KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

37
KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Personal Born: London, England, 9 February 1952 Citizenship: Canadian Office Department of Political Studies Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 CANADA Tel: (613) 5336230 Email: [email protected] Home 1620 Howe Island Dr. Gananoque, ON K7G 2V6 CANADA Cell: (613) 4838766 Education Ph.D., Political Economy, University of Toronto, 1977 M.A., Political Economy, University of Toronto, 1974 B.A., St. Michael’s College, University of Toronto, 1972 Primary and secondary education in Melbourne, Beijing, Toronto, and Hong Kong: General Certificate of Education, University of London—Ordinary Level, 1968; Advanced Level, 1970 Appointments Professor, Department of Political Studies, Queen’s University, 2001present; StaufferDunning Chair of Policy Studies and director, School of Policy Studies, 20132015; director, Queen’s Centre for International and Defence Policy, 20112013; Sir Edward Peacock Professor of International Relations, 20082013; head, Department of Political Studies, 20012009.

Transcript of KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

Page 1: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

              KIM  RICHARD  NOSSAL      Personal    Born:         London,  England,  9  February  1952  Citizenship:       Canadian    Office       Department  of  Political  Studies             Queen’s  University           Kingston,  ON    K7L  3N6         CANADA           Tel:     (613)  533-­‐‑6230         Email:     [email protected]    Home       1620  Howe  Island  Dr.         Gananoque,  ON    K7G  2V6         CANADA           Cell:       (613)  483-­‐‑8766    Education    Ph.D.,  Political  Economy,  University  of  Toronto,  1977  M.A.,  Political  Economy,  University  of  Toronto,  1974  B.A.,  St.  Michael’s  College,  University  of  Toronto,  1972    Primary  and  secondary  education  in  Melbourne,  Beijing,  Toronto,  and  Hong  Kong:  General  Certificate  of  Education,  University  of  London—Ordinary  Level,  1968;  Advanced  Level,  1970      Appointments    Professor,  Department  of  Political  Studies,  Queen’s  University,  2001-­‐‑present;  Stauffer-­‐‑Dunning  Chair  of  Policy  Studies  and  director,  School  of  Policy  Studies,  2013-­‐‑2015;  director,  Queen’s  Centre  for  International  and  Defence  Policy,  2011-­‐‑2013;  Sir  Edward  Peacock  Professor  of  International  Relations,  2008-­‐‑2013;  head,  Department  of  Political  Studies,  2001-­‐‑2009.    

Page 2: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

2 Professor,  Department  of  Political  Science,  McMaster  University,  1988-­‐‑2001;  associate  professor,  1982-­‐‑88;  assistant  professor,  1977-­‐‑82;  lecturer,  1976-­‐‑77;  tenured  1  July  1980;  acting  chair,  1989-­‐‑90;  chair,  1992-­‐‑1996    Visiting  fellow,  Department  of  International  Relations,  Research  School  of  Pacific  Studies,  Australian  National  University,  May-­‐‑August  1989    Visiting  associate  professor,  Department  of  Political  Science,  University  of  Toronto,  1985-­‐‑86    Visiting  fellow,  Centre  for  Strategic  Studies,  York  University,  1983-­‐‑84    Associate  director  of  research,  Canadian  Institute  of  International  Affairs,  1981-­‐‑82;  research  associate,  1979-­‐‑81    Visiting  assistant  professor,  Department  of  Political  Science,  McGill  University,  summer  1980    Visiting  assistant  professor,  Department  of  Political  Economy,  University  of  Toronto,  summer  1977    Instructor  (part-­‐‑time),  Faculty  of  Humanities  and  Social  Sciences,  Humber  College,  spring  1976      Honours  and  Awards    International  Studies  Association–Canada,  Distinguished  Scholar  Award,  March  2014    Maureen  Molot  Best  Paper  Prize,  2011,  for  “Don’t  Talk  About  the  Neighbours:  Canada  and  the  Regional  Politics  of  the  Afghanistan  Mission,”  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  Journal  17:1  (March  2011):  9–22.    Honorary  life  member,  Queen’s  University  Alma  Mater  Society,  2007      McMaster  Students  Union  teaching  awards:  1981-­‐‑82,  2000-­‐‑2001                  

Page 3: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

3

PUBLICATIONS    Books    

1. KRN,  Stéphane  Roussel,  and  Stéphane  Paquin,  The  Politics  of  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,  4th  ed.  (Kingston  and  Montréal:  Queen’s  Policy  Studies  Series,  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2015),  xxvi,  396  pp.    

2. KRN,  Stéphane  Roussel,  and  Stéphane  Paquin,  International  Policy  and  Politics  in  Canada  (Toronto:  Pearson  Canada,  2011),  xxiv,  358  pp.    

3. KRN,  Stéphane  Roussel,  et  Stéphane  Paquin,  Politique  internationale  et  défense  au  Canada  et  au  Québec  (Montréal:  Les  Presses  de  l’Université  de  Montréal,  2007),  pp.  646    

4. The  Patterns  of  World  Politics  (Scarborough,  ON:  Prentice  Hall  Allyn  &  Bacon  Canada,  1998),  xxvii,  532  pp.    

5. The  Politics  of  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,  3rd  ed.  (Scarborough,  ON:  Prentice  Hall  Canada,  1997);  1st  ed.  1985;  2nd  ed.  1989;  xxiii,  358  pp.    

6. Rain  Dancing:  Sanctions  in  Canadian  and  Australian  Foreign  Policy  (Toronto:  University  of  Toronto  Press,  1994),  xviii,  323  pp.    

7. Andrew  F.  Cooper,  Richard  A.  Higgott,  and  KRN,  Relocating  Middle  Powers:  Australia  and  Canada  in  a  Changing  World  Order  (Vancouver:  University  of  British  Columbia  Press,  1993),  xiv,  232  pp.;  chap  1  reprinted  in  Mark  Charlton,  ed.,  Cross  Currents:  International  Relations  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era,  rev.  ed.  (Toronto:  ITP  Nelson,  1999),  78-­‐‑94  

 Monographs  and  Reports    

1. Denis  Stairs,  David  J.  Bercuson,  Mark  Entwistle,  J.L.  Granatstein,  KRN,  and  Gordon  S.  Smith,  In  the  National  Interest:  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  in  an  Insecure  World  (Calgary:  Canadian  Foreign  Affairs  and  Defence  Institute,  2003),  45  pp.    

2. KRN  and  Carolynn  Vivian,  A  Brief  Madness:  Australia  and  the  Resumption  of  French  Nuclear  Testing,  Canberra  Papers  on  Strategy  and  Defence  121  (Canberra:  Strategic  and  Defence  Studies  Centre,  Australian  National  University,  1997),  65  pp.    

3. The  Beijing  Massacre:  Australian  Responses,  Australian  Foreign  Policy  Papers  (Canberra:  Department  of  International  Relations,  Australian  National  University,  1993),  72  pp.  

Page 4: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

4 Edited  Collections    

1. A.  Scott  Carson,  Jeffrey  Dixon  and  KRN,  eds.,  Toward  a  Healthcare  Strategy  for  Canadians  (Montréal  and  Kingston:  Queen’s  Policy  Studies  Series,  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2015)    

2. Srdjan  Vucetic  and  KRN,  guest  editors,  “The  International  Politics  of  the  F-­‐‑35  Joint  Strike  Fighter,”  International  Journal  68:1  (Winter  2012-­‐‑13)    

3. Christian  Leuprecht,  Todd  Hataley,  and  KRN,  eds.,  Evolving  Transnational  Threats  and  Border  Security,  Martello  Paper  37  (2012),  138  pp.    

4. Adam  Chapnick  and  KRN,  guest  editors,  “Annual  John  W.  Holmes  Issue  on  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,”  International  Journal  65:2  (Spring  2010),  281-­‐‑389.    

5. Greg  Donaghy  and  KRN,  eds.  Architects  and  Innovators:  Building  the  Department  of  Foreign  Affairs  and  International  Trade,  1909–2009  /  Architectes  et  innovateurs  :  le  développement  du  ministère  des  Affaires  étrangères  et  du  Commerce  international,  de  1909  à  2009  (Montréal  and  Kingston:  Queen’s  Policy  Studies  Series,  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2009),  vii,  318  pp.    

6. Nelson  Michaud  and  KRN,  eds.,  Diplomatic  Departures:  The  Conservative  Era  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,  1984-­‐‑93  (Vancouver:  University  of  British  Columbia  Press,  2001),  xvii,  326  pp.    

7. Nelson  Michaud  and  KRN,  guest  editors,  Études  internationales  31:2  (juin  2000):  Nécessité  ou  innovation?  vers  une  redéfinition  de  la  politique  étrangère  canadienne,  1984-­‐‑1993      

8. Lauren  McKinsey  and  KRN,  eds.,  America'ʹs  Alliances  and  Canadian-­‐‑American  Relations  (Toronto:  Summerhill  Press,  1988),  223  pp.    

9. Ed.,  An  Acceptance  of  Paradox:  Essays  on  Canadian  Diplomacy  in  Honour  of  John  W.  Holmes  (Toronto:  Canadian  Institute  of  International  Affairs,  1982),  xii,  204  pp.    

10. Robert  Spencer,  John  Kirton  and  KRN,  eds.,  The  International  Joint  Commission  Seventy  Years  On  (Toronto:  Centre  for  International  Studies,  University  of  Toronto,  1981),  xiv,  158  pp.  

       

Page 5: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

5 Peer  Reviewed  Articles  in  Scholarly  Journals  (*  indicates  double-­‐‑blind  refereed  article)    

1. *KRN  and  Leah  Sarson,  “About  Face:  Explaining  Changes  in  Canada’s  China  Policy,  2006-­‐‑2012,”  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  Journal  20:2  (2014),  146–62  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/11926422.2014.934864)    

2. Srdjan  Vucetic  and  KRN,  “The  International  Politics  of  the  F-­‐‑35  Joint  Strike  Fighter,”  International  Journal  68:1  (Winter  2012-­‐‑13),  3–12  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002070201306800102).  

 3. “Late  Learners:  The  F-­‐‑35  and  Lessons  from  the  New  Fighter  Aircraft  Program,”  

International  Journal  68:1  (Winter  2012-­‐‑13),  167–84  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002070201306800111).  

 4. *“Don’t  Talk  About  the  Neighbours:  Canada  and  the  Regional  Politics  of  the  

Afghanistan  Mission,”  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  Journal  17:1  (March  2011):  9–22  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/11926422.2011.559106).  Winner  of  the  2011  Maureen  Molot  Best  Paper  Prize.  

 5. *Alan  Bloomfield  and  KRN,  “End  of  an  Era?    Anti-­‐‑Americanism  in  the  Australian  Labor  

Party,”  Australian  Journal  of  Politics  and  History  55:4  (December  2010):  592–611  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-­‐‑8497.2010.01573.x).  

 6. Adam  Chapnick  and  KRN,  “John  W.  Holmes:  A  Re-­‐‑introduction,”  International  Journal  

65:2  (Spring  2010):  281–88  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002070201006500201).    7. *Ann  Capling  and  KRN,  “The  Contradictions  of  Regionalism  in  North  America,”  Review  

of  International  Studies  35:S1  (February  2009):  147–67  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0260210509008468);  also  published  in  Rick  Fawn,  ed.,  Globalising  the  Regional,  Regionalising  the  Global  (Cambridge:  Cambridge  University  Press,  2009)  

 8. Richard  A.  Higgott  and  KRN,  “Odd  Man  In,  Odd  Man  Out:  Australia’s  Liminal  Position  

in  Asia  Revisited  –  A  Reply  to  Ann  Capling,”  Pacific  Review  21:5  (December  2008):  623–34  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09512740802457351).  

 9. *“The  Unavoidable  Shadow  of  Past  Wars:  Obsequies  for  Casualties  of  the  Afghanistan  

Mission  in  Australia  and  Canada,”  Australasian  Canadian  Studies  26:1  (2008),  91–124.    

Page 6: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

6

10. *Alan  Bloomfield  and  KRN,  “Toward  an  ‘Explicative  Understanding’  of  Strategic  Culture:  The  Cases  of  Australia  and  Canada,”  Contemporary  Security  Policy  28:2  (August  2007):  285–306  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13523260701489859).  

 11. “Right  and  Wrong  in  Foreign  Policy  40  Years  On:  Realism  and  Idealism  in  Canadian  

Foreign  Policy,”  International  Journal  62:2  (Spring  2007):  263–77  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002070200706200204).  

 12. “Defense  Policy  and  the  Atmospherics  of  Canada-­‐‑U.S.  Relations:  The  Case  of  the  Harper  

Conservatives,”  American  Review  of  Canadian  Studies  37:1  (Spring  2007):  23–34  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02722010709481798).  

