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Robert Huish

Associate Professor

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to contact


Email: huish@dal.ca
Phone: 902-494-2979
Twitter: @ProfessorHuish
Mailing Address: 
Department of International Development Studies
Marion McCain Building
6135 University Ave.
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PO Box 15000
Halifax, NS, Canada
B3H 4R2

Office location:
Marion McCain Building 2197
 
Research Topics:
  • Global Health
  • Sanctions
  • Cuban Development
  • Activism and Social Justice
  • COVID-19 Stigma

Education

  • B.A. (Hons.) Queen’s University


  • M.A. Queen’s University


  • Ph.D. Simon Fraser University


Dr. Huish is the host of the Podcast "GDP" which is the Podcast on all issues related to International Development. .

In response to online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Huish offers a course on managing pandemics through cooperation and collaboration. .

Research Interests

With support from the Nova Scotia COVID-19 Health Research Coalition, I am currently working on

Broadly, my research explores global health inequities, and the role of economic sanctions in shaping those inequities, as well as the role of social justice in resisting them. My current research looks at how donor nations are responding to the call for greater global health equity, and specifically how economic coercive measures (sanctions) impact the capacity of many countires in the global South to work with each other to improve health for all.

I also pursue research on how sanctions impacthuman rights and security issues.In particular this work exposes how countries like Russia and North Korea continue to violate human rights, and how it pursues military aggression despite . Click here for my interviews on:;; and on

Other areas of research includeand with special attention to Cuba, and how this facilitates comprehensive development.

At the moment I am currently working on the following projects:

  • Human Rights Activism in North Korea.

  • The impacts of climate change and health in pacific island countries)
  • The Impacts of Sanctions on Health and Security.

Teaching Interests

(global health; activism & resistance; experiential learning)

My teaching interests include topics on global health, poverty and human rights, neoliberal globalization, and . 


For more on this approach, check out this interview with, 
as well as

I'm also happy to introduce a new course on Pandemic management in the time of COVID-19. combines podcast learning with game simulation to develop collaborative management strategies for students and policy makers.

Books

Refereed Journal Articles and Book Chapters:

Huish, Robert. (2021). “Global citizenship amid COVID-19: why climate change and a pandemic spell the end of international experiential learning”.The Canadian Journal of Development Studies.10.1080/02255189.2020.1862071

Huish, Robert (2020). “Cuba” in Georgeou N., & Hawksley C. (eds).State Responses to COVID-19: a global snapshot at 1 June 2020. Sydney: Western Sydney University Press.

Huish, Robert (2020). “Canada” in Georgeou N., & Hawksley C. (eds).State Responses to COVID-19: a global snapshot at 1 June 2020. Sydney: Western Sydney University Press.

Huish, Robert (2018). Going where no one should go: Experiential Learning without making the world your classroom. Journal of Global Citizenship and Equity Education. 6(1) 2 - 21.

Huish, Robert. (2018). No Secret Cure: Why the 1970s Hold the Secret to Cuba’s Health Paradox in Kirk, Emily, Clayfield, Anna, & Story, Isabel (eds.) Cuba’s Forgotten Decade: How the1970s Shaped the Revolution. New York: Lexington.

Huish, Robert, (2018), “Poverty, Hunger and Inequality”, inE-Learning Module on Operationalizing the Right toDevelopment in Implementing the Sustainable Development Goals,Kanade, M; Puvimanasinghe S; Aginam O; Schwartz P eds.(Geneva, Ciudad Colon and Kuala Lumpur: UN, UPEACE and UNU-IIGH), Chapter 4.

Huish, Robert (2017). How to Sink the Hermit Kingdom: Improving Maritime Sanctions against North Korea. Canadian Naval Review. 13(2). 5- 10.

Huish, Robert. (2017). “Health and Development,” in Richardson, Douglas, et al.,The International Encyclopedia of Geography: People, the Earth, Environment and Technology.New York: Wiley-Blackwell.

Huish, Robert. (2016). “Wanting to Care: A Comparison of the ethics of health worker migration in Cuba and the Philippines,” in Luginaah, Isaac, Bezner Kerr, Rachael (eds.)Geographies of Development and Health. London: Ashgate.

Darnell, Simon & Robert Huish. (2015). Cuban Sport Policy and South – South Cooperation: An Exploration of the Escuela Internacional de Educación Física y Deporte. International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics. 7(1), 123 – 140.

Darnell, Simon & Robert Huish (2015). “Cuban Sport and the Challenges of South – South Solidarity,” for Hayhurst, L. and Kay, T. (eds) Beyond Sport for Development: Transnational Perspectives on Theory, Policy and Practice. London: Routledge.

