You don't want to miss this.
[[trackingImage]]

Mar 23

A Primer on Canada: U.S. Canada Relations

Christopher Hernandez-Roy will discuss: A Primer on Canada: U.S. Canada Relations

The Colony Palm Beach
155 Hammon Avenue, Palm Beach, FL 33480
View on map


Virtual location

You will receive a confirmation email with a URL.

Mar 23, 2026 06:30pm ET

$0.00 - $35.00

Speaker Profile:  Christopher Hernandez-Roy is a senior fellow and deputy director of the Americas Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, D.C. His work includes research into democratic backsliding, transnational organized crime, geopolitics, and economic and national security issues in the Western Hemisphere. He worked for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police early in his career.

 

Christopher held senior leadership positions at the Organization of American States (OAS), as the first director of the Department of Public Security and later the Department of Sustainable Democracy and Special Missions. He also served as a senior political adviser to two secretaries general, during which time he documented the grave human rights abuses of dictatorship in Venezuela and co-led the OAS’s efforts to bring a case to the International Criminal Court for possible crimes against humanity. He oversaw the OAS Mission to Support the Peace Process in Colombia and negotiated the establishment of the Mission to Support the Fight against Corruption and Impunity in Honduras. Christopher was also intimately involved in the peaceful resolution of border disputes between Honduras and Nicaragua, Belize and Guatemala, and Honduras and El Salvador.

 

He has been interviewed on CBS, CTV and the CBC and cited in the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, and the New York Times, among other media outlets. He has also testified on Capitol Hill.

 

 Christopher is an affiliated practitioner at James Madison University’s Department of Political Science. He holds a BA honors degree in history from Carleton University and an MPhil in international relations from the University of Cambridge.