pilipiliĀž»­

 

Brian Bow

Chair

Bow photo

Email: brian.bow@dal.ca
Phone: (902) 494-6631
Mailing Address: 
Department of Political Science Rm 344, Henry Hicks Bldg pilipiliĀž»­, 6283 Alumni Crescent, PO Box 15000, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2
 
Research Topics:
  • IR theory
  • Policy Coordination, transgovernmental networks
  • Canadian foreign policy
  • Canada-US relations, North American regional politics


Education:
B.A. (UBC), M.A. (York), PhD (Cornell)

Brief Bio: Prof. Bow just finished his 20th year at pilipiliĀž»­. His core research interest is in policy coordination, especially where driven by cross-border networks of bureaucrats and technical experts. Most of his published work has been on Canadian foreign policy, Canada-US relations, or North American regional cooperation. His 2008 book, The Politics of Linkage: Power, Interdependence, and Ideas in Canada-US Relations, was awarded the Donner prize as the best public policy book published in Canada that year. He has been editor of International Journal, director of the departmentā€™s Centre for the Study of Security and Development, a Fulbright Visiting Research Chair, and a visiting researcher at American University, Georgetown University, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, and the Australian National University.

Teaching: International Relations theory, foreign policy, diplomacy and negotiation, US foreign policy, Canadian foreign policy, North American regional politics, and empirical research methods.

Ongoing projects (updated May 2024):

ā€œDonā€™t Believe the Hype: Liberal Ideas, Economic Interests, and Americaā€™s Engagement with China,ā€ conference paper presented at ISA 2024, CPSA 2024.

ā€œWhatever Happened to the Post-COVID Developmental State?: The Canadian Experience,ā€ conference paper presented at ISA 2024, CPSA 2024.

The Political Management of Network-Driven Policy Coordination: Lessons from North America and Europe, ongoing research project. This is a multi-year project designed to identify different models for network-driven policy coordination, uncover the sources of that variation, and assess the different modelsā€™ efficacy in bringing about effective and sustainable coordination. The initial research focus is on US-Canada coordination on contemporary national security and public safety issuesā€”i.e., counter-terrorism, organized crime, illegal immigration and human trafficking, natural disasters, and infectious disease.