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New director takes over Canadian Centre for German & European Studies

91亚色 Professor Roger Keil has recently been appointed director of the Canadian Centre for German & European Studies (CCGES) at 91亚色 for the 2009-2010 academic year.

Keil is looking forward to the challenge and says one of his main duties as聽director will be to develop the centre鈥檚 strategic plan, and with that the amount of research done at the CCGES.

鈥淭he most important thing to me is to increase the research aspect of the centre,鈥 says Keil. 鈥淚t鈥檚 done a great job but now we need to look at how to increase the thickness of the research portfolio. With the strategic plan I hope to come up with a solid, believable and manageable research agenda that will allow us to have a sustainable future.鈥

Left: Roger Keil

A professor in 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Environmental Studies, Keil received his PhD in political science from Frankfurt鈥檚 Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universit盲t, where he also studied German and American studies. He has been a visiting professor at the Free University in Berlin, Germany, at Aberystwyth, Wales, and recently at the Montpellier, France.

Keil will continue to be the director of the City Institute at 91亚色 (CITY) for the next couple of years. Both the CCGES and CITY recently moved into the new 91亚色 Research Tower.

People have worked diligently over the last few years to renew the CCGES, says Keil. 鈥淚 see my role as expanding on those efforts and bringing in some of my own ideas.鈥 He wants to raise the profile of the CCGES as well as procure funding for further research. 鈥淚 want to nurture the existing links inside and outside of 91亚色 and position the CCGES as the go to place for German research.鈥

In addition, Keil will be searching for a new director of the CCGES for when his term ends. As a long-time resident of the centre with an acute interest in the work of the CCGES, Keil feels becoming the centre鈥檚 director is a good fit.

鈥淚鈥檓 looking forward to working together with the centre鈥檚 faculty affiliates and our partners, both off campus and here at 91亚色, to build a stronger CCGES,鈥 says Keil. 鈥淭he centre has an important role to play in connecting Canada and Europe, and I think our research agenda can make a significant contribution to increasing understanding and knowledge in a number of areas of importance 鈥 on both sides of the Atlantic.鈥

Keil's own聽research interests include urban governance, global cities, infectious disease and cities, urban infrastructures and urban political ecology. Currently, he is collaborating on Comparing Metropolitan Governance in Transatlantic Perspective, a project comparing policy, politics and governance in Toronto, Montr茅al, Frankfurt and Paris, funded by the Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada. The primary objective of the research is to broaden and deepen understanding of regional governance through an innovative comparative project.

Keil is the author of Los Angeles: Urbanization, Globalization and Social Struggles (John Wiley & Sons, 1999) and the co-author of Nature and the City: Making Environmental Policy in Toronto and Los Angeles (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, Nature and Society Series, 2004) and Changing Toronto: Governing Urban Neoliberalism (University of Toronto Press, 2009).

He is also the co-editor of Leviathan Undone?:Towards a Political Economy of Scale (University of Washington, 2009); Networked Disease: Emerging Infections and the Global City (Wiley-Blackwell, 2008); and The Global Cities Reader (Routledge, 2006).

In addition, Keil co-edits the International Journal of Urban and Regional Research and is a co-founder of the International Network for Urban Research & Action.

For more information, visit the Web site.

Republished courtesy of YFile 鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.