics of Difference 2014 MPS – The Politics of Difference 2013 MPS – The Politics of Difference 2012 MPS – The Politics of Difference

Seminars:

2018 (Fall) Rights & Public Policy 2018 (Winter) Rights & Public Policy 2016 Rights & Public Policy 2015 Rights & Public Policy 2014 Rights & Public Policy

h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2018 Cdn. Fed.for Hum. C $8,000 publication Aid to Sch. Pub. Prog. Principal investigator: E. Macfarlane

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2016 Cdn. Fed.for Hum. C $8,000 publication Aid to Sch. Pub. Prog. Principal investigator: E. Macfarlane

2014 Social Sciences and Hum. C $42,116 Research Council Principal investigator: E. Macfarlane

2013 Cdn. Fed.for Hum. C $8,000 publication Aid to Sch. Pub. Prog. Principal investigator: E. Macfarlane

*Type: C-Granting councils; G-Government; F-Foundations; O-Other ** Purpose: research, travel, publication, etc. 2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

2014 University of Waterloo SSHRC 4A Award $8,000

2013 University of Waterloo SSHRC 4A Award $8,000

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 1 - Books edited ...... 2 - Chapters in books ...... 10 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 15 - Others (workshops presented) ...... 39

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2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

1. Governing from the Bench: The Supreme Court of Canada and the Judicial Role. UBC Press. 2013.

Books edited:

1. Policy Change, Courts, and the Canadian Constitution. University of Toronto Press. 2018.

2. Constitutional Amendment in Canada. University of Toronto Press. 2016.

Chapters in Books:

1. “The Perils and Paranoia of Senate Reform: Does Senate Independence Threaten Canadian Democracy?” State of the Federation 2017. Institute for Intergovernmental Relations (McGill-Queen’s University Press, forthcoming).

2. “Reasonable Accommodation, Diversity, and the Supreme Court of Canada.” Policy Transformation in Canada: Is Past Prologue? Carolyn Hughes Tuohy, Sophie Borwein, Peter John Loewen, and Andrew Potter eds. (University of Toronto Press, forthcoming).

3. “The Future of Constitutional Change in Canada: Examining Our Legal, Political, and Jurisprudential Straitjacket.” in Richard Albert, Paul Daly, and Vanessa MacDonnell eds., The Canadian Constitution in Transition. (University of Toronto Press, 2019).

4. “Judicial Policy Impact in Canada,” in Emmett Macfarlane, ed., Policy Change, Courts, and the Canadian Constitution. (University of Toronto Press, 2018).

5. “Policy Influence and Its Limits: Assessing the Power of Courts and the Constitution,” in Emmett Macfarlane, ed., Policy Change, Courts, and the Canadian Constitution. (University of Toronto Press, 2018).

6. “Electoral Reform is Not a Rights Issue,” in Andrew Potter, Daniel Weinstock and Peter Loewen, eds., Should We Change How We Vote? Evaluating Canada’s Electoral System. (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2017).

7. “Conservative with the Constitution? Moderation, Strategy, and Institutional Distrust.” in J.P. Lewis and Joanna Everitt, eds., The Blueprint: Conservative Parties and their Impact on Canadian Politics. (University of Toronto Press, 2017).

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8. “Striking a Balance: The Players and Procedures of Canada’s Constitutional Amending Formula,” in Emmett Macfarlane, ed., Constitutional Amendment in Canada. (University of Toronto Press, 2016).

9. “The Uncertain Future of Senate Reform,” in Emmett Macfarlane, ed., Constitutional Amendment in Canada. (University of Toronto Press, 2016).

10. “The Future of Canadian Constitutional Amendment,” in Emmett Macfarlane, ed., Constitutional Amendment in Canada. (University of Toronto Press, 2016).

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. “Leader and Representative: The Legacy of Beverley McLachlin Inside and Outside of Court.” Supreme Court Law Review. 2018. 86: 41-60.

2. “Positive Rights and Section 15 of the Charter: Addressing a Dilemma.” National Journal of Constitutional Law. 2018. 38(1): 147-168.

3. “‘You Can’t Always Get What You Want’: Regime Politics, the Supreme Court of Canada, and the Harper Government.” Canadian Journal of Political Science. 2018. 51(1): 1-21. [Prepublished on September 11, 2017. DOI: 10.1017/S0008423917000981]

4. “The Impact and Role of Officers of Parliament: Canada’s Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner.” Canadian Public Administration. 2018. 61(1): 5-25. (with Gwyneth Bergman).

5. “Dialogue, Remedies, and Positive Rights: Carter v. Canada as Microcosm for Past and Future Issues under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.” Ottawa Law Review. 2017. 49(1): 107-29. [Note: this article was first published in March, 2018]

6. “Constitutional Constraints on Electoral Reform in Canada: Why Parliament is (Mostly) Free to Implement a New Voting System.” Supreme Court Law Review. 2016. 76(2d): 399- 417.

7. “Unsteady Architecture: Ambiguity, the Senate Reference, and the Future of Constitutional Amendment in Canada.” McGill Law Journal. 2015. 60(4): 883-903.

8. “Public Policy, Rights, and Abortion Access in Canada.” International Journal of Canadian Studies. 2015. 51: 97-120. (with Rachael Johnstone)

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9. “The Dilemma of Positive Rights: Access to Health Care and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.” Journal of Canadian Studies. 2014. 48(2): 49-78. [Note: this article was first published in August, 2015].

10. “Dialogue or Compliance? Measuring Legislatures’ Policy Responses to Court Rulings on Rights.” International Political Science Review. 2013. 34(1): 39-56. Prepublished on April 13, 2012. DOI: 10.1177/0192512111432565

11. “Conceptual Precision and Parliamentary Systems of Rights: Disambiguating ‘Dialogue’.” Review of Constitutional Studies. 2012. 17(2): 73-100.

12. “Failing to Walk the Rights Talk? Post-9/11 Security Policy and the Supreme Court of Canada.” Review of Constitutional Studies. 2012. 16(2): 159-79.

DATE: January 31, 2019.

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a) NAME:

MOMANI, Bessma, Full Professor, Tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: Yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. University of Western Ontario, 2002 M.A. University of Guelph, 1996 B.A. University of Toronto, 1994 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

Current Positions: 2015 - Present - Full Professor, Political Science, University of Waterloo & Balsillie School of International Affairs. 2005-Present - Senior Fellow, Centre for International Governance and Innovation, Waterloo, Canada. 2018-Present - Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Stimson Center, Washington, DC. 2018-Present - Board Member, Office of the Provincial Security Advisor, Toronto. 2018-Present - Board Member, Pierre Elliot Trudeau Foundation, Montreal.

Past Positions: 2015-2018 - Fellow, Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, Montreal, Quebec. 2004-2015 - Assistant and Associate Professor, University of Waterloo. 2016-2018 - Non-Resident Fellow, Brookings Doha Centre. 2017-2018 - Consultant, International Monetary Fund, Independent Evaluation Office. 2012-2014 - Consultant, International Monetary Fund, Communications Office. 2011-2014 - Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution, Washington, DC. 2012-2013 - Visiting Associate, Georgetown University’s Mortara Research Center, Washington, DC. 2012-2013 - Visiting Associate, Georgetown University’s Mortara Research Center, Washington, DC. 2002-2003 - Lecturer, Wilfrid Laurier University. 1998-2004 - Adjunct Professor, University of Western Ontario.

d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

2015-2016 - University of Waterloo Outstanding Performance Award 2015-2016 - University of Waterloo Excellence in Arts Teaching Award 2015-2018 - Pierre Elliot Trudeau Foundation Fellowship

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2011-2012 - Fulbright Scholar 2011 - Nominated for the Canadian Public Administration’s J.E.H. Hodgetts Award 1994-1995 - University of Guelph Founding Scholar Award 1994 - High Distinction; University of Toronto BA Degree 1994 - Dean’s Honour List; University of Toronto 1990-1991 - Ontario Scholar Award

e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

Current Editorial and Other Professional Roles: Advisory Board Member, Palgrave, Canada and International Affairs Chair, Research Committee, Balsillie School of International Affairs

Past Academic Administrative Roles: Undergraduate Advisor, Department of Political Science Supervisor, CIGI Junior Fellow Program

Manuscript Reviewing for the Following Journals: Canadian Foreign Policy, Canadian Journal of Political Science, Contemporary Politics, China and the World Economy, Comparative European Politics, Comparative Political Studies, Global Governance, Global Policy, International Journal, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of International Relations and Development, New Political Economy, Review of International Political Economy, Review of International Studies, Studies in Political Economy, The World Economy, Government and Opposition

Book Manuscript Reviewing: University of California Press, Ashgate, Cambridge University Press, Cornell University Press, Oxford University Press, Palgrave, Polity Press, Routledge Press, University of Toronto Press. f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

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2018-2020 – Research, SSHRC Insight Development Grant, Type G, $68,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2018-2019 – Research, Innovation for Defence Excellence and Security (IDEaS) Grant, Type G, $186,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2018-2019 – Research, Department of National Defence Engagement Program- Special Projects, Type G, $100,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2018-2019 – Publication, Department of National Defence Targeted Engagement Grant, Type G, $36,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2018-2019 – Research, Canadian Network for Research on Terrorism, Security and Society, Type O, $15,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2017-2018 – Research, National Priorities Research Program, Qatar National Research Fund, Type F, $501,766

2016-2017 – Research, Department of National Defence, Type G, $14,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2016-2017 – Research, Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Public Interaction Grant, Type F, $150,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2016-2017 – Research, Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Project Grant, Type F, $50,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2016-2017 – Research, SSHRC Partnership Development Grant, Type G, $200,000

2015-2018 – Research, Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Fellowship Award, Type F, $250,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2015-2016 – Research, SSHRC Connection Grant, Type G, $50,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2015-2020 – Research, SSHRC Insight Grant, Type G, $123,000

2015-2020 - Research, SSHRC Insight Grant, Type G,$85,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2014-2015 – Research, IDRC Small Partnership Grant, Type O, $12,500 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

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2014-2015 – Publication, UBC Scholarly Publication Award, Type O, $8,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2012-2013 – Research, Fulbright Scholar Award, Type F, $12,500 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2011-2013 - SSHRC Insight Development Grant, Type G, $75,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

2015-2018 – Research, University of Waterloo Cybersecurity and Privacy Institute Seed Grant, Type O, $30,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2018-2019 – Research, University of Waterloo Gender Equity Research Grant, Type O, $10,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2017-2018 – Research, SSHRC Knowledge Synthesis Grant, Type G, $25,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2017-2018 – Research, BSIA Seed Grant, Type O, $3,500 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2013-2014 – Research, UW Lois Claxton HSS Endowment Fund Award, Type O, $7,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2013-2014 - Research, UW Research Incentive, Type O, $8000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2012-2013 – Research, UW/SSHRC Seed Grant, Type O, $5,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2011-2012 - Research, UW Research Incentive Fund, Type O, $8,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani)

2011-2013 - Research, UW International Collaboration Grant, Type O, $10,000 (Principal investigator: B. Momani) i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original

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publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 6 - Chapters in books ...... 19 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 29 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 16 - Other Submitted Contributions………………………………………….6

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books Authored:

1. Strengthening the Canadian Armed Forces through Diversity and Inclusion Co-edited with A. Edgar and R. Mangat. University of Toronto Press. (2019). 2. What’s Wrong with the IMF? Co-authored with M. Hibben. Polity Press. (2017). 3. Tahrir Square and Beyond: Critical Perspectives on Politics, Law and Security. Co-edited with E. Mohamed. Indiana University Press. (2016). 4. An Arab Dawn: The Demographic Dividend of Arab Youth. University of Toronto Press. (2015). 5. Targeted Transnationals: The State, the Media, and Arab Canadians. Co-edited with J. Hennebry. UBC Press. (2013). 6. Shifting GeoEconomic Power of the Gulf. Co-edited with M. Legrenzi. London: Ashgate. (2011).

