Table of Contents for
| Haiti: Hope for a Fragile State, edited by Yasmine Shamsie and Andrew S. Thompson
Acknowledgments
Preface | Terry Copp (Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies, WLU) and John English (Centre for International Governance Innovation, Waterloo, ON)
Introduction—Haiti: Hope for a Fragile State | Yasmine Shamsie and Andrew S. Thompson
The Historical Context
1. The Fall of Aristide and Haiti’s Current Predicament | Robert Fattton, Jr. (University of Virginia)
2. Assisting a Neighbour: Haiti’s Challenge to North American Policy-Makers | Robert Maguire (Trinity University, Washington, DC)
3. The Economic Dimension of Peace-building in Haiti: Drawing on the Past to Reflect on the Present | Yasmine Shamsie Justice and Security 4. Haiti’s Tenuous Human Rights Climate | Andrew S. Thompson 5. Testimony on the Situation in Haiti and Ongoing UN Mission | Col. Jacques Morneau (Canadian Forces College, Toronto, ON) Building Haiti through Civil Society 6. The Role of the Private Sector and the Diaspora in Rebuilding Haiti | Carlo Dade (Canadian Foundation for the Americas [FOCAL]) 7. Dissonant Voices: Northern NGO and Haitian Partner Perspectives on the Future of Haiti | Jim Hodgson (The United Church of Canada) Conclusion—La difficile sortie d’une longue transition | Suzy Castor (Centre for Research and Training in Social and Economic Development [CRESFED], Haiti) Contributors Suzy Castor is a historian and the director of the Centre for Research and Training in Social and Economic Development
(CRESFED) in Port-au-Prince. From 19681984 (during the Duvalier dictatorships) she was a professor and researcher at the National
Autonomous University (UNAM) in Mexico, during which she was made a member of the prestigious National System of Researchers of the
Mexican Academy of Sciences. She has published more than fifty articles in journals and edited volumes and has taught at
universities in Mexico, the United States, Martinique, Guadeloupe, the Dominican Republic, and Grenada. Terry Copp is Professor Emeritus and director of the Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies at Wilfrid
Laurier University. He is the author or co-author of thirteen books and numerous articles on the history of the Canadian
Forces. He is the founding editor of the journal Canadian Military History, a regular columnist for Legion
Magazine and the Kitchener-Waterloo Record, and chair of the Education Committee of the Canadian Battlefields Foundation. He has recently held a
number of workshops and conferences exploring the role of the Canadian military in current international affairs. Carlo Dade is the senior policy advisor with the Canadian Foundation for the Americas (FOCAL), where he manages programs in
transnationalism, corporate social responsibility, and Afro-descendants in the Americas. Prior to joining focal, Mr. Dade was representative for the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and
the English-speaking Caribbean at the Inter-American Foundation (IAF), a US government foreign aid agency. He has worked with
numerous US, Canadian, and Caribbean government agencies on remittance and Diaspora outreach policies and program development
and organized the first conference on the role of the Canadian Diaspora in the development of Haiti. John English has long been recognized as one of Canada’s leading experts on international affairs. Holding a doctorate from
Harvard University, he is a senior professor of history and political science at the University of Waterloo. Between 1993 and
1997, he served as a Liberal Member of Parliament. Subsequently, he served as a Special Ambassador for Landmines and as a Special
Envoy for the election of Canada to the Security Council. He has also served as president of the Canadian Institute of
International Affairs; and is currently the executive director of the Centre for International Governance Innovation, Canada’s
largest think tank devoted exclusively to the study of international affairs. Robert Fatton, Jr. is the Julia A. Cooper Professor of Government and Foreign Affairs in the Department of Politics at the
University of Virginia. He is the author of several books and a large number of scholarly articles including Haiti’s Predatory
Republic: The Unending Transition to Democracy (2002). He is currently working on a new book tentatively entitled “The
Authoritarian Habitus,” which seeks to explain the historical and material roots of despotic regimes in Haiti. Born and raised in
Port-au-Prince, Fatton studied in France in the mid-1970s, later earning a doctorate from the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. Jim Hodgson is the Caribbean/Central America program co-ordinator in the national office of The United Church of Canada. He is a
journalist and adult educator who worked in the Dominican Republic in the late 1980s and in Mexico from 1994 to 2000. In
1990 he travelled to Haiti as an election observer with a delegation from the Caribbean Conference of Churches, and has
visited the country many times from 1984 to the present. Robert E. Maguire holds a joint appointment at Trinity University in Washington, DC, as director of programs in International
Affairs and assistant professor and chair of the International Affairs Program. He is also director of the Trinity University
Haiti Program. He has been involved with Haiti since the mid-1970s through work at the Inter-American Foundation, the
Department of State, and Johns Hopkins, Brown, and Georgetown universities, and has published extensively on Haiti in the areas
of economic and grassroots development, governance, security, international involvement, state/civil society relations. Colonel Jacques Morneau presently serves as the director of strategic studies at Canadian Forces College in Toronto. From
January to July 2005 he served as the Commander for the United Nations Task Force in Port-au-Prince and Chief of Staff of
MINUSTAH in Haiti. Prior to this he held many important posts including director of staff at Regional Headquarters Allied
Forces North Europe and Senior Canadian Officer in Burnssum, The Netherlands, from April 2000 until December 2003. Col. Morneau
holds a master’s degree in International Studies from King’s College London and attended the Royal College of Defence Studies
in London, UK, in 2003. Yasmine Shamsie is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at Wilfrid Laurier University where she teaches
Latin American politics and international relations. She specializes in the political economy of democracy promotion with
a focus on the inter-American system. Her research has focused on oas peacebuilding efforts in Haiti and its conflict prevention
work in Guatemala. She is a Fellow at the Centre for Research on Latin America and the Caribbean (CERLAC) at York University. Andrew S. Thompson holds a Ph.D. in history from the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Canada, and has written on questions of
human rights and international governance. In March–April 2004, he was the media officer for an Amnesty International human
rights lobbying and fact-finding mission to Haiti.


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