 13. “A  Question  of  Balance:  The  Cult  of  Research  Intensivity  and  the  Professing  of  Political  

Science  in  Canada:  Presidential  Address  to  the  Canadian  Political  Science  Association,  Toronto,  Ontario,  June  2,  2006,”  Canadian  Journal  of  Political  Science  39:4  (December  2006):  735–54  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0008423906060367).  

 14. *Ann  Capling  and  KRN,  “Blowback:  Investor-­‐‑State  Dispute  Mechanisms  in  International  

Trade  Agreements,”  Governance:  An  International  Journal  of  Policy,  Administration,  and  Institutions  19:2  (April  2006):  151–72  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-­‐‑0491.2006.00310.x).  

 15. *«  Les  objectifs  politiques  des  examens  de  politique  étrangère:  Étude  comparée  de  

l’Australie  et  du  Canada  »  Études  internationales  37:1  (mars  2006):  57–69  (translated)  (http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/013412ar).  

 16. *J.A.  (Sandy)  Irvine  and  KRN,  “Constitutional  Constraints  on  the  International  Activities  

of  Non-­‐‑Central  Governments:  Scotland  and  Québec  Compared,”  British  Journal  of  Canadian  Studies  18:2  (2005):  340–57  (http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/bjcs.18.2.8)      

17. “Ear  Candy:  Canadian  Policy  toward  Humanitarian  Intervention  and  Atrocity  Crimes  in  Darfur,”  International  Journal  60:4  (Autumn  2005):  1017–32  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002070200506000408).  

 18. “Canada  and  the  Search  for  World  Order:  John  W.  Holmes  and  Canadian  Foreign  

Policy,”  International  Journal  59:4  (Autumn  2004):  749–60  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002070200405900402).  

 19. “Defending  the  ‘Realm’:  Canadian  Strategic  Culture  Revisited,”  International  Journal  59:3  

(Summer  2004):  503–20  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002070200405900303).    

Page 7: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

7

20. *T.S.  Hataley  and  KRN,  “The  Limits  of  the  Human  Security  Agenda:  The  Case  of  Canada’s  Response  to  the  Timor  Crisis,”  Global  Change,  Peace  and  Security  16:1  (February  2004):  5–17  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1478115042000176148).  

 21. *Ann  Capling  and  KRN,  “Parliament  and  the  Democratization  of  Foreign  Policy:  The  

Case  of  Australia’s  Joint  Standing  Committee  on  Treaties,”  Canadian  Journal  of  Political  Science  36:4  (September  2003):  835–55  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/3233213).  

 22. «  Le  Canada  après  le  11  septembre  :  Les  défis  d’une  ère  nouvelle,”  Études  internationales  

33:4  (décembre  2002):  621–27  (translated)  ((http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/006658ar).    23. *“Global  Governance  and  National  Interests:  The  Regulation  of  Transnational  Security  

Corporations  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era,”  Melbourne  Journal  of  International  Law  2  (2001):  459–76  ((http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/MelbJIL/2001/17.html).  

 24. *Ann  Capling  and  KRN,  “Death  of  Distance  or  Tyranny  of  Distance?  The  Internet,  

Deterritorialization,  and  the  Anti-­‐‑globalization  Movement  in  Australia,”  Pacific  Review  14:3  (2001):  443–65  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09512740110064857).  

 25. “Bilateral  Free  Trade  with  the  United  States:  Lessons  from  Canada,”  Special  Issue:  “An  

American-­‐‑Australian  Free  Trade  Agreement?”  Policy,  Organisation  and  Society  20:1  (2001):  47–62.  

 26. «Ce  qu’il  est  préférable  de  taire  :  Le  Canada  et  l’élargissement  de  l’OTAN»  Cahiers  

d’histoire  20:2  (hiver  2001):  99–117  (translated).    27. Nelson  Michaud  and  KRN,  «  Les  nouveaux  espaces  de  la  politique  étrangère  canadienne  

(1984-­‐‑1993)  »,  Études  internationales  31:2  (juin  2000):  241–52  (translated)  (http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/006658ar).  

 28. “Home-­‐‑Grown  IR:  The  Canadianization  of  International  Relations,”  Journal  of  Canadian  

Studies  35:1  (Spring  2000):  95–114.    29. *“International  Sanctions  as  Instruments  of  Global  Governance,”  Global  Society    13:2  

(April  1999):  125–37  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13600829908443183).    30. “Pinchpenny  Diplomacy:  The  Decline  of  ‘Good  International  Citizenship’  in  Canadian  

Foreign  Policy,”  International  Journal  54:1  (Winter  1998-­‐‑9):  88–105  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/40203357)    

Page 8: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

8

31. *“The  Rage  of  Nations:  Australia  and  French  Nuclear  Testing  and  Hong  Kong  and  the  Diaoyutai/Senkaku-­‐‑shoto,”  Pacifica  Review  10:3  (October  1998):  187–202  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14781159808412860).  

 32. *“Roland  Goes  Corporate:  Mercenaries  and  Transnational  Security  Corporations  in  the  

Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era,”  Civil  Wars  1  (Spring  1998):  16–35  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13698249808402365).  

 33. *Lori  Buck,  Nicole  Gallant  and  KRN,  “Sanctions  as  a  Gendered  Instrument  of  Statecraft:  

The  Case  of  Iraq,”  Review  of  International  Studies  24:1(January  1998):  69–84  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/20097506).  

 34. “‘Without  Regard  for  the  Interests  of  Others’:  Canada  and  American  Unilateralism  in  the  

Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era,”  American  Review  of  Canadian  Studies  27:2  (Summer  1997):  179–97  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02722019709481496).  

 35. *Richard  A.  Higgott  and  KRN,  “The  International  Politics  of  Liminality:  Relocating  

Australia  in  the  Asia  Pacific,”  Australian  Journal  of  Political  Science  32:2  (July  1997):  169–85  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10361149750887).  

 36. *“A  High  Degree  of  Ambiguity:  Hong  Kong  as  an  International  Actor  after  1997,”  Pacific  

Review  10:1  (1997):  84–103  ((http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09512749708719211).    37. *“Seeing  Things?    The  Adornment  of  ‘Security’  in  Australia  and  Canada,”  Australian  

Journal  of  International  Affairs  49:1  (May  1995):  33–47  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10357719508445143).  

 38. “The  PM  and  the  SSEA  in  Canada’s  Foreign  Policy:  Dividing  the  Territory,  1968-­‐‑1993,”  

International  Journal  50:1  (Winter  1994-­‐‑5):  189–208  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/40203001).    39. *“The  Politics  of  Circumspection:  Canadian  Policy  towards  the  Soviet  Union,  1985-­‐‑1991,”  

International  Journal  of  Canadian  Studies  9  (Spring  1994):  27–45.    40. “The  Democratization  of  Canadian  Foreign  Policy?”  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  1  (Fall  1993):  

95–104  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/11926422.1993.9673010).    41. *Andrew  Fenton  Cooper,  Richard  A.  Higgott,  and  KRN,  “Bound  to  Follow?    Leadership  

and  Followership  in  the  Gulf  Conflict,”  Political  Science  Quarterly  106  (Fall  1991):  391–410  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/2151739);  reprinted  in:  Mark  Charlton  and  Elizabeth  Riddell-­‐‑Dixon,  eds.,  Cross  Currents:  International  Relations  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era  (Toronto:  Nelson  Canada,  1993):  66–77;  and  in  Demetrios  Caraley  and  Cerentha  Harris,  

Page 9: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

9

eds.,  New  World  Politics:  Power,  Ethnicity  and  Democracy  (New  York:  Academy  of  Political  Science,  1993):  129–48.  

 42. *“The  Symbolic  Purposes  of  Sanctions:  Australian  and  Canadian  Reactions  to  

Afghanistan,”  Australian  Journal  of  Political  Science  26:1  (March  1991):  29–50  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00323269108402134).  

 43. *“Canadian  Sanctions  against  South  Africa:  Explaining  the  Mulroney  Initiatives,  1985-­‐‑

86,”  Journal  of  Canadian  Studies  25  (Winter  1990-­‐‑91):  17–33.    44. “The  Imperial  Congress:  The  Separation  of  Powers  and  Canadian-­‐‑American  Relations,”  

International  Journal  44:4  (Autumn  1989):  863–83  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002070208904400406).  

 45. “Knowing  When  to  Fold:  Western  Sanctions  against  the  USSR,  1980-­‐‑1983,”  International  

Journal  44:3  (Summer  1989):  698–724  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002070208904400308).    46. *“International  Sanctions  as  International  Punishment,”  International  Organization  43:2  

(Spring  1989):  301–22  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/2706704);  reprinted  in  David  A.  Lake,  ed.,  The  International  Political  Economy  of  Trade,  vol  2  (Aldershot,  UK  and  Brookfield,  VT:  Edward  Elgar,  1993):  430–52.  

 47. *“Mixed  Motives  Revisited:  Canada’s  Interest  in  Development  Assistance,”  Canadian  

Journal  of  Political  Science  21  (March  1988):  35–56  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/3228152);  reprinted  in  Robert  O.  Matthews,  Arthur  G.  Rubinoff  and  Janice  Gross  Stein,  eds.,  International  Conflict  and  Conflict  Management:  Readings  in  World  Politics,  2nd  ed.  (Scarborough:  Prentice-­‐‑Hall  Canada,  1989):  247–61.  

 48. *«  Les  sanctions  économiques  et  les  petits  états:  le  cas  de  la  ‘punition’  du  Vietnam  par  le  

Canada  »,  Etudes  internationales  18  (septembre  1987):  523–44  (translated)  (http://www.erudit.org/revue/ei/1987/v18/n3/702209ar.pdf).  

 49. Adam  Bromke  and  KRN,  “A  Turning  Point  in  Canada-­‐‑United  States  Relations,”  Foreign  

Affairs  66:1  (Fall  1987):  150–69  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/20043296).    50. Adam  Bromke  and  KRN,  “Tensions  in  Canada’s  Foreign  Policy,”  Foreign  Affairs  62:2  

(Winter  1983-­‐‑84):  335–53  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/20041821).    51. *“Institutionalization  and  the  Pacific  Settlement  of  Interstate  Conflict:  The  Case  of  

Canada  and  the  International  Joint  Commission,”  Journal  of  Canadian  Studies  18  (Winter  1983-­‐‑84):  75–87.  

Page 10: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

10

 52. “Analyzing  the  Domestic  Sources  of  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,”  International  Journal  39:1  

(Winter  1983-­‐‑84):  1–21  ((http://www.jstor.org/stable/40202219);  reprinted  in  Duane  Bratt  and  Christopher  J.  Kukucha,  eds.,  Readings  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy:  Classic  Debates  and  New  Ideas  (Toronto:  Oxford  University  Press,  2007):  163–75.  

 53. “Personal  Diplomacy  and  National  Behaviour:  Trudeau’s  North-­‐‑South  Initiatives,”  

Dalhousie  Review  62  (Summer  1982):  278–91.    54. *Michael  M.  Atkinson  and  KRN,  “Bureaucratic  Politics  and  the  New  Fighter  Aircraft  

Decisions,”  Canadian  Public  Administration  24  (Winter  1981):  531–62  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1754-­‐‑7121.1981.tb00348.x).  

 55. “Does  the  Electoral  Cycle  in  the  United  States  Affect  Relations  with  Canada?”  

International  Journal  36:1  (Winter  1980-­‐‑81):  208–27  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/40201943).    56. *«Les  droits  de  la  personne  et  la  politique  étrangère  canadienne:  le  cas  de  l’Indonésie  »,  

Études  internationales  11,  no  2  (juin  1980):  223–38  (translated)  (http://dx.doi.org/http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/70143ar).  

 57. *Michael  M.  Atkinson  and  KRN,  “Executive  Power  and  Committee  Autonomy  in  the  

Canadian  House  of  Commons:  Leadership  Selection,  1968-­‐‑1979,”  Canadian  Journal  of  Political  Science  13:2  (June  1980):  287–308  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/3229725).  

 58. *“Allison  through  the  (Ottawa)  Looking  Glass:  Bureaucratic  Politics  and  Foreign  Policy  

in  a  Parliamentary  System,”  Canadian  Public  Administration  22:4  (Winter  1979):  610–26    (  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1754-­‐‑7121.1979.tb01841.x);  reprinted  in  Kenneth  Kernaghan,  ed.,  Public  Administration  in  Canada,  4th  and  5th  eds.  (Toronto:  Methuen,  1982  and  1985).  

