Irvin Studin is Editor-in-Chief and Publisher of Global Brief magazine, and President of The Institute for 21st Century Questions. He is also the Chair of the Worldwide Commission to Educate All Kids (Post-Pandemic).
Studin has been a professor of public policy in leading universities and policy schools in North America, Asia and Europe. His latest book is Canada Must Think for Itself – Ten Theses for Our Country’s Survival and Success in the 21st Century. His forthcoming book is The Consequences of the Pandemic – What Happened to the World? And What’s to be Done? His last book was Russia – Strategy, Policy & Administration (Palgrave-MacMillan, 2018). He is the co-founder of Ukraine’s Higher School of Public Administration (Kyiv).
Studin worked for a number of years in the Privy Council Office in Ottawa, as well as in the Australian Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet in Canberra. He was an appointed member of the first-ever external advisory board of the Canadian Foreign Service Institute, Canada’s diplomatic academy, charged with preparing Canada’s diplomats for the challenges of this century.
The first-ever recruit of the Canadian government’s Recruitment of Policy Leaders programme, he was a member of the small team that wrote Canada’s 2004 national security policy (the country’s first), and he principal-authored Australia’s 2006 national counter-terrorism policy. He holds degrees from the Schulich School of Business (York University), the London School of Economics and the University of Oxford, where he studied on a Rhodes Scholarship. His PhD is from Osgoode Hall Law School, where he was a Pierre Elliott Trudeau Scholar and won the Governor-General’s Gold Medal.
Studin lectures and advises around the world in a number of languages, and has written for publications ranging from the Financial Times to Le Monde, Vedomosti, the South China Morning Post, the Globe & Mail, Toronto Star, National Post, Le Devoir, La Presse, the Indian Express, The Australian, Daily FT (Sri Lanka), and the Straits Times. His other books include The Strategic Constitution – Understanding Canadian Power in the World (UBC Press, 2014), and What is a Canadian? Forty-Three Thought-Provoking Responses (McClelland & Stewart, 2006). The latter book creates the basis for the Odessa Prize in Canadiana, awarded at several universities across Canada.