
- Why Terror Networks are Dissimilar: How Structure Relates to Function
- Vectors of Extremism Across the Canada-US Border
- Tracking the War of Ideas: A Poll of Ottawa Muslims
- The West’s Last War? Neo-Interventionism, Strategic Surprise and the Waning Appetite for Playing the Away Game
- Terrorist Networks as Strategic Repertoires: Functional Differentiation among Al-Shabaab Terror Cells
- Sûreté, Sécurité Civile et Mesures d’Urgence au Sein du Système Canadien de Gouvernance Multiniveau
- Recruitment and Retention Strategy: Endogenous Constraints, Exogenous Imperatives
- Public Security in Federal Systems
- Public Safety in Federal Systems: A Primer
- Political Demography of Canada-US co-dependence in defence and security
- Networks as Strategic Repertoires: Functional differentiation among Al-Shabaab terror cells
- Inferring the Mental State of Influencers
- Improving the Language of Influence
- Home-Grown Islamist Radicalization in Canada: Using Survey Evidence to Model the Structure of Radical Attitudes
- Guns for Hire: Mapping Canada-US cross-border gun trafficking networks
- Evolving Transnational Threats and Border Security: A New Research Agenda
- Defence Policy, ‘Walmart Style’: Canadian lessons in ‘not-so-grand’ strategy
- Cross-Border Terror Networks: A Social Network Analysis of the Canada-U.S. Border
- Asymmetric decentralization of the administration of public safety in the Canadian federal political system
Description:
Christian Leuprecht is Professor of Political Science at the Royal Military College of Canada and Senior Fellow at the Macdonald Laurier Institute. He holds an appointment to the governing Council of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, is president of the International Sociological Association’s Research Committee 01: Armed Forces and Conflict Resolution, and a United Nations Security Structure Expert. He is cross-appointed to the Department of Political Studies and the School of Policy Studies at Queen’s University where he is also a fellow of the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations and the Queen’s Centre for International and Defence Policy. As a foremost expert on security and defence, political demography, and comparative federalism and multilevel governance, he is regularly called as an expert witness to testify before committees of parliament.
His research priorities include national security and defence policy, politically motivated violent extremism/terrorism, border security, the political, economic, security, social and cultural implications of demographic change, horizon scanning of emerging security threats, civil-military relations, federalism and intergovernmental relations, dynamics of ethno-national conflict, comparative constitutional politics, and Canadian as well as German politics.