
Yung Chang on Boxing, Mao, and Individuality in China
OpenCanada talks to the director of the documentary China Heavyweight.
Former deputy editor of OpenCanada.org
Anouk Dey is the former deputy editor of opencanada.org and an Action Canada fellow. Anouk recently completed her M.Phil in International Relations at Oxford University, where she was a Donovan-Moody scholar and received an Oxford Blue (ski racing). Anouk is founder and president of Reclaim Childhood, a non-profit organization that seeks to expose Iraqi refugee girls to sport. Anouk holds a B.A. (Hons) in International Relations from Williams College.
OpenCanada talks to the director of the documentary China Heavyweight.
OpenCanada talks to the director of the documentary We Are Legion.
Canada talks a lot about protecting women’s rights abroad. Why not do the same at home asks Anouk Dey.
Anouk Dey looks at how political machinations in Ottawa dictated Canada’s Afghan war effort.
An interactive timeline on Canada’s involvement with the court.
In Washington this week, Prime Minister Harper gave President Obama two reasons to frown.
He won’t bring pandas home from China, and other insights into Mulcair’s foreign policy agenda.
Dick Cheney is scared of us and Iceland wants our dollar. Lessons for John Baird.
Putting the X in External Affairs. A revised list of top Canadian women in honour of International Women’s Day.
On International Women’s Day, we celebrate the Canadian women making their name on the world stage.
On International Women’s Day, we celebrate the Canadian women making their name on the world stage.
In a crowd of 30,000 rock jocks, Canada is innovation king. Anouk Dey wonders why.
How Google killed Gutenberg – and explained the world. A new theory of international relations.
Most oil-rich countries have national oil companies. Canada doesn’t.
What Marshall McLuhan and Jane Jacobs tell us about International Relations in a globalized age.
Peter Kent showed us one way to say no to globalization. Does Carney offer an alternative? Anouk Dey asks.
Anouk Dey dissects the unlikely constructivist roots of Hermain Cain’s friends-and-enemies view of the world.
Canada needs to apply its foreign policy doctrine to domestic problems, Anouk Dey argues.
Canada’s withdrawal from Afghanistan on Thursday occasioned thoughtful commentary on […]