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MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR Fall is a busy time of the year, but also an exciting fresh start as we welcome new and returning students and faculty to McMaster and specifically to the Department of Political Science. This year we welcome two short-term appointments to our faculty: teaching CLA Dr. Heather Bastedo, and research CLA Dr. Szu- Yun Hsu (see New Appointments). We will also be particularly busy this fall with a search process for a new tenure-track appointment in comparative public policy. Faculty searches are time-intensive as short-listed candidates visit campus, meet with faculty and students, and give a research presentation. It is also an exciting process, as we get to learn about new research and add a scholar with distinctive talents and expertise to our department. Faculty growth brings new courses and curriculum renewal, which is a direct benefit for our undergraduate and graduate students. This adds to the core strengths of our department, which are rooted in our outstanding faculty who continue to produce ground-breaking research, win national research or best paper awards, and earn laurels as exceptional teachers and respected public commentators. Congratulations in particular go to Marshall Beier, Michelle Dion, Catherine Frost, and Cliff van der Linden for receiving major research grants this past year, and to Peter Nyers, who has been promoted to Full Professor. Our graduate students also continue to be recognized for their outstanding work. PhD candidate Kelsey Leonard was awarded the prestigious Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship, while Rachel Barnett, Oldrich Bubak, Michael Gordon, John Hayes, and sasha kovalchuk won nationally competitive SSHRC Doctoral Scholarships. The undergraduate program is also thriving. Among the many awards and scholarships won by our undergraduate students this past year, Carol Markos was selected for the prestigious Wilson Leadership Scholar Award. The MPSSA, MACMUN, AWSM and MSU were among the many university and community organizations where our students played leadership roles, and gained enriching experiences outside of the classroom. The federal election season will keep us busy this fall, and we are planning an exciting roster of guest speakers, workshops and other special events that bring our faculty and students’ expertise to bear on this and many other pressing issues of these turbulent times. Check out the department’s website regularly to keep abreast of all that is going on. And as you review this newsletter, take heart that our students and scholars are doing their part to address the enduring questions of politics, locally and internationally, to help us navigate our challenging political landscape. Sincerely, Karen Bird McMASTER UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE ANNUAL NEWSLETTER | FALL 2019 POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES Department of Political Science BRIGHTER WORLD | politicalscience.mcmaster.ca
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POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES · with the Carlos Monsiváis Award Drs. Michelle Dion and Jordi Díez (University of Guelph) have been recognized with the Carlos Monsiváis Award for the

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Page 1: POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES · with the Carlos Monsiváis Award Drs. Michelle Dion and Jordi Díez (University of Guelph) have been recognized with the Carlos Monsiváis Award for the

MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRFall is a busy time of the year, but also an exciting fresh start as we welcome new and returning students and faculty to McMaster and specifically to

the Department of Political Science.

This year we welcome two short-term appointments to our faculty: teaching CLA Dr. Heather Bastedo, and research CLA Dr. Szu-Yun Hsu (see New Appointments). We will also be particularly busy this fall with a search process for a new tenure-track appointment in comparative public policy. Faculty searches are time-intensive as short-listed candidates visit campus, meet with faculty and students, and give a research presentation. It is also an exciting process, as we get to learn about new research and add a scholar with distinctive talents and expertise to our department. Faculty growth brings new courses and curriculum renewal, which is a direct benefit for our undergraduate and graduate students.

This adds to the core strengths of our department, which are rooted in our outstanding faculty who continue to produce ground-breaking research, win national research or best paper awards, and earn laurels as exceptional teachers and respected public commentators. Congratulations in particular go to Marshall Beier, Michelle Dion, Catherine Frost, and Cliff van der Linden for receiving major research grants this past year, and to Peter Nyers, who has been promoted to Full Professor.

Our graduate students also continue to be recognized for their outstanding work. PhD candidate Kelsey Leonard was awarded the prestigious Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship, while Rachel Barnett, Oldrich Bubak, Michael Gordon, John Hayes, and sasha kovalchuk won nationally competitive SSHRC Doctoral Scholarships. The undergraduate program is also thriving. Among the many awards and scholarships won by our undergraduate students this past year, Carol Markos was selected for

the prestigious Wilson Leadership Scholar Award. The MPSSA, MACMUN, AWSM and MSU were among the many university and community organizations where our students played leadership roles, and gained enriching experiences outside of the classroom.

