J. Jockel) and “A Larger ‘Footprint’ in Ottawa: General Hillier and Canada’s Shifting Civil-Military Relationship, 2005–2008” (with P. Lagassé). Dr. Sokolsky is a Senior Fellow at the Queen’s University Centre for International and Defence Policy and a Research Affiliate at the Strategic Studies Program of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Reginald C. Stuart is a professor of history and political and Canadian studies at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He holds a PhD from the University of Florida (Gainesville) and a BA and MA from the University of British Columbia. His previous publications include (with Michael D. Behiels) Transnationalism: Canada–United States History into the 21st Century(2010) and Dispersed Relations: Americans and Canadians in Upper North America(2007). In 2004 he was the Distinguished Chair in Canadian Studies at the Woodrow Wilson Institute for Scholars on a Canada–United States Fulbright fellowship.
Isabel Studer is founding director of the Center for Dialogue and Analysis on North America, at the Tecnológico de Monterrey. She holds a PhD in international relations from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies. She was assistant director general for Canada at the Mexican Ministry for Foreign Affairs, research director at the North American Commission for Labor Cooperation, and director general for North America at the Mexican Ministry of the Environment and Natural Resources. She is author of Ford and the Global Strategies of Multinationals: The North American Auto Industry(Routledge 2002) and coeditor, with Carol Wise, of Requiem or Revival: The Promise of North American Integration(Brookings 2007) and, with Neil Craik and Debora Van Nijnatten, Designing Integration: Regional Governance on Climate Change in North America(University of Toronto Press, 2012).
John Herd Thompson is a professor of history at Duke University. Dr. Thompson’s previous publications include Canada and the United States: Ambivalent Allies (with coauthor Stephen J. Randall) now in its fourth edition.
Debora L. VanNijnatten is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Wilfrid Laurier University and Program Coordinator for Laurier’s North American Studies Program. Her research focuses on cross-border regions as policy actors in North America as well as various aspects of Canadian-American-Mexican environmental policy including air quality policy, climate change policy and subnational policy innovations. She is coeditor of Canadian Environmental Policy(Oxford 2002, 2009). She has been a visiting Fulbright