Andrew F. Cooper

Andrew F. Cooper
Born Andrew Fenton Cooper
(1950-06-29) June 29, 1950
Residence Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Citizenship Canadian
Alma mater Oxford University,
Lynacre College
Website
www.andrewfcooper.com

Andrew Fenton Cooper, D.Phil. (born 29 June 1950) is a Professor at the Balsillie School of International Affairs and the Department of Political Science at the University of Waterloo where he teaches in the areas of International Organization, Global Governance, Comparative Foreign Policy and International Diplomacy. He holds a DPhil in International Relations from Oxford University. He currently is the Director of The Centre for the Study on Rapid Global Change, University of Waterloo, Canada and an Associate Research Fellow-UNU CRIS as well as an Associate Senior Fellow at the Centre for Global Cooperation Research in Duisburg, Germany.

From January to May 2009, he served as Visiting Fulbright Chair at the Center on Public Diplomacy, University of Southern California, and has previously been a visiting professor at Australian National University, SAIS Johns Hopkins, Stellenbosch University and Harvard University.Dr. Cooper has led training sessions on global governance, diplomacy and International Political Economy in Canada, South Africa and at the World Trade Organization, and in 1993-94 was scholar in residence at Canada’s Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT). He has attended numerous G8 summits and all of the G20s either presenting at pre-summit academic conferences or providing commenting from media centres. He has been active in major research projects on the global economic governance in partnership with Chatham House and other leading research institutes, and has given major addresses in conferences sponsored by such bodies as the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, the German Development Institute, the Centre for New Global Governance at Renmin University, the Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul, the Asian Development Bank Institute, Shanghai Institutes of International Studies, The Matías Romero Institute, the Clingendael Institute, Oxfam International, and The Woodrow Wilson Center for International Studies. He has also served on the Advisory Board of both the GARNET Network of Excellence and the Hague Journal of Diplomacy, and has been a member of the first Warwick Commission on The Multilateral Trading System.Dr. Cooper is the co-editor of the recently published The Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy. He has co-authored the first stand-alone book on the G20 as well, with a Foreword by the Rt. Hon. Paul Martin. Dr. Cooper’s research focuses on foreign policy strategies of emerging powers in a multi-polar world, middle and small states, regionalization, global health governance and conventional and non-conventional diplomacy. He is author/co-author of 9 books and editor/co-editor of 21 collections and his articles have appeared in leading journals such as International Organization, International Affairs, World Development, International Studies Review, International Interactions, Political Science Quarterly, Global Policy Journal, Washington Quarterly,Journal of Democracy, Global Governance, Third World Quarterly, and New Political Economy. His work has been profiled via ABC Good Morning America, The Independent, CBC’s Q, Variety Magazine, Times of India,China Daily, and the Washington Diplomat.

Selected bibliography

Co- editor, The Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy: Oxford Handbooks in Politics & International Relations (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).

“Middle Power Leadership and the Evolution of the G20,” The Global Summitry Journal (GSJ), 5-2-2013.

“Civil Society Relationships with the G20: An Extension of the G8 Template or Distinctive Pattern of Engagement?," Global Society, 27, 2 2013:179-200.

“Introduction: the challenges of 21st-century diplomacy,” (with Jorge Heine and Ramesh Thakur), in Andrew F. Cooper, Jorge Heine and Ramesh Thakur, Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, March 2013), 1-35.

“The changing nature of diplomacy,” Andrew F. Cooper, Jorge Heine and Ramesh Thakur, Oxford Handbook of Modern Diplomacy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, March 2013), 35-53.

“Small states in a world of crisis & divergence: more/less vulnerability or resilience?’ in The Diplomacies of Small States: Between Vulnerability and Resilience (edited with Timothy M. Shaw) (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), xvi-xxv.

Co- author, The Group of Twenty- G20 (New York: Routledge, 2012).

“Canada’s Engagement with the Americas in comparative perspective: Between declaratory thickness and operational thinness,” International Journal, Annual John. W. Holmes issue on Canadian Foreign Policy, 67, 3 Summer 2012: 707-723.