Chapters in Books:

1. “The Convergence of State and Institutional Preferences in China’s Relationship with the IMF” with A. Malkin in Handbook of the International Political Economy of China. Edited by K. Zeng. Edward Elgar Publishing (2019). 2. “Global Financial Governance” in International Organization and Global Governance, 2nd Edition. Edited by T. G. Weiss & R. Wilkinson. Routledge Press (In Press, 2018). 3. “NORAD in an Age of Trump’s Jacksonianism” with M. MacInnes North American Strategic Defense in the 21st Century: Security and Sovereignty in an Uncertain World. Leuprecht et al. Eds. Switzerland: Springer, 2018. 4. “Knowledge and Learning in the World Bank: Assessing the Role, Challenges and Prospects for a More Accountable IFI” with T. Kramarz, in Accountability and Governance. Edited by J. Kirton. Ashgate Publishing (2017).

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5. “Tracing Participatory Planning in Amman” with L. Khirfan in Order and Disorder: The Middle East’s Urban Governance and Participatory Planning. Edited by L. Khirfan. McGill University Press (2017). 6. “Professional Management Consultants’ Advice on Public Policy Issues: Growing their Transnational Impact on Shaping Solutions to Pressing Government Concerns” in Professional Networks in Transnational Governance. Co-edited by L. Seabrooke and L. Folke Henriksen. Cambridge University Press (2017). 7. “Canada and the Middle East after Afghanistan” with D. Dewitt in Canada after Afghanistan: Reflections on Canadian International Security Policy, Edited by J. Fergusson and F. Furtado. University of British Columbia Press (2016). 8. “Introduction” with E. Mohamed in Tahrir Square and Beyond: Critical Perspectives on Politics, Law and Security. Co-edited with E. Mohamed. Indiana University Press. (2016). 9. “Syria and the Responsibility to Protect” with T. Hakak, in The Oxford Handbook on the Responsibility to Protect. Co-edited by T. Dunne and A. Bellamy. Oxford University Press (2016). 10. *"The Hidden History of China and the IMF" with Eric Helleiner. E. Helleiner and J. Kirshner, Eds., The Great Wall of Money: Power and Politics in China’s International Monetary Relations. Cornell University Press (2016). 11. “Hands On or Hands Off? Lessons from the Arab Spring” with F. Hampson, in Arab Spring: Negotiating in the Shadow of Intifadat. Edited by W. Zartman. Georgia University Press (September, 2015). 12. “China and the IMF” in Enter the Dragon: China in the International Financial System Co- edited by H. Wang and D. Lombardi. Waterloo, ON: CIGI (2015). 13. “The International Monetary Fund and Surveillance” with K. English, in Handbook on International Monetary Relations. Edited by T. Oakley, E. Elgar (2014). 14. “China and the International Monetary Fund: A Retrospective View” with E. Helleiner, in The Great Wall of Money: Power and Politics in China’s International Monetary Relations, Edited by E. Helleiner and J. Kirshner. Cornell, Cornell University Press (2014). 15. “App-Powered Protests Put Democracy in Peril” in Current Debates in Comparative Politics by J. Tyler Dickovick and J. Eastwood. Oxford University Press (2014). 16. “Global Financial Governance” in International Organization and Global Governance. Edited by Thomas G. Weiss & Rorden Wilkinson. Routledge Press (2014). 17. “Introduction” in with J. Hennebry in Targeted Transnationals: The State, the Media, and Arab Canadians. Co-edited with J. Hennebry. UBC Press (2013). 18. “Globalization and the Middle East” with W. Hassan in Thinking the International Differently Edited by A. Tickner and O. Weaver. Routledge IR Series (2012). 19. “Academic and Think- Tank Assessment of the IEO and its Evaluators” in Independent Evaluation at the IMF: The First Decade. Edited by R. Lamdany and H. Edison. Washington: International Monetary Fund Publication Services (2012).

Papers in Refereed Journals:

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1. 1."More Than a Pipeline Problem: Evaluating the Gender Pay Gap in Canadian Academia from 1997 to 2016," Canadian Journal of Higher Education, with E. Dreher and K. Williams. Vol 29, Issue 1, April 2019. 2. “Transnational Citizenship Mobilization among Canadian Arab Youth: An Engaged Social Movement for Change in the Middle East” Canadian Ethnic Studies, with M. Finn (Forthcoming). 3. “The Importance of Transnational Circulation for Citizenship Capacity-Building.” International Political Sociology, with M. Finn (2018). 4. “Canadian Arab Youth at the Border: Cultural Dissociation, Fear Management, and Disciplining Practices in Securitised Spaces.” Journal of International Migration and Integration (JIMI), with J. Hennebry and M. Finn (2018) 5. "Canadian Arab Youth Vote 2015" with M. Finn, Canadian Political Science Review Vol. 11 No.1 (2017). 6. “Building Foundations for the Comparative Study of State and Non-State Terrorism: Strategic Communication in the Terrorism Attack Cycle” with M. Finn in Critical Studies on Terrorism. P. 1-25. (2017). 7. "Established and emergent political subjectivities in circular human geographies: transnational Arab activists” with Melissa Finn in Citizenship Studies 21.1 (2017): P. 22- 43. 8. "Canadian Foreign Policy from the roaring 1990s." International Journal 72, no. 2 (2017): P. 192-202. 9. “Youth Evaluations of Countering Violent Extremism and Anti-Radicalization Programming in Kenya” with M. Finn and M. Opondo in Journal for Deradicalization No. 7, P. 164-224. (2016). 10. "An Effective Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: A Bottom Up Approach” with A. Malkin in Global Policy Vol 6, Issue 4. P. 521-530 (2016). 11. “Cooperation or Clashes on 19th Street? Theorizing and Assessing IMF and World Bank Collaboration” with M. Hibben in the Journal of International Organizational Studies. Vol. 6, Issue 2. P. 27-43. (December, 2015). 12. “Best Practices in Central Banks’ Organizational Culture, Learning and Structure: Case of the Moroccan Central Bank” with S. St. Amand in Economic Notes. Vol. 44, No. 3. P. 449- 481. (October, 2015). 13. “Muslim Brotherhood: Between Democracy, Ideology and Distrust” in Sociology of Islam with E. Mohamed Vol. 2, Issue 3-4. P. 196-212 (2014). 14. “The Harper Governments' Messaging in the build up to the Libyan Intervention; Was Canada different than its NATO Allies” in Canadian Foreign Policy Journal with A. Cooper Vol. 20, Issue 2. P. 176-188 (Fall 2014). 15. “Re-balancing the G20 from efficiency to legitimacy: The 3G coalition and the practice of global governance” in Global Governance with A. Cooper Vol. 20, No. 2. P. 213-232 (April-June 2014).

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16. “Change in IMF Policy Advice to North Africa After the Arab Uprisings” in Journal of International Organizations Studies with D. Lanz Vol. 5, Issue 2. P. 37-52. (September 2014). 17. “The United States and Bahrain: Interpreting the Differentiated Response to the Arab Spring” in Digest on Middle East Studies w. A. Cooper and A. Farooq. Vol 22, Issue 2. P. 360-384. (Fall, 2014). 18. "The Harper Governments' Messaging in the build up to the Libyan Intervention; Was Canada different then its NATO Allies"” in Canadian Foreign Policy Journal with A. Cooper Vol. 20, Issue 2. P. 176-188 (Fall, 2014). 19. “Re-balancing the G20 from efficiency to legitimacy: The 3G coalition and the practice of global governance” in Global Governance with A. Cooper Vol. 20, No. 2. P. 213-232 (April-June 2014). 20. “Whose authority? Exporting Canadian urban planning expertise to Jordan and Abu Dhabi” in GeoForum with L. Khirfan & Z. Jaffer Vol. 50. P. 1-9 (December, 2013). 21. “China at the International Monetary Fund: Continued Engagement In Its Drive for Membership and Added Voice at the IMF Executive Board” in Journal of Chinese Economies Vol. 1, Issue 1. P. 125-150 (December, 2013). 22. “Explaining the Use of Planning Consultants in Ontario Cities” in Canadian Public Administration with L. Khirfan Vol. 6, Issue 3. P. 391-413 (September, 2013). 23. “The Arab Spring Can Bring a Demographic Dividend: That is Good for Business and Investors" in the Global Policy Journal Special Issue. P. 1-11 (August, 2013). 24. Management consultants and the United States’ public sector” in Business and Politics Vol. 15, Issue 3. P. 381-399 (August, 2013). 25. “Shaping the Middle East in the Midst of the Arab Uprisings: Turkish and Saudi Foreign Policy Strategies” in Third World Quarterly with C. Ennis Vol. 34, No. 6. P. 1127-1144 (July, 2013). 26. “The Knowledge Bank Testing the Limits of a Legitimate Global Knowledge Actor” in Review of Policy Research with T. Kramraz Vol. 30, No. 1. P. 409-431 (July, 2013). 27. “(Re)Branding Amman: the values, the image and the making of place" in Place Branding and Public Diplomacy with L. Khirfan Vol. 9. P. 49-65 (February, 2013). 28. “Between Caution and Controversy: Lessons from the GCC States as (Re)Emerging Donors” in Cambridge Review of International Affairs with C. Ennis Vol. 25, No. 4. P. 605- 627 (December, 2012). 29. “Japan’s Rescue of the IMF” in Social Science Japan Journal with C. Holryod Vol. 15, Issue 2. P. 201-218 (January, 2012).

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings:

1. “Canadian Arab Youth: An Engaged Social Movement for Change in the Middle East”, with M. Finn, Paper Presentation, Canadian Political Science Association Conference, Ryerson University, Toronto, ON, May 29, 2017. 2. “Changing professional incentives for IR/FP scholars; substantive focus on Canada in the Middle East”. Paper Presentation, Generations Workshop: The Sources and Evolution of Canadian Foreign Policy. Toronto, ON Canada. September 29, 2016.

