Alain-G. Gagnon
}}Alain-G. Gagnon CC CQ CRC (born 1954) is a Montreal-based scholar who serves as President of the Royal Society of Canada and Vice-President of the International Association of Centers of Federal Studies. Since the 1980s, when he published his first major academic works, Gagnon has been an active participant in debates surrounding the constitutional status of Québec amid struggles for sovereignty and negotiations to reform Canada's federal system. He is a well established figure in the study of Québec and Canada and in the theorization of contested systems of national recognition.
Gagnon has held visiting professorships at a number of European institutions, including the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Sciences Po Paris, Sciences Po Bordeaux, and the Université Sorbonne Nouvelle. But he is principally based in Montreal. He served as Director of the Quebec Studies Program at McGill University from 1992 until 2003, when he joined the Political Science Department of the Université du Québec à Montréal. At UQAM he holds the Canada Research Chair in Québec and Canadian Studies. "Using a comparative approach that draws on theories and concepts from political science, law, sociology and history, Gagnon and his team are analyzing how these phenomena affect intercommunity dynamics and cohesion in the context of relationships between citizens and their institutions."
A significant figure in the internationalization of research partnerships in Québec, Gagnon is well known for institution-building in his fields of publication and study. In 2018, he founded a research centre at UQAM focused on the study of constitutional politics and federalism. Other Montreal-based research centers that Gagnon has led include the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Diversity and Democracy (CRIDAQ) and the Research Group on Plurinational Societies (GRSP), which he helped to establish in 1993.
The Royal Society of Canada reviews Gagnon's academic profile as follows:
Translated into some twenty languages, his work has earned him several distinctions, including the Prix Marcel-Vincent from the Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS, 2007), the 2008 Award of Excellence and the 2019 Teaching Award from the Société québécoise de science politique, the Governor General's International Award in Canadian Studies (2016), the Ordre de Pléiade (Ordre de la francophonie et du dialogue des cultures) (2018), and the Mildred A. Schwartz Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Political Science Association (2020). He was appointed Officer of the Order of Canada in 2019 and Member of the Order of Quebec in 2022.An autumn 2023 colloquium was organized in Montreal to recognize and take stock of the scope of Gagnon's influence. Provided by Wikipedia