- Source: Canadian Global Affairs Institute
- Hubungan luar negeri Brunei
- Hubungan luar negeri Oman
- Chatham House
- Globalisasi
- Hubungan luar negeri Arab Saudi
- Perang Dunia I
- Arktik
- Diplomasi digital
- Singapura
- Tanggung jawab melindungi
- Canadian Global Affairs Institute
- Global Affairs Canada
- Cleo Paskal
- Global affairs (disambiguation)
- Canada
- Foreign relations of Canada
- List of think tanks
- Munk School
- Chatham House
- Yale Jackson School of Global Affairs
The Canadian Global Affairs Institute (CGAI) is an independent, non-partisan research institute based in Calgary with an office in Ottawa. Incorporated as a charitable organization in 2001, CGAI seeks to focus the national debate and understanding of Canada's international policies, with the ultimate aim of ensuring a more globally engaged Canada.
CGAI provides insight into the international challenges and opportunities facing Canada in the areas of defence, diplomacy, development, security, international trade and global governance.
CGAI's mission is to enhance recognition of Canada’s important role in the international community and to promote Canada’s active and effective involvement in all international forums. The institute is dedicated to educating Canadians, particularly those who have leadership roles in shaping Canadian foreign policy, about the importance of Canada being proactive in world affairs with tangible diplomatic, military, and aid assets. CGAI believes that doing so enhances Canadian security and prosperity.
The Institute is a credible Canadian source of expertise on global affairs. The work of their researchers, fellows and advisors sparks impassioned nation-wide discussions and debates that are designed to help Canadians better understand their role on the world stage.
About
CGAI began in Calgary, Alberta, in 2001 as the Canadian Defence & Foreign Affairs Institute (CDFAI) with a mandate to promote and inform government and the public about the value of a strong international Canadian presence. In 2010, CGAI opened an Ottawa, Ontario, office to reach out to parliamentarians, senior policy makers and the diplomatic service.
The Institute's research is created by staff and fellows, comprising a diverse group of practitioners and academics throughout Canada and abroad. Program guidance is provided by an advisory council made up of a cross-section of former politicians, senior retired civil servants, retired general officers and academics. The Institute is governed by a board of experienced corporate directors, while a team of staff split between Calgary and Ottawa manages the day-to-day operations.
= Vision
=The Institute’s vision is to become the indispensable Canadian institution that government, the media, business and civil society, here and abroad, seek out for policy analysis pertaining to global affairs.
= Mission
=CGAI’s mission is to identify Canadian global interests and to promote Canada’s active and effective involvement in the international arena. This is pursued through the production of authoritative, relevant and rigorous public policy analysis, and the dissemination of this strategic analysis to Canadian policy-makers and the public.
Current Activities
The Institute conducts research on current and critical international issues relevant to Canada, including topics of defence, development, diplomacy, security, international law, trade, natural resource management and global governance. This is achieved by promoting and disseminating written, audio and video publications, hosting speaker events and providing expert commentary to the media.
= Weekly Podcasts
=Source:
The Global Exchange Podcast
The Global Exchange podcast is a weekly conversation focused on bringing listeners comprehensive analysis and commentary on a variety of world issues, including foreign policy, trade, and development issues. Host Colin Robertson guides listeners through the various challenges confronting Canadian foreign policymakers.
Defence Deconstructed Podcast
The Defence Deconstructed podcast is a weekly conversation with host David Perry engaging various defence experts and officials on the pressing defence and security issues Canada faces today and tomorrow. Defence Deconstructed is released every Friday.
Energy Security Cubed Podcast
The Energy Security Cubed podcast is a weekly conversation with hosts Kelly Ogle and Joe Calnan engaging various experts and officials to discuss the three pillars of energy security – energy, economics and the environment. Energy Security Cubed is released weekly on Thursdays.
The Event Edit Podcast
“The Event Edit,” is released every Tuesday over the Summer. This podcast comprises recordings from events organized by CGAI throughout the year.
= Roundtable Events
=Each year, CGAI hosts several dozen roundtable speaker events based on specific topics of importance to Canadian defence, security, and foreign affairs. The roundtables are held in Calgary, Montreal, Toronto, and Ottawa, and bring together businesspeople, academics, and practitioners to listen to some of Canada's most important and influential thinkers. Former speakers include Peter MacKay, Minister of National Defence; Michael Bell, former diplomat; and Yuen Pau Woo, president and CEO of the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, among others.