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3. “New Canadian Entrepreneurs: An Underappreciated Contribution to Canadian Prosperity”. Paper Presentation, Six Degrees Citizen Space 2016. Toronto, ON Canada. 19, September 2016. 4. “Citizenship Claims-making Among Canadian Arab Youth: Examining Political Subjectivity through Peer-to-Peer Engagement,” with M. Finn, Youth Political Participation Conference, McGill University, Montreal, QUE, June 15, 2016. 5. “Citizenship Claims-making Among Canadian Arab Youth: Examining Political Subjectivity through Peer-to-Peer Engagement,” with M. Finn, Canadian Political Science Association Conference, Calgary, AB, June 1, 2016. 6. “The Effects of Security Surveillance and Border Control Mechanisms on the Citizenship Claims-making of Canadian Arab Youth: Insights from a Canada-Wide Study Using Peer- to-Peer Engagement,” with M. Finn, Mid-west Political Science Association Conference, Chicago, IL, April 9, 2016. 7. “One Belt Road: A Discourse Analysis” with A. Malkin. Paper presented to Centre for Global Change, Hamburg Germany, December 2015. 8. “Arab Youth and their Continued Cultural and Social Revolution Beyond the Arab Spring” with M. Finn. Paper presented the University of Alberta’s UPAS Interdisciplinary Conference. September 2015, Edmonton, Alberta. 9. “The Arab Spring is Genuine Revolution, But a Bumpy and Arduous Road Ahead”. Paper presented at The Institute for New Economic Thinking and the Centre for International Governance Innovation Annual Meeting 2014, Toronto. 10. “Professional Management Consultants and their role in Transnational Governance”. Paper presented at International Studies Association 2014, Toronto. 11. “Theorizing IMF and World Bank Organizational Cultures and their effects on collaborative policy initiatives” with M. Hibben. Paper presented at International Studies Association 2014, Toronto. 12. “Locating IMF Ideas and Measuring Impact”. Paper presented at International Studies Association 2013, San Francisco. 13. “China at the International Monetary Fund: Continued Engagement In Its Drive for Membership and Added Voice at the IMF Executive Board”. Paper prepared for Cornell Workshop on China and presented by E. Helleiner, November 2012. 14. “The Global Reach of Management Consultant Firms”. Paper prepared for Georgetown University International Theory and Research Seminar (GUIATRS) Series, September 2012. 15. “Economic Precursors and Consequences of the Arab Spring”. Paper prepared for TOBB University of Economics and Technology and at the Economic Policy Research Foundation of Turkey (TEPAV), May 2012. 16. “Change in urban development in the Middle East caused by an influx of Arab Gulf investments”. Paper prepared for Columbia University’s Amman Campus in Jordan, March 2012.

Submitted Contributions:

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1. “Gender mainstreaming in the Canadian Armed Forces and the Department of National Defence: Lessons on the implementation of Gender Based Analysis Plus (GBA+)” with R. Johnstone Canadian Journal of Political Science (Submitted). 2. “Organizational Change in Canadian Public Institutions: Gender Focul Points at DND” with R. Johnston Canadian Public Administration (Submitted). 3. “The Geography of Multinational Management Consulting Firms: Mapping and Exploring a Global Expansion, 1939-Present” with K. Williams Competition and Change (Submitted). 4. “Arab Youth Non-Movements: Resilient Citizenship in the Middle East” with Melissa Finn in The Myth of Middle East 1. Exceptionalism: The Unfinished Project of MENA Movements, edited by M. Mahdavi, Oxford University Press (Submitted). 5. “Economics: Bread, Jobs, and Beyond” with M. Morgan in Societies of the Middle East and North Africa edited by S. Yom, Routledge Press (Submitted) 6. “Transcultural Arab Identities in the West: Canadian – Arab Youth Navigating Culture, Identity, and Belonging” with M. Finn in Emergent Collectivities: The Transcultural Ethics of Arab Social Movements, edited by E. Mohamed, AUC Press (Submitted).

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

MUFTI, Mariam Assistant professor, tenure-track Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Political Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 2011 M.A. Political Science, johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, 2006 B.A. Social Science, Lahore University of Management Sciences, Lahore, 2004 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2014- Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2012-14 Assistant Professor, International and Area Studies, University of Oklahoma d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

Excellence in Arts Teaching Award, University of Waterloo, 2017 e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies) N/A f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 3 M.A., 0 Ph.D. In progress: 1 M.A., 0 Ph.D.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

. Nima Karimi (MA), Effectiveness of Counter-terrorism Fatwas. 2016-2017 (thesis) . Reshem Khan (MA), Progress or Status Quo? Systems Thinking and Targeted Practice in Development. 2015-2016 (thesis) . Lema Ijtemaye (MA), Conviction vs. Apprehension : The Effects of Nuclear Weapons Proliferation on International Relations 2015-2016 (major research paper) g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

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2017-2018 Politics of Authoritarianism 2016-2017 Politics of Authoritarianism 2015-2016 Politics of Authoritarianism 2014-2015 Politics of Authoritarianism

Directed Studies: N/A h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose** 2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.] University of Waterloo, SSHRC Seed Grant 2018-2019, $6940 i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 0 - Books edited ...... 0 - Chapters in books ...... 4 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 3 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 0 - Technical reports ...... 3 - Abstracts and/or papers read ...... 19 - Others (workshops presented) ...... 15

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored: Books edited: Chapters in Books:

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Mufti, Mariam. 2016. “Factionalism and indiscipline in Pakistan’s party political system” in State and Nation-building in Pakistan: Beyond Islam and Security, edited by Roger D. Long, Yunas Samad, Gurharpal Singh, and Ian Talbot, 60-76. London: Routledge Mufti, Mariam. 2015, “The Years of a Failed Democratic Transition 1988-1997” in The History of Pakistan, edited by Roger D. Long, 633-679. Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2015 Mufti, Mariam. 2015. “Pakistan: ministerial turnover in the federal cabinet” in The Selection of Ministers around the World, edited by Keith Dowding and Patrick Dumont, 117-138, UK: Routledge Mufti, Mariam, 2012. “The Impact of Pakistan’s Domestic Affairs on the Making of US Foreign Policy” in Pakistan: The US, Geopolitics and Grand Strategies, edited by Julian Schofield and Usama Butt, 64-86. London, UK: Pluto Press

Papers in refereed Journals:

Mufti, Mariam and Andrei Zhirnov. “Electoral Constraints on Inter-Party Mobility of Candidates: The Case of Pakistan” accepted by Comparative Politics (http://jcp.gc.cuny.edu/)- forthcoming October 2019 Mufti, Mariam. 2018. “What do we know about hybrid regimes after two decades of scholarship.” Politics and Governance 6(2): 112-119 Mufti, Mariam. 2009. “Ensuring Social Order: A Case of Islamic Governance under the MMA 2002- 2007.” Critique Internationale, .42(1): 39-55

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings

American Political Science Association, August 31 to Sept 3, 2018. Boston, MA Panelist “Does multi-level governance enhance women’s representation in Federations?”

Northern Political Science Association, Nov 8-10, 2018. Montreal, QC Panelist “Reserved Seat Quotas: A Much-Needed Change to Stay the Same.”

Association for Asian Studies 2018 Washington DC Panelist: Democratic Consolidation in Pakistan: Challenges and Opportunities

The 46th Annual Conference on South Asia Madison, WI Panelist: 40 Years of Scholarship on Political Parties in Pakistan

American Political Science Association 2017, San Francisco, CA Panelist: Subverting the Gender Quota in Pakistan (co-authored with Farida Jalazai)

Canadian Political Science Association 2017, Toronto, ON Panelist: Relying on Men: On Gender Quotas and Candidate-Selection in Pakistan

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American Political Science Association 2015 , San Francisco, CA Panelist: Relying on Men: On Gender Quotas and Candidate-Selection in Pakistan

Association for Asian Studies 2015, Chicago, IL Panelist: Elections and the Prospects of Democratization in Pakistan

International Political Science Association 2014, Montreal, QC Panelist: Understanding Pakistan’s Political Regime

European Conference on South Asian Studies 2014, Zurich Panel Organizer: Elections and Democratic Transition in South Asia

2013 Association for Asian Studies Annual Conference, San Diego, CA Panelist: The Impact of Quotas for Women in Pakistan and Afghanistan

The 41st Annual Conference on South Asia, Madison, WI Panel Organizer: Approaches to Understanding Democracy in Pakistan

European Conference on South Asian Studies 2012, Lisbon Panelist: Understanding the 'Persistently Unstable" Nature of Pakistan's Hybrid Regime

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME: RAVENHILL, John

Full professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, 1981. A.M. Indiana University, Bloomington, 1976. M.A. Dalhousie University, Halifax, 1973. B.Sc. (Econ.) Hons.University of Hull, England. Awarded with Honours in Economics and Politics, 1971. c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: 2013- Director, Balsillie School of International Affairs, and Professor of Political Science, University of Waterloo. 2010-13 Professor and Head of School of Politics and International Relations, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University. 2004-10 Professor, Department of International Relations, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. 2000-2003 Chair of Politics, University of Edinburgh. Appointed to the senior established Chair in the Discipline of Politics. 1998-2000 Professor, Department of International Relations, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. 1990–98 Senior Fellow, Department of International Relations, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. 1988–90 Associate Professor, Department of Government, University of Sydney. 1985–88 Senior Lecturer in International Politics, Department of Government, University of Sydney. 1982–84 Lecturer in International Politics, Department of Government, University of Sydney. 1980–82 Assistant Professor, Woodrow Wilson Department of Government and Foreign Affairs, University of Virginia. d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

Elected Fellow, Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia, (FASSA) 2009. Elected Fellow, Australian Institute of International Affairs, (FAIIA) 2016. Distinguished Scholar Award, International Political Economy section, International Studies Association, 2016. Inaugural winner, 1988, L.F. Crisp Medal, Australasian Political Studies Association. Awarded to Australasian political scientists for early career contributions to the discipline.

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e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

Editor, Review of International Political Economy 2015-18 Regional Editor, International Relations of the Asia-Pacific 2000- . Member, Review Board, Transnational Corporations (UNCTAD) 2018- Member, Editorial Board, Contemporary Politics 2016- Member, Editorial Board, Economic and Political Studies 2016- Member, Editorial Board, Review of International Political Economy 2012 – 2015. Member, Editorial Board, Australian Journal of Political Science, 2011 - Member, Editorial Board, Pacific Affairs 2003—. Associate Editor (Asia and the Pacific), Business and Politics 1998–. Member, Editorial Board, International Political Sociology 2016 - Member, International Advisory Board, International Relations (Sage Publications, London) 2003- 15. Member, Editorial Board, International Studies Review 2012 - . Member, Advisory Board, East Asia (formerly Journal of Northeast Asian Studies) 2005-. Member, Publications Committee, International Studies Association, 2014-18 Member, Finance Committee, International Studies Association, 2012-14.

Reviewer for the Grawemeyer Award in World Order, 2018.

Reviewer for SSHRC for Global Excellence Initiative, 2019 Guggenheim Fellowship application.

Reviewer for the Austrian Science Fund for a 2018 proposal. f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 15 Ph.D (too many masters to remember). In progress: 3 Ph.D, 1 Postdoc

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

. Rongfang Pan (PhD), National Champions or Global Partners? Explaining Firm Responses to Industrial Policy in China's Nuclear and Wind Sectors. 2011-2015 (Australian National University) . Budi Rahmanto (PhD), Developing Country Coalitions in the Doha Round: The Liberal Trade and Development Nexus. 2009-14 (Australian National University) g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

2019: GGOV 618/PSCI 683, Political Economy of International Trade

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Directed Studies:

Jeff Huebner (PhD candidate, 2016) Terry D’Andrea (PhD candidate, 2014). h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2011 MacArthur Foundation. F $US200,000 East Asia Security Initiative: workshops, research collaboration, publication

*Type: C-Granting councils; G-Government; F-Foundations; O-Other ** Purpose: research, travel, publication, etc.