The federal election season will keep us busy this fall, and we are planning an exciting roster of guest speakers, workshops and other special events that bring our faculty and students’ expertise to bear on this and many other pressing issues of these turbulent times. Check out the department’s website regularly to keep abreast of all that is going on. And as you review this newsletter, take heart that our students and scholars are doing their part to address the enduring questions of politics, locally and internationally, to help us navigate our challenging political landscape.

Sincerely,Karen Bird

McMASTER UNIVERSIT Y DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE ANNUAL NE WSLET TER | FALL 2019

POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES

Department ofPolitical Science

BRIGHTER WORLD | politicalscience.mcmaster.ca

Page 2: POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES · with the Carlos Monsiváis Award Drs. Michelle Dion and Jordi Díez (University of Guelph) have been recognized with the Carlos Monsiváis Award for the

AWARDSCongratulations to Dr. Michelle Dion, recipient of the Sarah Shorten Award

The Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT) recently honoured Michelle Dion (left) with the Sarah Shorten Award in recognition of outstanding achievements in the promotion of the advancement of women in Canadian universities and colleges.

A commitment to equity is something Dr. Dion has in spades. While serving as President of the McMaster University Faculty Association, Dr. Dion advocated improvements in leave policies, family support policies and changes to student evaluation processes that are biases against women professors. Michelle was also recently named as part of an all-female editorial team of the American Political Science Review, a role that she will take up next year through 2024. Kudos Michelle on your work to ensure that the future of political science is diverse, inclusive and, increasingly, female.

Dr. Michelle Dion, recognized internationally with the Carlos Monsiváis Award

Drs. Michelle Dion and Jordi Díez (University of Guelph) have been recognized with the Carlos Monsiváis Award for the best Social Science article by the

Latin American Studies Association (LASA).

Their article, “New Media and Support for Same Sex Marriage” published in the Latin American Research Review (LASA), explains that internet access provides opportunities for Latin Americans, particularly those who are most interested in keeping up with the news, to learn about regional and international trends that are expanding the rights of same-sex couples. This, in turn, is then associated with more support for those rights at home.

Dr. Karen Bird recognized for her professional and community contributions

Dr. Karen Bird was recognized by the Empower Strategy group for her role in driving change. Dr. Bird has contributed research and advocacy on diversifying the

make-up of the senior leadership of Hamilton’s public and private sector organizations and was recognized for lasting impact on her field and her community.

Khaled Al-Kassimi recognized for teaching excellence

The Department is proud to announce that Khaled Al-Kassimi, PhD candidate has been named one of two winners of the 2018 Keith Leppmann Award for Teaching Assistant Excellence. He is the first two-time winner of the award, having previously been recognized in 2015.

Cassandra Preece as one of the Taiwan MOFA’s Canadian Young Leaders to Visit Taiwan!

Incoming Political Science doctoral student Cassandra Preece was selected by Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) to participate in the Canadian Young

Leaders’ Delegation to Taiwan.

Sponsored and organized by Taiwan’s MOFA, 12 young professionals met with government officials, including those from the Ministry of Mainland Affairs, the National Development Council and the Bureau of Foreign Trade, to exchange ideas and strengthen relations between Canada and Taiwan. Taiwan is one of the most open and progressive democracies in Asia and is of particular interest to Cassandra as she begins her doctoral studies with support from the Ethnic Quota Global Study Doctoral Fellowship.

MAJOR RESEARCH GRANTS AWARDED IN 2018-19

Marshall J. BeierChildren, Rights and Security: Global Performatives, Local Practices (SSHRC Insight Development)

Michelle DionGender, Methodology, Knowledge Mobilization and Research Impact across Four Social Sciences (SSHRC Insight Development)

Catherine FrostSpeech, Declarations of Independence, and the paradox of Constituent Power (SSHRC Insight Development)

Clifton van der LindenAI + Democracy Lab Canada Foundation for Innovation John R. Evans Leaders Fund (JELF)

George Breckenridge, an influential voice for understanding contemporary U.S. politics, and who generously shared his insights with generations of students, scholars and the general public, passed away on Dec. 11, 2018, in Hamilton.

