Thomas Homer-Dixon

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Thomas Homer-Dixon (born 1956 in Victoria, British Columbia) holds the George Ignatieff Chair of Peace and Conflict Studies at the Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Toronto, and is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto. In the fall of 2008, Homer-Dixon will leave the University of Toronto to take an appointment as a CIGI Chair of Global Systems Studies at the Balsillie School of International Affairs at the University of Waterloo, in Waterloo, Ontario.

Homer-Dixon was born in Victoria, British Columbia, in 1956, and was raised in a rural area outside Victoria.[1] He received his B.A. in political science from Carleton University in 1980 and his Ph.D. in Political Science from MIT in 1989, where he studied international relations, defense and arms control policy, cognitive science and conflict theory. He then moved to the University of Toronto where he has led several international research projects studying the links between environmental stress and violence in developing countries. Recently, his research has focused on threats to global security in the 21st century and on how societies adapt to complex economic, ecological, and technological change. His work is highly interdisciplinary, drawing on political science, economics, environmental studies, geography, cognitive science, social psychology and complex systems theory. Homer-Dixon is widely regarded as a central figure in the Environment and Security debate, having significantly shaped the discourse in the field.

His award-winning works include: The Upside of Down: Catastrophe, Creativity, and the Renewal of Civilization, which won the 2006 National Business Book Award; The Ingenuity Gap, which won the 2001 Governor-General's Non-fiction Award; and Environment, Scarcity, and Violence, which received the 2000 Lynton Caldwell Prize from the American Political Science Association.

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  1. ^ Thomas Homer-Dixon's official biography. (Accessed March 5, 2007.)
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