Graduate Students Head to the 5th Global Peace Summit
Congratulations to our exceptional students representing Queen’s University at the 5th Global Peace Summit!
Congratulations to our exceptional students representing Queen’s University at the 5th Global Peace Summit!
Date
Friday January 30, 2026Location
Robert Sutherland Hall, Room 202Doctoral Student
He/Him/His
BA in Applied Mathematics; MA in Economics in University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Political Studies
Doctoral Student
My research focuses on quantitative methods, causal inference, nationalism, and right-wing politics. I am currently investigating the post-Soviet politics of the West, specifically the rise of right-wing politics in Western Europe and the United States in the post-Soviet era.
Teaching Assistant for POLS 111 and POLS 230
Michael Murphy, Director of the Centre for International and Defence Policy (CIDP) at Ñý¼§Ö±²¥, recently spoke with Kingston City Council about online voting security in municipal elections. Murphy questioned the effectiveness of online voting at increasing voter turnout and security risks of the city’s online voting system.
Read the full article on .
Date
Thursday March 5, 2026Location
Robert Sutherland Hall Room 202Professor Alasdair Roberts is the 2026 J.A. Corry Lecturer and will speak on his forthcoming book, Why Great States Fail.
This is a book about great states and why they fail. It matters for people who live in great states—almost half the world's population—since their quality of life will clearly suffer if the political order is collapsing around them. The other half of the planet lives in smaller states like Canada that neighbour and trade with great states. These people also need to understand why great states fail, because life in small states is so heavily influenced by the caprices of their giant neighbours. When great states stumble, small states suffer too.
Alasdair Roberts is a professor of public policy at University of Massachusetts Amherst. He writes extensively on problems of governance and public policy. His most recent book, The Adaptable Country: How Canada Can Survive the Twenty-First Century, was published by McGill-Ñý¼§Ö±²¥ Press in 2024. It was a finalist for the 2025 Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing. His preceding book, Superstates: Empires of the Twenty-First Century, was published by Polity in 2023. Eight earlier books have received five book awards.
Professor Roberts grew up in Pembroke, Ontario, Canada. He received his BA from Ñý¼§Ö±²¥, his JD from the University of Toronto, and his MPP and PhD in Public Policy from Harvard University.
Before University of Massachusetts Amherst, Professor Roberts held tenured faculty appointments at Ñý¼§Ö±²¥, Syracuse University, Suffolk University Law School, and the University of Missouri. In 2007, he became the first non-US citizen to be elected as a Fellow of the US National Academy of Public Administration. In 2014 he received the Grace-Pépin Access to Information Award for his research on open government. In 2022, he received the ASPA Riggs Award for Lifetime Achievement in International and Comparative Public Administration.
From 2009 to 2017, Professor Roberts was co-editor of the journal Governance. He was Inaugural Director of the School of Public Policy at University of Massachusetts Amherst from 2017 to 2022. In 2022, he served as co-chair of the ASPA Presidential Committee on International Scholarly Engagement. In 2022-23, he was the Jocelyne Bourgon Visiting Scholar at the Canada School of Public Service.
His website is http://www.alasdairroberts.ca
Date
Friday January 16, 2026Location
Robert Sutherland Hall 202The conversation with be facilitated by Dr. Oded Haklai, Political Studies Professor and Director of the Centre for the Study of Democracy and Diversity.
Coffee and light refreshments will be provided.
This conversation follows Dr. Stanley’s Dunning Trust Lecture “Fascist Erasures†on Thursday, January 15 in Grant Hall ().
Participants must read Chapter 4 of Stanley’s in advance of the discussion. A PDF copy of the chapter will be provided to registered students in advance.
Please RSVP to Bronwyn Jaques (Hub-1 Academic Programs Coordinator) by email: fas-hub1-apc@queensu.ca to receive your copy.
Professor | Cross-Appointed
She/Her
Department of Political Science and Economics
Royal Military College of Canada
Professor | Cross-Appointed
Holly Ann Garnett is the Class of 1965 Professor of Leadership and a Professor in the Department of Political Science and Economics at the Royal Military College of Canada. She is cross-appointed faculty at the School of Policy Studies and Department of Political Studies at Queen’s University and an Honourary Research Fellow at the University of East Anglia. Garnett is co-director of the, a global network of academics and practitioners that engages in empirical research, publicly-accessible data collection, and stakeholder engagement on issues relating to election quality around the world. She was the 2024-2025 Fulbright Research Chair in Canada-US Relations at Johns Hopkins University SAIS and recipient of the 2023 of the Cowan Prize for Excellence in Research at the Royal Military College of Canada.