 59. “The  Unmaking  of  Garrison:  United  States  Politics  and  the  Management  of  Canadian-­‐‑

American  Boundary  Waters,”  Behind  the  Headlines  37  (November  1978):  30  pp.    60. *“Business  as  Usual:  Canadian  Relations  with  China  in  the  1940s,”  Historical  Papers  

(1978):  134-­‐‑47;  http://nelson.cen.umontreal.ca/revue/hp/1978/v13/n1/030481ar.pdf;  reprinted  in  Nossal,  ed.,  Acceptance  of  Paradox,  39–55.  

 61. “Chungking  Prism:  Cognitive  Process  and  Intelligence  Failure,”  International  Journal  32:3  

(Summer  1977):  559–76  (http://www.jstor.org/stable/40201581).  

     

Page 11: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

11 Chapters  in  Books    

1. “Toujours  la  politesse?  The  ‘Impolite  No’  on  Iraq  in  Historical  Perspective,”  in  Australia,  Canada,  and  Iraq:  Perspectives  on  an  Invasion,  eds.  Ramesh  Thakur  and  Jack  Cunningham  (Toronto:  Dundurn  Press,  2015).    

2. Jean-­‐‑Christophe  Boucher  and  KRN,  “Lessons  Learned?  Public  Opinion  and  the  Afghanistan  Mission,”  in  Canada  Among  Nations,  2015:  Elusive  Pursuits,  eds.  Fen  Osler  Hampson  and  Stephen  Saideman  (Waterloo:  Centre  for  International  Governance  Innovation,  2015),  73–93.    

3. “Shadows  of  the  Past:  Commemorating  the  Fallen  in  Australia  and  Canada,”  in  Jack  Cunningham  and  William  Maley,  eds.,  Australia  and  Canada  in  Afghanistan:  Perspectives  on  a  Mission  (Toronto:  Dundurn  Press,  2015),  186–217.  

 4. “‘No  Repercussions  Down  Under’?  Australian  Responses  to  Kristallnacht,”  in  Colin  

McCullough  and  Nathan  Wilson,  eds.,  Violence,  Memory  and  History:  Western  Perceptions  of  Kristallnacht  (New  York:  Routledge,  2015),  130–50.  

 5. “Defending  Canada,”  in  Duane  Bratt  and  Christopher  J.  Kukucha,  eds.,  Readings  in  

Canadian  Foreign  Policy,  3rd  ed.  (Toronto:  Oxford  University  Press,  2015),  295–307.    

6. Alan  Bloomfield  and  KRN,  “A  Conservative  Foreign  Policy?  Canada  and  Australia  Compared,”  in  James  Farney  and  David  Rayside,  eds.,  Conservatism  in  Canada  (Toronto:  University  of  Toronto  Press,  2013),  139–64.  

 7. “The  Use—and  Misuse—of  R2P:  The  Case  of  Canada,”  in  Aidan  Hehir  and  Robert  

Murray,  eds.,  Libya,  the  Responsibility  to  Protect  and  the  Future  of  Humanitarian  Intervention  (London:  Palgrave  Macmillan,  2013),  110–29.  

 8. “Canada’s  Minervian  Moment:  Global  Activism  and  Domestic  Politics,”  in  Yves  

Tiberghien,  ed.,  Leadership  in  Global  Institution  Building:  Minerva’s  Rule  (London:  Palgrave  Macmillan,  2013),  49–64.  

 9. “The  Liberal  Past  in  the  Conservative  Present:  Internationalism  in  the  Harper  Era,”  in  

Heather  A.  Smith  and  Claire  Turenne  Sjolander,  eds.,  Canada  in  the  World:  Internationalism  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  (Toronto:  Oxford  University  Press,  2013),  21–35.  

 10. “Déjà  Vu  All  Over  Again?”  in  Sean  Clark  and  Sabrina  Hoque,  eds.,  Debating  a  Post-­‐‑

American  World:  What  Lies  Ahead?  (New  York:  Routledge,  2012),  65–69.  

Page 12: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

12

 11. “America’s  ‘Most  Reliable  Ally’?  Canada  and  the  Evanescence  of  the  Culture  of  

Partnership,”  in  Greg  Anderson  and  Christopher  Sands,  eds.,  Forgotten  Partnership  Redux:  Canada-­‐‑U.S.  Relations  in  the  21st  Century  (New  York:  Cambria  Press,  2011),  375–404.  

 12. “A  Canadian  Department  of  Global  Affairs?”  in  Janice  Gross  Stein,  ed.,  Diplomacy  in  the  

Digital  Age:  Essays  in  Honour  of  Ambassador  Allan  Gotlieb  (Toronto:  McClelland  &  Stewart,  2011),  141–54.  

 13. “Las  consecuencias  del  11  de  Septiembre  para  Canadá,”  in  María  Cristina  Rosas,  ed.,  

Terrorismo,  Democracia  y  Seguridad  –  11  de  septiembre:  diez  años  después  (México  DF:  Universidad  National  Autónoma  de  México,  2011),  89–108  (translated).  

 14. “Understanding  Canadian  Defence  Policy,”  in  Duane  Bratt  and  Christopher  J.  

Kukucha,  eds.,  Readings  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,  2nd  ed.  (Toronto:  Oxford  University  Press  Canada,  2011),  303–315.  

 15. “Rethinking  the  Security  Imaginary:  Canadian  Security  and  the  Case  of  Afghanistan,”  

in  Bruno  Charbonneau  and  Wayne  S.  Cox,  eds.,  Locating  Global  Order:  American  Power  and  Canadian  Security  after  9/11  (Vancouver:  UBC  Press,  2010),  107–25.  

 16. “‘Middlepowerhood’  and  ‘Middlepowermanship’  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,”  in  

Nikola  Hynek  and  David  Bosold,  eds.,  Canada’s  Foreign  and  Security  Policy:  Soft  and  Hard  Strategies  of  a  Middle  Power  (Toronto:  Oxford  University  Press,  2010),  20–34.  

 17. Greg  Donaghy  and  KRN,  “Introduction,”  in  Greg  Donaghy  and  KRN,  eds.  Architects  

and  Innovators:  Building  the  Department  of  Foreign  Affairs  and  International  Trade,  1909–2009  /  Architectes  et  innovateurs  :  le  développement  du  ministère  des  Affaires  étrangères  et  du  Commerce  international,  de  1909  à  2009  (Montréal  and  Kingston:  Queen’s  Policy  Studies  Series,  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2009),  1–8.  

 18. “Allan  E.  Gotlieb  and  ‘the  Politics  of  the  Real  World,’”  in  Greg  Donaghy  and  KRN,  eds.  

Architects  and  Innovators:  Building  the  Department  of  Foreign  Affairs  and  International  Trade,  1909–2009  /  Architectes  et  innovateurs  :  le  développement  du  ministère  des  Affaires  étrangères  et  du  Commerce  international,  de  1909  à  2009  (Montréal  and  Kingston:  Queen’s  Policy  Studies  Series,  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2009),  273–88.  

 19. “No  Exit:  Canada  and  the  ‘War  without  End’  in  Afghanistan,”  in  Hans-­‐‑Georg  Ehrhart  

and  Charles  C.  Pentland,  eds.,  The  Afghanistan  Challenge:  Hard  Realities  and  Strategic  Choices  (Montreal  and  Kingston:  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2009),  157–73.  

Page 13: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

13

 20. Wayne  S.  Cox  and  KRN,  “The  ‘Crimson  World’:  The  Anglo  Core,  the  Post-­‐‑Imperial  

Non-­‐‑core,  and  the  Hegemony  of  American  IR,”  in  Arlene  B.  Tickner  and  Ole  Wæver,  eds.,  International  Relations  Scholarship  around  the  World  (London:  Routledge,  2009),  287–306.  

 21. “World  Politics:  Global  Anarchy,  Global  Governance,”  in  Rand  Dyck,  ed.,  Studying  

Politics:  An  Introduction  to  Political  Science,  3rd  ed.  (Toronto:  Nelson  Education,  2009),  434–54;  2nd  ed.  (Toronto:  Thomson  Nelson,  2006),  375–94;  1st  ed.  (Toronto:  Thomson  Nelson,  2002),  369–88.  

 22. “A  Thermostatic  Dynamic?    Electoral  Outcomes  and  Anti-­‐‑Americanism  in  Canada,”  in  

Richard  A.  Higgott  and  Ivona  Malbašić,  eds.,  The  Political  Consequences  of  Anti-­‐‑Americanism  (London:  Routledge,  2008),  129–41.  

 23. “Anti-­‐‑Americanism  in  Canada,”  in  Brendon  O’Connor,  ed.,  Anti-­‐‑Americanism:  History,  

Causes,  and  Themes,  vol.  3:  Comparative  Perspectives  (Oxford/Westport:  Greenwood  World  Publishing,  2007),  59–76.  

 24. «  La  défense  du  «  royaume  »  :  la  culture  stratégique  du  Canada  revue  et  corrigée  »,  

dans  Stéphane  Roussel,  dir.  Culture  stratégique  de  défense  :  L’expérience  canadienne  (Montréal  :  Athéna  Éditions,  2007),  97–112;  revised  translated  version  of  “Defending  the  ‘Realm’:  Canadian  Strategic  Culture  Revisited,”  International  Journal  59:3  (Summer  2004),  503–20.  

 25. Nelson  Michaud  and  KRN,  “Out  of  the  Blue:  The  Mulroney  Legacy  in  Foreign  Policy,”  

in  Raymond  B.  Blake,    ed.,  Transforming  the  Nation:  Canada  and  Prime  Minister  Brian  Mulroney  (Montreal  and  Kingston:  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2007),  113–31.  

 26. Ann  Capling  and  KRN,  “The  Third  Sector  Meets  the  National  Security  State:  The  Anti-­‐‑

Globalization  Movement  in  Canada  after  9/11,”  in  Kathy  Brock,  ed.,  Delicate  Dances:  Public  Policy  and  the  Nonprofit  Sector  (Montreal  and  Kingston:  McGill-­‐‑Queen'ʹs  University  Press,  2003),  275–96.  

 27. “Canadian  Foreign  Policy  after  9/11:  Realignment,  Reorientation  or  Reinforcement?,”  in  

Lenard  Cohen,  Brian  Job  and  Alexander  Moens,  eds.,  Foreign  Policy  Realignment  in  the  Age  of  Terror  (Toronto:  Canadian  Institute  of  Strategic  Studies,  2003),  20–34.  

 28. Ann  Capling  and  KRN,  “The  Limits  of  Like-­‐‑Mindedness:  Australia,  Canada,  and  

Multilateral  Trade,”  in  Margaret  MacMillan  and  Francine  McKenzie,  eds.,  Parties  Long  

Page 14: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

14

Estranged:  Canada  and  Australia  in  the  Twentieth  Century  (Vancouver:  UBC  Press,  2003),  229–48.  

 29. “Looking  Enviously  Down  Under?  The  Australian  Experience  and  Canadian  Foreign  

Policy,”  in  Andrew  F.  Cooper  and  Dane  Rowlands,  eds.,  Canada  Among  Nations  2005:  Split  Images  (Kingston  and  Montreal:  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2005),  79–92.  

 30. “Canada  and  the  United  States  in  a  Hyperpower  Era,”  in  Ann  L.  Griffiths,  ed.,  The  

Canadian  Forces  and  Interoperability:  Panacea  or  Perdition?  (Halifax:  Centre  for  Foreign  Policy  Studies,  Dalhousie  University,  2002),  172–81.  

 31. “Smarter,  Sharper,  Stronger?  UN  Sanctions  and  Conflict  Diamonds  in  Angola,”  in  

Andrew  F.  Cooper  and  Ramesh  Thakur,  eds.,  Enhancing  Global  Governance:  Towards  a  New  Diplomacy?  (Tokyo:  United  Nations  University  Press,  2002),  248–67.  

 32. “Prologo:  Australia,  Canadá  y  el  cambiante  entorno  international,”  in  María  Cristina  

Rosas,  Australia  y  Canadá:  ¿potencies  medias  o  hegemonies  frustradas?  Una  visión  desde  México  (México  DF:  Universidad  National  Autónoma  de  México,  2002),  47–52  (translated).  

 33. “Throwing  the  Baby  Out  with  the  Bathwater?  Huntington’s  ‘Kin-­‐‑Country’  Thesis  and  

Australian-­‐‑Canadian  Relations,”  in  Linda  Cardinal  and  David  Headon,  eds.,  Shaping  Nations:  Constitutionalism  and  Society  in  Australia  and  Canada  (Ottawa:  University  of  Ottawa  Press,  2002),  167–81.  

 34. Nelson  Michaud  and  KRN,  “Introduction:  The  Conservative  Era  in  Canadian  Foreign  

Policy,  1984-­‐‑1993,”  in  Michaud  and  Nossal,  eds.,  Diplomatic  Departures,  3–24.    35. “Opening  Up  the  Policy  Process:  Does  Party  Make  a  Difference?”  in  Michaud  and  

Nossal,  eds.,  Diplomatic  Departures,  276–89.    36. Nelson  Michaud  and  KRN,  “Conclusion:  Diplomatic  Departures?  Assessing  the  

Conservative  Era  in  Foreign  Policy,”  in  Michaud  and  Nossal,  eds.,  Diplomatic  Departures,  290–95.  