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories. 1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- books and monographs ...... 4 - edited books and monographs ...... 20 - chapters in books and monographs ...... 131 - refereed journal articles ...... 67 (I don’t bother to keep track of the other items)

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored: Books edited:

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1. Global Political Economy [3rd Edition] (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011) [editor and contributor] pp. xxvii + 532. (Translated into Italian and published as Economia Politica Globale (Milano: Guerini Scientifica, 2013) pp. 454.

2. Middle Power Dreaming: Australia in World Affairs 2006-2010 (South Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2011) [co-editor and contributor] pp. xvi + 360.

3. Oxford Handbook of the International Relations of Asia (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014) [co-editor and contributor] pp. xxiii + 810.

4. Global Political Economy [4th Edition] (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014 [editor and contributor] pp. Xxvii + 465.

5. Global Political Economy [5th Edition] (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017) [editor and contributor] pp. xxvii + 475. Translated into Greek.

Chapters in Books:

1. “Regional Trade Agreements” in John Ravenhill (ed.), Global Political Economy [5th edition] (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017) pp. 141-73.

2. “The Study of Global Political Economy” in John Ravenhill (ed.), Global Political Economy [5th edition] (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017) pp. 3-25.

3. "Weak Organization, Strong Institution." in Yi-Chong Xu and Patrick Moray Weller (eds.) The Politics of International Organizations: Views from Insiders (London: Routledge, 2015): pp. 48-57.

4. “What Drives Regionalism in East Asia—And Why It Matters” in Christoph Antons and Reto M. Hilty (eds.) Intellectual Property and Free Trade Agreements in the Asia-Pacific Region (New York: Springer, 2015) pp. 87-108.

5. “Is Economic Interdependence a Stop-gap for Regional Conflict in 21st Century Asia? in Françoise Nicolas, Céline Pajon and John Seaman (eds.), The Asian Century: What International Norms and Practices (Paris: IFRI, 2014) pp. 75-83.

6. “Production Networks and Asia’s International Relations” in Saadia Pekkanen, John Ravenhill and Rosemary Foot (eds.), Oxford Handbook of the International Relations of Asia (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014) pp. 348-68.

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7. “The International Relations of Asia” in Saadia Pekkanen, John Ravenhill and Rosemary Foot (eds.), Oxford Handbook of the International Relations of Asia (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014) pp. 3-21 [co-authors Rosemary Foot and Saadia Pekkanen].

8. “The Political Economy of Asia-Pacific Trade Agreements” in Inderjit Kaur and Nirvikar Singh (eds.), The Economics of the Pacific Rim (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014) pp. 314-32.

9. “Regional Trade Agreements” in John Ravenhill (ed.), Global Political Economy [4th edition] (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014) pp. 139-70.

10. “The Study of Global Political Economy” in John Ravenhill (ed.), Global Political Economy [4th edition] (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014) pp. 3-24.

11.“The Future of Asian Regional Institutions” in Miles Kahler and Andrew MacIntyre (eds.) Asian Regional Institutions (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2013) pp. 245-63 [co- author Andrew MacIntyre].

12.“APEC and Security” in Vinod K. Aggarwal and Kristi Govella (eds.) Linking Trade and Security: Evolving Institutions and Strategies in Asia, Europe and the United States (New York: Springer, 2013) pp. 49-66.

13. “The TPP: Multilateralizing Regionalism or the Securitization of Trade Policy?” in C.L. Lim, Deborah K. Elms and Patrick Low (eds.), The TransPacific Partnership: A Quest for a Twenty- first Century Trade Agreement (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012) pp. 279-98 [co-author, Ann Capling].

14.“The Numbers Game in Asia-Pacific Cooperation” in Christopher M. Dent and Jorn Dosch (eds.), The Asia-Pacific, Regionalism And The Global System (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2012) pp. 75-93.

15. “The Australia-Korea Negotiations for a Preferential Trade Agreement: The Political Economy of Stalemate”, Taiwanese Journal of WTO Studies XXII (2012) pp. 75-106.

16. “Multilateralising Regionalism: What Role for the TPP?” The Pacific Review 34, 5 (December 2011) pp. 553-75 [co-author Ann Capling].

17.“Back from the Brink: Australia and the Global Economy 2006-10” in James Cotton and John Ravenhill (eds.), Middle Power Dreaming: Australia in World Affairs 2006-2010 (South Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2011) pp. 32-52.

18.“Middle Power Dreaming: Australian Foreign Policy During the Rudd-Gillard Governments” in James Cotton and John Ravenhill (eds.), Middle Power Dreaming: Australia in World Affairs 2006-2010 (South Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 2011) pp. 1-12.

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19. “The Study of Global Political Economy” in John Ravenhill (ed.), Global Political Economy [3rd edition], (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011) pp. 3-28.

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. “The political economy of the Trans-Pacific Partnership: a ‘21st Century’ trade agreement?” New Political Economy 22, 5 (2017) pp. 573-94. DOI 10.1080/13563467.2017.1270925

2. “Cycles of Middle Power Activism: Constraint and Choice in Australian and Canadian Foreign Policies”, Australian Journal of International Affairs special virtual 70th anniversary issue, a reprint of this article, the most cited in the journal’s history, originally published in Australian Journal of International Affairs 52, 3 (November 1998) pp. 309-27.

3. “The Political Economy of an ‘‘Asian’’ Mega-FTA: The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership”, Asian Survey 56, 6 (November-December 2016) pp. 1077-1100.

4. “Responding to Security Challenges in East Asia: Three Perspectives”, CIGI Papers No. 99 (April 2016) DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.1.2165.8483.

5. “Australia’s Flawed Approach to Trade Negotiations: And Where Do We Sign?”, Australian Journal of International Affairs 69, 5 (2015) pp. 496-512. “Australia’s Flawed Approach to Trade Negotiations: And Where Do We Sign?”, Australian Journal of International Affairs 69, 5 (2015) pp. 496-512.

6.“Global Value Chains and Development”, Review of International Political Economy 21, 1 (2014) pp. 264-74.

7.“Global Value Chains: Implications for Trade, Investment and Development Policies”, G20 Monitor No. 3 (June 2013) Lowy Institute for International Policy G20 Studies Centre: 18- 24.

8.“Australia–US Economic Relations and the Regional Balance of Power: Introduction”, Australian Journal of Political Science 48, 2 (2013) pp. 179-83.

9.“Australia, the United States and the Trans-Pacific Partnership: Diverging Interests and Unintended Consequences” Australian Journal of Political Science 48, 2 (2013) pp. 184-96 [co-author Ann Capling].

10.“Resource Insecurity and International Institutions in the Asia-Pacific”, The Pacific Review 26, 1 (March 2013) pp. 39-64.

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11.“Economics and Security in the Asia-Pacific region”, The Pacific Review 26, 1 (March 2013) pp. 1-15.

12.“Asia's Multi-Level Response to the Global Financial Crisis", Asia Europe Journal 9, 2-4 (March 2012): pp. 141-57 [co-author, Jikon Lai].

13.“The Asian and global financial crises: consequences for East Asian regionalism”, Contemporary Politics 17, 2 (June 2011) pp. 133-49 [co-author Ralf Emmers].

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

RUS, Horatiu A., associate professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Economics, University of British Columbia, Canada, 2009 M.A., Economics, York University of London, Canada, 2002 M.A., International Relations and European Studies, Central European University, Hungary, 1999 B.A., International Economic Relations, Babes-Bolyai University, Romania, 1997 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2017- Associate Professor, Departments of Economics and Political Science, University of Waterloo 2009-17 Assistant Professor, Departments of Economics and Political Science, University of Waterloo 2008-2009 Lecturer, Departments of Economics and Political Science, University of Waterloo d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

N/A e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

N/A f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 6 M.A., 4 Ph.D. In progress: 1 Ph.D.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

. Liton Chakraborty (PhD), Geography and Environmental Management, Social Equity Dimensions of Flood Risk Management in Canada: Analyzing Social Vulnerability Through a Choice Experiment Approach, Sept 2018- (PhD thesis, committee member)

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. Guneet Sandhu (MES), SEED, Bulk Water Pricing Framework to Foster Sustainable Water Management in Ontario. Sept. 2017-October 2018 (masters thesis, co-supervisor) . Sara Aghakazemjouraff (PhD), Economics, The Economics of Waste Clean-Up from Resource Extraction Projects: Environmental Bonds versus Strict Liability. Sept. 2011- December 2018 (PhD thesis, committee member) . Ghazal Memartoluie (PhD), Economics, Empirical Essays in Water and Electricity Use, Sept-2011- April 2018 (PhD thesis, committee member) . Hongxiu Li (PhD), Economics, Three Essays on the Economics of Innovation as Adaptation to Climate Change, Sept 2011-Nov. 2017 (PhD thesis, main supervisor) . Isabelle Duchaine (MA), Global Governance, Babies Beyond Borders : Regulating the Transnational Surrogacy Market (Sept 2014-July 2015) (MA thesis, co-supervisor) . Feifei Ding (MA), Economics, The Impact of Eco-Innovation and Environmental Policies on BRICS Exports, (Sept 2013-Aug 2014), (major research paper, supervisor) . Mengyu Zhang (MA), Global Governance, China and The Global Governance of Trade (Sept 2013-August 2014) (MA thesis, co-supervisor) . Raluca Ardelean (MA), Global Governance, Assessing The Role of the World Trade Organization for Global Governance : Relevance, Effectiveness and Reform (Sept 2013- August 2014) (MA thesis, co-supervisor) . Shilei Niu (PhD), Economics, (PhD thesis, committee member)(2012-2014) . Noha Tarek (MA), Local Economic Development, Ingenious Cities : Evolution, Foundation and Assessment (April 2011) g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

2018-19 Topics in International Political Economy (Politics of International Trade) 2017-18 Resource Economics, Economic Analysis for Global Governance 2016-17 Resource Economics (Fall and Winter) 2015-16 Advanced International Trade, Economic Analysis for Global Governance, Topics in International Political Economy (Politics of International Trade) 2014-15 Topics in International Political Economy (Politics of International Trade) 2013-14 Topics in International Political Economy (Politics of International Trade), Advanced International Trade, Economic Analysis for Global Governance, Resource Economics 2012-13 Topics in International Trade, Economic Analysis for Global Governance

Directed Studies:

Hongxiu Li, Ph.D. 2013 Zhanyu Li, M.A., 2015

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2012 SSHRC Insight Development Grant C $16,975 research Principal investigator: A-D. Nimubona

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

2017 Water Institute O $18,500 research

2015 BSIA O $2,000 research

2015 UW/SSHRC Seed O $5,500 research

2015 UW/SSHRC Travel O $700

2011 UW/SSHRC Seed O $5,500 research

2011 UW/SSHRC Travel O $700 i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 0 - Books edited ...... 0

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- Chapters in books ...... 2 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 12 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 0 - Technical reports ...... 0 - Abstracts and/or papers read ...... 0 - Others (workshops presented) ...... 0

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. Hongxiu Li and Horatiu Rus, “International Environmental Agreements with Adaptation and Heterogeneous Countries”, Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, May 2019, forthcoming.

2. Zhiqi Chen, Horatiu Rus and Anindya Sen. “Border Effects Before and After 9/11: Panel Data Evidence Across Industries”, The World Economy, 39: 10, p. 1456-1481, 2016.

