Michael Kempa
Class of 2013
FGJ 2013, Criminologist and Crime Reporter
PhD
Michael is a professor of criminology at the University of Ottawa, specializing in the political economy of security — including policing. He came with an appetite for investigative journalism. During the Fellowship, Michael conceived and spearheaded a three-day national series for CBC News, CBC Radio and CBC.ca on policing in a time of austerity, called ‘Cops and Dollars’. He also covered security issues for The National Post. Since graduating, Michael has returned to his professorial work while writing a major investigative feature for The Walrus, Canada’s national monthly news magazine.
“The Fellowship in Global Journalism took me from being a subject-matter expert who had many ambitious notions to a working academic-journalist who can execute on actionable ideas. It defines the contours of what is practically possible in the shifting field of journalism. It provides the practical tools and access to the contacts necessary to navigate that shifting field and it instructs in the basics of good business practice and relevant law to become a responsible player in that field. I now have foundations I need to carry on as a working journalist, and continuously improve as I go.”


Trudeau’s call for strategic voting hurts everyone – Liberals included

Civilian Oversight for the RCMP?

The benefits and pitfalls to police militarization in Canada

RCMP Apology

Toronto needs more than a taskforce to change policing

McARTHUR | Ottawa Police and the death of a man with mental illness

Will sentence set an example?

Simply increasing police budgets won’t reduce crime

We need a leaner, more modern police service

Liberals eschew civilian oversight plan for RCMP harassment issues

Ballooning police budgets don’t improve public safety

New government, first day on the job

Stephen Harper’s empty promises to victims of crime

Welcome to Scarborough Southwest, Bill Blair. I’ve been campaigning here for a year

Bill C-51 supercharges CSIS

Canada needs more crime prevention, not vengeance

The danger of cracking down on unpaid internships
When the RCMP investigates the powerful

A very Thorough Investigation

Police work and sexual assault

Security questions after Edmonton pipe bomb incident

Upholding the Right

Afghan murder underlines importance of commitment to policing reform

Michael Kempa: Police street checks promote community safety? Prove it

Independent police powers are key to outing rotten politicians

Meet the contemporary al-Qaeda
RCMP is looking to expand its fleet of police drones

How to keep Canada’s crime rate low
The rising cost of policing