Garnett’s research examines how electoral integrity can be strengthened throughout the electoral cycle, including the role of election management, registration and voting, cyber-security and election technologies, civic literacy, and campaign finance.
Toby S. James and Holly Ann Garnett. (Forthcoming). What is Electoral Integrity? Reconceptualising Election Quality in an Age of Uncertainty. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Holly Ann Garnett. (Forthcoming). Who Gives? Who Gets? Who Wins? Campaign Finance in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Holly Ann Garnett and Toby S. James Eds. 2025. The Oxford Handbook of Electoral Integrity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Holly Ann Garnett and Michael Pal Eds. 2022. Cyber-Threats to Canadian Democracy. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press. – Listed in The Hill Times Top 100 books of 2022.
Toby S. James and Holly Ann Garnett Eds. 2020. Building Inclusive Elections. New York: Routledge Press.
Holly Ann Garnett and Margarita Zavadskaya Eds. 2017. Electoral Integrity and Political Regimes: Actors, Strategies and Consequences. New York: Routledge Press.
The Department of Political Studies at Queen’s University invites applications for three Postdoctoral Fellowship opportunities:
Date
Wednesday January 28, 2026Location
Robert Sutherland Hall, Room 202A light luncheon will be provided. RSVPs are appreciated.
Abstract: There is a broad consensus today that the international order is in crisis. Calls to protect, improve, or reform its institutions and rules are proliferating. Underlying these is a view of international order as self-evident and fixed, at least until quite recently, anchored in a broad consensus that is now being destabilized by revisionist actors. This lecture interrogates this premise and puts it in perspective, showing that the current crisis of international order is best understood as a clash of competing narratives about what a legitimate order ought to look like, who gets to be situated within or outside of it, and who is in a position to claim the authority of making this distinction. The talk makes a case for going beyond a focus on material interests and strategic motives in attempts to understand the ongoing transformation of world politics in the present era, highlighting the power of narratives, and the necessity of making international order strange instead of taking it for granted.
Stéphanie Martel is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Studies at Ñý¼§Ö±²¥, where she holds the Hardy Professorship. She is currently a Visiting Scholar at the University of Ottawa's Graduate School of Public and International Affairs and at the Centre for International Policy Studies. Her research is on multilateral diplomacy, gender and security, and regional governance, with a focus on Southeast Asia, ASEAN, and the Asia/Indo-Pacific.
Date
Thursday January 15, 2026Location
Grant Hall, Queen's UniversityJoin us for an evening with Dr. Jason Stanley, the Bissell-Heyd Chair in American studies in the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy at the University of Toronto, on Thursday, January 15 at 6:30 pm.
This lecture, free and open to the entire Queen’s community, is supported by the Dunning Trust Lecture series and brings to campus for the first time one of today's most influential public intellectuals whose acclaimed books How Propaganda Works and How Fascism Works have been translated into more than twenty languages. Stanley’s work exposes how language, myth making, and manufactured division erode democratic life, and why these forces are resurgent across the globe, and why Canadians should be deeply concerned.
A light reception will follow the lecture.
Co-sponsored by the Departments of Art History & Art Conservation, History, and Political Studies.
Registration is required.
Jason Stanley is a philosopher, whose work ranges over philosophy of language, epistemology, linguistics, cognitive science, and social and political philosophy. Jason is the Bissell-Heyd Chair in American Studies in the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, and also has an appointment in the Department of Philosophy. In addition to his position at the Munk School, he is a Distinguished Professor at the Kyiv School of Economics. Before coming to the University of Toronto in 2025, he held positions as a Professor of Philosophy at Yale University (2013-2025), Rutgers University (2004-2013), The University of Michigan (2000-4), and Cornell University (1995-2000).
The author of seven books and dozens of scholarly articles in multiple disciplines, Jason won the American Philosophical Association Book Prize in 2007 for his book Knowledge and Practical Interests (Oxford University Press, 2005), and the Prose Award in Philosophy for his 2015 book, How Propaganda Works (Princeton University Press, 2015). In addition to his academic work, Jason writes for a broader audience on the themes of authoritarianism, propaganda, free speech, mass incarceration, and democracy, most frequently for The New York Times, The Guardian, and Project Syndicate. Jason has also published in The Washington Post, Die Zeit, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Folha de São Paulo, El Pais and many other outlets across the world. A New York Times bestselling author, Jason’s work has been translated into over 30 languages.
Stanley is a member of the Justice Collaboratory at Yale Law School, a fellow of the African American Policy Forum, and serves on the advisory board of the Prison Policy Initiative.