L’ Équipe

Chercheurs

Patrick Fournier

Patrick Fournier est professeur titulaire au Département de science politique à l’Université de Montréal. Il est le chercheur principal de l’Étude Électorale Canadienne pour les deux prochaines élections de 2011 et 2015. Il était membre de l’équipe ÉÉC des élections 2004, 2006 et 2008. Ses intérêts de recherche portent sur les comportements politiques, la psychologie politique, la compétence des citoyens, le changement d’opinion et les méthodes de sondage.

Fred Cutler

Fred Cutler is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of British Columbia  He does research in public opinion, elections, federalism, and political psychology. He has published in POQ, JOP, BJPolS, CJPS, Publius, Political Geography, Electoral Stuides, and has chapters in various edited volumes.  A new research project involves lab experiments to understand the effects of different numbers of political parties on voters (electoraldemocracy.com).  He has a SSHRCC-funded project on Polls and Elections, with J. Scott Matthews (Queen’s), Mark Pickup (Oxford & SFU), and Paul Gustafson (UBC). His recent SSHRCC-funded research focussed on the effect of federalism on political behaviour and government accountability. Much of his work has investigated the influence of the local social and economic environment on how people think about politics.

Stuart Soroka

Stuart Soroka est professeur agrégé de Communication Studies and Political Science  de l’Université de Michigan. Il est aussi l’ancien directeur du CORA (Canadian Opinion Research Archive) à la School of Policy Studies de l’Université Queen’s à Kingston. Le professeur Soroka s’intéresse particulièrement aux liens entre les préférences des citoyens et les politiques publiques mises en place, ainsi qu’aux sources des préférences des citoyens en matière de politiques publiques.

Dietlind Stolle

Dietlind Stolle is Associate Professor in Political Science at McGill University, Montréal, Canada. She conducts research and has published on voluntary associations, trust, institutional foundations of social capital, ethnic-racial diversity and its consequences on social cohesion, and various forms of political participation. She is also the co-principal investigator of the unique longitudinal Comparative Youth Survey (CYS) as well as associate director of the US Citizenship, Involvement and Democracy (CID) survey. Stolle has also co-edited a book on social capital and one on political consumerism. She was guest professor at the Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin and the NCCR at the University of Zürich.

Collaborateurs

Éric Bélanger – McGill University
Amanda Bittner – Memorial University
Allison Harell – Université du Québec à Montréal
Karen Long Jusko – Stanford University
Peter Loewen – University of Toronto at Mississauga
Scott Matthews – Memorial University
Mark Pickup – Simon Fraser University
Daniel Rubenson – Ryerson University
Laura Stephenson – Western University