Founded in 1946, the International Journal is Canada's leading voice in cross-disciplinary global policy. Advancing research, igniting dialogue.

Joined August 2018
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G7 in Kananaskis, AI & security, critical minerals, NATO, climate. IJ 80/2 is out now. Read: journals.sagepub.com/toc/ijx…
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Canada hosts refugees on land from which Indigenous peoples were forcibly displaced. Forced Migration in/to Canada argues the two histories cannot be understood separately. Hannah Cox reviews. doi.org/10.1177/002070202513…
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Martin Thomas's global history of decolonization is ambitious and sometimes insightful — but defines its subject so broadly it ends up explaining nothing in particular. Jack Cunningham's review. doi.org/10.1177/002070202513…
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The CAF's sexual misconduct failures weren't accidental — Allan English argues senior leaders actively blocked change. Breede and Imre-Millei review the book with both validation and critical friction. doi.org/10.1177/002070202513…
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Beth Fischer revisited IJ issues from 2000–2003 and found the same questions: how to define security, what to do about a US missile defense program, where Russia is headed. The end of the Cold War rhymes with today. doi.org/10.1177/002070202614…
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Two speeches, 79 years apart. Robert Bothwell traces what changed between St-Laurent's Gray Lecture and Carney's Davos address — and what the distance between them reveals about Canada's place in the world. doi.org/10.1177/002070202614…
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IJ turns 80. Issue 81/1 pairs anniversary retrospectives with new research on quantum ecosystems, civilian readiness, Canada-India maritime ties, Russia's status bid, and Biden's personal diplomacy. journals.sagepub.com/toc/ijx…
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