Hataley, Todd

Picture of Professor Todd Hataley

Todd Hataley

Professor

School of Justice and Community Development

Fleming College

Dr. Todd Hataley is a professor in the School of Justice and Community Development at Fleming College.  He is a retired member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.  During his tenure as a federal police officer, he worked as an investigator in organized crime, national security, cross-border crime and extra-territorial torture.  Dr. Hataley is an adjunct associate professor at the Royal Military College of Canada and in the Australian Graduate School of Policing and Security at Charles Sturt University in Canberra, Australia.  His research currently focuses on the management of international boundaries, money laundering, Indigenous policing and transnational crime.  He is working on the IIRG’s project on the intersection of international and traditional Indigenous boundaries.

"Citizen Election Observers in Theory and Practice": a panel discussion

Date

Tuesday March 21, 2023
12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

Location

Robert Sutherland Hall, Room 202

Luoma, Michael

Michael Luoma photo

Michael Luoma

Post-Doctoral Fellow at IIGR and CSDD

Institute of Intergovernmental Relations

Queen's University

Michael Luoma (PhD, Philosophy, Queen’s University, 2023) is a Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations (IIGR) and the Centre for the Study of Democracy and Diversity (CSDD) at Queen’s University.

Michael’s research draws contemporary political philosophy into dialogue with grounded contexts of normative and political contestation. Specifically, Michael’s research examines the conditions for political legitimacy in Indigenous – settler relations, with a focus on the requirements for fair negotiation of territorial authority among self-determining peoples in a multinational federal system. Pursuant to this objective, Michael has conducted research on Indigenous political authority and collective self-determination, territorial rights and restitution, federalism, transnational Indigenous communities, and the negotiation of modern treaties.

In his capacity as postdoctoral fellow at the IIGR, Michael is pursuing research on multinational federalism and border governance in the field of Indigenous – state relations, in association with the Institute’s partnership with the 21st Century Borders project.

You may find additional details about Michael’s research, on the negotiation of modern treaty agreements, on his CSDD profile.

Articles:
Luoma, M. (2024).  â€śGroup-differentiated rights for Indigenous communities that straddle borders.” Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 28 (1): 121–142.

Luoma, M. (2024) “Public Education, Multinational Identity Formation, and Territorial 
Legitimacy: An Analysis of the 2004 and 2023 Ontario Curricula on Indigenous ±Ę±đ´Ç±č±ô±đ˛ő.” Frontiers in Political Science, Peace and Democracy, 6: 1-16.

Luoma, M. & Moore, M. (2024). “Rectifying Historical Territorial Injustices.” Res Publica, 30: 683–703.

Luoma, M. (2022). “Collective Self-Determination, Territory and the Wet'suwet’en: What Justifies the Political Authority of Historic Indigenous Governments over Land and ±Ę±đ´Ç±č±ô±đ?” Canadian Journal of Political Science, 55(1), 19-39.

Book Chapters:

Luoma, M. (2025). “Indigenous Perspectives on Climate Change.” In Madsen, R. & Sullivan, W.M. (Eds.), Ethikon Series in Comparative Ethics: Climate Change and Morality. Brookings Institution Press. Forthcoming.

Book Reviews and Encyclopedia Entries:

Luoma, M. “James Tully: Indigenous Self-Government in Modern Canada.” In Gray, K. (Ed.), Global Encyclopedia of Territorial Rights (pp. 1-10). Springer.

Luoma, M. “Sharing Territories: Overlapping Self-Determination and Resource Rights Cara Nine, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022, pp. 336.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 56 (4): 1000-1002.