 37. “Conclusion:  The  Decline  Of  the  Atlanticist  Tradition  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,”  in  

George  A.  MacLean,  ed.,  Between  Actor  and  Presence:  The  European  Union  and  the  Future  for  the  Transatlantic  Relationship  (Ottawa:  University  of  Ottawa  Press,  2001),  223–34.  

 38. “Tales  That  Textbooks  Tell:  Ethnocentricity  and  Diversity  in  American  Introductions  to  

International  Relations,”  in  Robert  M.A.  Crawford  and  Darryl  S.L.  Jarvis,  eds.,  

Page 15: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

15

International  Relations—Still  an  American  Social  Science?  Toward  Diversity  in  International  Thought  (Albany:  State  University  of  New  York  Press,  2001),  167–86.  

 39. KRN  and  Stéphane  Roussel,  “Canada  and  the  Kosovo  War:  The  Happy  Follower,”  in  

Pierre  Martin  and  Mark  R.  Brawley,  eds.,  Alliance  Politics,  Kosovo,  and  NATO’s  War:  Allied  Force  or  Forced  Allies?    (New  York:  Palgrave,  2000),  181–99.  

 40. “Life  with  Uncle  Revisited:  the  United  States  and  the  Issue  of  Leadership,”  in  David  G.  

Haglund,  ed.,  The  France-­‐‑US  Leadership  Race:  Closely  Watched  Allies  (Kingston:  Queen’s  Quarterly  Press,  2000),  157–79.  

 41. “Mission  Diplomacy  and  the  ‘Cult  of  the  Initiative’  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,”  in  

Andrew  F.  Cooper  and  Geoffrey  Hayes,  eds.,  Worthwhile  Initiatives?  Canadian  Mission-­‐‑Oriented  Diplomacy  (Toronto:  Irwin,  2000),  1–12.  

 42. “Liberal-­‐‑Democratic  Regimes,  International  Sanctions,  and  Global  Governance,”  in  

Raimo  Väyrynen,  ed.,  Global  Governance  and  Enforcement:  Issues  and  Strategies  (Lanham,  MD:  Rowman  and  Littlefield,  1999),  127–49.  

 43. “The  False  Promise  of  Economic  Sanctions,”  in  Mark  Charlton,  ed.,  Cross  Currents:  

International  Relations  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era,  rev.  ed.  (Toronto:  ITP  Nelson,  1999),  525–29.  

 44. “Congress  and  Canada,”  in  Robert  A.  Pastor  and  Rafael  Fernández  de  Castro,  eds.,  The  

Controversial  Pivot:  The  U.S.  Congress  and  North  America    (Washington:  Brookings  Institution  Press,  1998),  50–69.  

 45. Richard  A.  Higgott  and  KRN,  “Australia  and  the  Search  for  a  Security  Community  in  

the  1990s,”  in  Emanuel  Adler  and  Michael  Barnett,  eds.,  Security  Communities  (Cambridge:  Cambridge  University  Press,  1998),  265–94.  

 46. “An  Ambassador  by  Any  Other  Name?    Provincial  Representatives  Abroad,”  in  Robert  

Wolfe,  ed.,  Diplomatic  Missions:  The  Ambassador  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  (Kingston:  Queen’s  University  School  of  Policy  Studies,  1998),  161–73.  

 47. “Comparing  Australian  and  Canadian  Responses,”  in  Stephen  Alomes  and  Michael  

Provis,  eds.,  French  Worlds,  Pacific  Worlds:  French  Nuclear  Testing  in  Australia’s  Backyard  (Port  Melbourne:  Institute  for  Australian  Studies,  Deakin  University,  1998),  113–29.  

 

Page 16: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

16

48. “Playing  the  International  Card?    The  View  from  Australia,  Canada,  and  the  United  States,”  in  Gerard  A.  Postiglione  and  James  T.H.  Tang,  eds.,  Hong  Kong’s  Reunion  with  China:  The  Global  Dimensions  (Armonk,  NY:  M.E.  Sharpe,  1997),  79–101.  

 49. KRN  and  Richard  Stubbs,  “Mahathir’s  Malaysia:  An  Emergent  Middle  Power?”  in  

Andrew  F.  Cooper,  ed.,  Niche  Diplomacy:  Middle  Powers  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era  (Basingstoke:  Macmillan,  1997),  147–63.  

 50. Andrew  F.  Cooper  and  KRN,  “The  Middle  Powers  in  the  Gulf  Coalition:  Australia,  

Canada,  and  the  Nordics  Compared,”  in  Andrew  Bennett,  Joseph  Lepgold,  and  Danny  Unger,  eds.,  Friends  in  Need:  Burden  Sharing  in  the  Persian  Gulf  War  (New  York:  St  Martin’s  Press,  1997),  269–95.  

 51. “Anything  But  Provincial:  The  Provinces  and  Foreign  Affairs,”  in  Christopher  Dunn,  

ed.,  Provinces:  Canadian  Provincial  Politics  (Toronto:  Broadview  Press,  1996),  503–18.    52. George  MacLean  and  KRN,  “Building  Bridges  for  Trade:  The  Economic  Impact  of  

Ontario-­‐‑China  Relations,”  in  Jayant  Lele  and  Kwasi  Ofori-­‐‑Yeboah,  eds.,  Unravelling  the  Asian  Miracle:  Explorations  in  Development  Strategies,  Geopolitics  and  Regionalism  (Aldershot,  UK:  Dartmouth,  1996),  203–17.  

 53. “Australian  and  Canadian  Policy  towards  Southeast  Asia,”  in  David  Wurfel  and  Bruce  

Burton,  eds.,  Southeast  Asia  in  the  New  World  Order:  The  Political  Economy  of  a  Dynamic  Region  (Basingstoke:  Macmillan,  1996),  186–203.  

 54. “The  Democratization  of  Canadian  Foreign  Policy:  The  Elusive  Ideal,”  in  Maxwell  A.  

Cameron  and  Maureen  Appel  Molot,  eds.,  Canada  Among  Nations,  1995:  Democracy  and  Foreign  Policy  (Ottawa:  Carleton  University  Press,  1995),  29–43.  

 55. “Rationality  and  Non-­‐‑Rationality  in  Canadian  Defence  Policy,”  in  David  B.  Dewitt  and  

David  Leyton-­‐‑Brown,  eds.,  Canada’s  International  Security  Policy  (Scarborough:  Prentice-­‐‑Hall  Canada,  1995),  351–64.  

 56. “Quantum  Leaping:  The  Gulf  Debate  in  Australia  and  Canada,”  in  Michael  McKinley,  

ed.,  The  Gulf  War:  Critical  Perspectives  (Sydney:  Allen  and  Unwin,  1994),  48–71.    57. “Contending  Explanations  for  the  Amalgamation  of  External  Affairs,”  in  Donald  Story,  

ed.,  The  Canadian  Foreign  Service  in  Transition  (Toronto:  Scholars’  Press,  1993),  37–58.    

Page 17: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

17

58. George  MacLean  and  KRN,  “Triangular  Dynamics:  Australian  States,  Canadian  Provinces,  and  Relations  with  China,”  in  Brian  Hocking,  ed.,  Foreign  Relations  and  Federal  States  (London:  Leicester  University  Press,  1993),  170–89.  

 59. Richard  A.  Higgott  and  KRN,  “Policy  Convergence  and  Bureaucratic  Learning:  Trade  

and  Foreign  Affairs,”  in  Patrick  Weller,  John  Forster  and  Glyn  Davis,  eds.,  Reforming  the  Public  Service:  Lessons  from  Recent  Experience  (Melbourne:  Macmillan  Australia,  1993),  148–63.  

 60. “Middle  Power  Diplomacy  in  the  Changing  Asia-­‐‑Pacific  Order:  Australia  and  Canada  

Compared,”  in  Richard  Leaver  and  James  L.  Richardson,  eds.,  The  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Order:  Diagnoses  and  Prognoses  (Sydney:  Allen  &  Unwin,  1993),  210–23;  republished  in  North  America  as  Charting  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Order  (Boulder:  Westview  Press,  1993).  

 61. “The  Limits  of  Linking  Aid  and  Trade  to  Human  Rights,”  in  Mark  Charlton  and  

Elizabeth  Riddell-­‐‑Dixon,  eds.,  Cross  Currents:  International  Relations  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era  (Toronto:  Nelson  Canada,  1993),  443–50.  

 62. “The  Impact  of  Provincial  Governments  on  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,”  in  Douglas  M.  

Brown  and  Earl  H.  Fry,  eds.,  States  and  Provinces  in  the  International  Economy  (Berkeley,  CA:  Institute  of  Intergovernmental  Relations,  University  of  California  at  Berkeley,  1993),  233–43.  

 63. “Succumbing  to  the  Dumbbell:  Canadian  Perspectives  on  NATO  in  the  1990s,”  in  

Barbara  McDougall,  Kim  Richard  Nossal,  Alex  Morrison  and  Joseph  T.  Jockel,  Canada  and  NATO:  The  Forgotten  Ally?  (Cambridge:  Institute  for  Foreign  Policy  Analysis,  1992),  17–32.  

 64. “A  European  Nation?    The  Life  and  Times  of  Atlanticism  in  Canada,”  in  John  English  

and  Norman  Hillmer,  eds.,  Making  a  Difference?  Canada’s  Foreign  Policy  in  a  Changing  World  Order  (Toronto:  Lester  Publishing,  1992),  79–102;    also  published  in  translation  as  «Un  pays  européen  ?  L’histoire  de  l’atlantisme  au  Canada  »,  dans  La  politique  étrangère  canadienne  dans  un  ordre  international  en  mutation.  Une  volonté  de  se  démarquer  ?  (Québec,  Centre  québécois  de  relations  internationales,  1992),  131–160.  

 65. William  D.  Coleman  and  KRN,  “The  State,  War  and  Business  in  Canada,  1939-­‐‑1945,”  in  

Wyn  Grant,  Jan  Nekkers,  and  Frans  van  Waarden,  eds.,  Organising  Business  for  War:  Corporatist  Economic  Organisation  during  the  Second  World  War  (Providence:  Berg  Publishers,  1991),  47–73.  

 

Page 18: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

18

66. “Opening  up  the  Black  Box:  The  Decision-­‐‑Making  Approach  to  International  Politics,”  in  David  G.  Haglund  and  Michael  K.  Hawes,  eds.,  World  Politics:  Power,  Interdependence  and  Dependence  (Toronto:  Harcourt  Brace  Jovanovich,  1990),  531–52.  

 67. “‘Micro-­‐‑Diplomacy’:  The  Case  of  Ontario  and  Economic  Sanctions  against  South  

Africa,”  in  William  M.  Chandler  and  Christian  W.  Zöllner,  eds.,  Challenges  to  Federalism:  Policy-­‐‑Making  in  Canada  and  the  Federal  Republic  of  Germany  (Kingston:  Institute  of  Intergovernmental  Relations,  Queen’s  University,  1989),  235–50.  

 68. “Necessary  and  Sufficient  Conditions:  The  Inertial  Factor  in  Canadian  Sanctions  

against  Vietnam,”  in  Richard  Stubbs,  comp.,  Vietnam:  Facing  the  1990s,  Asia  Papers  1  (Toronto:  Joint  Centre  for  Asia  Pacific  Studies,  1989),  61–79.  

 69. “Cabin’d,  Cribb’d,  Confin’d?:    Canada’s  Interests  in  Human  Rights,”  in  Robert  O.  

Matthews  and  Cranford  Pratt,  eds.,  Human  Rights  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  (Montreal  and  Kingston:  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  1988),  46–58.  

 70. Lauren  McKinsey  and  KRN,  “Introduction:  The  American  Alliances  and  Canadian-­‐‑

American  Relations,”  in  McKinsey  and  Nossal,  eds.,  America’s  Alliances,  13–31.    71. “The  Dilemmas  of  Alliancemanship:  Cohesion  and  Disintegration  in  the  American  

Alliances,”  in  McKinsey  and  Nossal,  eds.,  America’s  Alliances,  32–51.    72. “Political  Leadership  and  Foreign  Policy:  Trudeau  and  Mulroney,”  in  Leslie  Pal  and  

David  Taras,  eds.,  Prime  Ministers  and  Premiers:  Political  Leadership  and  Public  Policy  in  Canada  (Scarborough:  Prentice-­‐‑Hall  Canada,  1988),  112–23.  

