Welch Tyler, PhD Student

Tyler Welch
PhD Student
Department of Political Science
Area(s) of Interest:
Biography
Tyler is a Ph.D. student majoring in international relations. His research focuses on terrorist recruitment and propaganda. His work studies the propaganda of violent Islamic extremist and white supremacist organizations.
Publications:
Forthcoming. Welch, T. "Theology, Heroism, Justice, and Fear: An analysis of ISIS propaganda magazines Dabiq and Rumiyah," Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict.
Welch, T. (2018). "Framed: Media and the Coverage of Race in Canadian Politics by Erin Tolley Vancouver: UBC Press, 2016." Canadian Journal of Political Science, 1–2, pp. 264.
Teaching:
Instructor: POL-317 - Comparative Developing Politics – Fall 2018
Course Coordinator: PolSci 4ZZ6 – Authority, Democracy, and Dissent in the Trump Era – Fall 2018
Teaching Assistant: PolSci 1AB3 – Power and Politics in a Globalizing World – Winter 2018
Teaching Assistant: PolSci 1AA3 – Government, Politics, and Power – Fall 2017
Teaching Assistant: PolSci 1AB3 – Power and Politics in a Globalizing World – Winter 2017
Education
- Ph.D. student in International Relations at McMaster University
- M.A. in International Relations from McMaster University
- B.Sc. in Politics and International Relations from The London School of Economics and Political Science
Teaching
Teaching:
Instructor: POL-317 - Comparative Developing Politics – Fall 2018
Course Coordinator: PolSci 4ZZ6 – Authority, Democracy, and Dissent in the Trump Era – Fall 2018
Teaching Assistant: PolSci 1AB3 – Power and Politics in a Globalizing World – Winter 2018
Teaching Assistant: PolSci 1AA3 – Government, Politics, and Power – Fall 2017
Teaching Assistant: PolSci 1AB3 – Power and Politics in a Globalizing World – Winter 2017
Research
Publications:
Forthcoming. Welch, T. "Theology, Heroism, Justice, and Fear: An analysis of ISIS propaganda magazines Dabiq and Rumiyah," Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict.
Welch, T. (2018). "Framed: Media and the Coverage of Race in Canadian Politics by Erin Tolley Vancouver: UBC Press, 2016." Canadian Journal of Political Science, 1–2, pp. 264.