= Conferences
=CGAI hosts various conferences in Ottawa around critical issues in Canadian defence, trade, security, resources, and foreign policy. These conferences consistently attract high-calibre speakers, key policy makers, prominent academics, and a large number of the interested public.
Conferences are core components in the pursuit of the Institute's vision. By gathering prominent Canadian policy-makers, business leaders, academics and bureaucrats, CGAI conveys and exchanges ideas about Canada’s evolving role in the world as well as bolster debate and analysis of Canadian policy options.
= Publications
=CGAI sponsors publications that are written and developed with the intent of promoting public dialogue on issues affecting Canada’s policies in the areas of foreign affairs, including defence, security, trade policy, natural resources, international law, migration and global governance.
= Policy Papers
=The analysis and recommendations produced in these papers and the ideas they articulate are a key component of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute. All policy papers undergo a double-blind peer review process to ensure unbiased methodological and conceptual evaluation. Policy papers are longer, more in-depth bodies of work that afford the authors a chance to thoroughly examine a topic, analyzing research and providing a recommended course of action.
= Policy Perspectives
=Policy Perspectives are a middle ground between research intensive Policy Papers and brief but topical op-eds and commentary. These papers allow the CGAI to respond in a timely manner to a wide range of topics associated with the dynamic global environment. Similar to Policy Papers, Policy Perspectives are subject to rigorous review to ensure high quality research and analysis, however, to ensure timely distribution they do not undergo a double-blind review. They are produced by CGAI fellows, staff and other subject matter experts and cover a wide range of topics, reflective of the Institute’s breadth of expertise.
= Primers
=CGAI Primers are special ad-hoc publications that offer exhaustive overviews and insight towards specific topics or upcoming international events. The goal of our Primers is to provide a comprehensive synopsis of a specific topic of an upcoming event that assists readers in mastering its nuances. Like the Policy Papers and Policy Perspectives, CGAI Primers are subject to rigorous review which ensures high quality research and analysis.
= Triple Helix
=Source:
Triple Helix is a network composed of the CGAI, the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs (NPSIA) at Carleton University, and industry that will explore how a range of emerging technologies intersect with defence.
Directed by Dr. David Perry (CGAI), Dr. Alex Wilner (NPSIA), and Michael Petric, Triple Helix is a hub that:
thinks creatively about emerging technology;
links developments therein to Canadian defence strategy, policy, and planning;
facilitates the establishment of a pan-Canadian research across academia, think tanks, and industry dedicated to promoting research excellence; and,
develops working relationships with researchers, practitioners, and industry in Five Eyes countries in order to draw international lessons for Canada on how allied states are applying emerging technologies to their own defence priorities and needs.
The objective of Triple Helix is to provide an empirically driven and practically oriented guide on the interplay between technology, innovation, security, defence, and policy useful to Canadian policymakers and private sector actors alike, as well as to identify paths to and foster greater cooperation between government, academia, think tanks and industry in the areas of emerging technologies and innovation.
Four overarching and related research questions animate Triple Helix's network:
First, what is the impact of emerging technologies on force development with respect to connected battlespace?
Second, what policy instruments and cooperation mechanisms exist to support allied military interoperability and connectivity among defence coalitions?
Third, how do emerging communications and related space and cyber technologies, including synthetic environments, effect both the public and the defence sector, and how can these enhanced capabilities participate in shaping a global, dispersed, and resilient connected battlespace?
And fourth, how do these technologies, policy instruments and enhanced capabilities strengthen continental defence?
To date, there is very little Canadian transdisciplinary scholarship that spans academia, public policy, and industry on any of these research questions. Triple Helix seeks to close that gap.
The research outputs of Triple Helix look to respond to three central defence policy challenges: “Emerging Technologies and Military Application,” “Cyber, Space and Information as Operational Domains,” and “Securing North America and Enhancing Continental Defence.”
Diversity, equity and inclusion, the principles of Gender-Based Analysis Plus (GBA+), as well as building the next generation of defence professionals, guide Triple Helix's operations, activities, and outputs.
= CGAI-WiDS Fellowship Award
=CGAI partners with Women in Defence & Security (WiDs) to offer a professional development fellowship. This opportunity aims to advance the careers of women in defence and security by offering one or more women mentorship, work and research/analysis opportunities with CGAI, access to our publications and resources. This collaboration selects female graduate or post-graduate students, using the WiDS Annual Memorial Scholarship Process.
= Committee Testimony
=Being experts in their specific fields, CGAI Fellows and Advisory Council members are consistently called upon by House of Commons and Senate committees to give expert testimony on a given subject of parliamentary study.