 73. “Polar  Icebreakers:  The  Politics  of  Inertia,”  in  Franklyn  Griffiths,  ed.,  Politics  of  the  

Northwest  Passage  (Montreal  and  Kingston:  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  1987),  216–38.  

 74. “Economic  Sanctions  in  the  League  of  Nations  and  the  United  Nations,”  in  David  

Leyton-­‐‑Brown,  ed.,  The  Utility  of  International  Economic  Sanctions  (London:  Croom  Helm,  1987),  7–21.  

 75. “Economic  Nationalism  and  Continental  Integration:  Assumptions,  Arguments  and  

Advocacies,”  in  The  Collected  Research  Studies/The  Royal  Commission  on  the  Economic  Union  and  Development  Prospects  for  Canada,  vol.  29:  The  Politics  of  Canada’s  Economic  Relationship  with  the  United  States,  Denis  Stairs  and  Gilbert  R.  Winham,  eds.,  (Ottawa:  Supply  and  Services  Canada,  1985),  55-­‐‑94;  also  published  as  «  Le  nationalisme  économique  et  l'ʹintégration  continentale  :  hypothèses,  arguments  et  causes  »  dans  Les  

Page 19: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

19

Études/Commission  royale  d’enquête  sur  l’union  économique  et  les  perspectives  de  développement  du  Canada,  vol.  29:  Les  dimensions  politiques  des  rapports  entre  le  Canada  et  les  États-­‐‑Unis,  Denis  Stairs  et  G.R.  Winham  (dirs)  (Ottawa:  Approvisionnements  et  services  Canada,  1986),  64–98.  

 76. “Doctrine  and  Canadian  Foreign  Policy:  The  Evolution  of  Bilateralism  as  a  Policy  

Idea,”  in  Guy  Gosselin,  ed.,  La  politique  étrangère  du  Canada:  Approches  bilatérale  et  régionale  (Québec:  Centre  québécois  de  relations  internationales,  1984),  59–86.  

 77. “Bureaucratic  Politics  and  the  Westminster  Model,”  in  Robert  O.  Matthews,  Arthur  G.  

Rubinoff  and  Janice  Gross  Stein,  eds.,  International  Conflict  and  Conflict  Management:  Readings  in  World  Politics,  1st  and  2nd  eds.  (Scarborough:  Prentice-­‐‑Hall  Canada,  1984  and  1989).  

 78. “Retreat,  Retraction  and  Reconstruction:  Canada  and  Indochina  in  the  Post-­‐‑Hostilities  

Period,”  in  Gordon  P.  Means,  ed.,  The  Past  in  Southeast  Asia’s  Present  (Ottawa:  Canadian  Council  for  Southeast  Asian  Studies,  1978),  171–81.  

 Other  Publications  

 1. Jean-­‐‑Christophe  Boucher  and  KRN,  “Public  Opinion  and  Interventions  Abroad,”  NPSIA  

Blog,  Norman  Paterson  School  of  International  Affairs,  Carleton  University,  27  October  2015,  https://npsia.wordpress.com/2015/10/27/public-­‐‑opinion-­‐‑and-­‐‑interventions-­‐‑abroad/.    

2. “Military  Procurement  and  the  2015  Election,”  Policy  Brief,  Centre  for  International  and  Defence  Policy,  Queen’s  University,  Fall  2015,  http://tinyurl.com/cidp-­‐‑fall2015.    

3. “Introduction,”  in  A.  Scott  Carson,  Jeffrey  Dixon  and  KRN,  eds.,  Toward  a  Healthcare  Strategy  for  Canadians  (Montréal  and  Kingston:  Queen’s  Policy  Studies  Series,  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2015),  1–9.  

4. “Old  Habits  and  New  Directions  Indeed,”  International  Journal  69:2  (June  2014):  253–57  (http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0020702014528666).  

5. “The  Heart  of  the  Matter?”  Critical  Studies  on  Security  2:1  (2014):  20–22    

(http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21624887.2013.850243).    

Page 20: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

20

6. “The  Shifting  Centre  of  Global  Gravity:  Britain,  Canada  and  the  North  Pacific,”  Canada-­‐‑UK  Colloquium  2012  Rapporteur’s  Report  (2013),  pp.  33  (http://www.queensu.ca/canuk/sites/webpublish.queensu.ca.canukwww/files/files/2012Report.pdf)  

7. “Introduction,”  in  Michael  Rostek  and  Peter  Gizewski,  eds.,  Security  Operations  in  the  

21st  Century:  Canadian  Perspectives  on  the  Comprehensive  Approach  (Montréal  and  Kingston:  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  2011),  1–10.  

 8. Contributor,  “H-­‐‑Diplo  Roundtable  Review  of  Adam  Chapnick,  Canada’s  Voice:  The  Public  

Life  of  John  Wendell  Holmes,”  H-­‐‑Diplo  12:9  (2011):  21–23  (http://h-­‐‑diplo.org/roundtables/PDF/Roundtable-­‐‑XII-­‐‑9.pdf).    

9. “Rethinking  Canada’s  Role  in  the  Middle  East,”  in  Brent  E.  Sasley,  ed.,  Actors  and  Identity  in  the  Middle  East,  Bison  Paper  14  (Winnipeg:  Centre  for  Defence  and  Security  Studies,  University  of  Manitoba,  2010),  79–88.    

10. “Canadian  Policy  towards  Mexico:  Pastor’s  Puzzle  Reconsidered,”  The  North  American  Dialogue  13  (January-­‐‑June  2010).  Available  at  http://www.cedan.org.mx.    

11. “Anti-­‐‑Americanism  in  Canada,”  Anti-­‐‑Americanism  Working  Papers  2005,  Center  for  Policy  Studies,  Central  European  University.  Available  at  http://cps.ceu.hu  |  Publications  |  Working  Papers  |  2005      

12. “Painting  the  Map  with  Maple  Leaves:  The  ‘Canadian  Studies  Enterprise’  Reconsidered,”  Crossings  10:2  (2005).  Available  at  http://www.inasa.org/crossings/10_2/index.php?apply=canadian.    

13. “The  Responsibility  to  be  Honest,”  in  David  J.  Bercuson  and  Denis  Stairs,  eds.,  In  the  National  Interest?  Assessing  Canada’s  International  Policy  Statement  (Calgary:  Canadian  Foreign  Affairs  and  Defence  Institute,  2005),  39–42.  Available  at  http://www.cdfai.org/PDF/In  The  Canadian  Interest  E.pdf.    

14. “Middle  Powers”,  “Sanctions”,  in  Martin  Griffiths,  ed.,  Encyclopaedia  of  International  Relations  and  Global  Politics  (London:  Routledge,  2005).    

15. “The  Army  as  an  Instrument  of  Canadian  Foreign  Policy:  Implications  for  the  ‘Army  of  Tomorrow,’”  in  LCol  Bernd  Horn  and  Peter  Gizewski,  eds.,  Towards  the  Brave  New  World:  Canada’s  Army  in  the  21st  Century  (Kingston:  Director  of  Land  Strategic  Concepts,  Department  of  National  Defence,  2004),  23–31.    

Page 21: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

21

16. “‘The  World  We  Want’?    The  Purposeful  Confusion  of  Values,  Goals  and  Interests  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,”  Canadian  Defence  and  Foreign  Affairs  Institute,  2003,  on-­‐‑line  paper  available  at  http://www.cdfai.org/PDF/The  World  We  Want.pdf.    

17. “The  Mulroney  Years:  Transformation  and  Tumult,”  Policy  Options  24  (June-­‐‑July  2003),  76–81.    

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

19. “Trudeau’s  Domestic  and  Foreign  Policy  Achievements,”  in  sección  especial:  Pierre  Elliott  Trudeau  (1919-­‐‑2000),  Revista  Mexicana  de  Estudios  Canadienses  3  (enero  2001),  17–21.    

20. “Bulls  to  Bears:  The  Privatization  of  War  in  the  1990s,”  in  Gilles  Carbonnier  and  Sarah  Fleming,  eds.,  ICRC  Forum:  War,  Money  and  Survival  (Geneva:  International  Committee  of  the  Red  Cross,  2000),  36–40.    

21. “Air  Power  and  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era,”  in  David  Rudd,  Jim  Hanson,  and  André  Beauregard,  eds.,  Air  Power  at  the  Turn  of  the  Millennium  (Toronto:  Canadian  Institute  of  Strategic  Studies,  1999),  17–22.    

22. David  Black,  Maxwell  A.  Cameron,  Andrew  F.  Cooper,  Mark  Neufeld,  KRN,  and  Heather  Smith,  “Roundtable  on  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,”  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  6  (Spring  1999),  1–24.    

23. Louis  F.  Nastro  and  KRN,  “The  Commitment-­‐‑Capability  Gap:  Implications  for  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era,”  Canadian  Defence  Quarterly  27  (Autumn  1997),  19–22;  reprinted  in  Gregory  S.  Mahler  and  Roman  R.  March,  eds.,  Annual  Editions:  Canadian  Politics,  5th  ed.  (Guilford,  CT:  Dushkin/McGraw  Hill,  2000).    

24. “Sanctions  and  Human  Rights,”  Pacific  Research  9  (November  1996):  13–15.    

25. “The  Canadian  ‘Malaise’  Reconsidered:  Foreign  Policy  in  an  Era  of  Domestic  Uncertainty,”  in  Liou  To-­‐‑hai,  ed.,  Canadian  Studies  1996,  Conference  Proceedings  (Taipei:  National  Chengchi  University,  1996),  1–27.    

26. “Lester  Pearson:  Warrior,”  Literary  Review  of  Canada  (May  1994),  10–11.    

Page 22: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

22

27. “Regresso  al  aislamiento:  la  política  exterior  de  Canadá  en  los  90,”  Etcétera  (Mexico  City)  63  (14  abril  1994)  :  32–33  (translated).    

28. “Canadian  Foreign  Policy:  The  Outlook  for  1993,”  Behind  the  Headlines  50  (Winter  1992-­‐‑93),  2–9.    

29. “All  in  Favour,  Say  Aye,”  Peace  and  Security  4  (Spring  1989):  4–5.    

30. “Out  of  Steam?    Mulroney  and  Sanctions,”  International  Perspectives  17  (November/December  1988):  13–15.    

31. Adam  Bromke  and  KRN,  “Zmiana  i  ciaglosc  w  polityce  zagranicznej  Kanady,”  Sprawy  Miedzynarodowe  40  (Luty  1987):  35–42  [“Change  and  Continuity  in  Canada’s  Foreign  Policy,”  International  Affairs,  Warsaw,  40  (February  1987)]  (translated).    

32. “Middling  Through,”  Policy  Options  7  (May  1986),  25–27.    

33. “Rhetoric  and  Reality,”  Policy  Options  7  (January/February  1986),  5–7.    

34. Adam  Bromke  and  KRN,  “Die  kanadische  Außenpolitik  unter  den  Konservativen,”  Europa  Archiv:  Zeitschrift  für  Internationale  Politik  41  (Juni  1985):  329–36  (translated).    

35. Adam  Bromke  and  KRN,  “Canada:  Foreign  Policy  Outlook  after  the  Conservative  Victory,”  The  World  Today  40  (November  1984):  462–71.    

36. Adam  Bromke  and  KRN,  “Trudeau  Rides  the  ‘Third  Rail,’”  International  Perspectives  (May/June  1984),  3–6.    

37. “The  IJC  in  Retrospect,”  in  Spencer,  Kirton  and  Nossal,  eds.,  International  Joint  Commission,  124-­‐‑–30.    

38. “International  Joint  Commission  and  the  Garrison  Diversion,”  International  Perspectives  (Nov/Dec  1978),  22–25.  

 Reprints    

1. “Analyzing  the  Domestic  Sources  of  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,”  International  Journal  39  (Winter  1983-­‐‑84),  1–21;  reprinted  in  Duane  Bratt  and  Christopher  J.  Kukucha,  eds.,  Readings  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy:  Classic  Debates  and  New  Ideas  (Toronto:  Oxford  University  Press,  2007),  163–75.    

Page 23: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

23

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

3. Louis  F.  Nastro  and  KRN,  “The  Commitment-­‐‑Capability  Gap:  Implications  for  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era,”  Canadian  Defence  Quarterly  27  (Autumn  1997),  19–22;  reprinted  in  Gregory  S.  Mahler  and  Roman  R.  March,  eds.,  Annual  Editions:  Canadian  Politics,  5th  ed.  (Guilford,  CT:  Dushkin/McGraw  Hill,  2000).    

4. Andrew  F.  Cooper,  Richard  A.  Higgott,  and  KRN,  Relocating  Middle  Powers:  Australia  and  Canada  in  a  Changing  World  Order  (Vancouver:  University  of  British  Columbia  Press,  1993),  xiv,  232  pp.;  chap  1  reprinted  in  Mark  Charlton,  ed.,  Cross  Currents:  International  Relations  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era,  rev.  ed.  (Toronto:  ITP  Nelson,  1999),  78–94.    

