Research in Political Science: an event celebrating faculty works published in 2016
Research in Political Science: an event celebrating faculty works published in 2016
Categories: Lectures and Seminars | Intended for Anyone
A602 Loeb Building
1125 Colonel By Dr, Ottawa, ON
Contact Information
Anne Farquharson, 2777, anne.farquharson@carleton.ca
Registration
No registration required.
Cost
Free
About this Event
Host Organization: Political Science
More Information: Please click here for additional details.
Have you ever wondered what kinds of books/articles professors in Political Science write? Come and find out. Political Science faculty who have had books/articles published in 2016 will speak to what animates their research at a special seminar celebrating our research achievements,including presentations from:
Andrea Chandler, “Women on Corporate Boards: a Comparison of Parliamentary Discourse in the United Kingdom and France.” Politics and Gender, vol. 12, no. 3, September 2016, pp. 443-68.
William P. Cross , Ofer Kenig, Scott Pruysers, Gideon Rahat, The Promise and Challenge of Party Primary Elections: A Comparative Perspective,McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2016.
Piotr Dutkiewicz, Richard Sakwa, Vladimir Kulikov (eds), Social History of Post-Communist Russia, Routledge (London & New York), 2016, pp.320
Randall Germain (ed), Susan Strange and the Future of Global Political Economy, Routledge, 2016.
Achim Hurrelmann, “Empirical legitimation analysis in International Relations: how to learn from the insights – and avoid the mistakes – of research in EU studies”, Contemporary Politics 23:1, 2017, 63-80.
Laura Macdonald and Jeremy Paltiel, “Middle power or muddling power? Canada’s relations with emerging markets”, Canadian Foreign Policy Journal, 22 (1) 2016, 1-11.
Laura Macdonald, “Evaluating Canadian economic diplomacy: Canada’s relations with emerging markets in the Americas,” Canadian Foreign Policy Journal, 22 (1) 2016, 12-25.
Jeremy Paltiel, “Resolute ambivalence: Canada’s strategy toward China and the Asia-Pacific”, Canadian Foreign Policy Journal, 22 (2) 2016.
Waller Newell, Tyrants: A History of Power, Injustice and Terror (Cambridge University Press 2016).
Jeff Sahadeo, “Black Snouts Go Home! Migration and Race in Late Soviet Leningrad and Moscow” Journal of Modern History 88, no. 4 (2016): 797-826
Mira Sucharov, “Teaching Subjectively: Interdisciplinary Insights.” The Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning 7, 2 (2016), with B. Kuzmarov, S. Todd, S. Douglas, and K. Schwartz.
William Walters and B. Lüthi. 2016. ‘The Politics of Cramped Space: Dilemmas of Action, Containment, and Mobility’, International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society. 29: 359-366 [along with essays by Julie Y Chu (Chicago), Barbara Lüthi (Cologne) and Nick Thoburn (Manchester)].