Joel Sokolsky

Dr. Joel Sokolsky

Joel Sokolsky

Professor

Political Science and Economics

Royal Military College of Canada

About

Dr. Sokolsky is a Professor of Political Science at the Royal Military College of Canada (RMC).  He holds a PhD in Political Science from Harvard University. A native of Toronto, Dr. Sokolsky earned his Honours BA from the University of Toronto and an MA from the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), Johns Hopkins University. From 2008 to 2013, he was Principal (Provost) of RMC.  Prior to this appointment, Dr. Sokolsky was Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Head of the Department of Political Science and Chair of the War Studies Committee. He is a Senior Fellow at the Queen’s University Centre for International and Defence Policy and holds an appointment with the Queen’s Department of Political Studies. He is a Senior Analyst with Wikistrat.com. Dr. Sokolsky has served as a consultant to several government offices and represented Canada on the Secretariat Working Group of the NATO/Partnership for Peace Consortium of Defence Academies and Security Studies Institutes.

Research Interests

  • Canadian foreign and defence policy;
  • International security relations; and
  • American foreign and defence policy.

Recent Publications

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Dr. Grazia Scoppio

Dr. Grazia Scoppio

Grazia Scoppio

Professor

Defence Studies

Royal Military College of Canada

gs104@queensu.ca

scoppio-g@rmc.ca

About

Dr. Grazia Scoppio is Professor Emerita, Defence Studies at the Royal Military College of Canada (RMC), cross-appointed in the Queen’s University Department of Political Studies and a fellow at the Centre for International and Defence Policy at Queen’s. She was a Fulbright Canada Research Chair in Peace and War Studies at Norwich University, in Vermont, USA.  She was Dean of Continuing Studies at RMC from 2017 to 2020 after having served as Associate Dean. Between 2002 and 2013 she held appointments at the Canadian Defence Academy and the Canadian Forces Leadership Institute. In 2018 she was a member of the first Halifax Peace with Women Fellowship Selection Committee for the Halifax International Security Forum. Due to her expertise Dr. Scoppio is often contacted to provide contributions to the media and testify before Parliamentary committees. She is an active member of various academic societies and a member of the Editorial Boards of two bilingual journals, the Canadian Military Journal and Comparative and International Education Journal. She has over two decades of experience conducting interdisciplinary research on issues related to military personnel including diversity and gender in military organizations, indigenous participation in the military, immigrants in the armed forces, military education, organizational culture, and lessons learned.

Research Interests

  • Military Personnel
  • Immigrants in the Armed Forces
  • Indigenous Peoples Participation in the Military 

Recent Publications

Online

Kim Richard Nossal

Kim Richard Nossal

Kim Richard Nossal

Professor Emeritus

Political Studies Department

About

Professor emeritus of political studies, Centre for International and Defence Policy, Queen’s University. Author of a number of works on Canadian foreign and defence policy. Latest book is Canada Along: Navigating the Post-American World (Dundurn Press, 2023)

Research Interests

  • Canadian foreign and defence policy

Recent Publications

  • Canada Along: Navigating the Post-American World (Dundurn Press, 2023)
  • KRN, Stéphane Roussel et Stéphane Paquin, Politique internationale et défense au Canada et au Québec, deuxième édition enrichie et mise à jour (Les Presses de l’Université de Montréal, 2023)

Online

  • Bluesky: @kimnossal.bsky.social

James McKay

James McKay

James McKay

Associate Professor

Department of Political Science and Economics

Royal Military College of Canada

About

Educated at Bishop's University, RMC, and King's College London.  Has served as Director, Faculty Services, Chair Military & Strategic Studies, Associate Dean of Social Sciences and Humanities (Faculty); and Chair War Studies.  Current research is on the measurement of national power.

Research Interests

  • Power
  • Transatlantic defence & security relations
  • Coercion

Recent Publications

  • “Pressure, Threat, Dependence: Assessing NATO Member-State Defence Spending?” Journal of Transatlantic Studies.  December 2022. https://doi.org/10.1057/s42738-023-00105-z.

  • with Pierre Jolicoeur, Christian Breede, and Ali Dizboni.  “Educating the Ideal Canadian Lieutenant”. Parameters, Spring 2022.

  • “Canada and NATO: hopes and ambitions”, in Michele Testoni, Ed., NATO and Transatlantic Relations in the 21st Century,(London: Routledge, 2021).

  • “Shaped by Loss: Culture and Casualties in Canada”, in H. Christian Breede, Ed.  Culture and the Soldier: Identities, Values, and Norms in Military Engagements, (Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2019).

  • “How transatlantic is the Trump Administration?”, Journal of Transatlantic Studies.  October 2019.  DOI: 10.1057/s42738-019-00030-0,  532-553. 