5. “International  Sanctions  as  International  Punishment,”  International  Organization  43  (Spring  1989),  301–22;  reprinted  in  David  A.  Lake,  ed.,  The  International  Political  Economy  of  Trade,  vol  2  (Aldershot,  UK  and  Brookfield,  VT:  Edward  Elgar,  1993),  430–52.    

6. Andrew  Fenton  Cooper,  Richard  A.  Higgott,  and  KRN,  “Bound  to  Follow?    Leadership  and  Followership  in  the  Gulf  Conflict,”  Political  Science  Quarterly  106  (Fall  1991),  391-­‐‑410;  reprinted  in:  Mark  Charlton  and  Elizabeth  Riddell-­‐‑Dixon,  eds.,  Cross  Currents:  International  Relations  in  the  Post-­‐‑Cold  War  Era  (Toronto:  Nelson  Canada,  1993),  66–77;  and  in  Demetrios  Caraley  and  Cerentha  Harris,  eds.,  New  World  Politics:  Power,  Ethnicity  and  Democracy  (New  York:  Academy  of  Political  Science,  1993),  129–48.    

7. “Mixed  Motives  Revisited:  Canada’s  Interest  in  Development  Assistance,”  Canadian  Journal  of  Political  Science  21  (March  1988),  35–56;  reprinted  in  Robert  O.  Matthews,  Arthur  G.  Rubinoff  and  Janice  Gross  Stein,  eds.,  International  Conflict  and  Conflict  Management:  Readings  in  World  Politics,  2nd  ed.  (Scarborough:  Prentice-­‐‑Hall  Canada,  1989),  247–61.    

8. “Allison  through  the  (Ottawa)  Looking  Glass:  Bureaucratic  Politics  and  Foreign  Policy  in  a  Parliamentary  System,”  Canadian  Public  Administration  22  (Winter  1979),  610–26;  reprinted  in  Kenneth  Kernaghan,  ed.,  Public  Administration  in  Canada,  4th  and  5th  eds.  (Toronto:  Methuen,  1982  and  1985).  

 Newspaper  Articles    

1. Stéphane  Roussel,  Jean-­‐‑Christophe  Boucher,  Stéfanie  von  Hlatky,  Thomas  Juneau,  KRN,  and  Jonathan  Paquin,  “We  can’t  turn  back  the  clock  on  Canada’s  foreign  policy,”  Globe  and  Mail,  27  September  2015,  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/we-­‐‑cant-­‐‑

Page 24: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

24

turn-­‐‑back-­‐‑the-­‐‑clock-­‐‑on-­‐‑canadas-­‐‑foreign-­‐‑policy/article26556228/  

2. Stéphane  Roussel,  Jean-­‐‑Christophe  Boucher,  Stéfanie  von  Hlatky,  Thomas  Juneau,  KRN,  et  Jonathan  Paquin,  “Politique  étrangère:  peut-­‐‑on  revenir  en  arrière?”  [Foreign  policy:  can  we  go  back?],  Le  Devoir,  18  septembre  2015,  http://www.ledevoir.com/politique/canada/450315/politique-­‐‑etrangere-­‐‑peut-­‐‑on-­‐‑revenir-­‐‑en-­‐‑arriere  

3. “Baird  mixes  up  his  ‘P’  words  at  the  UN:  Speech  gives  greater  glimpse  of  Conservative  

‘principled’  worldview,”  Embassy,  5  October  2011,  http://www.embassynews.ca/opinion/2011/10/05/baird-­‐‑mixes-­‐‑up-­‐‑his-­‐‑p-­‐‑words-­‐‑at-­‐‑the-­‐‑un/40810    

4. “A  defence  white  paper  is  needed,”  Embassy,  4  May  2011,  http://m.embassynews.ca/opinion/2011/05/04/a-­‐‑defence-­‐‑white-­‐‑paper-­‐‑is-­‐‑needed/40210    

5. “Don’t  trust  the  feds  with  higher  learning,”  National  Post,  3  November  2009,  A17    

6. Kathy  Brock  and  KRN,  “Shattered  dreams  of  tsunami  aid,”  Globe  and  Mail,  5  July  2005,  A13    

7. “Another  march  of  folly?  Hardly,”  Globe  and  Mail,  15  April  1999,  A15    

8. “Foreign  policy  for  wimps,”  Ottawa  Citizen,  23  April  1998,  A19  

   Book  Reviews    49  book  reviews  in  American  Political  Science  Review  (2002);  American  Review  of  Canadian  Studies  (2011,  1988);  Asian  Thought  and  Society  (1984);  Australian  Journal  of  International  Affairs  (2011);  Australian  Journal  of  Political  Science  (2003,  1994);  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  Journal  (2004,  2003);  Canadian  Forum  (1976);  Canadian  Historical  Review  (2004,  1993,  1979);  Canadian  Journal  of  Political  Science  (2001,  1999,  1996,  1992,  1989,  1987,  1983,  1982);  Canadian  Public  Administration  (1990);  Canadian  Public  Policy  (1987);  Études  internationales  (1986,  1984);  European  Review  of  International  Studies  (2015);  Global  Change,  Peace  and  Security  (2004);  H-­‐‑Diplo  (2015,  2011);  International  Affairs  (1977);  International  History  Review  (2005,  1999,  1995,  1987);  International  Journal  (2011-­‐‑12,  2009-­‐‑10,  2001,  1994,  1992,  1989,  1986,  1980-­‐‑1,  1979,  1978);  Journal  of  East  Asian  Studies  (2015);  Pacific  Affairs  (1999);  Pacific  Review  (1997);  Quill  &  Quire  (1993);  The  Round  Table  (2000)        

Page 25: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

25 Papers  Presented,  1977-­‐‑2015    114  papers  presented  to  academic  conferences,  including  meetings  of  the  following  scholarly  societies:  Association  for  Canadian  Studies  in  Australia  and  New  Zealand  (2010,  2008,  2000,  1998,  1996,  1990);  Association  for  Canadian  Studies  in  China  (2013);  Association  for  Canadian  Studies  in  the  United  States  (2011);  Australian  Political  Studies  Association  (2015,  1991);  Australian  and  New  Zealand  Studies  Association  of  North  America  (2015,  2010,  2008,  2005,  2004,  2001,  1999,  1998);  British  International  Studies  Association  (1996);  Canadian  Council  for  Southeast  Asian  Studies  (1979,  1977);  Canadian  Historical  Association  (1994,  1978);  Canadian  Political  Science  Association  (2013,  2011,  2010,  2008,  2006,  2004,  2003,  2001,  1998,  1997,  1994,  1991,  1988,  1987,  1984,  1979);  International  Political  Science  Association  (2000);  International  Studies  Association  (2014,  2011,  2004,  2001,  1996,  1994,  1992,  1991);  Oceanic  Conference  on  International  Studies  (2012,  2008,  2006,  2004);  South  African  Political  Studies  Association  (1999).      Papers  Presented,  2007-­‐‑2015    

1. “The  Politics  of  Bipartisanship:  Australia,  Canada  and  the  F-­‐‑35,”  Australian  Political  Studies  Association,  Canberra,  28  September  2015;  also  Australian  and  New  Zealand  Studies  Association  of  North  America,  Dallas,  29-­‐‑31  January  2015    

2. “Canada  and  the  General  Assembly:  A  Global  Bully  Pulpit?”  Conference  on  “The  UN  at  70,”  McMaster  University,  Hamilton,  12  June  2105.    

3. “Primat  der  Wahlurne:  Explaining  Stephen  Harper’s  Foreign  Policy,”  International  Studies  Association,  Toronto,  29  March  2014    

4. “The  Big  Shift:  The  ‘Laurentian  Consensus’  and  Canada’s  China  Policy,  2006-­‐‑2012,”  Association  for  Canadian  Studies  in  China,  Guangzhou,  21  September  2013    

5. KRN  and  Leah  Sarson,  “About  Face:  Explaining  Changes  in  Canada’s  China  Policy,  2006-­‐‑2012,”  Canadian  Political  Science  Association,  Victoria,  6  June  2013    

6. “Toujours  la  politesse?    The  ‘Impolite  No’  on  Iraq  in  Historical  Perspective,”  Conference  on  “Le  «  Non  »  à  la  guerre  en  Irak,  10  ans  plus  tard/Canada’s  ‘No’  to  the  War  in  Iraq  Ten  Years  On,”  Shawinigan,  Québec,  15-­‐‑16  March  2013    

7. “An  ‘A-­‐‑Strategic’  Middle  Power?  Canada’s  Approach  to  a  Rising  China,”  Conference  on  “Middle  Power  Responses  to  the  Rise  of  the  Middle  Kingdom,”  Griffith  University,  Brisbane,  23-­‐‑24  July  2012    

Page 26: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

26

8. Alan  Bloomfield  and  KRN,  “A  Darwinian  Perspective  on  Asia-­‐‑Pacific  Multilateral  Architecture,”  Oceanic  Conference  on  International  Studies,  University  of  Sydney,  19-­‐‑20  July  2012    

9. “Shadows  of  the  Past  Revisited:  Commemorating  the  Fallen  in  Australia  and  Canada,”  conference  on  “Afghanistan:  The  Australian  And  The  Canadian  Experience  Compared,”  Centre  for  the  Study  of  Contemporary  International  History,  University  of  Toronto,  10-­‐‑11  April  2012    

10. “America’s  ‘Most  Reliable  Ally’?    Canada  and  the  Evanescence  of  the  Culture  of  Partnership,”  Association  for  Canadian  Studies  in  the  United  States,  Ottawa,  20  November  2011    

11. “A  Canadian  Department  of  Global  Affairs?”  Conference  in  Honour  of  Allan  Gotlieb,  University  of  Toronto,  13  October  2011    

12. “Don’t  Mention  the  War:  The  Afghanistan  Mission  and  Bipartisanship  in  Australia  and  Canada,”  Canadian  Political  Science  Association,  Wilfrid  Laurier  University,  17  May  2011    

13. “How  Important  Are  the  International  Activities  of  Non-­‐‑Central  Governments?  The  Case  of  Québec  Reconsidered,”  International  Studies  Association,  Montreal,  16  March  2011    

14. “The  Elephants  in  the  Room:  Canada  and  the  ‘Great  Game’  in  Southwest  Asia,”  Workshop  on  the  Regional  Dimension  of  the  Afghanistan  Conflict,  Centre  for  Security  and  Defence  Studies,  Carleton  University,  Ottawa,  16-­‐‑17  September  2010    

15. “Making  Sense  of  Afghanistan:  The  Domestic  Politics  of  International  Stabilization  Missions  in  Australia  and  Canada,”  Association  for  Canadian  Studies  in  Australia  and  New  Zealand,  Armidale,  NSW,  4  July  2010;  Australian  and  New  Zealand  Studies  Association  of  North  America,  Austin,  Texas,  26-­‐‑27  February  2010    

16. Alan  Bloomfield  and  KRN,  “A  Conservative  Foreign  Policy?  Australia  and  Canada  Compared,”  Canadian  Political  Science  Association,  Montréal,  3  June  2010    

17. “Mexico  and  Canada:  the  relationship  reconsidered,”  inaugural  lecture,  Canadian  Studies  Lecture  series,  Centro  de  Diálogo  y  Análisis  sobre  América  del  Norte,  Tecnológico  de  Monterrey,  Mexico  City,  23  February  2010    

Page 27: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

27

18. “Unfinished  Business?  The  Long-­‐‑Term  Implications  of  the  Reorganization  of  the  Department  of  External  Affairs,  1982-­‐‑2009,”  paper  to  the  Conference  on  Foreign  Affairs  Transformation,  University  of  Saskatchewan,  28  September  2009    

19. “Rethinking  Canada’s  Role  in  the  Middle  East,”  paper  to  the  2009  University  of  Manitoba  Political  Studies  Students’  Conference,  Winnipeg,  28-­‐‑30  January  2009    

20. “Allan  E.  Gotlieb  and  ‘the  Politics  of  the  Real  World,’”  Conference  on  “Architects  and  Innovators:  Building  the  Department  of  Foreign  Affairs  and  International  Trade,  1909-­‐‑2009,”  Ottawa,  17-­‐‑18  December  2008    

21. Ann  Capling  and  KRN,  “The  Region  that  Never  Was  (And  Never  Will  Be):  The  Case  of  North  America,”  Oceanic  Conference  on  International  Studies,  University  of  Queensland,  Brisbane,  2-­‐‑4  July  2008    

