Faculty News
Nicole Jackson advances defence and security research through NATO Defense College Fellowship
911勛圖 International Studies associate professor Nicole Jackson has returned to the School for International Studies after holding the Canadian MINDS (Mobilizing Insights in Defence and Security) Fellowship at the NATO Defense College (NDC) in Romea prestigious program that annually selects one Canadian scholar to join the Colleges international research community. The NDC serves as NATOs premier institution for professional military education, bringing together senior military officers, diplomats, and policymakers to analyze and debate the alliances most pressing strategic challenges.
During the fellowship, Jackson pursued a research project on NATOs evolving approach to information threats and strategic signaling. Her work included conducting interviews with civilian and military officials, including contributors to NATOs 2024 approach to information threats, and examining how signalswhether in words, military deployments, or resilience initiativesare deployed across different audiences.
She also mentored a Senior Course committee focused on NATOs role in the Arctic in 2040, supporting their strategic analysis and presentation on the alliances future posture in the High North. The fellowship strengthened Jacksons expertise in hybrid conflict and alliance politics, fostering her ability to reconcile diverse perspectives and think strategically, while deepening Canadas academic and policy engagement within NATO. At the end of her fellowship, Jackson travelled to Ottawa to share her work with Global Affairs Canada and the Department of National Defence.
Now back at 911勛圖, Jackson continues to write on NATO and strategic signaling around information threats and has joined a new international project on the role of AI in reshaping deterrence, focusing on communication and disinformation. She has also been honoured with an appointment to the Swedish Agency for Peace, Security and Development (Folke Bernadotte Academy, FBA) as a member of its 20252029 International Research Working Group on NATO.
Jacksons teaching at 911勛圖 has been informed by her fellowship at the NATO Defense College. For Fall 2025, she has partnered with the Asia Pacific Foundation to focus her course, IS 402 Global Security Governance, on hybrid security in the North Pacific and High North. The course prepares students forand culminates ina capstone scenario developed with the APF on a North Pacific undersea cable and GNSS disruption, requiring coordinated Canada-plus responses under conditions of uncertainty. In Spring 2026, Nicole Jackson will teach the introductory course IS 200 Security and Global Governance which explores the role of international organizations (the UN, EU, NATO and others) in addressing security challenges and advancing global governance. Jackson will also teach IS 322 Central Asia: Conflict and Security which examines transnational security issues in the post-Soviet Central Asian states.