Online

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Justin Massie

Dr. Justin Massie

Justin Massie

Professor

Political Science

Université du Québec à Montréal

About

Justin Massie is a professor and Head of the Department of political science at the Université du Québec à Montréal. He is also Co-director of the Network for Strategic Analysis, and Co-director of Le Rubicon. He was the 2019 Fulbright Visiting Research Chair in Canada-U.S. Relations at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, DC. His research focuses on the global power transition, multinational military interventions, and foreign and defence policy. His work has been published in several journals, including International Studies Quarterly, European Journal of International Security, International Relations, Foreign Policy Analysis, Contemporary Security Policy, Comparative Strategy, Canadian Journal of Political Science, International Journal (winner of the best article published in 2017), Canadian Foreign Policy Journal (winner of the best article published in 2008) and Études internationales (winner of the best article published in 2011). He is the author of Francosphère : l’importance de la France dans la culture stratégique du Canada (PUQ, 2013), and co-editor of Paradiplomatie identitaire : Nations minoritaires et politique extérieure (PUQ, 2019), America’s Allies and the Decline of U.S. Hegemony (Routledge, 2019), and Intelligence Cooperation in a Multipolar World: Non-American Perspectives (UTP, 2024).

Research Interests

  • International Security
  • Foreign and Defence Policy
  • Military Interventions

Recent Publications

Online

Robert (Bob) Martyn

Robert Martyn

Robert (Bob) Martyn

Research Fellow

Centre for International and Defence Policy

About

I am a former member of the Canadian military, having divided my service between the Air Force and Army. I served in Armour and Search & Rescue before being commissioned as an Intelligence officer, where I worked in NDHQ, Brigade HQ, and within Special Operations Forces Command. I have operational deployments to Cyprus (UN), Bosnia (NATO), Kosovo (NATO), and two tours in Afghanistan (Special Operations Command). I retired as a Reserve Infantry Officer.

After receiving a BA in Politics (Manitoba) and a MA in War Studies (RMC), I completed my PhD in Military History (Queen’s) in 2004, with a dissertation on Intelligence Support to Peacekeeping. This was followed by Post-Doctoral research in Terrorism (William & Mary) and Intelligence (Carleton/Norman Patterson School of International Relations)

Research Interests

  • Intelligence
  • Violent Radicalization and Disinformation
  • Canadian Arctic

Recent Publications

  • “From the Kremlin to the Klan: Russian Nesting Dolls of Right-Wing Hate,” in Bernd Horn, James Kiras, and Emily Spencer, eds., The Invisible Hand: Strategic Sabotage, Case Studies. Canadian Special Operations Forces Command, 2021.

  • “Beliefs: What Motivates Insurgents,” in Robert Engen, H. Christian Breede, and Allan English, eds., Why We Fight: New Approaches to the Human Dimension of War. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2020.

  • “Anger in the Peaceable Kingdom: An Overview of Canada’s Violent Extremist History,” in in Stéfanie von Hlatky, ed., Countering Violent Extremism and Terrorism: Assessing Domestic and International Strategies, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2019.

  • “Radicalization in Mali: A Primer.” Queen’s Centre for International and Defence Policy, Policy Brief, 4 (5), November 2018.

  • Domestic Operations: A Canadian Army Perspective. (Editor and contributor) Kingston: Canadian Army Publication Office, 2006.

Online

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Stéphanie Martel

Stéphanie Martel

Stéphanie Martel

Associate Professor

Department of Political Studies

Queen's University

About

Stéphanie Martel is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Studies, and a Distinguished Fellow at the Asia-Pacific Foundation of Canada. Her research is on multilateral diplomacy and regional security governance, with a focus on Southeast Asia and the Asia/Indo-Pacific. Dr. Martel’s work has been published in peer-reviewed journals such as International Studies Quarterly, International Affairs, European Journal of International Relations, International Studies Perspectives, PS: Political Science & Politics, and The Pacific Review, among others. She is the author of Enacting the Security Community: ASEAN’s Never-Ending Story (2022, Stanford University Press). Dr. Martel regularly represents Canada in various expert diplomacy mechanisms and policy dialogues on issues of Indo-Pacific security, including the ASEAN Regional Forum's Eminent and Expert Persons Group and the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific. She is a member of the Research Network on Women, Peace and Security.