George was raised in Dumbarton, Scotland, and graduated from the University of Glasgow with an M.A. in Economics and Political Science, before proceeding to Duke University in the U.S. where he earned his Ph.D. His time at Duke coincided with the height of the Civil Rights Movement and this helped shape his understanding of American politics and strengthened his compassion for those who suffer.

In 1967, he joined the Department of Political Science at McMaster where he continued to teach until this past year. His expertise in American politics (which resulted in his book, United States Government and Politics) and the UK led to regular calls by the local and national media to discuss the domestic and international politics of both countries. George shared his knowledge in other ways too, including

most recently co-organizing and moderating the Department’s very successful series of “Trump Talks.” His political insights and his calm and careful counsel

have been valued by successive generations of students and by his University colleagues.

One of them is political scientist Dr. Barry Kay, who was in his sophomore year at the time George joined the department. Dr. Kay notes that over the next fifty years, George “continued to serve as an

inspiration, confidante, role model, mentor and friend… There is nobody who has had a

greater impact on how I teach my US Government course at Wilfrid Laurier, or who I have contacted more regularly on academic matters.”

As much as George enjoyed his academic life, he also enjoyed an active life outside of it. He insisted that there were other crucial priorities in the manner in which a person should live and he took care to preserve his relationship with his family, his friends, and his church. He loved interesting conversations, travel, opera, good books, and movies. He was a fine example of a life well lived, and he is greatly missed by his many former students, colleagues and friends.

• Remembering George Breckenridge •

Page 3: POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES · with the Carlos Monsiváis Award Drs. Michelle Dion and Jordi Díez (University of Guelph) have been recognized with the Carlos Monsiváis Award for the

EVENTSMapping the Global Dimension of Policy 8

The eighth annual graduate student conference on Mapping the Global Dimensions of Policy took place March 8-9, 2019. The conference attracted over 30 participants from McMaster and universities across Canada. The first day’s events took place at McMaster’s Continuing Education facility in downtown Hamilton, enabling delegates to partake in the famous James North Art Crawl on Friday night, before returning to a second day of plenaries and papers on campus.

Two excellent guest speakers got the conference off to a good start. Dr. Judy Fudge, from Labour Studies, spoke of the need for a global governance regime to eliminate human trafficking and modern slavery. Dr. Hayden King (McMaster PhD, 2018), from Ryerson’s Yellowhead Institute, addressed the ongoing relationship between the Canadian settler state and Indigenous people. An exciting array of papers covered topics such as extractivist political economy, global health policy, climate change and the challenge of environmental governance, migration and citizenship issues. These were punctuated by a Professional Development Panel on life after the degree, and a roundtable on Globalization in an Age of Discontent, featuring McMaster’s Dr. Catherine Frost, Dr. Mark Busser, and University of Waterloo’s Dr. Susan Elliott.

A Remarkable Assembly: Female MPP Job Shadow

The Political Science Department sent a group of ten female students to Queen’s Park this past

April to participate in two days of activities hosted by the Legislative Assembly of Ontario’s Women’s Forum and the Protocol and Public Relations Branch.

The students engaged with 100+ other young women from across Ontario in the “Our Remarkable Assembly Women’s Forum,” which featured a full-day program of networking and public engagement through education and female empowerment. On the second day, our students had the exclusive privilege to each job-shadow a female MPP.

The Political Science department thanks the Socrates Project and the Office of Experiential Education, as well as Dave Levac, McMaster’s Distinguished Visiting Professor in Public Leadership for Change, for facilitating this exceptional opportunity.

Pre-ISA Workshop on Digital Democracy: How will Digitization Impact Global Democratic Practices?

Ahead of the 2019 International Studies Association Conference in Toronto, a group of 24 international researchers gathered at McMaster University to discuss the transnational, cross-border dimensions of digital democracy.