Past Activities
= The Dispatch
=The Canadian Global Affairs Institute produced a quarterly newsletter called The Dispatch. The Dispatch invited CGAI fellows to provide insight on international issues of relevance to Canada.
= Strategic Studies Working Group
=The Strategic Studies Working Group (SSWG) was a partnership between CGAI and the Canadian International Council (CIC), which incorporated the former Canadian Institute of Strategic Studies. The SSWG was administered by CGAI, which also conducted research and produced publications on security and defence issues on behalf of the partnership. All projects undertaken by the SSWG were first approved by CIC and were co-published or co e-published according to CIC standards.
The SSWG began to host e-conferences on issues related to defence and security. These e-conferences took place over a number of weeks, with each week dedicated to a specific topic. The e-conferences included regular commentaries by academics and practitioners, Twitter Q&As, live chats and major articles published in national media.
The "Future of Fighting" conference focused on how the Canadian Forces might evolve in the coming decade to reflect the changing funding and combat environment.
The "Drone Week" conference was focused on understanding some of the practical, legal and moral questions surrounding the current and future use of drones and other unmanned aerial vehicles.
The SSWG produced research papers which keep in line with the partnership's purpose of focusing on defence and security topics. The Strategic Profile Canada was a project which provides a comprehensive overview of Canada's demographic, economic and military information.
= 3Ds Blog
=The 3Ds Blog was a site managed by CGAI which provided defence and security news from Canada and around the world. Blog updates were made by CGAI fellows, the majority coming from Mark Collins.
= Ross Munro Award
=The Ross Munro Media Award was initiated, in 2002, by the Conference of Defence Associations in concert with CGAI. It was awarded annually to recognize one Canadian journalist who made a significant and outstanding contribution to the general public's understanding of Canada's defence and security issues.
= Military Journalism Course
=The Military Journalism Course was started in 2002 as a nine-day course, which introduced university students to military journalism and the Canadian Armed Forces. The course was run in partnership with the Centre for Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary and included a combination of media-military theory in a classroom setting, coupled with field visits to Armed Forces regular and reserve units. The stated goal of the program was to enhance the military education of future Canadian journalists who will report on Canadian military activities domestically and abroad.
In 2007, the program introduced its first Francophone Military Journalism course held at the Université de Montréal and Canadian Forces Base Valcartier, near Québec City.
People
= Board of Directors
=Source:
Laura Dawson
Gillian McCormack
Kelly J. Ogle
David Perry
Craig Stewart
Ian Wild (Chair)
= Fellows
=Source:
Chris Ayotte
Ken Barker
John Barrett
Peter G. Bates
Stewart Beck
Dani Belo
David Bercuson, OC, FRSC
Kevin Birn
Mike Blanchfield
Steve Bowes
Maureen Boyd
Brett Boudreau
Gregory Brew
Kerry Buck
Joe Calnan
Philip Calvert
David Carment
Joseph Caron
Andrea Charron
Jan Top Christensen
Luiza Ch. Savage
Scott Clancy
Claire Citeau
Julie Clark
Michael Cleland
Yvan Cliche
Howard Coombs
Nicole Covey
Kristen Csenkey
Afton David
D. Michael Day
Glenn Davidson
Francisco Suarez Davila
Ferry de Kerckhove
Charlotte Duval-Lantoine
Peter Donolo
Dur-e-Aden
Judith Fabian
James Fergusson
Ross Fetterly
Patricia Fortier
Julian Lindley-French
Jonathan Fried
Monica Gattinger
Allison Gifford
Emily Gilfillan
John Gilmour
Sarah Goldfeder
Frank Graves
