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The 2013 Task Force on Arctic Policy is a joint program between the Canadian Studies and International Studies centers in the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington (UW). This year's Task Force on the Arctic has received support from the Government of Québec and will focus on the northern policies of the Government of Québec and Inuit of Nunavik in northern Québec. The vision of the program is to bring UW students together with their Inuit colleagues in Canada to address effective ways to govern the international Arctic region.
Archived 2009 Arctic Task Force Site
2013 Task Force Instructors
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Joël Plouffe is a Research Fellow at the Raoul Dandurand Chair of Strategic and Diplomatic Studies at the University of Québec at Montréal (UQAM). He is also affiliated to the Northern Research Forum network on Geopolitics and Security (www.nrf.is), led by Dr. Lassi Heininen of the University of Lapland, Finland. His research and publications deal mainly with geopolitics, foreign policy making and international relations in the Arctic. Joël holds a doctoral scholarship from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and is currently a project member on “Climate Change and Commercial Shipping Development in the Arctic” under the auspices of Université Laval’s ArcticNet and led by Dr. Frédéric Lasserre. In August 2012, Joël was embedded with Canada’s National Defence and Canadian Forces ‘Operation Nanook’ in Canada’s Western Arctic (Northwest Territories). He is currently enrolled in a doctoral program in Political Science at UQAM. His thesis looks at the influence of Arctic geography in US foreign policy making. |
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Nadine C. Fabbi is the Associate Director of the Canadian Studies Center. For the last ten years her work has centered on the history and geopolitics of the circumpolar north. She is currently engaged in research on indigenous diplomacies and international relations in the Arctic. She earned her MA in Canadian Studies from Carleton University and is currently enrolled in a doctoral program at the University of British Columbia. Nadine has travelled to Alaska, the Yukon, Churchill, Manitoba, Greenland, Iceland and Siberia. In addition to the 2009 and 2011 Arctic-focused Task Force classes, she has taught on Inuit history and political mobilization at the University of Alberta and the University Centre of the Westfjords, Ísafjörður, Iceland. |
Expert Evaluator
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Tony Penikett is a Vancouver-based mediator and has served in politics for 25 years including two years in Ottawa as Chief of Staff to federal New Democratic Party Leader Ed Broadbent MP; five terms in the Yukon Legislative Assembly; and two terms as Premier of Canada's Yukon Territory (1985-92). His government negotiated final agreement for First Nation land claims in the territory and passed pioneering education, health, language legislation, as well as leading a much-admired bottom-up economic planning process. |
Inuit Student Liaison/Advisor
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Donat Savoie is an Anthropologist by training and has occupied several senior positions within Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada for more than 35 years in areas related to Arctic, Inuit and Circumpolar Affairs. He is presently Special Advisor to the Office of the President of Makivik Corporation. He has received several honours during his career and was appointed to the National Order of Québec in 2010 by the Premier of the Province of Québec, the highest recognition of the province for his work amongst the Inuit. |
Arctic Science Advisor
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Vincent Gallucci is a professor in the School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences; adjunct in the Jackson School and the School for Marine Affairs and is director of the Center for Quantitative Sciences in Forestry, Fisheries and Wildlife. His research focus is the management of fishery resources in developing countries and upon coldwater fisheries in the Bering/Arctic seas. He has experience in Russia and published in the Russian Fisheries Science literature. He will help develop the scientific / political aspects of the Russian Federation's perspective in the Arctic debate. He has taught with a colleague a course on marine policy for over ten years. He serves on a Arctic Biodiversity Assessment team appointed by the Arctic Council helping represent diversity in both Arctic ecosystems and marine fishes. This will help establish a baseline for change that may occur due to global climatic or anthropomorphic factors. For more information: http://www.fish.washington.edu/people/gallucci/. |
Foreword Author
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Bernard Funston is currently the Chair of the Canadian Polar Commission, a body established by an Act of Parliament to promote the development and dissemination of polar knowledge. He has extensive experience on a range of matters pertaining to the Canadian North and the northern circumpolar region, including systems of governance, international and intergovernmental relations, Aboriginal land claims and self-government processes, resource development issues, scientific research and cooperation, and a range of fields relating to economic and community development. By training, Mr. Funston is a constitutional lawyer and a member in good standing of the Law Societies of Northwest Territories and Alberta. He holds degrees from Trent University, the University of Cambridge (King’s College), and the University of Alberta. |
Editors
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Charlotte Dubiel |
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Binh Vong |
Task Force Team
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Michael Brown |
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Zoe Cosford |
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Hannah Dolph |
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Kitty Gordon |
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Charlotte Guard |
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Kevin Shaw |
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Steven Moore |
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Ngoc Ho Ngyuyen |
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Max Sugarman |
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Rachel M. Tam |
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Nicolas van Tulder |
| Canadian Studies Center | |
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