Dominique Clément
University of Alberta
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dominique Clément.
Security Dialogue | 2015
Philip J Boyle; Dominique Clément; Kevin D. Haggerty
This article compares security dynamics at two Olympic Games hosted by Canada: Montreal (1976) and Vancouver (2010). It is the first study of security at the Montreal Olympics and was only made possible after four years of requests under the Access to Information Act that resulted in the release of thousands of classified security documents in French and English. A comparative study of the two largest peacetime security operations in Canadian history offers unique insights into the challenges of hosting a major international gathering in the aftermath of an international terrorist incident: the 1972 Munich massacre and the 11 September 2001 attack on the World Trade Center. The comparison further offers an opportunity to chart the continuities and differences in Olympic security over time. We focus in part on how the historical context of each event informed ‘imaginaries of disaster’. We also examine continuities in the official security response, such as the emphasis on advance intelligence gathering, security ‘mock-ups’, manpower allocation, coalitions of security agencies and technological innovation. We conclude with some considerations on security legacies and the importance of major event security as a subject of comparative inquiry.
The International Journal of Human Rights | 2018
Dominique Clément
ABSTRACT This article debates a paradox in politics, law and social practice: Whereas human rights has become an effective strategy for framing grievances, the increasing appropriation of rights-talk to frame any and all grievances is undermining attempts to successfully address systemic social problems. I argue that issues such as poverty should be framed as social justice rather than human rights. In an attempt to further develop a sociology of human rights, I explore how framing a grievance as a human right shapes the way people understand both the problem and the solution, and the limits to framing social problems as rights violations. Canadians, in particular, typify a broader global experience of increasingly asserting rights-claims in everyday life, from the environment to bullying at school.
Canadian Historical Review | 2006
Dominique Clément
liberal order dangerously incapable of understanding its conflicted past or theorizing its post-colonial future. One has to wonder if all’s well with this liberal world when as eminent a publishing house as UBC Press permits a book with its imprint to include the following sentence: ‘After all, it is not self-evident that spousal benefits as a justiciable right belong to lesbian couples, or that men may collect kiddie porn instead of stamps’ (109). IAN MCKAY Queen’s University
Terrorism and Political Violence | 2017
Dominique Clément
Labour/Le Travail | 2015
Dominique Clément
Canadian Review of Sociology-revue Canadienne De Sociologie | 2011
Dominique Clément
Labour/Le Travail | 2001
Dominique Clément; Laurel Sefton MacDowell
Labour/Le Travail | 2018
Dominique Clément
Osgoode Hall Law Journal | 2017
Dominique Clément
Canadian Journal of Sociology | 2015
Dominique Clément