Don Munton is a professor and former chair of the International Studies Program at the University of Northern British Columbia. He received his BA and MA from the University of British Columbia and his PhD from Ohio State University. He taught previously at Dalhousie University and UBC and has been a Fulbright Fellow at Dartmouth College; NATO Fellow; visiting professor at Carleton and York Universities and the University of Toronto; and a visiting scholar at Essex University, United Kingdom, Waseda University, Tokyo, and the University of Wales, Aberystwyth. He specializes in the areas of international environmental issues, security policy, Canadian foreign policy and quantitative methods. His publications include The Real Thirteen Days: A Concise History of the Cuban Missile Crisis (Oxford, forthcoming), Siting by Choice: Waste Facilities, NIMBY and Volunteer Communities (1996); Rethinking National Security: The Public Dimension (1991); Canadian Foreign Policy: Selected Cases (1992). |