PACS-Can, in collaboration with Waterloo’s Balsillie School of International Affairs, hosted a two-day workshop on Canadian engagement with UN Peacekeeping on September 21-22, 2017. The workshop featured a series of panels of Canadian scholars and practitioners on key issues in contemporary peacekeeping and on Canadian contributions to peacekeeping past, present, and future.
Check out some of the draft papers presented at the workshop below:
“Exploring the Linkages Between Canadian Soldiers’ Peace Support Deployment Experiences and Peacebuilding through Human Science Research” by Patlee Creary, University of Manitoba
“Canada is (Not Quite) Back: Foreign Policy and the Changing Face of Peacekeeping” by Timothy Donais, Wilfrid Laurier University
“A Cross-Case Synthesis of Pre-Deployment Training in Japan and Canada: Assessment of Cultural Awareness Training of PKO Mission Participants” by Hiroyoshi Hiratsuka, International Christian University
“Post-Afghanistan Syndrome? Canadian Public Opinion on Military Intervention Abroad After the Afghanistan Mission” by Mathieu Landriault, University of Ottawa
“Peace Professional Standards for Peace Professionals: The Time Has Come” by Evelyn Voigt and Gordon Breedyk, Civilian Peace Service Canada (CPSC)