Eat Strategy for Breakfast" When it Comes to National Security?聽聽

Eat Strategy for Breakfast" When it Comes to National Security?聽聽

Eat Strategy for Breakfast" When it Comes to National Security?聽聽

Date

Friday April 25, 2025
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm

Location

Queen鈥檚 University, Robert Sutherland Hall Rm. 334

IDP Speaker Series with Col Kris Purdy

Kris's current research examines the strategic culture of the Government of Canada and its impact on our ability to mount a credible whole-of-government response to prevailing national security threats. Kris proposes a model to build culture through common executive development, thereby overcoming the fragmented and competitive nature of interdepartmental policies and advice to deliver a unified national security strategy that ultimately guides subordinate foreign, defence and security policies.  

   

 


Bio:

Colonel Kris Purdy enrolled in the Canadian Armed Forces in 2000, serving as a Military Police Officer before transferring to the Intelligence Branch in 2004.

He has held various staff and command positions at all levels with the majority of his service spent within the Canadian Special Operations Forces Command, Canadian Forces Intelligence Group, and Canadian Joint Operations Command.

Col Purdy has served internationally in Afghanistan, Jordan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Most recently, he deployed on Operation CROCODILE as the Canadian Task Force Commander and Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations and Plans for the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

He holds a Bachelor of Arts from Saint Mary鈥檚 University, a Master of Defence Studies from the Royal Military College of Canada and is a graduate of the Canadian Forces College Joint Command and Staff Program. He was named to the Order of Military Merit in 2018 and has been awarded Chief of Defence Staff and Vice Chief of Defence Staff Commendations.

Colonel Purdy is currently a Visiting Defence Fellow at the Centre for International and Defence Policy at Queen鈥檚 University, where he is conducting research on Canada鈥檚 strategic culture and professional development of national security executives.