Dr Joanna Everitt
,Canada
Professor
Dr. Joanna Everitt is a Professor of Political Science and a former president of the Canadian Political Science Association. At UNB she has served as the Director of the UNB Urban and Community Studies Institute (2018-21), the Dean of Arts at UNB Saint John (2008-2018) and as chair of the Department of History and Politics (2006-08). She has been a Visiting Fellow with the Electoral Integrity Project run out of Queen’s University and the University of West Anglia (2022), at the University of Exeter Q-Step Centre (2019), The McGill Centre for the Study of Democratic Citizenship (2018), Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government (2013) and the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada (2004). She received her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Toronto, and her BA from Carleton University. She joined the Department of History & Politics at the University of New Brunswick – Saint John in 1997. In 2018 she was awarded the Senior Women Academic Administrators of Canada (SWAAC) Angela Hildyard Recognition Award for innovative leadership and outstanding contributions to her institution and in 2007 she was awarded the Allan P. Stuart Award for Excellence in Teaching. In July 2022, her research was recognized through her appointment as a UNB University Research Scholar (2022-2024). Joanna Everitt specializes in Canadian politics, gender and identity politics, and political behaviour. Her research specifically examines how gender and other identities affect political engagement, public opinion, and political success (including opportunities to run for elected office, media coverage and leadership evaluations) of political elites. She was the lead investigator for the 2020 and 2014 New Brunswick Election Study and was part of the team of scholars that produced the 2004, 2006 and 2008 Canadian Election Studies. She is currently the PI for a 5 year SSHRC Insight Grant to examine the impact of candidate affinity on voter political engagement in Canadian federal elections with a focus on women, LGBTQ, Indigenous and racialized individuals. Along with 6 co-authored and co-edited books, she has published over 50 articles in national and international journals and edited collections.
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Dr Joanna Everitt
, country.Canada
Professor
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Dr. Joanna Everitt is a Professor of Political Science and a former president of the Canadian Political Science Association. At UNB she has served as the Director of the UNB Urban and Community Studies Institute (2018-21), the Dean of Arts at UNB Saint John (2008-2018) and as chair of the Department of History and Politics (2006-08). She has been a Visiting Fellow with the Electoral Integrity Project run out of Queen’s University and the University of West Anglia (2022), at the University of Exeter Q-Step Centre (2019), The McGill Centre for the Study of Democratic Citizenship (2018), Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government (2013) and the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada (2004). She received her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Toronto, and her BA from Carleton University. She joined the Department of History & Politics at the University of New Brunswick – Saint John in 1997. In 2018 she was awarded the Senior Women Academic Administrators of Canada (SWAAC) Angela Hildyard Recognition Award for innovative leadership and outstanding contributions to her institution and in 2007 she was awarded the Allan P. Stuart Award for Excellence in Teaching. In July 2022, her research was recognized through her appointment as a UNB University Research Scholar (2022-2024). Joanna Everitt specializes in Canadian politics, gender and identity politics, and political behaviour. Her research specifically examines how gender and other identities affect political engagement, public opinion, and political success (including opportunities to run for elected office, media coverage and leadership evaluations) of political elites. She was the lead investigator for the 2020 and 2014 New Brunswick Election Study and was part of the team of scholars that produced the 2004, 2006 and 2008 Canadian Election Studies. She is currently the PI for a 5 year SSHRC Insight Grant to examine the impact of candidate affinity on voter political engagement in Canadian federal elections with a focus on women, LGBTQ, Indigenous and racialized individuals. Along with 6 co-authored and co-edited books, she has published over 50 articles in national and international journals and edited collections.
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Dr. Joanna Everitt is a Professor of Political Science and a former president of the Canadian Political Science Association. At UNB she has served as the Director of the UNB Urban and Community Studies Institute (2018-21), the Dean of Arts at UNB Saint John (2008-2018) and as chair of the Department of History and Politics (2006-08). She has been a Visiting Fellow with the Electoral Integrity Project run out of Queen’s University and the University of West Anglia (2022), at the University of Exeter Q-Step Centre (2019), The McGill Centre for the Study of Democratic Citizenship (2018), Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government (2013) and the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada (2004). She received her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Toronto, and her BA from Carleton University. She joined the Department of History & Politics at the University of New Brunswick – Saint John in 1997. In 2018 she was awarded the Senior Women Academic Administrators of Canada (SWAAC) Angela Hildyard Recognition Award for innovative leadership and outstanding contributions to her institution and in 2007 she was awarded the Allan P. Stuart Award for Excellence in Teaching. In July 2022, her research was recognized through her appointment as a UNB University Research Scholar (2022-2024). Joanna Everitt specializes in Canadian politics, gender and identity politics, and political behaviour. Her research specifically examines how gender and other identities affect political engagement, public opinion, and political success (including opportunities to run for elected office, media coverage and leadership evaluations) of political elites. She was the lead investigator for the 2020 and 2014 New Brunswick Election Study and was part of the team of scholars that produced the 2004, 2006 and 2008 Canadian Election Studies. She is currently the PI for a 5 year SSHRC Insight Grant to examine the impact of candidate affinity on voter political engagement in Canadian federal elections with a focus on women, LGBTQ, Indigenous and racialized individuals. Along with 6 co-authored and co-edited books, she has published over 50 articles in national and international journals and edited collections.
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