3. Horatiu Rus. “Renewable Resource, Pollution and Trade”, Review of International Economics, 24:2, p. 364-391, 2016.

4. A-D Nimubona and Horatiu Rus. “Green Technology Transfers and Border Tax Adjustments”, Environmental and Resource Economics 62:1, p. 189-206, 2015.

5. Horatiu Rus. “Corruption, Conflict and the Management of Natural Resources”, Economics of Governance, 15:4, p. 355-386, 2014.

6. Horatiu Rus. “Environmental Depletion, Governance and Conflict”, Southern Economic Journal 78:4, p. 1305-1332, April 2012.

7. Horatiu Rus. “Transboundary Marine Resources and Trading Neighbours”, Environmental and Resource Economics 53:2, p. 159-184, 2012.

DATE: January 31, 2019

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

WANG, Hongying, associate professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Politics, Princeton University, U.S., 1996 M.A. Politics, Princeton University, U.S., 1992 M.A. History, Ohio University, U.S. 1990 B.A., International Politics, Peking University, China, 1987 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2012- Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo, Canada 2005-2011 Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Syracuse University, U.S. 1998-2005 Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Syracuse University, U.S. 1997-1998 Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, San Diego State University, U.S. d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...) e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2003 – Editorial board, East Asia: An International Quarterly, 2003- 2007 – Fellow, Public Intellectuals Program, the National Committee of US-China Relations f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 13 M.A. In progress: 4 M.A., 1 Ph.D.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

• Honggang Tan (PhD), Dancing with Chains : Chinese NGOs and Their Policy Impact, September 2006 – • Asif Farooq (MA), China’s growing soft power in Africa: A comparative study of Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa (2011-12)

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• Jierui Zhao (MA thesis) Chinese foreign direct investment in North America: Comparing Canadian and U.S attitude (2012-13)

• Hejin Wang (MA thesis), Local governments and policy responses in China: The case of Shifang protest (2012-13)

• Mengyun Zhang (MA), Participating in global trade governance: China’s practice, approaches and implications (2013-14)

• Alex Brouse (MA), China in the world-system: The impact of systemic forces on China’s economic policies (2014-15)

• Shane McCaughey (MA), Little Mortar, little concern for the developing world: Evaluating the influence of the BRICS on governance reform in the UNSC and IMF (2014-15)

• Jing Li (MA), A comparative study of RMB exchange rate policy in the Asian and the global financial crises (2014-15)

• Xin Jiang (MA), New activism in infrastructure development: The different approaches and implications of China’s model of PPP (2015-16)

• Leeann Perkins (MA), Controlling for corruption in Africa: Who does it better the Traditional West or the “New China” (2015-16)

• Zhenyu Li (MA), China’s “new silk roads” strategy: Economic statecraft in foreign policy (2015-16)

• Rachel Beale (MA) Reform, risk, and rural migrants: A case study of Shenzhen’s healthcare system and its impact on socioeconomic risk for Chinse migrants (2015-16)

• Yong Hao Wang (MA), Parallel institutions in global economic governance: A comparative analysis of the NDB, AIIB and the Silk Road Fund (2017-18)

• Julia Carvolho (MA thesis), From bilateral investment treaties to cooperation and facilitation investment agreements: A study of the Brazilian experience (2016- 2018) g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

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2013 International Business and Development 2013 Chinese Political Economy 2014 China and Global Governance 2015 Chinese Political Economy 2016 Chinese Political Economy 2017 Chinese Political Economy 2018 China and Global Governance 2019 China and Global Governance

Directed Studies:

Shane McCaughey, M.A. 2014 Amanda Sadowski, M.A. 2014 Julia Carvalho M.A. 2017 Julia Carvalho M.A. 2018 h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.] i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 1 - Books edited ...... 1 - Chapters in books ...... 21 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 24 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 0 - Technical reports (policy papers) ...... 16 - Abstracts and/or papers read (conference papers) ...... 64 - Others (invited talks) ...... 53

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2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

Books edited:

1. Enter the Dragon: China in the International Financial System, ed. By Domenico Lombardi and Hongying Wang, Center for International Governance Innovation, Canada, 2015, 427 pp.

a) Domenico Lombardi and Hongying Wang, “Introduction,” pp.1-11. b) Stuart Brown and Hongying Wang, “China’s Rise as an International Creditor: Sign of Strength?” (chapter 7) pp. 151-222. c) Hongying Wang, “China’s Engagement in Minilateral Financial Institutions: Motivations and Implications,” (chapter 13) pp.385-410. d) Domenico Lombardi and Hongying Wang, “Conclusion,” pp. 411-422.

Chapters in Books:

1. “China and the International Monetary System: Does Beijing Really Want to Challenge the Dollar?” in A New Financial Geopolitics? The U.S.-Led Monetary Order in a Time of Turbulence, Foreign Affairs Anthology Series, January 2018. 2. “A Rising China in Global Governance: Transition from a Rule-taker to a Rule-breaker and Rule-maker?” in Guoguang Wu and Helen Lansdowne, eds., China in Transition, Routledge, 2015, pp.144-161. 3. “Debating International Institutions and Global Governance: The Missing Chinese IPE Contribution,” with Pang Zhongying, in Gregory Chin, Margaret Pearson, and Wang Yong, eds., International Political Economy in China: The Global Conversation, London: Routledge, 2015, pp. 45-70. 4. “The Limits of the Exchange Rate Weapon in Addressing China’s Role in Global Imbalance” in Eric Helleiner and Jonathan Kirshner eds., Politics and Power in China’s International Monetary Relations, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2014, pp. 99- 126. 5. “The Political Economy of Exchange Rates in East Asia,” in Thomas Oatley, ed., Handbook of International Political Economy of Monetary Relations, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2014, pp. 241-261.

Papers in refereed Journals:

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1. Wang, H. “The NDB and the AIIB: China’s Ambiguous Approach to Global Financial Governance,” Development and Change, Volume 50, Issue 1, January 2019:221-244.

2. Helleiner E. and Wang, H. “Beyond the Tributary Tradition of Chinese IPE: The Indigenous Roots of Early Chinese Economic Nationalism,” The Chinese Journal of International Politics, Volume 11, Issue 4, December 2018: 451–483

3. Hou, B., Hong, J., Wang, H. and Zhou, C. “Academia-Industry Collaboration, Government Funding and Innovation Efficiency in Chinese Industrial Enterprises,” Technology Analysis & Strategic Management, November 2018.

4. Helleiner, E. and Wang, H. “Limits to the BRICS Challenge: Credit Rating Reform and Institutional Innovation in Global Finance,” Review of International Political Economy, October 2018.

5. Hong, J., Yang, Y., Wang, H., Zhou, Y. and Deng, P. “Incubator Interdependence and Incubation Performance in China’s Transition Economy: The Moderating Roles of Incubator Ownership and Strategy,” Technology Analysis & Strategic Management, June 2018.

6. Wang, H. and Hu, X. “China’s Outgoing Investment and Corporate Social Responsibility: Preliminary Evidence of the ‘Boomerang Effect’,” Journal of Contemporary China, vol. 26, no. 108 (November 2017): 820-833.

7. Wang, H., “New Multilateral Development Banks: Opportunities and Challenges for Global Governance,” Global Policy, vol. 8, issue 1 (February 2017): 113–118.

8. Wang, H., “The Missing Link in Sino-Latin American Relations,” Journal of Contemporary China, vol. 24, issue 95 (March 2015): 922-942.

9. Wang, H. and French E. “China's Participation in Global Economic Governance,” Asian Economic Policy Review, vol. 9, no. 2 (July 2014): 254-271.

10. Pang, Z. and Wang, H. “Debating International Institutions and Global Governance: The Missing Chinese IPE Contribution,” Review of International Political Economy, vol. 20, no. 6 (December 2013): 1189-1214.

11. Wang, H. and French E. "Middle Range Powers in Global Governance," Third World Quarterly vol. 34, no. 6 (July 2013): 985-999.

12. Wang, H. and French E. “China’s Participation in Global Governance in Comparative Perspective,” Asian Policy, no.15 (January 2013): 89-114.

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Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings

DATE: January 30, 2019

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME: WELCH, David

Full professor, tenured Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D., Political Science, Harvard University, USA, 1990 A.M., Political Science, Harvard University, USA, 1985 B.A. (Hons.), International Relations and Philosophy, Trinity College, University of Toronto, Canada, 1983 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2009– Professor, Dept. of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2005–2009 Professor, Dept. of Political Science, University of Toronto 1994–2005 Associate Professor, Dept. of Political Science, University of Toronto 1990–1994 Assistant Professor, Dept. of Political Science, University of Toronto d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

Scholarship

1. Outstanding Performance Award for Scholarship and Teaching, University of Waterloo (2010). 2. Inaugural International Studies Association ISSS Best Book Award for 2005 and 2006; for Painful Choices: A Theory of Foreign Policy Change (2008). 3. 1994 Edgar S. Furniss Book Award for an Outstanding Contribution to National Security Studies, Mershon Centre, Ohio State University; for Justice and the Genesis of War (1996). 4. Governor-General’s Medal for highest overall standing, Trinity College (1983). 5. Ambassador Kenneth Taylor Award for highest standing in International Relations, University of Toronto (1983). 6. George Kennedy Award for highest standing in Philosophy, University of Toronto (1983).

Teaching

1. American Political Science Association and Pi Sigma Alpha National Political Science Honor Society Award for Outstanding Teaching in Political Science (2008).

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2. Faculty of Arts and Science Outstanding Teaching Award, University of Toronto (2008). 3. SAC/APUS Undergraduate Teaching Award for Teaching Excellence, University of Toronto (2007). 4. Senior Alumni Association Teaching Award, University of Toronto (1992). 5. Harvard Danforth Certificate for Excellence in Teaching (1986). e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2019– Co-editor, International Theory 2018– Member, International Advisory Board, International University of Japan 2018– Distinguished Fellow, Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada 2017– Canada Co-Chair, Canada-Japan Symposium on Peace and Security Cooperation 2017– Dean’s Distinguished Visiting Scholar, Endowed Chair Program in Japanese Politics and Global Affairs, University of Toronto 2017– Member, Japan Studies Association of Canada Executive, 2017– 2016– Member, Advisory Council, Prince Takamado Japan Centre, University of Alberta 2016–2017 Fellow, Munk School of Global Affairs 2016–2017 Visiting Professor, Dept. of Political Science, University of Toronto 2016 Shibusawa-Hepburn Distinguished Visiting Scholar, University of Tokyo 2016 Visiting Professor, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan 2014 Visiting Professor, National Defense Academy, Yokosuka, Japan 2013– Co-Director, Suntory Foundation Reexamining Japan in Global Context project 2013– Senior Fellow, Centre for International Governance Innovation, Waterloo 2012– Member, Scientific Advisory Board, Hessische Stiftung Friedens- und Konfliktforschung (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt) 2010–2013 Director, Balsillie School of International Affairs 2007–2019 Member, Editorial Board, International Theory f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master’s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 44 M.A., 26 Ph.D. In progress: 4 M.A., 5 Ph.D.