The workshop examined the global aspects of concerns about digitization and democracy, considering both more conventional democratic practices, such as elections, and newer ones, such as digital activism.

This workshop was co-organized by Dr. Tony Porter and Dr. Netina Tan from the Department of Political Science, who along with Dr. Sara Bannerman head up Digital Democracy Hub at McMaster University. Additional support was provided by the International Studies Association, the Institute on Globalization and the Human Condition, and the Faculty of Social Sciences.

Field Trip to Queen’s Park

Undergraduate students from two political science classes visited the Ontario Legislative Building at Queen’s Park in Toronto. Participants were enrolled either in 4ZZ6: Case Studies in Public Leadership taught by Distinguished Visiting Professor Dave Levac (Former Speaker of the Ontario Legislative Assembly), or in Emeritus Professor Henry Jacek’s 3J03: Canadian Politics and Public Policy.

During the visit the students were introduced to the Legislature by Speaker Arnott at the beginning of Question Period. In the afternoon the students had private meetings with important leaders of the Progressive Conservative, New Democrat, Liberal and Green political parties.

International conference “Beyond Numbers: Comparing Substantive Representation of Ethnic Minorities and Indigenous Peoples”

Drs. Karen Bird and Netina Tan co-organized a 3-day conference at McMaster this past December, addressing ethnic quotas as a route to political participation and meaningful inclusion of ethnic minorities around the world.

More than 30 international and Canadian scholars gathered to assess whether the design of ethnic quotas and reserved seats in legislatures and other political bodies can satisfy regulative ideals about democratic representation, and advance the interests of ethnic minorities and indigenous groups.

Page 4: POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES · with the Carlos Monsiváis Award Drs. Michelle Dion and Jordi Díez (University of Guelph) have been recognized with the Carlos Monsiváis Award for the

Ontario under Doug Ford – What Happened, and Where are We Going?

Most voters chose Doug Ford’s PC government because they wanted change. And that is certainly what we are getting, including cancelation of the basic income pilot, cutting sex ed, overturning carbon pricing, and slashing the size of Toronto Council.

The McMaster Political Science Students Association (MPSSA) and the Political Science Department co-hosted a panel to reflect on the election of the Ford government and its various policy implications. The panel included Dr. Henry Jacek, Dr. Greg Flynn, Dr. Peter Graefe, Dr. Stephaine Ross, PhD candidate Rachel Barnett, plus moderator Dave Levac.

“AltAusterity: Coping is Not Enough”

From “Austerity and its Alternatives”, a SSHRC PDG held by Canada Research Chair, Dr. Stephen McBride, comes the research project’s third annual conference, held in Berlin, Germany.

How do social and economic relations change under conditions of permanent austerity? How do international, national, and regional political institutions influence the development of austerity-regimes? Co-hosted with the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Foundation, the event created a space to discuss these and other salient questions with academics and practitioners from all over the world.

“Doing Democracy Differently”

John McGuire and James Ingram co-organized a two-day conference on democratic theory at McMaster’s downtown campus March 22-23. The EU-funded event brought in two dozen leading political theorists from around the world to discuss various aspects of democratic politics

with faculty and students. The conference was the capstone of John’s two-year Marie Curie postdoctoral visit to the department. This fall he returns to University College Dublin to complete this highly competitive and much coveted fellowship, which will culminate in a second conference in Ireland in spring 2020.

Gathering of Art, Gentrification, and Economic Development (GAGED): A Public Forum for Hamilton

Hamilton’s recent renaissance and corresponding “revitalization” of the core have produced new challenges for the city and its residents.

“Gaged,” a two-day forum convened by Political Science doctoral student Angela Orasch, brought together stakeholders from across different sectors to

share views and grapple with these challenges. The Gathering featured installations and performances by local artists addressing issues and the role of artists in urban development.

INVITED GUESTSDr. Jenny Kehl, Fulbright Scholar and Visiting Research Chair in Policy and Governance

We were pleased to have Dr. Jenny Kehl join us during the winter term 2019 as a Fulbright Visiting Research Chair. Dr. Kehl holds the Lynde

B. Uihlein Endowed Chair at the WATER Institute and Director of the Center for Water Policy at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She specializes in the political economy of water scarcity. Jenny met with various McMaster faculty and graduate students, and gave a series of talks while here including a presentation to our Research in Progress Seminar (RIPS) – “Water Scarcity as a Threat Multiplier.”

