photograph of J Andrew Grant

J. Andrew Grant

Associate Professor

He/Him

PhD (Dalhousie)

Political Studies

International Relations

Associate Professor

grantja@queensu.ca

Phone: (613) 533-6235

Mackintosh-Corry Hall, C424

People Directory Affiliation Category

Research Interests

  • International Relations
  • African Security
  • Global Governance
  • Conflict and Cooperation in Natural Resource Sectors
  • Regionalism and Regionalization,
  • Non-State Armed Groups
  • Arms Trade Treaty
  • Post-Conflict Reconstruction

Brief Biography

Dr. J. Andrew Grant is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Studies at Queen鈥檚 University. He is the recipient of an Early Researcher Award from the Government of Ontario鈥檚 Ministry of Research and Innovation for work on governance issues in natural resource sectors. Dr. Grant has been a Visiting Scholar/Researcher at Northwestern University, USA, and the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. During his doctoral studies, he served as an intern at the Campaign for Good Governance in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Dr. Grant is editor of  (CIR / CIDP 2009) and co-editor of  (with F. S枚derbaum, Ashgate 2003),  (with T.M. Shaw and S. Cornelissen, Ashgate 2012),  (with W.R.N. Compaor茅 and M.I. Mitchell, Palgrave 2015), and Corporate Social Responsibility and Canada鈥檚 Role in Africa鈥檚 Extractive Sectors (with N. Andrews, University of Toronto Press 2019). His publications on conflict diamonds and the Kimberley Process, non-state armed groups and regional security, post-conflict reconstruction in fragile states, and governance issues relating to natural resources have been funded by research agencies such as the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and the British Academy-Association of Commonwealth Universities. He conducts field research on a regular basis in Sierra Leone, Ghana, Uganda, Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa. Dr. Grant is a Senior Fellow with the Queen鈥檚 Centre for International and Defence Policy, a Faculty Associate with the Queen鈥檚 Southern African Research Centre, and a Research Fellow with the Centre for the Study of Security and Development at Dalhousie University. In 2017, he served as the International Studies Association (ISA) Program Chair for some 6,000 participants attending the 58th annual conference. A former Executive Council member of ISA-Canada and Chair of the ISA Committee on Virtual Engagement, he currently serves as the Canadian Political Science Association (CPSA) Liaison with the ISA and the American Political Science Association (APSA). He also serves on the Executive Council of the International Political Science Association Research Committee #40 (New World Orders) and the Editorial Boards of the Journal of Regional Security and Extractive Industries and Society

Teaching

For detailed information about political studies courses and instructors, please refer to the Undergraduate and Graduate pages. 

Service (2024/2025)

  • Colloquium Committee
  • Departmental Committee
  • Equity Issues Committee (Chair)

Selected Publications

鈥淎gential Constructivism and Change in World Politics鈥. International Studies Review 20:2, 2018, 255-263.

鈥淭he Glocal Dynamics of Land Reform in Natural Resource Sectors: Insights from Tanzania鈥 (with A.M. Collins and P. Ackah-Baidoo). Land Use Policy 81 (February), 2019, 889-896.

鈥淣atural Resource Governance in Africa: Insights from Governance Initiatives on Conflict-Prone Minerals and Sustainable Forestry.鈥 In Hany G. Besada, M. Evren Tok and Leah McMillan Polonenko, eds. Innovating South-South Cooperation: Policies, Challenges, and Prospects. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 2019, 269-288.

鈥淔orest Governance and REDD+ in Central Africa: Towards a Participatory Model to Increase Stakeholder Involvement in Carbon Markets鈥 (with A.N. Djomo et al). International Journal of Environmental Studies 75:2, 2018, 251-266.

鈥淓liminating Conflict Diamonds and other Conflict-Prone Minerals鈥. In Katharina P. Coleman and Thomas K. Tieku, eds. African Actors in International Security: Shaping Contemporary Norms. Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 2018, 51-71.

鈥淭he Kimberley Process on Conflict Diamonds, New Regionalisms, and the Dynamics of (De/Re)Territorialization鈥. In Ulf Engel, Heidrun Zinecker, Frank Mattheis, Antje Dietze and Thomas Pl枚tze, eds. The New Politics of Regionalism: Perspectives from Africa, Latin America and Asia-Pacific. London: Routledge, 2017, 146-158.

鈥淣orm Dynamics and International Organisations: South Africa in the African Union and International Criminal Court鈥 (with S. Hamilton). Commonwealth & Comparative Politics 54:2, 2016, 161-185.

鈥淎fro-Optimism Re-Invigorated? Reflections on the Glocal Networks of Sexual Identity, Health, and Natural Resources in Africa鈥 (with A.N. Djomo and M.G. Krause). Global Change, Peace & Security 28:3, 2016, 317-328.