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NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis or project, year of first registration and year of completion:

Last First Title Program Product Role Start Finish Program University Fleming Graydon The Belt and Road MA MRP First 2018 TBA Global U. Initiative and Economic reader Governance Waterloo Governance Urquhart Claire Global Health MA MRP Second 2018 TBA Global U. Governance reader Governance Waterloo Diallo Ousmane Circumventing the PhD Dissertation Committee 2017 TBA Global U. capabilities in the member Governance Waterloo African Peace and Security Architecture: security governance in Mali (2012-2015) Durrani Hamid Al-Wala wa-l-Bara MA MRP First 2017 TBA Political U. reader Science Waterloo Lawrence Michael A Systems Ontology of PhD Dissertation Committee 2017 TBA Global U. World Order member Governance Waterloo Piereder Jinelle Why Ideologies Matter: PhD Dissertation Committee 2017 TBA Global U. A Network-Based Study member Governance Waterloo of Ideological Conflict in Public Policy and Global Governance Sahadath Casey Governing the Internet PhD Dissertation Committee 2017 TBA Global U. chair Governance Waterloo D'Andrea Terry Narrative and Threat PhD Dissertation Committee 2014 TBA Global U. Perception in the South chair Governance Waterloo China Sea Eby Merran Agents of Change: The MA MRP First 2018 2019 Global U. Untapped Potential of reader Governance Waterloo Children in Disaster Risk Reduction Polacco Christabel The Brokers of Peace MA MRP First 2018 2019 Global U. and the Inciters of reader Governance Waterloo Violence: An Analysis of Women’s Roles in the Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration Process Sanchez Laura Immigration Policy in MA MRP Second 2018 2019 Political U. France and Canada: The reader Science Waterloo Case of the Roma as an Ethnic Minority Herbener Rebecca Water Scarcity, MA MRP Second 2017 2019 Global U. Cooperation, and reader Governance Waterloo Conflict Badea Ruxandra Global Governance Gap: MA MRP First 2017 2018 Global U. Proactive Regulation of reader Governance Waterloo Ethical Artificial Intelligence Caughey David The Renewable Energy MA MRP First 2017 2018 Global U. Transition reader Governance Waterloo Lacey Sebastian The Perils of Great-Small MA MRP Second 2017 2018 Global U. Power Conflict: A Study reader Governance Waterloo of the Cuban Missile

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Last First Title Program Product Role Start Finish Program University Crisis and the North Korean Nuclear Crisis Patel Shahene Water Wars in the MA MRP Second 2017 2018 Global U. Middle East: Rethinking reader Governance Waterloo the ‘scarcity’ discourse through a case study of Israel and Palestine Romanchik Sulamita A U.S.-Russian Empathy- MA MRP Second 2017 2018 Global U. Free Zone: How reader Governance Waterloo President Trump and President Putin Inherited Decades’ Worth of Misperceptions, Miscommunications, Misjudgments, Mistakes, and Misunderstandings West Jessica Defence in Depth: An PhD Dissertation Committee 2009 2018 Global Wilfrid Anatomy of chair Governance Laurier Containment from University Quarantine to Resilience Greve Patricia Identities and PhD Dissertation Committee 2005 2018 Political U. Toronto Expectations: On the member Science Maintenance of the German-American Security Community Bahl Priyanka Cybercrime and MA MRP First 2016 2017 Global U. Cybersecurity reader Governance Waterloo Darby- Joshua Security Provision for MA MRP First 2016 2017 Global Warwick/U. McLellan Non-Governmental reader Governance Waterloo Organisations and Charities during Humanitarian Aid Delivery Operations in Conflict Zones Fingler Emma Looking at the MA MRP First 2016 2017 Global U. Responsibility to Protect reader Governance Waterloo Doctrine in the Case of Natural Disaster Response Hockley Brett Lessons Learned? A MA MRP First 2016 2017 Political U. Discourse Analysis of the reader Science Waterloo 1985 Air India Bombing Koroma Keira Asian Values and Human MA MRP First 2016 2017 Global Warwick/U. Rights reader Governance Waterloo Fryer Kathleen Climate Change and MA MRP Second 2015 2016 Political U. Food Security: Global or reader Science Waterloo National Governance? Ijtemaya Lema Security Sector Reform MA MRP Second 2015 2016 Political U. in Afghanistan: Theory, reader Science Waterloo Practice, and Challenges Khan Reshem Securitization and MA Thesis First 2015 2016 Political U. Development: reader Science Waterloo Gendered Externalities

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Last First Title Program Product Role Start Finish Program University Lee Monica Assessing the United MA MRP Second 2015 2016 Political U. Nations’ Effectiveness in reader Science Waterloo Tackling Sexual and Gender Based Violence in Conflict Vlad Roxy Orwellian Canada, Our MA MRP First 2015 2016 Political U. Home and Native Land: reader Science Waterloo What Level of Privacy Intrusion Should the Government be Permitted in Order to Maintain National Security in Canada? Piereder Jinelle The Global Arms Trade MA MRP Second 2014 2015 Global U. System: Understanding reader Governance Waterloo the Interactions between Material and Ideational Networks Siraj Tousseef A Comparison of al- MA MRP Second 2014 2015 Political U. Qaeda and the Islamic reader Science Waterloo State Winch Ryan Cooling the Chinese MA MRP Second 2014 2015 Global U. Dragon: An Analysis of reader Governance Waterloo China’s Ability to Transition to a Low- Carbon Economy Aminjonov Farkhod Security of the Central PhD Dissertation Committee 2011 2015 Global Wilfrid Asian Energy System chair Governance Laurier through Regional-level University Governance Innovations Anstett Justin Diverging National Cyber MA MRP Second 2013 2014 Global U. Security Strategies: reader Governance Waterloo Examining the Role of Securitization and Epistemic Communities Janz Scott Tail-dominance and MA MRP Second 2013 2014 Global U. Catastrophe Insurance: reader Governance Waterloo Managing Uncertainty in Econometric Climate Change Modelling Naimpoor Sakhi Deconstructing a MA MRP Second 2013 2014 Political U. Belligerent Discourse: reader Science Waterloo Afghanistan, Ethnicity and Conflict Chalifoux Jeff Countering the MA MRP Second 2012 2013 Political U. Transnational Extremist reader Science Waterloo Threat in Yemen: The Evolution of U.S. Counter-Terrorism Policy Abroad Towards Low-Profile Tactics and the Rise of Special Operations Forces Harris Kyle Where black is the color; MA MRP Second 2012 2013 Global U. where none is the reader Governance Waterloo number: The Hibakusha

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Last First Title Program Product Role Start Finish Program University as the Key to Nuclear Abolition Koscinski Dan Privatizing Peace MA MRP First 2012 2013 Political U. reader Science Waterloo Sangha Karina Robots at War: The MA MRP First 2012 2013 Global U. Ethics of Unmanned reader Governance Waterloo Combat Aerial Vehicles Milkoreit Manjana Mindmade Politics: The PhD Dissertation Committee 2009 2013 Global U. Role of Cognition in member Governance Waterloo Global Climate Change Governance Tjornbo Ola Complexity and Social PhD Dissertation Committee 2008 2013 Global U. Media: The Role of member Governance Waterloo Virtual Associations in Supporting Democratic Responses to Complex Global Problems Carter Kimberley Engendering Security: PhD Dissertation Committee 2005 2013 Political U. Toronto Lessons from Post- member Science Conflict Central America Caverhill- Isaac ACEs High: Complexity, MA MRP Second 2011 2012 Global U. Godkewitsch Security, and Extreme reader Governance Waterloo Events Di Sciullo Vincent The Roles of Non-State MA MRP First 2011 2012 Political U. Actors in Transboundary reader Science Waterloo Water Management Downe- Tristan Clausewitz Endures: On MA MRP First 2011 2012 Political U. Dewdney War’s Relevance to reader Science Waterloo Strategic Thought in the Modern Era Emery Rachel Why do terrorist groups MA MRP Second 2011 2012 Political U. renounce violence? reader Science Waterloo Kokotovic Maja An exploration of the MA MRP First 2011 2012 Political U. role of women’s CSOs in reader Science Waterloo peacebuilding processes: current practices and future possibilities Maitra Titli State Sponsored Acts of MA MRP First 2011 2012 Political U. Terror reader Science Waterloo Manicom James Bridging Troubled Postdoctoral MRP Supervisor 2011 2012 Balsillie U. Waters: China, Japan, fellow School of Waterloo and Maritime Order in International the East China Sea Affairs McDonough David Canadian Naval Postdoctoral MRP Supervisor 2011 2012 Balsillie U. Strategy, Ballistic Missile fellow School of Waterloo Defence, and Asia- International Pacific Security Affairs Raymond Mark Ideational Conflict Postdoctoral MRP Supervisor 2011 2012 Balsillie U. fellow School of Waterloo International Affairs Sanders Rebecca Exceptional Security PhD Dissertation Committee 2005 2012 Political U. Toronto Practices, Human Rights chair Science Abuses, and the Politics of Legal Legitimation in

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Last First Title Program Product Role Start Finish Program University the American ‘War on Terror’

g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

2017–2018 Global Governance (MAGG core course) 2016-2017 Security Ontology 2015–2016 Security Governance 2014–2015 Security Ontology 2013–2014 Security Ontology 2012–2013 Security Governance 2012–2013 Security Ontology 2011–2012 Security Governance 2011–2012 Security Ontology h)1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount PI Purpose** 2013 CIGI O $450,000 (3–years) Welch R, T, P, O 2012 Japan F $16,500 Welch O Foundation 2012 Japan F $29,838 Welch P, O Foundation

*Type: C-Granting councils; G-Government; F-Foundations; O-Other ** Purpose: R-Research, T-Travel, P-Publication, O-Other

2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.]

N/A i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must

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show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

Books authored ...... 8 Books edited ...... 3 Chapters in books ...... 18 Papers in refereed journals ...... 25 Papers in refereed conference proceedings ...... 0 Technical reports (incl. policy briefs, research reports) ...... 2 Abstracts and/or papers read ...... 58 Others ...... 144

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

1. Welch, David A., 渋の選択 - 対外政策変更に関する理論 [Painful Choices: A Theory of Foreign Policy Change] (Tokyo: Chikura Shobo, 2016). 336 pp. 2. Nye, Joseph S., Jr. and David A. Welch, Understanding Global Conflict and Cooperation 10th ed. (New York: Pearson/Longman, January 2016). 384 pp. 3. Nye, Joseph S., Jr. and David A. Welch, Understanding Global Conflict and Cooperation 9th ed. (New York: Pearson/Longman, 2012). 365 pp. 4. Munton, Don, and David A. Welch, キューバ危機 - ミラー・イメージングの罠 [The Cuban Missile Crisis] (Tokyo: Chikura Shobo, 2015). 229 pp.

Books edited:

1. Soeya, Yoshihide, Masayuki Tadokoro, and David A. Welch, eds., 普通の国日本 [Japan as a 'Normal Country'?] (Tokyo: Chikura Shobo, 2014). 352 pp.

Chapters in Books:

1. “Arctic Geopolitics.” In Ken Coates and Carin Holroyd, eds., The Palgrave Handbook of Arctic Policy (London: Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming 2019). 2. “China, the United States, and ‘The Thucydides’s Trap’,” in Kai He and Huiyun Feng, eds., China’s Challenges and International Order Transition (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, forthcoming 2019). 3. “Canada and the South China Sea” (with David B. Dewitt). In Asif B. Farooq and Scott McKnight, eds., Moving Forward: Issues in Canada-China Relations (Toronto, ON: Asian Institute and China Open Research Network, 2016), pp. 37-45.

