Daniel Drache

Daniel Drache is Full Professor of Political Science in the Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies at York University. His work focuses on understanding the changing character of the globalization narrative in its economic, social and cultural dimensions. His 2008 book, Defiant Publics: The Unprecedented Reach of the Global Citizen (London: Polity) looks at the evolving responses from states, social movements and private sector actors to global governance and the increasing role of microactivists and social movements in public policy formation. He has worked extensively on the WTO's failed Doha Round with particular focus on TRIPS and public health, food security and nutrition, and poverty eradication. Another vital interest is North American integration and border security (Big Picture Realities: Canada and Mexico at the Crossroads, Wilfrid Laurier Press, 2008) and the impact of new information technologies and the ways in which micropublics have employed these technologies in innovative ways. His work has been recognized internationally and he has been a research associate at the European University Institute, Florence; a professor invité at CEPREMAP-CNRS, Paris; a visiting scholar at Macquarrie University, the University of Western Sydney and the AGSM, University of New South Wales and a guest lecturer at UNAM, Mexico. In January 2008 he was the Shastri Indo Canada Visiting lecturing at ten departments and/or institutions throughout the country. In 2010 he was the Ford Foundation Visiting Professor at JNU Centre for the Study of Law and Governance New Delhi. He is an expert evaluator for the EU since 2005. In 2003-04 he was invited to be the Senior Resident, Massey College, University of Toronto, and in June 2003 he was the Australia-Canada Millennium Lecturer in Sydney Australia. He has won major SSHRC research awards and is currently principal investigator, along with co-investigators Seth Feldman and Fred Fletcher of a SSHRC Research Development Initiative, entitled, "Global Cultural Flows, New Information Technologies and Re-Imagining the National Community" that was successfully completed in 2006. In 2011 he was awarded a grant from the Indo-Shastri Foundation for a collaborative project with the Centre for Culture, Media and Governance, Jamia Millia Islamia University New Delhi. During the same period he published a series of digital report on activist counterpublics and the remarkable iconography of dissent in post-modernity.

Publications et activités

Partenaires

Faculté des sciences humaines | UQAMInstitut d'études internationales de Montréal (IEIM-UQAM) Ministère des Relations internationales et de la Francophonie | Québec Affaires mondiales Canada

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Le Centre d’études et de recherches sur l’Inde, l’Asie du Sud et sa diaspora (CERIAS) est un regroupement académique interdisciplinaire et francophone dont l’objet d’étude est l’Asie du Sud et sa population. Le CERIAS regroupe des chercheurs, professeurs et étudiants de l’Université du Québec à Montréal et d’autres universités.

L’Asie du Sud est ici définie comme une aire géographique regroupant le Bangladesh, le Bhoutan, les Maldives, le Myanmar, le Népal, le Pakistan, le Sri Lanka et, bien entendu, l’Inde.

Le mandat du CERIAS est de promouvoir le rassemblement, la coordination et les échanges d’universitaires dont le domaine d’études est en lien avec l’Asie du Sud et sa diaspora, que ce soit dans les domaines des arts et lettres, des sciences humaines ou sociales, des sciences politiques et du droit, de l’économie, de l’éducation, des technologies de l’information et des communications, ou de l’environnement.

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Centre d’études et de recherches sur l’Inde, l’Asie du Sud et sa diaspora (CERIAS)