22. “The  Unavoidable  Shadow  of  Past  Wars:  Obsequies  for  Casualties  of  the  Afghanistan  War  in  Canada  and  Australia,”  Canadian  Political  Science  Association,  Vancouver,  6  June  2008;  Association  for  Canadian  Studies  in  Australia  and  New  Zealand,  Emmanuel  College,  University  of  Queensland,  Brisbane,  1-­‐‑3  July  2008    

23. “Don’t  Mention  the  War:  Explaining  Canadian  Attitudes  towards  the  Afghan  Mission,”  Conference  on  Canadian  Security  into  the  21st  Century:  (Re)Articulations  in  the  Post-­‐‑9/11  World,  Laurentian  University,  Sudbury,  5-­‐‑7  March  2008    

24. Alan  Bloomfield  and  KRN,  “End  of  an  Era?    Anti-­‐‑Americanism  in  the  Australian  Labor  Party,”  Australian  and  New  Zealand  Studies  Association  of  North  America,  Austin,  Texas,  28  February-­‐‑1  March  2008    

25. “ISAF  and  OEF:  From  Difference  to  Convergence?  A  Canadian  Perspective,”  Institut  für  Friedensforschung  und  Sicherheitspolitik  an  der  Universität  Hamburg,  Fürungsakademie  der  Bundeswehr,  Hamburg,  14  December  2007    

26. “How  Québec’s  Influence  on  Foreign  and  Defence  Policy  Is  Seen  in  English  Canada:  A  Reply  to  J.L.  Granatstein  and  Pierre  Martin,”  Conference  on  «La  société  québécoise  face  aux  enjeux  de  défense  du  Canada»,    Université  du  Québec  à  Montréal,  5-­‐‑6  octobre  2007    

 Work  in  Progress    “An  ‘A-­‐‑Strategic’  Power:  Canada,  China  and  Great  Power  Transitions,”  in  After  Afghanistan:  Reflections  on  Canadian  International  Security  Policy,  eds.  James  Fergusson  and  Francis  Furtado  (Vancouver:  UBC  Press,  forthcoming  2016)  

Page 28: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

28  “Canada  and  the  General  Assembly:  A  Global  Bully  Pulpit,”  in  Canada  and  the  UN:  Legacies,  Limits  and  the  Harper  Shift,  eds.  Robert  Teigrob  and  Colin  McCullough  (Montréal  and  Kingston:  McGill-­‐‑Queen’s  University  Press,  forthcoming  2016)    Jean-­‐‑Christophe  Boucher  and  KRN,  “Did  Minority  Government  Matter?  Thinking  Counterfactually  about  the  Canadian  Mission  in  Afghanistan,”  in  Canadian  International  Policy  2006-­‐‑2015:  Continuity  and  Change  under  Conservative  Minority  and  Majority  Governments,  eds.  Adam  Chapnick  and  Christopher  J.  Kukucha  (Vancouver:  UBC  Press,  forthcoming  2016)        “Kicking  It  Old  School:  Romanticism  with  Conservative  Characteristics,”  in  Multilateralism  as  State  Strategy:  Seeking  Order  in  an  Anarchic  Society,  ed.  Robert  Murray    (Edmonton:  University  of  Alberta  Press,  forthcoming  2016).      Jean-­‐‑Christophe  Boucher  and  KRN,  Home  Game:  The  Domestic  Politics  of  Canada’s  Afghanistan  Mission,  under  contract  with  UBC  Press,  for  submission  winter  2016      Research  and  Publication  Funding    Insight  Grant  435-­‐‑2015-­‐‑1801  (Co-­‐‑investigator  with  Stéphane  Roussel,  Jean-­‐‑Christophe  Boucher,  David  Carment,  Ting-­‐‑sheng  Lin,  David  Morin,  Geneviève  Tellier;  award-­‐‑holder:  Stéphane  Roussel,  École  nationale  d’administration  publique),  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $199,927,  2015-­‐‑2018,  “Élections  et  diasporas  comme  facteur  explicatif  en  politique  étrangère”    Insight  Grant  435-­‐‑2014-­‐‑1099  (Co-­‐‑investigator  with  Jeremy  T.  Paltiel  and  Wenran  Jiang;  award-­‐‑holder:  Jeremy  Paltiel,  Carleton  University),  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $426,549,  2014-­‐‑2019,  “A  Hingeless  Pivot:  China  and  the  Asia-­‐‑Pacific  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy”    Aid  to  Research  Workshop  and  Conferences  grant  646-­‐‑2011-­‐‑1145,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $22,415,  2012:  “Dealing  with  Conflict  in  Africa:  The  United  Nations  and  Regional  Organizations”    Standard  Research  Grant  410-­‐‑2009-­‐‑0204,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $71,600,  2009-­‐‑2012,  “The  Domestic  Politics  of  International  Stabilization  Missions”    International  Research  Linkage  grant,  Department  of  Foreign  Affairs  and  International  Trade,  $7000,  2008-­‐‑2009,  “Middle  Power  Diplomacy  Revisited:  Australia,  Canada,  and  Power  Transitions  in  Global  Politics”    

Page 29: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

29  Standard  Research  Grant  410-­‐‑2002-­‐‑0789,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $58,000,  2002-­‐‑2005,  “Human  Security  and  Humanitarian  Intervention  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy”    Publication  subsidy  (with  Nelson  Michaud)  for  Diplomatic  Departures:  The  Conservative  Era  in  Canadian  Foreign  Policy,  1984-­‐‑1993,  Aid  to  Scholarly  Publications  Programme,  Humanities  and  Social  Sciences  Federation  of  Canada,  2001    Conference  Grant  646-­‐‑2000-­‐‑1055,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $8300,  2001:  “A  century  of  citizenship  in  Australia  and  Canada”      Research  grant  (with  Ann  Capling),  Nonprofit  Sector  Research  Initiative,  School  of  Policy  Studies,  Queen’s  University,  $9058,  2000:  “Does  place  matter?  The  Internet  and  the  anti-­‐‑globalization  movement  in  Canada”    Conference  Grant  646-­‐‑99-­‐‑0062,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $8050,  1999:  “Diplomatic  departures:  the  Conservative  era  in  Canadian  foreign  policy,  1984-­‐‑1993”      Standard  Research  Grant  410-­‐‑99-­‐‑1498,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $33,200,  1999-­‐‑2002,  “Globalization  and  global  governance”    Publication  grant  (with  Stéphane  Roussel)  for  La  dynamique  de  la  politique  étrangère  et  de  la  sécurité  du  Canada:  Department  of  Canadian  Heritage,  1998,  $7000    Standard  Research  Grant  410-­‐‑95-­‐‑1085,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $45,000,  1995-­‐‑1998:  “Policy  convergence:  foreign  and  defence  policy  in  Australia  and  Canada”    Publication  subsidy  for  Rain  Dancing:  Department  of  Foreign  Affairs  and  International  Trade,  Government  of  Canada,  1993,  $4500    Research  Grant  CS-­‐‑021  (with  Andrew  F.  Cooper  and  Richard  A.  Higgott),  Cooperative  Security  Competition  Program,  $27,000,  1993-­‐‑1995:  “Redefining  security  after  the  Cold  War:  new  directions  in  Australian  and  Canadian  foreign  policy”    Publication  subvention  (with  Andrew  F.  Cooper  and  Richard  A.  Higgott)  for  Relocating  Middle  Powers:  Aid  to  Scholarly  Publications  Programme,  Social  Science  Federation  of  Canada,  1993,  $7543;  Australian  National  University,  AUD$1500    

Page 30: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

30 Standard  Research  Grant  410-­‐‑91-­‐‑0971,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $32,431,  1991-­‐‑1995:  “’Middlepowermanship’  in  the  Pacific:  Australia  and  Canada  Compared”    Research  grant  (with  Andrew  Fenton  Cooper  and  Richard  A.  Higgott),  Canadian  High  Commission,  Canberra,  Canada-­‐‑Australia  Bicentennial  Institutional  Research  Award,  AUD$25,000,  1990:  “Australia  and  Canada  in  the  Changing  International  Order”    Research  grant,  United  States  Embassy,  Ottawa,  American  Studies  Program  grant,  1990:  “Lobbying  Congress:  Australian  and  Canadian  Experiences”    Conference  Grant  443-­‐‑88-­‐‑0139,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  Conference  on  Canada,  the  USSR  and  Economic  Sanctions,  $4400,  July  1988    Conference  Grant  443-­‐‑87-­‐‑0199,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  Pearson-­‐‑Dickey  Conference  on  the  Canadian-­‐‑American  Relationship,  $3600,  November  1987    Research  grant  (with  David  Wurfel  and  eight  others),  Canadian  Institute  for  International  Peace  and  Security,  $10,000,  April-­‐‑May  1988:  “Vietnam  in  the  1990s:  Canadian  Perspectives”    Standard  Research  Grant  410-­‐‑87-­‐‑0706,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  $23,000,  1987-­‐‑1990:  “Middle  Powers  and  Economic  Sanctions:  Canada  and  Australia  in  Comparative  Perspective”    Leave  fellowship,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  1983-­‐‑84    (with  Michael  M.  Atkinson)  Research  grant,  Institute  of  Public  Administration  of  Canada,  $1,900,  1979:  “New  Fighter  Aircraft  acquisition”    McMaster  University  Arts  Research  Board  grants:  research,  $3200,  1999;  travel,  $1000,  1996;  research,  $4300,  1990;  research,  $1980,  1987;  (with  William  Coleman)  research,  $850,  1985;  travel,  $300,  1982;  (with  Michael  Atkinson)  research,  $1,200,  1980;  research,  1978      Invited  Lectures    “The  Big  Shift:  The  ‘Laurentian  Consensus’  and  Canada’s  China  Policy,  2006-­‐‑2012,”  Invited  Lecture,  Association  for  Canadian  Studies  in  China,  Guangzhou,  21  September  2013    “Hegemonic  Boss  Dragons  and  Two-­‐‑Sun  Skies:  The  Rise  of  China  and  the  Future  of  the  Asia-­‐‑Pacific,”  2012  Sir  Walter  Murdoch  Memorial  Lecture,  Murdoch  University,  Perth,  Australia,  25  

Page 31: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

31 October  2012;  repeated  as  Inaugural  Sir  Walter  Murdoch  Lecture,  Murdoch  University–Singapore  Campus,  Singapore,  1  November  2012    “The  Politics  of  Alignment:  Divergence  and  Convergence  in  the  Global  Policies  of  Canada  and  the  United  States,”  Invited  Keynote  Address,  14th  Maple  Leaf  and  Eagle  Conference  2012,  University  of  Helsinki,  8  May  2012      “Local  Governments  and  Global  Politics:  The  Missing  Dimension  in  the  Architecture  of  Contemporary  Global  Governance,”  Invited  Lecture,  Foreign  Affairs  Office  of  Shanghai  Municipality,  Shanghai,  9  September  2009    “A  Question  of  Balance:  The  Cult  of  Research  Intensivity  and  the  Professing  of  Political  Science  in  Canada,”  Presidential  Address  to  the  Canadian  Political  Science  Association,  Toronto,  2  June  2006      Invited  Parliamentary  Testimony    “’What  kind  of  Armed  Forces  do  Canadians  want?’    Asking  different  questions  about  Canadian  defence,”  invited  testimony  to  Canada,  Parliament,  Senate,  Committee  on  National  Security  and  Defence,  Kingston,  29  November  2004      “Minister’s  dialogue  on  foreign  policy,”  invited  testimony  to  Canada,  Parliament,  House  of  Commons,  Standing  Committee  on  Foreign  Affairs  and  International  Trade,  Proceedings,  3  April  2003    “’Parliament  will  decide’  revisited:  the  Canadian  parliament  and  the  use  of  force,”  invited  submission  to  Canada,  Parliament,  Senate,  Standing  Committee  on  Foreign  Affairs,  Proceedings,  36th  Parl.,  1st  sess.,  issue  41,  8  June  1999    “Canadian  sanctions  against  Nigeria?”  invited  written  submission  to  Canada,  Parliament,  House  of  Commons,  Standing  Committee  on  Foreign  Affairs  and  International  Trade,  Minutes  of  Proceedings  and  Evidence,  35th  Parl.,  14  December  1995;  invited  testimony,  18  June  1996    “The  utilities  of  economic  sanctions,  with  particular  reference  to  South  Africa,”  Canada,  Parliament,  House  of  Commons,  Standing  Committee  on  Human  Rights,  Minutes  of  Proceedings  and  Evidence,  33rd  Parl.,  1st  sess.,  issue  9,  16  July  1986    “Canada  and  economic  sanctions  against  South  Africa,”  Canada,  Parliament,  Special  Joint  Committee  of  the  Senate  and  the  House  of  Commons  on  Canada’s  International  Relations,  Minutes  of  Proceedings  and  Evidence,  33rd  Parl.,  1st  sess.,  issue  24,  10  December  1985  

