Jonathan M. Sears

Jonathan M. Sears he/him

Associate Professor of International Development and Political Studies; Chair of IDS, Conflict Resolution Studies, Peace and Conflict Transformation Studies; Director of MA in Peacebuilding & Collaborative Development

Political Studies & IDS

MA Peacebuilding and Collaborative Development

jsears:@:cmu.ca

204.953.3857

D289

Jon approaches International Development Studies and Comparative Politics of Sub-Saharan Africa in English et en Français from a multi-disciplinary background in political studies, philosophy, and anthropology. A long-standing interest in political (democratic) transition, consolidation, and legitimation attends to citizen identity-formation at the nexus of development and peacebuilding.

Areas of Teaching

Global Politics, African Politics, Political Theory, Philosophy, Development and Peacebuilding Ethics and Policies

Education

PhD, Political Studies, Queens University (Kingston, ON), 2007; MA, Political Philosophy, Brock University (St. Catharines, ON), 1999; BA, Honours Anthropology, Saint Thomas University (Fredericton, NB), 1994

Work in Detail

Teaching

Spring 2026

  • POLS-3950: You're Not the Boss of Me: Authority, Legitimacy, and Resistance

    • This course explores relationships between those in power and those subject to that power.  Key texts illustrate how claims to govern are made, reinforced, made to seem acceptable or legitimate, and are challenged. Students will also consider critically their place within various structures of authority in daily life.

Fall 2026

  • INTD-1000: Ways of Knowing I. 
    • This course introduces students to the university by getting them involved in asking a big question alongside other students and professors from many subject areas. Fall 2026 topic: Garbage: what counts as waste?

Winter 2027 

  • POLS-1010: Global Politics
    • An introduction to the fields of International Relations and Comparative Politics with particular emphasis on current global issues. 
  • POLS-3500 Gender and Politics
    • This course examines the exclusion of women and gender diverse individuals and communities from public life and their emergence and resilience as political actors. By examining gendered roles as personal, private, corporate, and public, we will see how identities shape citizenship and political participation.

Spring 2027

  • POLS/PHIL/SOC-2600 Social and Political Philosophy
    • What is human nature? Should society be organized to reflect this? What is justice? Are states coercive by nature? How does property inform politics? What is ethical citizenship? 

Past

  • POLS-2400: Comparative Politics of Development: Africa

  • INTD-1000: Ways of Knowing I: Neighbours. 
  • PHIL-2600, SOCI-2600 Social and Political Philosophy. 
  • IDS/PCTS/POLS/SOCI-4100 | PCD-5210 Seminar in Social Change, (also as IDS-4100 Senior Seminar in IDS UofWinnipeg). 
  • IDS-3101 Development Ethics | CRS-3231 Ethics in Conflict Resolution (@UW) | PCD-5715: Ethics of Peacebuilding 
  • POLS-1010: Global Politics
  • POLS-3950 You're not the boss of me: authority, legitimacy, resistance (POLS/Peace and Conflict Transformation Studies)
  • Development Ethics (IDS)
  • Senior Seminar in IDS | MA PCD  Seminar in Social Change 
  • Regional Development Issues: West African Sahel (IDS)
  • Development Theory (IDS)
  • Honours IDS Thesis
  • Crisis, Humanitarian Aid, and Development (IDS)
  • Conflict and Construction of the Other (Conflict Resolution Studies & IDS)
  • Gender and Politics  (POLS)

 

Research

Performance

  • Public reading March 22, 2025 "Under a grey sky" (poem). The Poetry of Painting. Mennonite Heritage Centre Gallery, Winnipeg, MB. January 31 – March 22, 2025
    • Also contributed  to  exhibit: "Coffee at midnight" (poem).

Applied

Community