Huish, Robert. (2014). Why Does Cuba 'Care' So Much? Understanding the Epistemology of Solidarity in Global Health Outreach. Public Health Ethics;
7(3), 261 – 276.

Huish, Robert, & Simon Darnell. (2014). “Cuban Sport Development: Building Capacity from el Parque to the Podium,” in Brenner, Philip, Marguerite Rose Jiménez, John M. Kirk, & William Leogrande, (eds). A Contemporary Cuban Reader – 2nd Edition. New York: Rowman and Littlefield. 367 – 372.

Huish, Robert (2014). The Heart of the Matter: The Impacts of Cuban Medical Internationalism in the global South. Cuba in a Global Context: International Relations, Internationalism, and Transnationalism. Cathie Krull (ed.) Gainsville: University Press of Florida. 176 – 191.

Huish, Robert (2013). “Dissent 101: Teaching the ‘dangerous knowledge’ of practices of activism.” Canadian Journal of International Development Studies. 34(2). 364- 383.

Huish, Robert, Thomas Carter & Simon Darnell, (2013). The (Soft) Power of Sport: The Comprehensive and Contradictory Strategies of Cuba’s Sport-Based Internationalism. International Journal of Cuban Studies. 5(1), 26 – 41.

Huish, Robert (2012). “The Ethical Conundrum of International Health Electives inMedical Education.” Journal of Global Citizenship & Equity Education. 2(1). 1-19.

Huish, Robert, Simon Darnell (2012). “Solidarity, counter-hegemony anddevelopment: Exploring Cuba’s sport-based internationalism. Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies. 36(71), 139 – 164.

Collins, Damian, Sébastien Flueret, Robert Huish, Anne Cécile Hoyez, (2011).Regards croisés sur les geographies de la santé Anglophone et Francophone, in Santé de géographie. Paris: Press Economica-Anthropos.

Huish, Robert (2011). Punching Above its Weight: Cuba’s use of sport for South-South Solidarity. Third World Quarterly 32(3). 417 – 433.

Evert, Jessica, Robert Huish Gary Heit, Scott Loeliger, Evaleen Jones, SteveSchmidbauer (2011). Global Health Ethics. Oxford Handbook of Neuroethics. Judy Iles & Barbara Sahakian, (eds). The Oxford Handbook of Neuroethics. New York: Oxford University Press.

Huish, Robert and W. George Lovell (2010). Bajo los volcanes: La Influenca deGuatemala en José Martí. ѱDzé. 52. 87 – 110.

Spiegel, Jerry and Robert Huish (2009). Canadian Foreign Aid for Global Health:Human Security Opportunity Lost. Canadian Foreign Policy. 15(3) 60 – 84.

Huish, Robert and John M. Kirk (2009). Cuban Medical Internationalism in Africa:The Threat of a Dangerous Example. The Latin Americanist. 53(3) 125 - 139.

Huish, Robert (2009). How Cuba’s Latin American School of Medicine challengesthe Ethics of Physician Migration. Social Science & Medicine. 69(3) 301 – 304.

Parkes Margot, Spiegel Jerry, Breilh Jaime, Cabarcas Fabio, Huish Robert, YassiAnnalee. (2009). Promoting the health of marginalized populations in Ecuador through international collaboration and educational innovations Bulletin of the World Health Organisation. 87(4), 312 – 319.

Huish, Robert. (2008). Human security and food security in geographic study:Knowledge translation, concepts and elusive theory. Geography Compass. 2(5) 1386 – 1403.

Spiegel, Jerry, Robert Huish, Klaudia Dmitrienko, Andrea A. Cortinois (2008).Canadian and Australian Health Aid, in Hanssonm Emily et. al. (eds.) Global Health Watch 2. London: Zed Books. 317 – 333.

Huish, Robert (2008). Going where no doctor has gone before: The role ofCuba's Latin American School of Medicine in meeting the needs of some of the world's most vulnerable populations. Public Health. 122(6) 552- 557. (WHO International Joint Special Issue, “Towards a Scaling-up of education for health workers.”)

Huish, Robert & Jerry Spiegel. (2008). Integrating health and human security intoforeign policy: Cuba’s surprising success. International Journal of Cuban Studies. 1(1) 1 – 13.

Huish, Robert and John M. Kirk (2007). Cuban Medical Internationalism: thedevelopment of the Latin American School of Medicine and human-resource-based healthcare provision. Latin American Perspectives. 34(6) 77 - 92.