Dr. Martijn Konings, H. L. Hooker Distinguished Visiting Professor

The Department was thrilled to host Dr. Martijn Konings as the Hooker Distinguished Visiting Professor during the fall term 2018. Dr. Konings is Professor

of Political Economy and Social Theory, at the

University of Sydney, Australia. His research and publications address the psychological dimensions of money and capitalism, neoliberalism, and risk and speculation in contemporary financial governance. He gave several talks during his visit, including at our Research in Progress Seminar (RIPS), and as part of the IGHC Distinguished Speaker Series.

Dr. Helen Berents, Visiting Professor

Dr. Helen Berents, Senior Lecturer, School of Justice, Queensland University of Technology joined our Research in Progress Seminar (RIPS)

talk with, “Small Deaths, Global Mourning: The Politics of Images of Children’s Suffering in Conflict and Crisis.” Her research draws on peace studies, feminist international relations, and critical security studies to consider representations of youth in crises and conflicts, and engagements with lived experiences of violence-affected young people.

Kathleen Wynne

Former Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne was a guest of the Department on April 1, 2019. She spent the day engaging with students

and made two public presentations. In a talk co-hosted by the Academic Women’s Success and Mentorship (AWSM) series, she reflected on her experience as Ontario’s first female premier and the first openly LGBTQ premier in Canada. Later, she joined Dr. Peter Graefe and MSU Vice-President Stephanie for a panel discussion on the past, present and future direction of Ontario education policy and its implications at all levels.

Trump Talks II

Following on the sold-out lecture series launched in spring 2018, we continued to explore political climate in the U.S. and its impact for Canada. Co-sponsored by the Socrates Project, we hosted four talks in season two, including by Dr. Atif Kubursi – “What Did Trump Get from Revamping NAFTA?” Michael Adams – “Could it Happen Here? Canada in the Age of Trump”, and Dr. Katie Boothe – “Questioning Health Policy Retrenchment in the Era of Trump.” The final talk in the series was held in November, and featured the Pulitzer Prize winning American journalist Chris Hedges, author of The Collapse of the American Empire.

Page 5: POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES · with the Carlos Monsiváis Award Drs. Michelle Dion and Jordi Díez (University of Guelph) have been recognized with the Carlos Monsiváis Award for the

NEW APPOINTMENTSWe are pleased to announce two new appointments to the Department!

Dr. Heather Bastedo joins us this academic year to teach an array of courses in Canadian politics, political communications, and public

policy and analysis. Dr. Bastedo holds a PhD from the University of Toronto, and earned her B.A. in Political Science at McMaster. Her research addresses issues of political representation, the health of Canadian democracy, and civic and youth engagement. Her passion for engagement extends to her teaching, where she invites practitioners into the classroom to engage students in real world events. In addition to her academic role, Heather is also President and founder of Public Square Research, which does extensive work in polling with the CBC among other clients.

Dr. Szu-Yun Hsu will join the department as a research CLA beginning January 2020. Dr. Hsu holds a PhD in Geography from the University of British

Columbia, and a Masters from the London School of Economics and Political Science. Her scholarly interests include international political economy, geopolitical economy, critical geopolitics, developmental state theory, neoliberalism, and democratization. Specifically, her research looks at hegemonic struggles over economic neoliberalization in Taiwan through trade politics and post-War (geo)political struggles, including nationalist contestation and populist movement. In addition to her research activities, she looks forward to teaching the graduate seminar on the Political Economy of East Asia, and undergraduate courses in Political Geography, and IR & Global Public Policy. Besides these academic interests, she is also an avid fan of East Asian pop cultures!

