King, Julian

Julian King Picture

Julian King

Student Researcher

Political Studies

Queen's University

Julian is a fourth-year Political Studies major with a minor in Philosophy, and aspires to attend law school post-graduation. He has a strong interest in international politics, foreign policy and affairs, global conflict and supranational institutions. Julian’s work discussing United States foreign policy in the Iraq War has been published in The Student Strategy & Security Journal, an academic political journal. This is Julian’s second year working for IIGR, where he acts as a student research assistant for a comparative project on Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and illicit uses of Cryptocurrency, and is in the midst of a funded research fellowship project on cyber security and strategic doctrine for middle powers alongside Professor Christian Leuprecht. Julian also acts as a member of the editorial board for Queen’s Political Digest undergraduate journal, an Academic Coordinator on the Political Studies Department Student Council, and is an active contributor to the Queen’s Journal.

Kenney, Gabrielle

Gabrielle Kenney Picture

Gabrielle Kenney

Student Researcher

Political Studies

Queen's University

Gabrielle is a fourth year student from Mississauga, Ontario who is currently pursuing a Bachelor of Arts Honours at Queen’s. Her major is Political Studies with a History minor, and she is also currently completing a Smith Certificate in Business. Her main research interests include terrorist financing, foreign policy, and Canadian politics. This past year she represented Queen’s students as an Academics Coordinator for the Political Studies Department Student Council. When not working or studying, Gabrielle enjoys skiing and travelling. 

Burgess, Ariel

Picture Ariel Burgess

Ariel Burgess

Research Coordinator

Political Studies

Queen's University

Ariel is a 2023 Queen’s graduate in Political Studies and a minor Philosophy and is now at the Royal Military College of Canada as an MA student in the War Studies Program. She has been working for the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations since October of 2022 on projects related to terrorist financing. Her research interests include terrorist financing and money laundering schemes, the gendered dynamics of war, military privatization and ethics, and Canadian defence policy.

Outside of work and studying, Ariel enjoys hiking with her partner and two dogs, reading mystery books, playing Pokémon games, and baking.

Chowdhury, Amitava

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Amitava Chowdhury

Associate Professor and Chair

Department of History and Global History Initiative

Queen's University

Amitava Chowdhury is the Chair of the Department of History and Director of the Global History Initiative. He is a historian and historical archaeologist of agrarian labour regimes and colonial plantations in the British Empire, and methodologically, he is interested in global history and diaspora theory. In the department, he is also the co-director of the Global History Initiative, a faculty and graduate research forum in global history. Dr. Chowdhury is a former fellow of Harvard University’s Weatherhead Initiative in Global History and a former Managing Editor of the Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies. Since arriving at Queen’s in 2008, he has taught at every level, from first-year lectures to graduate seminars, and pedagogically, he is invested in globalizing and decolonizing the curriculum. He is the past winner of the Department of History’s Teaching Excellence Award and has been nominated for several other teaching awards, including the Frank Knox Teaching Excellence Prize. His co-edited book Between Dispersion and Belonging won the 2017 CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Award

Bartels, Susan

Susan Bartels picture

Susan Bartels

Associate Professor

Emergency Medicine and Department of Public Health Sciences

Queen's University

Canada Research Chair in Humanitarian Health Equity

Dr. Susan Bartels is a Clinician-Scientist and Canada Research Chair in Humanitarian Health Equity at Queen’s University. In addition to practicing emergency medicine, she conducts global public health research focused on how women and children are impacted by humanitarian crises. While much of her work has been in Sub-Saharan Africa, she has also worked in the Middle East as well as in Asia and Latin America. She is currently the lead investigator on research projects funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and Elrha. Much of her current research is focused on investigating peacekeeper-perpetrated sexual exploitation and abuse in Haiti and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Dr. Bartels is interested in using innovative methods to improve understanding of the social determinants of health in complex environments such as armed conflict and natural disasters. After completing fellowship training in international emergency medicine and a Masters of Public Health degree at Harvard University, Dr. Bartels was faculty at the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative where she conducted research for the Women in War program. Dr. Bartels returned to Queen’s University in 2014 and lives in Kingston with her husband and two children.

Ferrill, Jamie

Picture of Jamie Ferrill

Jamie Ferrill

Professor

Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security

Charles Sturt University, Australia

Financial Crime Studies and Lecturer

Dr Jamie Ferrill is the Discipline Lead of Financial Crime Studies and Lecturer in the same at the Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security, Charles Sturt University. She has nearly a decade of law enforcement experience, having worked for Canada Border Services Agency prior to commencing an academic career. Jamie holds a PhD in Organizational Behaviour from Loughborough University (UK), a Masters in Homeland Security Leadership from the University of Connecticut (US), and a Bachelors in Criminal Justice from Mount Royal University (Canada). A political sociologist, Jamie researches threats to national and economic security. With a focus on border security, her work explores the role of human actors and ideology in organisational processes, as well as in transnational cooperation and collaboration. Jamie is working on the IIGR’s project on financial crime, addressing intergovernmental dimensions.

Hataley, Todd

Picture of Professor Todd Hataley

Todd Hataley

Professor

School of Justice and Community Development

Fleming College

Dr. Todd Hataley is a professor in the School of Justice and Community Development at Fleming College.  He is a retired member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.  During his tenure as a federal police officer, he worked as an investigator in organized crime, national security, cross-border crime and extra-territorial torture.  Dr. Hataley is an adjunct associate professor at the Royal Military College of Canada and in the Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security at Charles Sturt University in Canberra, Australia.  His research currently focuses on the management of international boundaries, money laundering, Indigenous policing and transnational crime.  He is working on the IIRG’s project on the intersection of international and traditional Indigenous boundaries.

Derungs, Curdin

Curdin Derungs photo

Curdin Derungs

Visiting Professor

Public Management

University of Applied Sciences of the Grisons, Switzerland

Curdin Derungs is a professor in the field of public management at the University of Applied Sciences of the Grisons (UASG), Switzerland. As the deputy head of the Center for Administrative Management he is responsible for consulting and research of public institutions and non-profit organizations. His research focuses on topics related to community management (strategy, organization, structures) and the political system on the local and regional level (federalism, participation, public corporate governance).

He holds an PhD Degree in Business Administration and a Master’s degree in Economics both from the University of St.Gallen, Switzerland, and was a visiting researcher at the University of Glasgow, United Kingdom. Afterwards, he was responsible for public sector consulting at Ernst & Young, Switzerland. Curdin Derungs has gained broad experience in economic impact analyses and evaluations and has accompanied public institutions in organizational development and review of strategic direction. His clients include federal institutions and states governments, and municipalities as well as international organizations and NPOs (e.g., World Health Organization, International Committee of the Red Cross, United Nations).

During his professional career at the UASG, Curdin Derungs has been responsible for numerous research projects. Curdin Derungs is particularly interested in the interaction between the public and private actors and is the author of various publications on the Swiss political system as well as on governance models, forms of public management and strategies of public institutions. He teaches 'Public Management' as well as 'Microeconomics' at the UASG in undergraduate and graduate level.

"Citizen Election Observers in Theory and Practice": a panel discussion

Date

Tuesday March 21, 2023
12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

Location

Robert Sutherland Hall, Room 202