“Celebrity Diplomats as Mobilizers? Celebrities and Activism in a Hypermediated Time” (with Joseph F. Turcotte), in Media, Mobilization and Human Rights (London: Zed, 2012).

“Beyond Activism: Emerging Models of Celebrity Diplomacy,” special feature on “Not the Usual Suspects: The Other Nonstate Actors,” World Policy Review, June 12, 2012.

Author, Internet Gambling Offshore: Caribbean Struggles over Casino Capitalism (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011).

“The Group of Twenty: Input and Output Legitimacy, Reforms, and Agenda,” ADBI Working Paper, No. 372 (Tokyo: Asian Development Bank Institute, August 2012).

Beyond Geography: BRIC/SAM and the New Contours of Regionalism” (with Agata Antkiewicz), in Timothy M. Shaw, J. Andrew Grant and Scarlett Cornelissen, eds, The Ashgate Research Companion to Regionalisms (Farnham, UK: Ashgatem 2011): 295-310.

“Advances in Global Economic Governance amid the obstacles at the Seoul G20 Summit’ (with Eric Helleiner), Social Europe, 5, 2 January 2011.

“The G20 and Regional Dynamics”, in Colin I. Bradford and Wonhyuk Lim, eds., Global Leadership in Transition (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2011): 265-274.

“Consolidated Institutional Cooperation and/or Competitive Fragmentation in the Aftermath of the Financial Crisis,” Whitehead Journal of Diplomacy and International Relations XIII, 2 Summer/Fall 2011, 19-31.

“The G20 and Its Regional Critics: The Search for Inclusion,” Global Policy Journal, 2, 2 May 2011, 203-209.

“Qatar and expanded contours of Small State Diplomacy” (with Bessma Momani), International Spectator, 46, 2 June 2011, 127-142.

“Introduction”, in Inter-American Cooperation at the Crossroads (with Gordon Mace and Timothy Shaw) (London: Palgrave Macmillan: 2010): 1-22.

“Introduction”, in Rising States, Rising Institutions: Can the World be Governed? (edited with Alan Alexandroff) (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2010): 1-16.

“Labels Matter: Interpreting Rising Powers through Acronyms”, Rising States, Rising Institutions: Challenges for Global Governance, 63-82.

“Conclusion", in Rising States, Rising Institutions: Can the World be Governed?, 294-306.

“Beyond the Boardroom: ‘Multilocation’ and the Business Face of Celebrity Diplomacy,” in Morten Ougaard and Anna Leander, eds. Business and Global Governance (London: Routledge, 2010): 305-316.

“Overview: Global economic governance in transition” (with Paola Subacchi), Introduction to special issue ofInternational Affairs, 86, 3 May 2010: 607-617.

“The G20 as an improvised crisis committee and/or a contested ‘steering committee’ for the world,” International Affairs, 86, 3 May 2010: 741-757.

Which Way Latin America: Hemispheric Politics Meets Globalization (edited with Jorge Heine, UNUP 2009)

CIGI Special G20 Report: Flashpoints for the Pittsburgh Summit (edited with Daniel Schwanen, CIGI 2009)

Innovations in Global Health Governance: Critical Cases (edited with John J. Kirton, Ashgate 2009)

The Diplomacies of Small States: Between Vulnerability and Resilience (edited with Timothy M. Shaw, Palgrave 2009)

Emerging Powers in Global Governance: Lessons from the Heiligendamm Process (edited with Agata Antkiewicz, WLUP 2008) (Chinese Translation, published by Shanghai People's Publishing House, 2009)

Global Governance and Diplomacy: Worlds Apart? (edited with Brian Hocking and William Maley, Palgrave 2008)

Celebrity Diplomacy (Paradigm 2007)

Governing Global Health: Challenge, Response, Innovation (with John J. Kirton and Ted Schrecker, Ashgate 2007)

External links

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