Wayne Hunt

Professor
Email
Office
AVDX 213

Biography

Wayne Hunt is a Professor of Politics and International Relations at Mount Allison University in Canada. He has been a Visiting Scholar at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government, a Senior Research Associate at St. Antony's College, Oxford University and Visiting Fellow at the Centre for International Studies at the London School of Economics.

He is interested in showing how the ideas which are generated in an academic setting can have an influence on policy-makers. He has been involved in partisan politics — standing as a candidate for a nominating convention for the Liberal party in Canada.

His published research is on the topic of political leadership, privacy and digital surveillance, the future of liberalism, public intellectuals and the structure of ideas on a digital platform, the impact of geoengineering on human communities, the political philosophies embodied in the competition between Silicon Valley firms like Google, Facebook and Apple; and, finally, on the geopolitical challenge of jihadist networks and the flow of foreign fighters.

In addition to that he helped organize and co-chaired a think tank on New Liberalism. His career has been designed to show how new technology is turning around the traditional divisions between art and science.

Publications

“A ‘Brand Canada’ for the Connected World” Tom Axworthy and Howard Aster, eds. Searching for the New Liberalism: Essays in Renewal (Oakville: Mosaic Press, 2002); 291-307.

“The Branding of Trudeau” London Journal of Canadian Studies 18 (Spring 2003); 87-101. E-journal available here.

“Tony Blair and Margaret Thatcher: Different Conceptions of Political Leadership” in S. Pugliese, ed. The Legacy of Margaret Thatcher (London: Politico’s - Methuen, 2003); 267-279.

“The Theatre of War” Queen’s Quarterly 111: 1 (Spring 2004); 44-49.

“The Media As A Tool For Civic Engagement” Report (Sackville, NB: Mount Allison University, 2004); 1-80.

“Bridging The Democratic Divide–Creating A Sense Of Civic Engagement” Policy Options 25: 9 (October 2004); 43-47.

“Drawing The Line: The Cartoon Wars” Journal of Middle East Media 1:3 (Fall 2007); 19-31.

“Baghdad Burning: The blogosphere, literature, and the art of war” Arab Media and Society (Spring 2008). E-journal available through http://www.arabmediasociety.com/?article=584

“Google’s Foreign Policy” International Journal of Science in Society, 1: 4 (Spring 2010); 105-114.

“The Gaza War, Theater and the Big Interview” Arab Media and Society, 10 (Spring 2010). E-journal available through http://www.arabmediasociety.com/?article=742

“Bloggers Under Occupation 2003 – Iraq” in John Downing, ed. Sage Encyclopedia of Social Movement Media (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2011); 83-84.

“After the Tsunami – Reconstructing the Political Architecture” Policy Options 36:4 (June 2011); 14-17.

“Cultural Corridors and Innovation” in John Reid and Donald Savoie, eds., Reshaping an Agenda for Atlantic Canada (Halifax: Fernwood, 2011); 302-321.

“Apple v Google: How a Corporate Rivalry Reflects a Longer Set of Geopolitical Struggles” International Journal of Science in Society, 3: 2 (Summer 2012); 159-170.

“How the Middle Eastern Experiment in Masdar in the UAE uses Apple as a Model” in Kiran Prasad, ed. Transforming International Communication: Media, Culture and Society in the Middle East (New Delhi: BRPC Publishers, 2014); 329-353.

“Privacy and the Creative Imagination in an Age of Digital Surveillance” Queen’s Quarterly 121: 3 (Fall 2014); 412-421. Available in print and at http://www.queensu.ca/quarterly/currentissue.html

Education

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO

Ph.D. in Political Science. Concentration in comparative politics, with a special focus on Canadian politics.

LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS

M.Sc. (Econ.). Thesis: Canada and India: the evolution of a federal form of governance in developed and developing societies

LAURENTIAN UNIVERSITY

B.A. (Hons) in Political Science

Teaching

Wayne Hunt's teaching has a focus on the impact of emergent technologies on art, architecture and design and documentary film making.

Research

Comparative Politics, International Relations, Business Studies, as well as Media and Communication Studies.

Grants, awards & honours

Editorial board member, Journal of Middle East Media

Editorial board member, International Journal of Science in Society

Editorial board member, International Journal of Political Science and Diplomacy

2010-2011   LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS

Visiting Fellow at Centre for International Studies

2003-04    OXFORD UNIVERSITY

Senior Research Associate at St. Antony’s College

Principal organizer for the New Liberalism Foundation think tank on “Creating Sustainable Communities.”

Acted as co-chair of the think tank (along with Dr. Tom Axworthy, Kennedy School, Harvard University) Halifax, Nova Scotia, February 28 - March 1, 2003. Available at http://www.gingergroup.org/cnf_0302_speakers.html

1997   LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS

Visiting Fellow at Centre for International Studies

1996-97    HARVARD UNIVERSITY

Visiting Scholar at the Kennedy School of Government

1989-90    LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS

Visiting Fellow at Centre for International Studies

1987   Active in the Liberal party of Canada

Stood as candidate for nomination in the Ontario riding of Algoma-Manitoulin in 1987.

2001-2003   Principal Investigator and Head of the Canadian Team

Funded by Gorbachev Foundation and the Canadian International Development Agency.

Total Grant: $170,000.

Head of the Russian Team, Alexander Chumikov, Professor of State Management at Moscow State University and General Director of the International Press Club and Secretary of the Union of Journalists.

Title of Project: The Mass Media as a Mechanism for Civic Engagement.

1979-1979  Massey College in the University of Toronto

Junior Fellowship