Department of Political Studies Class of 2024 Spring Convocation Reception
Date
Friday June 21, 202412:00 pm - 3:00 pm
Location
Date
Friday June 21, 2024Location
Date
Monday April 22, 2024Location
Online via Zoom(Mondays) April 22, 29, May 6, 13
5 - 7 pm
Recent advances in biomedical knowledge and innovation- such as sequencing of the human genome, gene therapy and genome editing, the biology of aging, behavioral genetics, etc.- raise the prospect that science could be utilized to âenhanceâ our biology rather than simply search for treatments for specific diseases. In his book Beyond Humanity? (Oxford University Press, 2011) the philosopher Allen Buchanan defines biomedical enhancement as âa deliberate intervention, applying biomedical science, which aims to improve an existing capacity that most or all normal human beings typically have, or to create a new capacity, by acting directly on the body or brainâ. This course will introduce students to both the science and ethics of biomedical enhancement, covering a range of topics like eugenics, genetics, the therapy/enhancement distinction, procreative liberty, aging, and memory modification.
Colin Farrelly (he/him) is the Sir Edward Peacock Professor of Political Theory in the Department of Political Studies at Queenâs University and is cross appointed with Philosophy. He has held academic appointments at universities in England, Scotland, the United States, TĂŒrkiye, and Canada. Recent publications include two books on the ethics of the genetic revolution and a series of journal articles on the science of aging in venues like the British Medical Journal, The Journals of Gerontology, Aging Cell, Royal Society Open Science, and the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. Colin is also the organizer of the local Philosophy Meetup (Kingston), which brings local residents into pubs and parks to discuss philosophical topics in ethics, science, politics, and psychology.
Click for more information about the Ever Scholar program
Date
Sunday May 5, 2024Location
The turn of the century brought on a wave of new and complex problems that the international community must face. From advancements in technology that have moulded and reshaped domestic political spheres; to leaps in communication that have enabled the rise of powerful non-state actors; to the digitalization of the finance world and the introduction of crypto currencies, we have seen change across virtually every channel of interaction.
Being able to understand these changes and conduct meaningful research to uncover their impacts are essential to a peaceful and cooperative future.
âNew Realitiesâ can be considered through many lenses. Understanding the effect evolving social change can have on national or international organizations is bound to change the way the organization operates. The international implications of the ongoing War in Ukraine, or the Israel-Hamas War, have the power to reshape and restructure the security situations in Europe, the Middle East, and beyond. The rise in domestic right-wing support in many regions of the world, or the risks following the possible re-election of Donald Trump, could have the power to challenge many governmentâs operational and fiscal âstatus-quosâ. And an increase in uprisings and coups, more specifically in the West African region, have regressed democracy to a point that concerns regional security and opens the door to global humanitarian crises.
These are all situations and dimensions of the global landscape that are undergoing change, and therefore creating a new reality the international community must confront.
We are inviting sub91ÊÓÆ”s from graduate students on topics that address the complexities of the ânew realityâ the world is beginning to navigate. The conference will be in a hybrid format. Participants can either join in-person at Queenâs University or online via Zoom. The keynote speaker has not yet been determined.
Some Proposed Themes / Subtopics:
Please submit an abstract of no more than 250 words to: psgsa.grad.con@gmail.com
Date
Friday April 5, 2024Location
10:00-10:05 AM â Opening Remarks | Kaitie Jourdeuil, coordinator
Panel 1 | 10:05-11:05 AM
11:05-11:10 AM â Break (light refreshments served)
Panel 2 | 11:10 AM - 12:10 PM
12:10-12:30 PM - Lunch (light lunch served)
Panel 3 | 12:30-1:30 PM
1:30-1:35 Break (light refreshments served)
Panel 4 | 1:35-2:35 PM
2:35-2:40 PM â Closing remarks | Kaitie Jourdeuil
Date
Thursday April 11, 2024Location
91ÊÓÆ” the event:
We are a group of York University students and alumni, both Palestinian/Arab and Israeli/Jewish, who want to change the way that the conversation about Israel/Palestine is happening at York University. We believe that, as fellow students who have a connection to this land, we all deserve human dignity and an honest conversation. We have established an Israel/Palestine student dialogue group on our campus for the purpose of sharing multiple perspectives in a respectful manner.
We are happy to share with the Queen's community the important dialogue work we are doing. York University Professor Randal Schnoor will moderate a public panel discussion with student leaders of York University's BRIDGING THE GAP to explore student motivations for starting this dialogue group, views on the current campus climate, challenges, and opportunities for dialogue. Question and discussion period with the audience will follow.
91ÊÓÆ” Dr. Schnoor:
Dr. Randal Schnoor, a sociologist, specializes in the study of contemporary Jewish Life in North America. For the last three years he has been teaching a course at York University entitled "Antisemitism and Islamophobia in Canada."