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4. “Shadow Boxing: Or, Pretending to Wage Cold War in a (Nearly) Postideological Era,” in Lorenz M. Lüthi, ed., The Regional Cold Wars in Europe, East Asia, and the Middle East: Crucial Periods and Turning Points (Stanford, CA: Standford University Press, 2015), pp. 191–195. 5. “The Shifting Landscape of Conflict Management,” in Chester A. Crocker, Fen Osler Hampson, and Pamela Aall, eds., Managing Conflict in a World Adrift (Washington, DC: United States institute of Peace Press, 2015), pp. 23–43. 6. “The Arctic and Geopolitics,” in Hara, Kimie and Ken Coates, eds., East Asia-Arctic Relations: Boundary, Security, and International Politics (Waterloo, ON: Center for International Governance Innovation, 2014) pp. 183–197. 7. Welch, David A., “The Cuban Missile Crisis,” in Cooper, Andrew F., Jorge Heine, and Ramesh Thakur, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013) pp. 836–829. 8. Welch, David A., “Tolstoy the International Relations Theorist,” in Orwin, Donna Tussing and Rick McPeak, eds., War and Peace across Disciplines (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2012) pp. 175–189. 9. Welch, David A., “The Kennedy-Castro Years,” in Castro, Soraya M. and Ron Pruessen, eds., Fifty Years of Revolution: Perspectives on Cuba, the United States, and the World (Gainsville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2012) pp. 184–198.

Papers in refereed Journals:

1. Welch, David A. “The Justice Motive in East Asia’s Territorial Disputes.” Group Decision and Negotiation (forthcoming; early online edition available September 2016). 2. Welch, David A.“The Justice Motive in International Relations: Past, Present, and Future.” International Negotiation 19:3 (2014), pp. 410–425. 3. Welch, David A., “What Is ‘Governance,’ Anyway?,” Canadian Foreign Policy Journal, Vol. 19, No. 3 (December 2013), pp. 253–258. 4. Welch, David A., “Discourse, Politics, and Authority: (My) Reply to (Our) Critics,” Canadian Foreign Policy Journal, Vol. 19, No. 3 (December 2013), pp. 265–267.

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings

N/A

DATE: January 29, 2019

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Curricula Vitae – PhD Political Science a) NAME:

WHITESIDE, Heather, assistant professor, pre-tenure Member of the Graduate Faculty: yes b) DEGREES: designation, institution, department, year

Ph.D. Political Science, Simon Fraser University, Canada, 2013 M.A. Political Economy, Carleton University, Canada, 2006 B.A. Global Political Economy, University of Manitoba, Canada, 2004 c) EMPLOYMENT HISTORY: dates, rank/position, department, institution/firm

2015- Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo 2015- Fellow, Balsillie School of International Affairs, University of Waterloo 2013-5 Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Geography, University of British Columbia d) HONOURS: (F.R.S., F.R.S.C., Governor Generals Award, honorary degree, etc...)

N/A e) SCHOLARLY AND PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES: past 7 years only (eg. executive and editorial positions but not memberships in societies)

2018- Co-coordinator, Waterloo Political Economy Group 2015- Associate Editor, Studies in Political Economy 2014- Member, Editorial Board, Studies in Political Economy f) GRADUATE SUPERVISIONS: master=s, doctoral, postdoctoral - completed/in progress

Completed: 2 M.A., 0 Ph.D. In progress: 2 M.A., 1 Ph.D.

NAME OF STUDENTS supervised within the past seven years, title of thesis of project, year of first registration and year of completion:

. Michelle Vello (MA), To Save or To Spend Oil Wealth. Sept. 2006-April 2007 (Master’s Research Project)

. Christopher Abbott (MA), Reproduction and the Ecological Dominance of Capitalism. Sept. 2006-April 2007 (Master’s Research Project)

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g) GRADUATE COURSES: past 7 years, by year

Seminars:

2019 State and Economic Life 2016-18 Topics in Politics and Business h) 1. EXTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: past 7 years only, by year, indicating source (granting councils, industry, government, foundations, other); amount; principal investigator; purpose (research, travel, publications, etc...)

Year Source Type* Amount per year Purpose**

2016-20 SSHRC C $46,063 Insight Grant Principal investigator: S. McBride.

2016-18 SSHRC C $49,935 Partnership Development Grant Principal investigator: S. McBride.

2015 ASPP O $5,000 Principal investigator: H. Whiteside.

2013-15 SSHRC C $41,500 Postdoctoral Fellowship Principal investigator: H. Whiteside. 2. INTERNAL RESEARCH FUNDING: This includes university funds, SSHRC minor grants awarded through the University, etc.] N/A i) PUBLICATIONS: The Publications should be listed in the categories shown below and include the following information: books authored, books edited (a list of the chapters contributed by the editor must follow each title), chapters in books (other than those listed in the above category), papers in refereed journals, papers in refereed conference proceedings, technical reports, abstracts and/or papers read, and others. Each title must show the names of the authors in the order in which they appear in the original

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publication and inclusive page numbers. Publications submitted, but not yet accepted, must be listed separately within the various categories.

1) Life-time summary (count) according to the following categories:

- Books authored ...... 3 - Books edited ...... 0 - Chapters in books ...... 13 - Papers in refereed journal ...... 11 - Papers in refereed conference proceedings...... 29 - Technical reports ...... 0 - Abstracts and/or papers read ...... 0 - Others (workshops presented) ...... 27

2) Details for past seven (7) years same categories as above: books, chapters in books, papers in refereed journals.

Books authored:

1. Whiteside, H. About Canada: Public-Private Partnerships (Fernwood Publishing: Winnipeg and Halifax, 2016).

2. Whiteside, H. Purchase for Profit: public-private partnerships and Canada’s public health care system (University of Toronto Press: Toronto, 2015).

3. McBride, S. and Whiteside, H. Private Affluence, Public Austerity: economic crisis and democratic malaise in Canada (Fernwood Publishing: Winnipeg and Halifax, 2011).

Books edited:

N/A

Chapters in Books:

1. Christophers, B., and Whiteside, H. forthcoming (accepted). “Fictions of surplus: commodifying public land in Canada and the United Kingdom.” In Lake, B., and Ghertner, A., eds. Land Fictions (Cornell University Press: Ithaca).

2. Whiteside, H. “BC’s Recurrent Austerity: victory unfettered from success.” In Fanelli, C., and Evans, B., eds. The Public Sector in an Age of Austerity: Perspectives from Canada’s Provinces and Territories (McGill-Queen’s University Press: Montreal and Kingston, 2018) pp. 23-47.

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3. Whiteside, H. “Healthy Profit: private finance and public hospitals.” Brownlee, J., Hurl, C., Walby, K., eds. Minding the Public’ s Business: Critical Perspectives on Corporatization in Canada (Between the Lines: Toronto, 2018), Chapter 1.

4. Peck, J., and Whiteside, H. “Neoliberalizing Detroit.” In Pavlovkskaya, M., and Schram, S. eds. Rethinking Neoliberalism: Resisting the Disciplinary Regime (NY: Routledge, 2017), pp. 181-98.

5. Whiteside, H. “Profiting Off Austerity: private finance for public infrastructure.” In McBride, S., and Evans, B., eds. The Austerity State (University of Toronto Press: Toronto, 2017) pp. 264-84.

6. Whiteside, H. “Neoliberalism as austerity: the theory, practice, and purpose of fiscal restraint since the 1970s.” In Springer, S., Birch, K., MacLeavy, J., eds. Handbook of Neoliberalism (Routledge: London, 2016) pp. 361-9.

7. Peck, J., and Whiteside, H. “Financializing the Entrepreneurial City.” In Schönig, B. and Schipper, S., eds. Urban Austerity: Impacts of the Global Financial Crisis on Cities in Europe (Theater de Zeit: Berlin, 2016) pp. 21-39.

8. Whiteside, H. “How Ottawa Shifts Spending: private financing and the municipal infrastructure gap.” In Doern, G. B., and Stoney, C., eds. How Ottawa Spends 2015-2016 (McGill-Queen’s University Press: Montreal and Kingston, 2016), pp. 90-129.

9. Whiteside, H. “Austerity budgets and public sector retrenchment: crisis era policy making in Canada, the UK, and Australia.” In Boychuk, G., Mahon, R., and McBride, S., eds. After ’08: Social Policy and the Global Financial Crisis (University of British Columbia Press: Vancouver, 2015) pp. 254-271.

10. Whiteside, H. “Colin Leys and Colin Hay: market-driven politics and the depoliticisation of health care.” In Collyer, F., ed. Handbook of Social Theory in Health, Illness and Medicine (Palgrave Macmillan: London, 2015) pp. 389-404.

11. Whiteside, H. “P3s and the Value for Money Illusion: orchestrating future austerity?” In Baines, D., and McBride, S., eds. Orchestrating Austerity: Impacts and Resistance (Fernwood Publishing: Winnipeg and Halifax, 2014) pp. 162-74.

12. Whiteside, H. “Tarnished yet tenacious: examining the track record and future of public- private partnership hospitals in Canada.” In Atasoy, Y., ed. Global Economic Crisis and the Politics of Diversity (Palgrave Macmillan: London, 2014) p. 81-104.

13. McBride, S. and Whiteside, H. “The Canadian State and the Crisis: Theoretical and Historical Context.” In Fowler, T., ed. From Crisis To Austerity: Neoliberalism, Organized Labour, and the Canadian State (Red Quill Books: Ottawa, 2013) pp. 23-48.

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Papers in refereed Journals:

1. Whiteside, H. forthcoming (accepted) “Critical Commentary: Advanced Perspectives on Financialized Urban Infrastructures.” Urban Studies.

2. Whiteside, H. 2018. “Austerity as Epiphenomenon? Public Assets Before & Beyond 2008.” Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society. 11:3, pp. 409-425.

3. Whiteside, H. 2018. “Foreign in a Domestic Sense: Puerto Rico’s Debt Crisis and Paradoxes in Critical Urban Studies.” Urban Studies. May 29, 2018, online first: http://journals.sagepub.com/eprint/y2f8aQ5Y5BC7kvTJzj37/full

4. Whiteside, H. 2018. “Public Works: Better, Cheaper, Faster Infrastructure.” Studies in Political Economy. 99:1, pp. 2-19.

5. Whiteside, H. 2017. “The state’s estate: devaluing and revaluing ‘surplus’ public land in Canada.” Environment & Planning A. August 2, 2017, online first: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0308518X17723631

6. Whiteside, H. 2017. “The Canada Infrastructure Bank: Private Finance As Poor ‘Alternative’.” Studies in Political Economy. 98:2, pp. 223-237.

7. Peck, J., and Whiteside, H. 2016. “Financializing Detroit.” Economic Geography. 92:3, pp. 235-268.

8. Whiteside, H. 2013. “Stabilizing privatization: crisis, enabling fields, and public-private partnerships in Canada.” Alternate Routes: a journal of critical social research. 24, pp. 85-108.

9. Whiteside, H. 2012. “Crises of Capital and the Logic of Dispossession and Repossession.” Studies in Political Economy. 89, pp. 59-78.

10. Whiteside, H. 2011. “Unhealthy Policy: the political economy of Canadian public-private partnership hospitals.” Health Sociology Review. 20:3, pp. 258-268.

