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Areas of interest
Research and Supervision Fields:
STATUS: NOT ACCEPTING NEW GRADUATE STUDENTS
-Separatism
-Human Rights
-Canadian Legal System
-Youth Engagement in the Political System
-Teaching Practice and Community Engagement
Teaching Streams:
-Justice and Law
-Diversity and Migration
-Research Methods and Analysis
-Public Policy and Democratic Governance
Education
- BA (honours), University of Oxford
- MA, University of British Columbia
- PhD, University of British Columbia
Biography
My research explores why separatist parties engage in the political systems they want to leave. I examine this question using the Scottish National Party in the British Parliament, the Bloc Québécois in the Canadian Parliament and Catalan nationalist parties in the Spanish Parliament. I am also interested in the boundary between legal and political systems: when are some policy debates decided by the courts, rather than politicians? This question is inspired by my background in the criminal justice system. After my law degree, I worked for the UK National Audit Office. In that job, I reported to Parliament on English prisons and peacekeeping missions in the Balkans. After moving to Canada, I completed my doctorate at UBC. My post-doctoral fellowship at Quest University focused on teaching methods.
I've used these experiences to design courses on human rights, separatist movements, political participation, Canada’s constitution and qualitative methods. As a teaching faculty member, I run the Department training program for teaching assistants (with Dr. Sanjay Jeram) and also have several ongoing projects exploring innovation in teaching. These include a Teaching and Learning Grant* on community partnerships for my first-year classes and the development of workshops to help graduate students work effectively with their research supervisors (with Professor Mark Pickup).
Courses
Fall 2024
Spring 2025
Future courses may be subject to change.