GRADUATE STUDENTSAwards & Recognition

Khaled Al-Kassimi• Political Science Graduate

Student Travel Grant • The William Coleman Fund

(2018)

Rachel Barnett• SSHRC Doctoral Scholarship

(2019)

Oldrich Bubak• Political Science Graduate

Student Travel Grant • SSHRC Doctoral Scholarship

(2019)

Matthew Gamble• H. L. Hooker Sr. Master’s

Fellowship (2019)

Riva Gewarges• Political Science Graduate

Student Travel Grant

Michael Gordon• James F. Harvey & Helen S.

Harvey Travel Scholarship (2018-19)

• MITACS Globalink Research Award (2018-19)

• Political Science Graduate Student Travel Grant

• SSHRC CGS – Michael Smith Foreign Study Supplement

John Hayes• SSHRC Doctoral Scholarship

(2018)

Roomana Hukil• Political Science Graduate

Student Travel Grant

Sally Khater• Ontario Graduate Scholarship

(2019)

Alexander Kovalchuk• SSHRC Doctoral Scholarship

(2019)

Kelsey Leonard• Harvey E. Longboat Graduate

Scholarship (2018-19)• Philomathia Travel in

Water Policy and Research Scholarship (2018-19)

Marrissa Mathews• Harvey E. Longboat Graduate

Scholarship (2018-19)

Angela Orasch• Ellen Louks Fairclough

Memorial Scholarship (2018-19)

Cassandra Preece• H. L. Hooker Sr. Doctoral

Fellowship (2019)• Political Science Graduate

Student Travel Grant

Rebekah Pullen• GSA Travel Assistance Award • Ontario Graduate Scholarship

Alexander Stover• Ontario Graduate Scholarship

Recent Grads

MA

Cassandra Preece• Parties at the Water’s Edge: Canada’s Political Parties and the Foreign Policy Domain

PhD

Jessica Foran-Jurgutis• Colonial Carcerality in

International Relations: Imprisonment, Carceral Space, and Settler Colonial Governance in Canada

Marguerite Marlin• ENGO Policy Influence via

Legislative Committees in Canada, the United States, and Russia

Nowrin Tabassum• Multi-scalar Knowledge

Brokers and the Labelling of Bangladesh’s Climate Change-induced Uprooted People

Alumni Careers

Jessica Jurgutis, Ph.D. 2018Assistant Professor, Departments of Indigenous Learning and Women’s Studies, and the Social Justice Program Lakehead University

Samantha Jackson, Ph.D. 2018Boston Consulting Group

Marguerite Marlin, Ph.D. 2019Interim Executive Editor of iPoliticsINTEL, iPolitics

Sorin Mitrea, Ph.D. 2018Policy Analyst, IETS, CanmetMATERIALS, Natural Resources Canada Sarah Shoker, Ph.D. 2018Postdoctoral Fellow, Balsillie School of International Affairs

Philipe Frowd, Ph.D. 2015Assistant Professor, International Relations in the School of Political Studies, University of Ottawa

Halina Sepeha, Ph.D. 2014Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, Philosophy and Political Science, University of British Columbia

Check out our “NEWS” webpage at politicalscience.mcmaster.ca for more current and archived events, publications, and achievements of our faculty and students.

Political Perspectives newsletter is published annually by the Department of Political Science, McMaster University

Editors: Dr. K. Bird, Chair; Ms. W. Ryckman, Administrator

Please send suggestions or contributions to:

Department of Political Science, Kenneth Taylor Hall, Rm. 527 McMaster University, 1280 Main St. West, Hamilton ON

905-525-9140 ext. 24420 politicalscience.mcmaster.ca

Page 6: POLITICAL PERSPECTIVES · with the Carlos Monsiváis Award Drs. Michelle Dion and Jordi Díez (University of Guelph) have been recognized with the Carlos Monsiváis Award for the

PUBLICATIONSMarshall Beier• J. Marshall Beier (2019). “Implementing Children’s Right to be Heard: Local Attenuations of a Global Commitment,” Journal of Human Rights 18:2, 215-229. • J. Marshall Beier (2019). “Binding Gestures: A Customary Norm Regarding the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child?” Children’s Geographies 17:3, 309-320. • Krista Paquin, Beth Levinson, J. Marshall Beier, and Sandeep Raha, (2018). “The Role of Partnerships in Delivering a Children’s University Program: A Case Study of the McMaster Children and Youth University,” E-Mentor 16:4, 8-13. doi

Karen Bird • Karen Bird (2019).“Égalité des genres, diversité et inclusion: Entre changements réels et une image de marque?” In Lisa Birch and François Pétry (eds.), Bilan du gouvernement libéral de Justin Trudeau: 353 promesses et un mandat de changement. Laval University Press.