Page 32: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

32  Teaching    Courses  taught:    

Undergraduate:  Introduction  to  politics  and  government;  Introduction  to  global  politics;  Canadian  foreign  policy;  Causes  of  war;  International  politics    Graduate:    Theories  of  international  politics;  Defence  policy;  Canadian  foreign  policy      

Queen’s  University  PhD  theses  supervised:    

Alan  Bloomfield,  “Australia’s  Strategic  Culture:  An  Investigation  of  the  Concept  of  Strategic  Culture  and  its  Application  to  the  Australian  Case,”  September  2005-­‐‑September  2011    Stephen  Noakes,  “Advocacy  under  Authoritarianism:  Transnational  Networks  in  China,”  September  2007-­‐‑June  2011;  co-­‐‑supervised  with  Bruce  Gilley    Bruno  Charbonneau,  “In  the  Name  of  France  and  Civilization:  The  Making  of  (In)security  and  the  Re-­‐‑legitimization  of  French  Security  Policy  in  Sub-­‐‑Saharan  Africa,”  September  2001-­‐‑September  2006;  co-­‐‑supervised  with  Wayne  S.  Cox    Todd  S.  Hataley,  “Exporting  American  Border  Control:  An  Institutional  Analysis  of  the  Canada-­‐‑United  States  Border,”  September  2001-­‐‑March  2006      

Queen’s  University  MA  theses  supervised:       Jenn  Vibert  (2009);  John  Stephenson  (2004)      McMaster  University  MA  theses  supervised:    

Gillian  Frost  (2001);  James  (Sandy)  Irvine  (2000);  Joel  Cobb  (2000);  Lori  Buck  (1997);  Vince  De  Rose  (1996);  Robert  Johnston  (1995);  Lawrence  Hing-­‐‑Kee  Chi  (1994);  Nancy  Mackneson  (1993);  Joe  Fluke  (1993);  George  MacLean  (1992);  Sheila  Singh  (1991);  Chris  LeClair  (1990);  Robert  Crawford  (1988);  Luc  Baudouin  St-­‐‑Cyr  (1987);  Elizabeth  Platt  (1986);  Gary  Janozeski  (1985);  Paul  Muldoon  (1983);  Greg  Brown  (1981);  Michael  Adams  (1980);  Petronella  Van  Weert  (1979);  Pettson  Onwumere  (1978);  Titus  Fagboye  (1977)  

Page 33: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

33    External  examiner    

PhD:  Brendon  Gittins  (University  of  Melbourne,  2014);  Steven  Seligman  (University  of  Western  Ontario,  2014);  Gregory  MacCallion  (Australian  National  University,  2014);  Hans  Christian  Breede  (Royal  Military  College  of  Canada,  2013);  Leanne  Smyth  (University  of  British  Columbia,  2013);  Robert  W.  Murray  (University  of  Alberta,  2010);  Andrea  Charron  (Royal  Military  College  of  Canada,  2009);  Patrick  Lennox  (University  of  Toronto,  2006);  John  Blaxland  (Royal  Military  College  of  Canada,  2004);  Monica  Gattinger  (Carleton  University,  2003);  Gunhild  Hoogensen  (University  of  Alberta,  1999);  Roy  Norton  (School  of  Advanced  International  Studies,  Johns  Hopkins  University,  1998);  Nelson  Michaud  (Université  Laval,  1998);  Christopher  Kukucha  (University  of  Alberta,  1996);  David  Cox  (Flinders  University  of  South  Australia,  1994);  Rob  Huebert  (Dalhousie  University,  1993);  Jane  Palmer  (Dalhousie  University,  1992);  Ernie  Keenes  (Carleton  University,  1991);  Patricia  Appavoo  (University  of  Toronto,  1989);  Elizabeth  Riddell-­‐‑Dixon  (University  of  Toronto,  1985);  Paul  Sharp  (Queen’s  University,  1985);  David  Taras  (University  of  Toronto,  1983);  Pamela  J.  Butler  (McGill  University,  1979)    M.Phil.:  Fok  Wai  Lun  (University  of  Hong  Kong,  1998)    M.A.:  David  Francoeur  (History,  Queen’s,  2011);  Stephen  Omelus  (University  of  Northern  British  Columbia,  2006);  Kim  Williams  (La  Trobe  University,  2002);  Craig  Snyder  (Brock  University,  1983)  

 Faculty  of  Social  Sciences  winner,  McMaster  Students  Union  teaching  awards,  1981-­‐‑82,  2000-­‐‑01    Chair,  University  Committee  on  Teaching  and  Learning,  1984-­‐‑86      Scholarly/Professional  Activities    Current  scholarly  editorial  activities:    • Member,  Editorial  Board,  International  Journal,  2012-­‐‑present  • Member,  International  Advisory  Board,  Canadian  Foreign  Policy  Journal,  2011-­‐‑present  • Member,  editorial  board,  Australasian  Canadian  Studies,  2010-­‐‑present  • Member,  comité  de  rédaction,  Études  internationales,  2002-­‐‑present  • Regional  editor  (North  America),  Global  Change,  Peace  and  Security  (formerly  Pacifica  Review),  

2002-­‐‑present  • General  editor  (with  Brian  Job  and  Mark  W.  Zacher),  Canada  and  International  Relations  

Page 34: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

34

Series,  University  of  British  Columbia  Press,  1994-­‐‑present    External  reviewer,  Department  of  Political  Science,  Royal  Military  College  of  Canada,  February-­‐‑April  2015    External  reviewer,  Department  of  Political  Science,  University  of  Guelph,  February-­‐‑March  2013    Member,  Molot  Prize  jury,  2013    Member,  Canadian  Political  Science  Association  Book  Prize  in  International  Relations  jury,  2012-­‐‑13    Member,  Prix  Paul-­‐‑Painchaud  jury,  Institut  québécois  des  hautes  études  internationales,  2009-­‐‑2012    External  reviewer,  International  Relations  program,  University  of  Northern  British  Columbia,  February  2012      Chair,  Security  and  Defence  Forum  selection  committee,  Department  of  National  Defence,  2006-­‐‑2012;  member,  2000-­‐‑2006    External  reviewer,  Political  Science  program,  Carleton  University,  March  2011    External  reviewer,  Department  of  Political  Science,  Mount  Allison  University,  March  2009    Ontario  Council  on  Graduate  Studies  external  reviewer,  School  of  Political  Studies,  University  of  Ottawa,  December  2008      External  reviewer,  Department  of  Political  Science,  University  of  Calgary,  February  2007    External  reviewer,  Faculty  of  Social  Sciences,  University  of  Western  Ontario,  May  2006      President,  Canadian  Political  Science  Association,  2005-­‐‑2006  (president-­‐‑elect,  2004-­‐‑2005;  past-­‐‑president,  2006-­‐‑2007)    Secretary-­‐‑treasurer,  Australian  and  New  Zealand  Studies  Association  of  North  America,  2001-­‐‑2003      Member,  board  of  directors,  Canadian  Political  Science  Association,  2001-­‐‑2003    Conference  co-­‐‑organizer  (with  Linda  Cardinal),  “A  century  of  citizenship  in  Australia  and  

Page 35: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

35 Canada,”  University  of  Ottawa,  7-­‐‑9  February  2001    Member,  editorial  board,  Canadian  Journal  of  Political  Science,  2000-­‐‑2003    Conference  co-­‐‑organizer  (with  Nelson  Michaud),  “The  Conservative  era  in  Canadian  foreign  policy,”  Hull,  Québec,  18-­‐‑20  November  1999    President,  Australian  and  New  Zealand  Studies  Association  of  North  America,  1999-­‐‑2001    Member,  editorial  board,  Revista  Mexicana  de  Estudios  Canadienses,  1999-­‐‑2001    Member,  editorial  board,  Civil  Wars,  1998-­‐‑2006    Member,  editorial  board,  Australian  Journal  of  Political  Science,  1996-­‐‑1999    Member,  board  of  directors,  Atlantic  Council  of  Canada,  1992-­‐‑1997    Co-­‐‑editor  (with  Stephen  J.  Randall),  International  Journal,  1992-­‐‑1995;  editor,  1995-­‐‑1997    Head,  international  relations  section,  1993  program  committee,  Canadian  Political  Science  Association    External  reviewer,  Dalhousie  University  Faculty  of  Arts  and  Social  Sciences  review  of  Department  of  Political  Science,  February  1993    Chair,  National  Foreign  Policy  Conference,  Canadian  Institute  of  International  Affairs,  1992    Member,  research  grants  adjudication  committee  for  political  science,  public  administration  and  law,  Social  Sciences  and  Humanities  Research  Council  of  Canada,  1990-­‐‑91,  1991-­‐‑92,  1992-­‐‑93    Member,  board  of  directors,  Canadian  Political  Science  Association,  1986-­‐‑1988    Member,  editorial  board,  International  Journal,  1984-­‐‑1992    Member,  communications  committee,  Canadian  Institute  of  International  Affairs,  1981-­‐‑1990    Member,  board  of  directors,  York  University/University  of  Toronto  Joint  Centre  for  Asia  Pacific  Studies,  1988-­‐‑1991    Conference  organizer,  “Canada,  the  Soviet  Union  and  Economic  Sanctions:  Lessons  from  Experience,”  Centre  for  Russian  and  East  European  Studies,  University  of  Toronto,  14-­‐‑15  July  

Page 36: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

36 1988    Canadian  co-­‐‑ordinator,  Pearson-­‐‑Dickey  Conferences  on  the  Canadian-­‐‑American  Relationship,  Dartmouth  College  and  Canadian  Institute  of  International  Affairs,  1986-­‐‑87    Editor,  Behind  the  Headlines,  vols.  37-­‐‑42  (1979-­‐‑1985)    Head,  international  relations  section,  1978  program  committee,  Canadian  Political  Science  Association      University  Service    (Research  leave  1983-­‐‑84,  1990-­‐‑91,  1997-­‐‑98;  administrative  leave  2009-­‐‑10;  academic  leave  2015-­‐‑16)    Queen’s  University,  2001-­‐‑present    

Director,  School  of  Policy  Studies,  July  2013-­‐‑present    Director,  Centre  for  International  and  Defence  Policy,  January  2011-­‐‑December  2013    Chair,  Committee  to  Review  the  Centre  for  Health  Services  and  Policy  Research,  Faculty  of  Health  Sciences,  2011-­‐‑2012    Member,  Academic  Plan  Writing  Team,  2010    Head,  Department  of  Political  Studies,  2001-­‐‑09    Faculty  co-­‐‑chair,  Queen’s  Community  Appeal,  2007-­‐‑08,  2008-­‐‑09    Acting  director,  Queen’s  Centre  for  International  Relations,  January-­‐‑July  2004    Member,  Geography  Headship  Search  Committee,  2003-­‐‑04    Member,  Centre  for  International  Relations  Search  Committee,  2001-­‐‑02  

   

McMaster  University,  1976-­‐‑2001    

Chair,  Graduate  Committee,  Department  of  Political  Science,  2000-­‐‑01    Member,  Distinguished  Alumni  Selection  Committee,  1996-­‐‑97,  1998-­‐‑99  

Page 37: KIM RICHARD NOSSAL Queen’s University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 ...

37

 Member,  Research  Misconduct  Panel,  1998-­‐‑99    Chair,  Department  of  Political  Science,  1992-­‐‑1996;  acting  chair,  1989-­‐‑90    Member,  Director  of  Peace  Studies  Selection  Committee,  1996    Member,  Dean’s  Priorities  and  Budget  Committee,  Faculty  of  Social  Sciences,  1992-­‐‑96    Elected  member,  Undergraduate  Council,  1991-­‐‑92  • member,  Curriculum  Committee  • chair,  ad  hoc  Committee  on  Limited  Enrolment    Member,  President’s  Advisory  Committee  on  Relations  with  the  Community,  1991-­‐‑93    Co-­‐‑chair,  Faculty  of  Social  Sciences  Undergraduate  Curriculum  Committee,  1991-­‐‑92    Member,  Director  of  Peace  Studies  Selection  Committee,  1989-­‐‑90    Elected  member,  Faculty  of  Social  Sciences  Tenure  and  Promotion  Committee,  1985-­‐‑87    Chair,  University  Committee  on  Teaching  and  Learning,  1984-­‐‑86    Elected  member,  McMaster  University  Senate,  1982-­‐‑83    Member,  President’s  Budget  Committee,  1982-­‐‑83    Chair,  Senate  Board  for  Student  Appeals,  1982-­‐‑83;  vice-­‐‑chair,  1981-­‐‑82    Elected  member,  McMaster  University  Faculty  Association  Executive  Committee,  1978-­‐‑79    

 November  2015