Political Studies in the News
PhD candidate Tim Abray, speaks with The Open Line on 560 CFOS Radio in Owen Sound about the upcoming Ontario Election.
PhD candidate Tim Abray, speaks with The Open Line on 560 CFOS Radio in Owen Sound about the upcoming Ontario Election.
CFRC Radio Queen's:
PhD candidate Tim Abray, talks about political campaign communications and their impact for the upcoming Ontario election.
Toronto Star:
globalnews.ca:
Toronto Star:
Peterborough Examiner:
Professor | Cross-Appointed
She/Her
RMC & Political Studies
Professor | Cross-Appointed
Jane Boulden is a Professor at the Royal Military College of Canada. She is cross-appointed to Queen’s University where she is also a Research Fellow at the Queen’s University Centre for International and Defence Policy. From 2004 - 2014 she held a Canada Research Chair in International Relations and Security Studies at RMC. From 2000 until 2004 she was a MacArthur Research Fellow at the Centre for International Studies, University of Oxford.
Royal Military College of Canada, Political Science, Faculty Member
PhD Candidate Tim Abray takes a closer look at the campaign strategies of Ontario's primary political parties heading into the general election, with a focus on their ad decisions, their social media usage, and how they plan to appeal to voters. What's effective and what falls flat?
Date
Monday June 13, 2022Location
Mackintosh-Corry Hall, Room B313Speaker Series Presentation
The CSDD and Department of Political Studies present Dr. Tariq Modood, a professor of sociology, politics, and public policy at Bristol University. Dr. Modood will be presenting his talk "Multiculturalism without Privileging Liberalism."
Liberalism’s primary medium is that of values, principles, and laws. One of the ways to de-absolutize liberalism in relation to multiculturalism and the respectful inclusion of minorities is to recognize the sociological and normative significance of other features of social life. I do so by focusing on the significance of identity and by highlighting the normative role of dialogue in a context of cultural and value conflicts. This offers a bottom-up basis for a political theory of multiculturalism, which is not simply about trends in academic liberalism but is about claims of national citizenship and national identity by those seeking inclusion in a new sense of the national. While a focus on identity, both in terms of recognition and in terms of fostering commonality and societal unity is not sufficient, it is a necessary dimension that political theorists who frame things in terms of liberalism miss and thereby miss both what needs to be addressed and what is needed for liberal – amongst other – values to be secured. (Nor do socialists, human rights champions, cosmopolitans, or localists).
Dr. Modood is the founding director of the Bristol University Research Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Citizenship and co-founding editor of the international journal, . He has held over 40 grants and consultancies (UK, European, and the US), has over 35 (co-)authored and (co-)edited books and reports, and over 250 articles or chapters in political philosophy, sociology, and public policy. I was a Robert Schuman Fellow at the European University Institute for part of 2013-15, a ‘Thinker in Residence’ at the Royal Academy of Flanders, Brussels in 2017, and a Visiting Fellow, Cumberland Lodge, Windsor (2017-2020).
Read more about Tariq Modood at
It is with great pride that we share that PhD Candidate Elizabeth McCallion has for the CPSA-ACSP Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. Congratulations, Elizabeth, on this incredible achievement!