鈥淎ssessing the European Union鈥檚 Engagement with Transnational Policy Networks on Conflict-Prone Natural Resources鈥 (with R.W. Alorse and W.R.N. Compaor茅). Contemporary Politics 21:3, 2015, 245-257.

鈥淎 Historical Institutionalist Understanding of Participatory Governance and Aboriginal Peoples: The Case of Policy Change in Ontario鈥檚 Mining Sector鈥 (with D. Panagos, M. Hughes and M.I. Mitchell). Social Science Quarterly 95:4, 2014, 978-1000.

鈥淭he Political Economy of Transitory Mining in Ghana: Understanding the Trajectories, Triumphs, and Tribulations of Artisanal and Small-Scale Operators鈥 (with F.K. Nyame). Extractive Industries and Society 1:1, 2014, 75-85.

鈥淐onsensus Dynamics and Global Governance Frameworks: Insights from the Kimberley Process on Conflict Diamonds.鈥 Canadian Foreign Policy Journal 19:3, 2013, 323-339.

鈥淐onstitutional Change, Aboriginal Rights, and Mining Policy in Canada鈥 (with D. Panagos). Commonwealth & Comparative Politics 51:4, 2013, 405-423.

鈥淩eflections on Network Governance in Africa鈥檚 Forestry Sector鈥 (with D. Balraj and G. Mavropoulos-Vagelis). Natural Resources Forum 37:4, 2013, 269-279.

鈥淐ommonwealth Cousins Combating Conflict Diamonds: An Examination of South African and Canadian Contributions to the Kimberley Process.鈥 Commonwealth & Comparative Politics 51:2, 2013, 210-233.

鈥淢icro-Regionalisms, Information and Communication Technologies, and Migration in West Africa: A Comparative Analysis of Ghana鈥檚 Diamond, Cocoa, and Gold Sectors鈥 (with M.I. Mitchell, F.K. Nyame and N. Yakovleva). In Ulrike Lorenz-Carl and Martin Rempe, eds. Mapping Agency: Comparing Regionalisms in Africa. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2013, 149-174.

鈥淔rom Carats to Karats: Explaining the Shift from Diamond to Gold Mining by Artisanal Miners in Ghana鈥 (with F.K. Nyame). Journal of Cleaner Production 29 (July), 2012, 163-172.

鈥淭he Kimberley Process at Ten: Reflections on a Decade of Efforts to End the Trade in Conflict Diamonds.鈥 In P盲ivi Lujala and Siri Aas Rustad, eds. High-Value Natural Resources and Post-Conflict Peacebuilding. New York: Earthscan / Taylor & Francis, 2012, 159-179.

鈥淐lan Identity and Islamic Identity in Somalia: An Examination of Non-State Armed Groups in Regional and Sub-Regional Context.鈥 In David Last and Anthony Seaboyer, eds. Clan and Islamic Identities in Somali Society. Toronto: Defence Research and Development Canada, 2011, 35-44.

鈥淣ew Regionalisms and the African Union: Reflections on the Rise of Africrats, Regional Economic Integration, and Inter-Regional Relations鈥 (with T.K. Tieku). In B.J.C. McKercher, ed. Routledge Handbook of Diplomacy and Statecraft. London: Routledge, 2011, 264-273.

"Natural Resources, International Regimes and State-Building: Diamonds in West Africa." Comparative Social Research  27:1, 2010, 223-248.

鈥淒igging Deep for Profits and Development? Reflections on Enhancing the Governance of Africa鈥檚 Mining Sector.鈥 South African Institute of International Affairs 49 (October), 2009, 5-19.

鈥淧erspectives on Migration Patterns in Ghana鈥檚 Mining Industry鈥 (with F.K. Nyame and N. Yakovleva). Resources Policy: The International Journal of Minerals Policy and Economics 34:1-2, 2009, 6-11.

鈥淚nformal Cross-Border Micro-Regionalism in West Africa: The Case of the Parrot鈥檚 Beak.鈥 In Fredrik S枚derbaum and Ian Taylor, eds. Afro-Regions: The Dynamics of Cross-Border Micro-Regionalism in Africa. Uppsala: Nordic Africa Institute, 2008, 105-120.

鈥淒iamonds, Foreign Aid, and the Uncertain Prospects for Post-Conflict Reconstruction in Sierra Leone.鈥 The Round Table: The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs 94:381, 2005, 443-457.

鈥淕lobal Governance and Conflict Diamonds: The Kimberley Process and the Quest for Clean Gems鈥 (with I. Taylor). The Round Table: The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs 93:375, 2004, 385-401.