Political Studies in the News - August 10, 2023

The Department of Political Studies is saddened to share that the Hon. Hugh Segal passed away yesterday, August 9th, 2023, at the age of 72.

Hugh was a Peacock Fellow of Political Studies, a friend of our department, a frequent lecturer and visitor to our classrooms, and will be greatly missed. As the School of Policy Studies so eloquently expressed it, Hugh "leaves a lasting legacy of non-partisan leadership in the Policy Studies community at Queen’s, across Canada and beyond."

We offer our sincere condolences to his family and friends.

Article Category

Dunton, Caroline

Photograph of Caroline Dunton

Caroline Dunton

Skelton-Clark Post-Doctoral Fellow

She/Her

PhD (Ottawa); MA (George Washington); MA (Ottawa); BKI (Waterloo)

Political Studies

Canadian Politics

Post-Doctoral Fellow

Brief Biography

Caroline is the Skelton-Clark Post-Doctoral Fellow, teaching POLS 300- and 400-level courses in Winter 2024. Caroline studies Canadian foreign policy, the United Nations Security Council, diplomacy, and settler colonialism in Canada. She holds a PhD from the University of Ottawa, where she has also been a Research Associate at the Centre for International Policy Studies. She also holds an MA from The George Washington University, an MA from the University of Ottawa, and a Bachelor of Knowledge Integration from the University of Waterloo. Outside of academia, she has worked at Global Affairs Canada, including as a Senior Policy Analyst in Foreign Policy Planning and the Cadieux-Léger Fellow. She is currently the Book Reviews Editor at International Journal. For more information on Caroline’s research, please visit her website.

Teaching

For detailed information about political studies courses and instructors, please refer to the Undergraduate and Graduate pages. 

Political Studies in the News - July 10, 2023

Department of Political Studies PhD candidate Fikir Haile was recently published in two journal articles.  In the article, Displaced for housing: analysing the uneven outcomes of the Addis Ababa Integrated Housing Development Program, appearing in the journal Urban Geography, Haile discusses the significant challenges posed by rapid urban growth in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia's largest and capital city.  

Nesbitt-Larking, Paul

Photograph of Paul Nesbitt-Larking

Paul Nesbitt-Larking

Term Adjunct

He/Him

PhD Political Science (Carleton); MA Comparative Politics (Kent); BSc Social Science (Bradford)

Political Studies

Term Adjunct

pnl@queensu.ca

Mackintosh-Corry Hall, C412

Research Interests

Paul Nesbitt-Larking is interested in how people make sense of their political lives and how they develop their political identities. In the Canadian context and beyond, he has conducted research into political discourses and narratives, beliefs, values and emotions, political communication and political agency. Recent research has included studies of masculinities, research ethics, migration and multiculturalism, citizenship, and the political lives of ethno-religious minorities. Support from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for studies in multiculturalism is gratefully acknowledged.

Brief Biography

Paul Nesbitt-Larking grew up in the UK and immigrated to Canada to study for a doctorate at Carleton University. His Canadian teaching career began in 1981 and he has taught at Carleton University, Brock University, York University, and Toronto Metropolitan University, as well as at Queen’s. He taught at Huron University College from 1992 to 2021 where he has been appointed Professor Emeritus of Political Science. Professor Nesbitt-Larking has enjoyed a long-standing professional membership of the International Society of Political Psychology and has a number of publications in their flagship journal, Political Psychology. He is a former president of the International Society of Political Psychology.

Teaching

POLS 313 Mass Media and Politics in Canada (Winter 2024)

POLS 434 Multiculturalism (Fall 2023)

Selected Publications

“Constructing Narratives of Masculinity: Online Followers of Jordan B. Peterson”, Psychology of Men and Masculinities (2022). https://doi.org/10.1037/men0000394

“Responsibility, Recognition, and Representation: The Ethical Bases of Truth Evaluation in Political Narrative Analysis”, Political Psychology (2021). https://doi.org/10.1111/pops.12780

Contemporary Orangeism in Canada: Identity, Nationalism, and Religion (co-authored with James W. McAuley) (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018).

“The Ideological Work of Narratives”, Political Psychology (2017), 38(3), 571-578.

“Securitization Through Re-Enchantment: The Strategic Uses of Myth and Memory”, Postcolonial Studies (2017) 20(3): 317-332.

“Saffron and Orange: Religion, Nation and Masculinity in Canada and India”, in Ivor Goodson, Ari Antikainen, Molly Andrews and Pat Sikes, Eds., The Routledge International Handbook on Narrative and Life History (pp. 331-343) (London: Routledge, 2017).

Religion and Representation: Islam and Democracy (co-edited with Ingrid Mattson and Nawaz Tahir) (Cambridge Scholars Press, 2015).

The Palgrave Handbook of Global Political Psychology (co-edited with Catarina Kinnvall, Tereza Capelos and Henk Dekker) (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).

Department of Political Studies Class of 2023 Spring Convocation Reception

Date

Thursday June 22, 2023
11:00 am - 1:00 pm

Department of Political Studies Class of 2023 Spring Convocation Reception!

All POLS Spring 2023 graduates and their guests are invited to attend this luncheon reception on Thursday, June 22nd from 11:00am to 1:00pm.   RSVPs are required, email Cynthia MacIntosh, Undergraduate Assistant, at ugpols@queensu.ca.

Thursday, June 22nd | 11:00AM – 1:00PM
Holiday Inn Kingston - Waterfront  | 2 Princess Street, Kingston 
Buffet lunch will be served

Event poster

Political Studies in the News - April 24, 2023

Congratulations to Queen's Department of Political Studies fourth year student Naomi Healey-Greene, for having her research spotlighted by Queen's University Faculty of Arts and Science!   Last summer, Healey-Greene took part in the Undergraduate Summer Student Research Fellowship (USSRF) program, and her research project focused on the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, examining the law and policy of student expression on Queen’s campus.  Following the presentation of her project, Healey-Greene was invited to