Albert C. Cano is a PhD candidate in International Relations at LSE and a Visiting Researcher in the School of Psychology at Queen’s University Belfast while carrying out fieldwork in Northern Ireland. He served as Editor and Associate Editor of Millennium: Journal of International Studies for Vol. 52 and 53. His research is funded by an LSE PhD Studentship and he has been awarded a Phelan US Centre Summer Research Grant which covered his 2024 field research in the US on Irish American diaspora and the transnational contributions to the peace process in Northern Ireland.
In the past he has been invited as guest lecturer on Northern Ireland and the Troubles, his thesis subject, for Michigan State University students to a summer programme in Accent Global Learning. He has also delivered a lecture on ‘Authoritarian Peacebuilding’ for IR349/422 Conflict and Peacebuilding (2024). Professionally, he has held positions as Research Analyst at London Politica, and Research Assistant at SOCIR (LSE); and ETHNICGOODS (Institut Barcelona Estudis Internationals [IBEI]) research projects. Additionally, he has participated in the inter-university research Cluster of Excellence ‘Contestations of the Liberal Scripts - SCRIPTS’, hosted by Freie Universität Berlin.
He published his Master’s thesis as a SCRIPTS working paper about Chinese peacebuilding. Lately, he has co-edited (with Shreya Bhattacharya and Eva Leth Sørensen) the Vol. 52 Millennium Special Issue ‘Remapping the Critical: Imagining Anti-Hierarchical Futures in International Studies’, as well as co-written the Introduction to the Special Issue.
He holds an MSc in International Security from IBEI, during which he undertook an exchange programme in Political Science at Freie Universität Berlin. He also holds MAs in Contemporary Philosophy and Pedagogy, and BAs in Philosophy and English Studies, from the Universitat de Barcelona.
Research topic
Liberal Peacebuilding, Transgenerational Trauma, and National Identity Formation in Post-Brexit Northern Ireland
Drawing on Poststructuralist and Critical IR Theory, and particularly theorising Lacanian IR, his research critically intervenes in the intersection among liberal peacebuilding practices, transgenerational trauma, and national identity formation. The empirical research problem being the so-called ‘Ceasefire Generation suicides’, his project problematises the interplay of mental health and peace in Northern Ireland. Thus, he intends to apply this political-psychological theory-building to peacebuilding efforts in Northern Ireland from 1998 to the present, showcasing the role of Brexit in exacerbating ethnonational and traumatic polarisations.
Teaching experience
- IR349 Conflict and Peacebuilding (LSE 2023/24)
- IR374/494 Conflict and Peacebuilding (LSE 2024/25)
- IR205 International Security (LSE 2024/25)
Academic supervisor
Mark Hoffman
Research Cluster affiliation
Security and Statecraft Research Cluster
Theory/Area/History Research Cluster