Marius Grinius
John Gruetzner
Robert Hage
Benjamin Hautecouverture
Darren Hawco
Lawrence Herman
Roger Hilton
Jacquie Hoornweg
Deanna Horton
Rob Huebert
Jaeho Hwang
Joseph Ingram
Rory Johnston
Thomas Juneau
Trevor Kennedy
Tom Keenan
Julie Kim
Brian Kingston
Jeffrey Kucharski
Philippe Lagassé, PhD
Adam Lajeunesse
Eugene Lang
Meredith Lilly
Ted Lipman
Ron Lloyd
Abbey MacDonald
Dennis McConaghy
Ian Mack
Paul Maddison
Aditi Malhotra
Michael Munulak
Randolph Mank
Solange Marquez
Brendan Marshall
Barbara Martin
Pascale Massot
Eric Miller
Marcia Mills
Vina Nadjibulla
Stephen R. Nagu
Mark Norman
Richard Norris
Roy Norton
Cleo Paskal
John Parisella
David Perry
George Petrolekas
Jeffrey Phillips
Taras Prodaniuk
Bahman Radnejad
Andrew Rasiulis
William Richardson
Tom Ring
Kari Roberts
Chris W. J. Roberts
Colin Robertson
Alexander Rudolph
Amrita Sen
Swaran Singh
Elinor Sloan
Hugh Stephens
Al Stephenson
John Stewart
Scott Stevenson
Craig Stone
Jeff Tasseron
Denis Thompson
Katherine Todd
Laurie Trautman
James Trottier
Heidi Tworek
Sara Vakhshouri
Adriana Vega
Stéfanie von Hlatky
Christopher Waddell
Ellen Wald
Ron R. Wallace
Kelly Williams
Alex Wilner
David Curtis Wright
= Notable alumni
=John Adams
Stuart Beare
Perrin Beatty, PC
Bob Bergen, PhD
Serge Bertrand
Christopher Bishop
Robert Booth, QC
Yves Brodeur
George Brookman
Derek Burney, OC
Gavin Cameron, PhD
Aurélie Campana, PhD
Joseph Caron
Timothy Choi
HE David Collins
Mark Collins
Jocelyn Coulon
LGen (ret’d) (Hon) Romeo Dallaire, OC, CMM, GOQ, MSC, CD
Neil Desai
Paul Dewar
Don Douglas
Paul Durand
Mark Entwistle PhD
James Fergusson, PhD
John Ferris, PhD
Tom Flanagan, PhD, CM, FRSC
Brian Flemming, CM, QC, DCL
Bob Fowler
Robert Gibson CLJ, MMLJ
Andrew Godefroy, CD
Jack L. Granatstein, OC
Hrach Gregorian
Rudyard Griffiths, MA
Robert Hamilton
Peter Harder MA, LLD
Frank Harvey
Natasha Hassan
Dan Hays
Raymond Henault
Sharon Hobson
Col (Ret’d) Bernd Horn OMM, MSM, CD
Anne Irwin, PhD
Tami Jacoby, PhD
Mike Jeffery, CMM, CD
Brian Job, PhD
Whitney Lackenbauer
Eric Lerhe, PhD
Andrew Leslie, CMM, MSC, MSM, CD
Stephen Letwin, B.Sc, MBA, LGA
Natalia Loukacheva, PhD
Sheila M. McIntosh
George Macdonald
David McLaughlin
Anne McGrath
Ken MacDougall BGen (ret’d)
Don Macnamara
Candice Malcolm
Gen (ret’d) Paul Manson, OC, CMM, CD
Pierre Martin, PhD
Michael Mears
Sarah Jane Meharg, PhD
BGen (Ret'd) Robert S. Millar
Jack Mintz
Alexander Moens, PhD
Robert Nicolay, MBA, ICD.D
HE John Noble
Roland Paris
David Pratt
Bob Rae
Stephen Randall, FRSC
Roy Rempel
MGen (Ret’d) Cameron Ross, CMM, CD
Stéphane Roussel, PhD
Ralph Sawyer, PhD
Robin Sears
Michael Shaw
Darren Schemmer
Hugh Segal
Gordon Smith, PhD
Denis Stairs, OC, PhD, FRSC
Gilbert W. Taylor
Brad Wall
Charity Weeden
John Weekes
Margaret Wente
Chris Westdal
Rob Wright
Marie-Joëlle Zahar
Recognition
Fellows regularly provide commentary and analysis of ongoing international events in TV and print media. CGAI Vice-President Colin Robertson was named in Embassy Magazine's 2012 ranking of the "Top 80 Influencing Canada Foreign Policy". The University of Pennsylvania has consistently ranked CGAI highly on its list of top think tanks in Canada.
Criticism and Controversy
In an article from July 2016, The Globe and Mail examined the Institute's support of Canada's $15-billion combat-vehicle sale to Saudi Arabia at a time of a humanitarian crisis in Yemen, and the think tank's acceptance of donations from defense contractor General Dynamics - the parent of the arms maker in the export contract.
An article in 2017 from The Huffington Post goes on to say about the Saudi arms deal: "At least four of the General Dynamics-funded institute's "fellows" wrote columns justifying the sale, including an opinion Perry published in The Globe and Mail Report on Business titled "Without foreign sales, Canada's defence industry would not survive."
References
External links
Official website