Research Interests:

  • Multilateral diplomacy, global security, and the role of discourse in international relations;
  • Southeast Asia and the Asia-Pacific

Recent Publications:

Online:

  • Twitter/X: @st_martel

Colin Magee

Dr. Colin Magee

Colin Magee

Senior Evaluator

Canadian Armed Forces Dallaire Centre of Excellence for Peace and Security

About

Dr. Colin Magee is the Senior Evaluator, and Concepts and Doctrine Developer at the Canadian Armed Forces’ Dallaire Centre of Excellence for Peace and Security (DCOE-PS). Dr. Magee retired from the Canadian Armed Forces as a Lieutenant Colonel in 2020, with close to four decades of command, staff, concept development, and teaching experience in Canadian and international, civilian and Professional Military Educational institutions, as well as practical experience in planning, commanding and conducting operations.

As the Senior Evaluator at the DCOE-PS, Dr. Magee leads the implementation of the Vancouver Principles within the CAF including authoring the Joint Doctrine Note on Canadian Armed Forces Responses to Preventing the Unlawful Recruitment and Use of Children in Conflict, the accompanying aide memoire, and a planner’s precis to integrate the prevention of the recruitment and use of child soldiers into the CAF planning process. He is currently leading a team to develop concepts notes for WPS for both NATO’s Partnership for Peace consortium on PME and the CAF, as well as CAF roles in Human Security.

In parallel to his professional experience, he holds a PhD from the University of Guelph researching leadership in the whole of government context.  Academically, he has developed and instructed undergraduate and graduate courses in leadership, operational planning and defence policy at the Royal Military College of Canada, the University of Guelph, Queen’s University and for the Australian National University.  He is an adjunct faculty member at the University of Guelph teaching on the Masters in Leadership program, a Military Studies Fellow at the Australian National University a sessional instructor for RMCC teaching leadership and ethics, and a sessional instructor at Queen’s University teaching Defence Studies. 

Research Interest

  • Human Security

  • Leadership in Complexity

  • Strategic and Operational Planning 

Recent Publications

  • Led the development of the Canadian Armed Forces Child Protection Handbook – final review ongoing
  • Co-Authored the Canadian Defence Framework to Implement the Women Peace and Security Agenda
  • Led the development of the Partnership for Peace Consortium of Defense Academies and Security Studies Institutes Concept Note on Military Roles in Implementing the Women Peace and Security Agenda

Online

Christian Leuprecht

Christian Leuprecht

Christian Leuprecht

Professor

Political Science and Economics

Royal Military College of Canada

About

Christian Leuprecht (Ph.D, Queen’s) is Class of 1965 Distinguished Professor in Leadership, Department of Political Science and Economics, Royal Military College, Director of the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations, School of Policy Studies, Queen’s University, Adjunct Research Professor, Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security, Charles Sturt University as well as the College of Business, Government and Law at Flinders University, and Munk Senior Fellow in Security and Defence at the Macdonald Laurier Institute.  He is Editor-in-Chief of the Canadian Military Journal and Canadian Defence Academy Press.  A former Fulbright Research Chair in Canada-US Relations at the School for Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University in Washington, DC (2020) and a former Eisenhower Fellow at the NATO Defence College in Rome (2019), he is an elected member of the College of New Scholars of the Royal Society of Canada and a recipient of RMC’s Cowan Prize for Excellence in Research.  He latest book is Intelligence as Democratic Statecraft (Oxford University Press, 2021).

Research Interests

  • Transnational Criminal and Terrorist Movement and Flows;
  • National Security and Intelligence Accountability, Review, and Oversight;
  • National and subregional Border Integrity, Security, Cultures and Cross-border cooperation, policy networks, and governance

Recent Publications

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Online

Chris R. Kilford

Chris R. Kilford

Chris Kilford

National Board Director & Editor (articles) Open Canada

Canadian International Council

cakilford@gmail.com

communications@thecic.org

About

Chris is a member of the national board of the Canadian International Council, the editor (articles) of CIC’s online foreign policy magazine Open Canada, president of the CIC Victoria branch and a sessional professor with the Canadian Forces College and the Royal Military College of Canada. He also holds a PhD in history from Queen’s University with a focus on civil-military relations in the developing world. Chris also enjoyed a 36-year career in the Canadian Army. He is a graduate of Canada’s Advanced Military Studies Course and was granted an equivalency for the year-long National Security Program in 2009. He also commanded 4th Air Defence Regiment, followed by various senior positions in the Department of National Defence including Director Future Security Analysis and Military Liaison Officer to the Senate Committee on National Security and Defence. From July 2009 until July 2010, Chris deployed to Canada’s Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan as the Deputy Military Attaché. On his return to Canada, he commenced Turkish language training after which he was sent to Canada’s Embassy in Ankara as the Canadian Defence Attaché with cross accreditation to Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkmenistan from July 2011 until July 2014. Chris retired from the military in September 2014.

Research Interests

  • Turkish and Middle Eastern security issues
  • Civil-Mililtary relations in developing countries
  • Canadian foreign and defence policy

Recent Publications

Online