Katherine Boothe• Katherine Boothe (2019). “Getting to the table”: Changing ideas about public and patient involvement in Canadian drug assessment.” Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 44 (4): 631-663.

Michelle Dion• Michelle L. Dion and Sara McLaughlin Mitchell (2019). “How Many Citations to Women is Enough”? Estimates of Gender Representation in Political Science.” PS: Political Science & Politics.• Mathieu Poirier, Michel Grignon, Karen Grepin, Michelle Dion (2018). “Transnational Wealth-Related Health Inequality Measurement.” Social Science & Medicine: Population Health, 6 (December): 259-275• Claudia Milena Díaz Ríos, Michelle L. Dion, and Kelsey Leonard (2018) “Institutional logics and Indigenous research sovereignty in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand.” Studies in Higher Education. • Jordi Díez and Michelle L. Dion (2018). “New Media and Support for Same-Sex Marriage.” Latin American Research Review, 53, 3: 466–484.• Jessica C. Shearer, John N. Lavis, Julia Abelson, Gill Walt, and Michelle L. Dion (2018).“Evidence-informed policy-making and policy innovation in a low-income country: Does policy network structure matter?” Evidence & Policy, 14, 3, August: 381-401.

Catherine Frost• Catherine Frost (2019).“Does Canada have a Founding Moment?” in David McGrane and Neil Hibbert (eds.), Applied Political Theory and Canadian Politics. University of Toronto Press, 265-86.

Peter Graefe• Peter Graefe (2018). “State rescaling, institutionalized state-citizen relationships, and Canadian health policy.” Studies in Political Economy 99, 2, 175-193.• Peter Graefe and Carol-Anne Hudson (2018). “Poverty and Policy in Ontario: You Can’t Eat Good Intentions,” in Greg Albo and Bryan M. Evans (eds) Divided Ontario: Ontario Politics in the Age of Neoliberalism. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press. 309-333.

Ahmed Shafiqul Huque• Shafiqul Huque and Patamawadee Jongruck (2018). “The Challenge of Assessing Governance in Asian States: Hong Kong in the Worldwide Governance Indicators Ranking,” The Asian Journal of Political Science, 26 (2): 276-291. • Habib Zafarullah and Shafiqul Huque (2018). “Climate Change Regulatory Policies and Regional Cooperation in South Asia,” Public Administration and Policy, 21 (1): 22-35. • Shafiqul Huque and Lina Vyas (2018). Public Service in a Globalized World: Central Training Institutes in India and Hong Kong, London: Routledge.• Shafiqul Huque and Grace Lee (2018). Managing Public Services: Crises and Lessons from Hong Kong, London: Routledge (2018).• Shafiqul Huque and Pranab Panday, “Local Institutions and Governance in Bangladesh: Progress, Pitfalls and Potentials,” South Asia Journal, 8 (5):127-133.

James Ingram• James Ingram (2018). “Postcolonialism and Critical Theory,” The Routledge Companion to the Frankfurt School, ed. Peter Gordon, Espen Hammer, and Axel Honneth (Routledge, 2018), 500-513.• James Ingram (2018). “Jacobinism” and “Lumpenproletariat,” Krisis 2018/2 (“200 Years Karl Marx”): 88-90, 101-104.