11. McBride, S. and Whiteside, H. 2011. “Austerity for Whom?” Socialist Studies. 7:1/2, Spring/Fall, pp. 42-64.

Papers in Refereed Conference Proceedings

1. Whiteside, H. “Making Sense and Cents of Austerity: Privatization, Financialization, and the Politics of Public Budget Management.” Global Conference on Economic Geography. University of Cologne, Germany. July 24-28, 2018.

2. Whiteside, H. “Public Assets & National Austerities” Alternate Routes: Austerity

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Against Democracy. University of Bologna. Bologna, Italy. June 11-13, 2018.

3. Whiteside, H. “Canadian Political Economy: changes, crises, and conflicts since the 1980s.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference 2018. University of Regina. Regina, SK. May 30-June 2, 2018.

4. Whiteside, H. “Austerity as Epiphenomenon? Public Assets Before & Beyond 2008.” Association of American Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting. New Orleans, LA. April 10-14, 2018.

5. Whiteside, H. “Management Reform and the Making of Public- Private Partnership Markets.” International Studies Association. San Francisco, CA. April 4-7, 2018.

6. Whiteside, H. “Authoritarian Neoliberalism & Abandoned PPPs?” European International Studies Association. Barcelona, Spain. September 13-16, 2017.

7. Whiteside, H. “Public Works: Better, Cheaper, Faster Infrastructure.” Congress 2017, Society for Socialist Studies. Ryerson University. Toronto, ON. May 30-June 2, 2017.

8. Whiteside, H. “Austerity and Its Alternatives.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference 2017. Ryerson University. Toronto, ON. May 30-June 1, 2017.

9. Whiteside, H. “Re-turned Commodities: secondary primitive accumulation and/in the public sector.” Association of American Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting. Boston, MA. April 5-9, 2017.

10. Whiteside, H. “Austerity, Private Finance, and the Business of Government.” International Political Science Association. 24th World Congress of Political Science. Poznań, Poland. July 23-28, 2016.

11. Whiteside, H. “Banking on infrastructure: public-private finance solutions to the infrastructure gap in Canada.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference 2016. University of Calgary. Calgary, AB. May 31-June 2, 2016.

12. Christophers, B. and Whiteside, H. “From source to surplus: public land’s conceptual commodification in Canada and the UK.” Association of American Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting. San Francisco, CA. March 29-April 2, 2016.

13. Whiteside, H. “A Solution in Search of a Problem: the emergence and development of infrastructure PPPs.” Fourth Global Conference on Economic Geography. University of Oxford, UK. August 19-23, 2015.

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14. Whiteside, H. “Austerity and the Financialization of Urban America.” Congress 2015, Society for Socialist Studies. University of Ottawa, ON. June 2-5, 2015.

15. Whiteside, H. “Financing Austerity.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference 2015. University of Ottawa. Ottawa, ON. June 2-4, 2015.

16. Whiteside, H. “Constructing Infrastructure Markets: private finance for public austerity.” Association of American Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting. Chicago, IL. April 21-25, 2015.

17. Whiteside. H. “What’s New With Austerity Today?” New Zealand Political Studies Association Conference. Auckland, NZ. December 1-3, 2014.

18. Whiteside, H. “Capitalizing on public infrastructure: financialization and public-private partnership hospitals.” Congress 2014, Society for Socialist Studies. Brock University. St. Catharines, ON. May 27-30, 2014.

19. Whiteside, H. “From turbulence to entrenchment: P3 policy evolution and innovation after the global financial crisis.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference 2014. Brock University. St. Catharines, ON. May 27-29, 2014.

20. Whiteside, H. “Public interest, private profit: analyzing the work and workers of P3 units.” International Research Society for Public Management (IRSPM). Carleton University. Ottawa, ON. April 9-11, 2014.

21. Whiteside. H. “The Spatio-Temporal Mobility of Austerity Policy.” International Studies Association Annual Conference 2014. Toronto, ON. March 26-29, 2014.

22. Whiteside, H. “P3s, austerity, and Canadian public procurement: sustainable development or substantial risk?” Work in a Warming World: Labour, Climate Change, and Social Struggle. University of Toronto. Toronto, ON. November 29-December 1, 2013.

23. Whiteside, H. “Politicizing depoliticization: resistance to ‘privatization by stealth’ in Canada.” Congress 2013, Society for Socialist Studies. University of Victoria, Victoria, BC. June 5-8, 2013.

24. Whiteside, H. “Public-private partnerships: re-conceptualizing the ‘public interest’.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference 2013, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC. June 4-6, 2013.

25. Whiteside, H. “Austerity disparity: fiscal restraint and the beneficiaries of provincial spending reform.” Policy Research in Times of Austerity and Uncertainty. Ryerson University, Toronto, ON. May 8-10, 2013.

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26. Whiteside, H. “Routinize, Institutionalize, Depoliticize: how global privatization policies are implemented locally in Canada.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB. June 13-15, 2012.

27. Whiteside, H. “Grounding Neoliberalism: subnational restructuring and the routinization of accumulation by dispossession within Canada’s public health care system.” Mapping the Global Dimensions of Policy. McMaster University, Hamilton, ON. January 26-27, 2012.

28. Whiteside, H. “Economic Crises and the Evolution of Dispossession and Repossession in Canada.” Canadian Political Science Association Annual Conference, Wilfred Laurier University, Waterloo, ON. May 16-18, 2011.

29. MacArthur, J., Newman, J., and Whiteside, H. “Trend or transformation? The private sector and evolving forms of health, power and transport governance in British Columbia.” British Columbia Political Studies Annual Conference, Trinity Western University, Langley, BC. May 5-6, 2011.

Other (Workshop Papers Presented)

1. Whiteside, H. “The Political Economy of Austerity, Privatization, and Social Reproduction.” Feminist Engagements with Austerity. University of Bristol. Bristol, UK. January 10-11, 2019.

2. Whiteside, H. “Austerity as Epiphenomenon?” Economics and Society Speaker Series. University of Manitoba. Winnipeg, MB. November 23, 2018.

3. Whiteside, H. “Operational P3s: Scandals and Status Quo.” International Public- Private Partnership Scholars Network (IP3SN). Seventh Conference. Toronto, ON. September 20-21, 2018.

4. Whiteside, H. “Creating & Commodifying ‘Surplus’ Public Land in Canada.” Workshop on Public Land. Université Paris-Est (Ecole d’Urbanisme de Paris), Paris, France. June 28-29, 2018.

5. Whiteside, H. “PPP, Austerity, and Me.” Association of American Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting. New Orleans, LA. April 10-14, 2018.

6. Whiteside, H. Book launch analysis and commentary. Skerrett, K., Weststar, J., Archer, S., and Roberts, C. 2017. The Contradictions of Pension Fund Capitalism. USA: LERA. Toronto, ON. March 29, 2018.

7. Whiteside, H. “Surplus and Scarcity: Austerity-Driven Public Land Disposal?” SSHRC ‘Austerity and Its Alternatives’ Partnership Development Grant Workshop. Carleton

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University, Ottawa, ON. March 23-24, 2018.

8. Whiteside, H. “Canada Infrastructure Bank.” Leadership or Laissez-Faire? Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. Ottawa, ON. March 22, 2018.

9. Whiteside, H. “Public-Private Partnerships: Market Development Through Management Reform.” The Political Economy of Management: At the Nexus of Public and Private Development. Review of International Political Economy Special Issue Proposal Workshop. School of African and Oriental Studies. London, UK. May 25-26, 2017.

10. Whiteside, H. “Financialized Fiscal Restraint: more debt, less spending, municipal distress.” Spatial Politics of Austerity. McMaster University. Hamilton, ON. May 18, 2017.

11. Whiteside, H. “The State of Theory on the Business of Government.” Political Economy: Old Challenges, New Responses. Carleton University. Ottawa, ON. March 20-21, 2017.

12. Whiteside, H. “Extraordinary But Not Unusual: Financialization & Detroit.” The Financialization of Cities Workshop. UC Berkeley. Berkeley, California. March 9-10, 2017.

13. Whiteside, H. “Paying for Austerity: public debt, private finance, and regressive redistribution.” Mapping the Global Dimensions of Policy 6. McMaster University. Hamilton, ON. February 6-7, 2017.

14. Whiteside, H. “Neoliberal Political Economy in Theory.” The Future Of Politics: Structures, Ideas, Law, and Transformative Change. University of Ontario Institute of Technology (UOIT). Oshawa, ON. February 1, 2017.

15. Whiteside, H. “Austerity Infrastructure: financializing, offshoring, and tax sheltering public-private partnership funds.” SSHRC ‘Austerity and Its Alternatives’ Partnership Development Grant Workshop. McMaster University. Hamilton, ON. December 14-15, 2016.

16. Whiteside, H. “The City Limits of Financialization.” Association of American Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting. San Francisco, CA. March 29-April 2, 2016.

17. Whiteside, H. “States, Markets, and Shifting Bureaucratic Capacities.” Association of American Geographers (AAG) Annual Meeting. San Francisco, CA. March 29-April 2, 2016.

18. Whiteside, H. “Infraction: Banking on Infrastructure.” Waterloo Political Economy

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Group & Balsillie School of International Affairs. University of Waterloo. Waterloo, ON. March 3, 2016.

19. Whiteside, H. “P3s: an insurance policy we don’t need and a middleman we don’t want.” Anti-Privatization Forum. Toronto. February 21, 2016.

20. Whiteside, H. “Unhealthy Policy: the political economy of public-private partnership hospitals.” Hospital / Hôpital. Institute for Health and Social Policy 2015 Conference. McGill University. Montreal, QU. October 1-2, 2015.

21. Whiteside, H. “Profiting Off Austerity: private finance for public infrastructure.” Manufacturing and Framing Austerity. McMaster University. Hamilton, ON. October 30- November 1, 2014.

22. Whiteside, H. “Private Affluence, Public Austerity: P3s, Economic Crisis, and the Public Response.” Ontario Health Coalition Annual Assembly and Conference. Toronto, ON. October 18-19, 2014.

23. Whiteside, H. “Austerity’s Spring: examining the relationship between financial crises and fiscal crises.” Atlantic Provinces Political Science Association 2014 Annual General Conference. Memorial University. St. John’s, NL. October 3-5, 2014.

24. Whiteside, H. “P3s and the Value for Money Illusion: orchestrating future austerity?” Orchestrating Austerity. McMaster University. Hamilton, ON. October 18, 2014.

25. Whiteside, H. “Austerity budgets and public sector retrenchment: crisis era policy in Britain, Canada, and Australia.” Global Crisis and the Changing Prospects for Social Policy. McMaster University, Hamilton, ON. September 27-28, 2014.

26. Whiteside, H. “Stabilizing Dispossession: How P3 Enabling Fields Help Cushion the Impact of an Economic Crisis on Privatization Policy.” The Global Economic Crisis and Canadian Austerity: Perceptions versus Reality. Ryerson University, Toronto, ON. March 23, 2012.

27. Whiteside, H. “Canadian Public-Private Partnerships and the Global Financial Crisis: tarnished yet triumphant.” Economic Crisis and the Reorganization of the Global Economy. Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, BC. September 9-10, 2011.

DATE: January 11, 2019

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