Future students

Wednesday, December 3, 2025 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Speaker Series

Gender, Peace, and Power Sharing

Dr. McCulloch will be speaking on her upcoming book Gender, Peace, and Power-Sharing (University of Toronto Press, June 2026), coauthored with Siobhan Byrne (University of Alberta). The book explores how power-sharing and the women, peace, and security agenda intersect in peacebuilding practices. It offers a feminist “alternative telling” that captures the tensions and potential of these frameworks

Friday, November 7, 2025 1:30 pm - 2:30 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Scholar Spotlight Series

Obstructed Labour: A Century of (In)action on Maternal Mortality in Canada

Canada's official maternal mortality statistics are incomplete to the extent that the World Health Organization applies an amplifier of 60%. This problem has been known for at least 100 years with no lasting progress to address it at a national level. Through the lens of reproductive justice, this presentation chronicles the historical trajectory and interrogates the public policy failure to prioritize the critical issue of maternal mortality.

Friday, October 3, 2025 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

Scholar Spotlight Series

From Myth to Malice: Affective and Political Consequences of False Claims to Indigeneity

In this talk, Rowland will interrogate the phenomenon of false Indigenous identity claims and their corrosive effects on Indigenous communities. Drawing on personal experience, historical precedents, and critical Indigenous scholarship, he situates these practices within the broader logic of settler colonialism and its drive toward self-indigenization. In particular, he will focus on the drive to consume and assume historical Indigenous suffering in the effort to cohere false claims.

By Dr. Zoe Todd

Associate Professor; Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Governance and Freshwater Fish Futures

Drawing on various scholars, Dr Zoe Todd critiques the push to 'braid' Indigenous and settler paradigms in conservation. As a Red River Métis scholar, Dr Todd advocates for the radical refusal of systems based on white possession and individualism, urging western institutions to embrace Indigenous practices and global anti-imperialist solidarities.

Friday, February 28, 2025 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EST (GMT -05:00)

Speaker Series: Permanent Marginality: Indigenous Identity and Academia

By Rachelle “Māēyawekēsekōkiw” Besaw

PhD Candidate, Sociocultural Anthropology, Arizona State University

In this lecture, the speaker will discuss the marginal space she now inhabits as a linguistic anthropologist, indebted to the oftentimes cruel and violent history of anthropological and linguistic research inflicted upon Indigenous Nations, and her own Tribe, in the name of Science. She will discuss her own journey through an academic system built on the oppression and subjugation of her people, and how she has had to rely upon extractive and exploitative research on her path to reclaiming her Indigeneity.

The International Political Economy Best Book Award recognizes an outstanding monograph in the field of IPE published within the past two years. 

Congratulations to the 2024 recipient of the IPE Best Book Award, Eric Helleiner for The Contested World Economy: The Deep and Global Roots of International Political Economy

Presentation entitled "Making the Next Great Transformation: Systemic Coordination Challenges for Green Transition Policymaking in Advanced Economy States," delivered at the Waterloo Climate Institute's 1st Annual Climate Con, March 16th, 2024. 

Presentation entitled "The Return of the State: The Incipient Fiscal Status-Quo and its Progressive Policy Implications," delivered at the Queens University PSGSA's Annual Graduate Conference, June 26th, 2024. 

Forthcoming presentation entitled "From 'Special Relationship' to 'Strategic Partnership': Prospects for the Future of Canada-CARICOM Relations in a Polarizing Global Political Economy," to be delivered at the Canada Caribbean Institute's 3rd Annual Research Symposium, October 16th-19th, 2024.  

Friday, October 11, 2024 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

Speaker Series Event

What international issues become national interests worth fighting for, and why?

In her upcoming article in the American Political Science Review, Professor Soyoung Lee of Yale University argues that, contrary to conventional wisdom, issues without clear economic value, such as barren lands, are more likely to be perceived as national interests and hence more likely to trigger international conflicts.