Inder Marwah• Inder S. Marwah (2019). Liberalism, Diversity and Domination: Kant, Mill and the Government of Difference, Cambridge University Press• Inder S. Marwah (2019). “Provincializing Progress: Developmentalism and Anti-Imperialism in Colonial India,” Polity 51 (3) 498-531

Stephen McBride• Stephen McBride and James Watson (2019). “Reviewing the 2018 OECD Jobs Strategy – anything new under the sun?” Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research, Vol. 25(2) 149–163 • Dieter Plehwe, Moritz Neujeffski, Stephen McBride, Bryan Evans eds.(2019). Austerity: 12 Myths Exposed. Berlin: Social Europe Publications • Dieter Plehwe, Stephen McBride, Bryan Evans, Moritz Neujeffski (2019). “Beyond Austerity: Myth and Substance” in Plehwe, Neujeffski, McBride, and Evans. eds. Austerity: 12 Myths Exposed. Berlin: Social Europe Publishing, xi-xxiii • Stephen McBride (2019). “ Two Worlds of Austerity: mythologies of activation and incentives” in Plehwe, Neujeffski, McBride, and Evans. eds. Austerity: 12 Myths Exposed. Berlin: Social Europe Publishing , 75-80• Bryan Evans, Stephen McBride and James Watson (2019). “Democratic Austerity: Social Concertation in the Neoliberal State” in Plehwe, Neujeffski, McBride, and Evans. eds. Austerity: 12 Myths Exposed. Berlin: Social Europe Publishing 81-85• Stephen McBride and Stephanie Tombari (2018). “Globalization: Definition, Debates, and Relation to International Development”, in M. Masaeli and L.T Munro (eds). Canada and Challenges of International Development and Globalization. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press.

Peter Nyers• Peter Nyers (2019). Irregular Citizenship, Immigration, and Deportation, New York: Routledge.• Peter Nyers, Julie Young, and Johanna Reynolds, eds. (2019). Dis/Placing the Borders of North America, special issue of International Journal of Migration and Border Studies 5:1/2. • Peter Nyers (2019). “Humanitarian Hubris in the Global Compacts on Migration and Refugees,” Global Affairs 5:2.• Peter Nyers (2018). “Irregular Citizenship and Citizenship in a No-Borders World: Prof. Peter Nyers interviewed by Jules Wong,” Notes from the Field, Canadian Association for Refugee and Forced Migration Studies.

Robert O’Brien• Robert O’Brien (2019). Labour Internationalism in the Globa South: The SIGTUR Initiative (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press

• Robert O’Brien (2019). ‘Revisiting Rosa Luxemburg’s internationalism’. Journal of International Political Theory

Tony Porter• Jacob Muirhead and Tony Porter. (2019). “Traceability in Global Governance,” Global Networks, July, 19(3), pp. 423-43.• Tony Porter and Karsten Ronit. (2018). “Whistleblowing as a new regulatory instrument in global governance: the case of tax evasion,” Cambridge Journal of International Affairs, 31(6) pp. 537-560. • Malcolm Campbell-Verduyn in conversation with Tony Porter (2019). “Experts, Matters and Actor-Networks,” in Carolin Kaltofen, Madeline Carr and Michele Acuto, eds., Technologies of International Relations: Continuity and Change London: Palgrave MacMillan, pp. 77-86.• Tony Porter and Karsten Ronit (2018). “The Role of Private Actors in the International Tax Policy Process: Towards a Conceptual Framework,” in Richard Eccleston and Ainsley Elbra, eds., Business, Civil Society and the ‘New’ Politics of Corporate Tax Justice: Paying a Fair Share? Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, pp. 178-199.

Alina Sajed• Alina Sajed (2019). “Re-remembering Third Worldism: an affirmative critique of national liberation in Algeria.” Middle East Critique • Alina Sajed (2019). “How We Fight: Anti-colonial Imaginaries and the Question of National Liberation in the Algerian War.” Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, 21:5, 635-651. • Alina Sajed and Timothy Seidel (2019). “Introduction: Escaping the Nation? National Consciousness and the Horizons of Decolonization.” Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, 21:5, 583-591

Netina Tan• Susan Franceschet, Mona Lena Krook, and Netina Tan, eds. (2019). The Palgrave Handbook of Women’s Political Rights. 1st ed. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan (Equal contributions between three editors). • Netina Tan (2019). “Regulating Fake News: Singapore.” Policy paper commissioned by United Arab Emirates Ministry of Justice, Comparative Law Solutions, LexusNexis Canada.

Lana Wylie• Lana Wylie (2019) “Dark Days for Canada-Cuba Relations,” OpenCanada.org June 13, 2019.