In episode 23 of Battle Rhythm season 3, with co-host Artur Wilczynski, retired DG of Foreign Intelligence Operations Canada and Senior Fellow GPSIA, University of Ottawa; Artur and Steve discuss the Halifax Security Forum debate about women in combat roles, Trump, Trudeau, Tariffs and US asylum seekers along with martial law in South Korea. Today's feature interview is with Dallaire Centre of Excellence for Peace and Security researchers Dr. Catherine Baillie Abidi and Dr. Dustin Johnson on their recent volume of Civil Wars, Volume 26, Issue 3 (2024): https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fciv20/26/3
Dr. Catherine Baillie Abidi is a scholarly practitioner in the Department of Child and Youth Study at Mount Saint Vincent University and has specialized in children and armed conflict for over two decades. She has worked in collaboration with dozens of Defence Forces and with international organizations such as the United Nations, Red Cross, and the International Labour Organization. She has over twenty publications in the field of peace and security and was the editor of Allons-y: Journal of Children, Peace and Security for five years. Dr. Baillie Abidi was awarded a Queen Diamond Jubilee Medal from the Governor General of Canada for her work in children, peace and security. At Mount Saint Vincent, she is leading research focused on conflict-related early warning, moral injury, and children and youth as agents of peace. Dr. Baillie Abidi is also the Co-Director of the Children, Peace and Security International Network, an active and collaborative group of international scholars, committed to researching inter-disciplinary, community-based, inclusive, and prevention-oriented approaches for protecting children and preventing their use in violence.
Dr. Dustin Johnson is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Defence Studies at the Royal Military College of Canada, and he is based within the Dallaire Centre of Excellence for Peace and Security at the Canadian Defence Academy, where he researches child protection and gender dynamics in armed conflict and peacekeeping with a focus on Ukraine. He holds a PhD in peace and development studies from the School of Global Studies at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, and has previously published in journals such as International Peacekeeping, Civil Wars, and Global Responsibility to Protect.
Dr. Catherine Baillie Abidi is a scholarly practitioner in the Department of Child and Youth Study at Mount Saint Vincent University and has specialized in children and armed conflict for over two decades. She has worked in collaboration with dozens of Defence Forces and with international organizations such as the United Nations, Red Cross, and the International Labour Organization. She has over twenty publications in the field of peace and security and was the editor of Allons-y: Journal of Children, Peace and Security for five years. Dr. Baillie Abidi was awarded a Queen Diamond Jubilee Medal from the Governor General of Canada for her work in children, peace and security. At Mount Saint Vincent, she is leading research focused on conflict-related early warning, moral injury, and children and youth as agents of peace. Dr. Baillie Abidi is also the Co-Director of the Children, Peace and Security International Network, an active and collaborative group of international scholars, committed to researching inter-disciplinary, community-based, inclusive, and prevention-oriented approaches for protecting children and preventing their use in violence.
Dr. Dustin Johnson is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Defence Studies at the Royal Military College of Canada, and he is based within the Dallaire Centre of Excellence for Peace and Security at the Canadian Defence Academy, where he researches child protection and gender dynamics in armed conflict and peacekeeping with a focus on Ukraine. He holds a PhD in peace and development studies from the School of Global Studies at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, and has previously published in journals such as International Peacekeeping, Civil Wars, and Global Responsibility to Protect.