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In this course he succeeds in fostering a healthy environment for honest and respectful discussion between Jews and Muslims. Upon the Hamas attack on Israel of October 7/23 and the subsequent heavy Israeli military response, he was motivated to revitalize the BRIDGING THE GAP Israel/Palestine student dialogue group at York which had laid dormant since the onset of the COVID pandemic. The dialogue group is now thriving where Dr. Schnoor works closely with an executive of eight students (Jewish/Israeli/Palestinian/Arab) to design programming and establish safe spaces for genuine dialogue on the York campus.
See:
Date
Tuesday March 26, 2024Location
Light refreshments served
The Kim Richard Nossal Teaching Award
The Kim Richard Nossal Teaching Award is in recognition of and his legacy of commitment to higher education and teaching in Political Studies at Queenâs University.
This student-led award recognizes and celebrates teaching excellence at the undergraduate level in the Department of Political Studies at Queenâs University. In particular, it rewards undergraduate instructors in the department who are at the beginning of their teaching careers, who have made an exceptional contribution to the study and education of Political Studies through their teaching at this university. The award will be presented to either one or two nominees annually each spring.
Date
Monday March 11, 2024Location
Date
Tuesday March 5, 2024Location
Online via ZoomThis event is for those who have received and/or accepted an offer of ad91ÊÓÆ” to the MA or PhD program commencing September 2024. Information sessions are offered each fall for those interested in learning more about our graduate programs in general.
Date
Monday March 4, 2024Location
Online via ZoomIn 2017 in Charlottesville, antisemitism and anti-Black racism converged as white supremacists, in a highly choreographed and violent protest against the removal of a statue honoring a Confederate general, carried Confederate flags and chanted âJews will not replace us.â This convergence is not just a product of American history, its roots go far deeper. In this talk, Magda Teter, the author of Christian Supremacy: Reckoning with the Roots of Antisemitism and Racism, will explore the interplay between Christian theology and law to demonstrate how the theological framework of Christian supersessionism articulated in antiquity and its subsequent application in law led to the creation of social hierarchies, legal exclusion of and a denial of equality to Jews and Black people also in modern times.
Magda Teter is a Professor of History and the Shvidler Chair of Judaic Studies at Fordham University. She is the author of Jews and Heretics in Catholic Poland (2005), Sinners on Trial: Jews and Sacrilege after the Reformation (2011), Blood Libel: On the Trail of An Antisemitic Myth (2020), Christian Supremacy: Reckoning with the Roots of Antisemitism and Racism (2023), and of dozens of articles in English, Hebrew, Italian, and Polish. Her book Blood Libel won the 2020 National Jewish Book Award, The George L. Mosse Prize from the American Historical Association, and the Ronald Bainton Prize from the Sixteenth Century Society. Teter has received fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, HF Guggenheim Foundation, Radcliffe Institute at Harvard, the Cullman Center at the NYPL, the NEH, and others. Teter is currently the President of the American Academy of Jewish Research. (Photo credit: Chuck Fishman)
Date
Friday March 8, 2024Location
Biography:
Dr. Farrelly is the Sir Edward Peacock Professor of Political Theory in the Department of Political Studies at Queenâs University. He is cross-appointed with the and occasionally teaches in the .
Over his 20+ year academic career, Dr. Farrelly has held academic appointments in 10 different departments in Political Science, Philosophy, and Public Policy in England, Scotland, the United States, and Canada. Previous appointments include Visiting Professor in UCLAâs Luskin School of Public Affairs, Fulbright Visiting Research Chair at the University of Manoa in Hawaii, Research Fellow in the Department of Politics and International Relations at Oxford University, Visitor in Oxfordâs Program on Ethics and the New Biosciences, as well as permanent academic appointments at Waterloo University, Manchester University and the University of Birmingham.
The author and editor of 6 books and approximately 50 journal articles, Colinâs publications include articles in journals in political science, philosophy, feminism, law, science, and medicine. He has published on a diverse array of topics, including the health challenges posed by population aging, the creation and evolution of patriarchy, virtue ethics, virtue epistemology, virtue jurisprudence, play and politics, freedom of expression, judicial review, non-ideal theory, gene patents, deliberative democracy, nanotechnology, sex selection, toleration, a citizenâs basic income, enhancing soldiers and economic incentives.
Dr. Farrelly believes science and science policy constitute the most significant areas of knowledge and public policy in the 21st century, and for the past 20+ years much of his research has focused on the ethical and social implications of advances in the biomedical sciences, especially human genetics and âgeroscienceâ. The latter aspires to increase the human health span by altering the rate of biological aging.