Dr. Walter Dorn

Royal Military College of Canada
& Canadian Forces College
215 Yonge Blvd.
Toronto, ON  Canada  M5M 3H9
E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Research Interests

Arms control, conflict prevention, peacekeeping and peace enforcement, international law, world religions, the United Nations

Recent Publications

LATEST pubs

Military training for Peacekeeping

Smart Peacekeeping

Canada in peace ops: ideas

Canada, the Peacekeeper

Canadian peacekeeping training

Book: AIR POWER IN UN OPERATIONS: Wings for Peace

US Wars: How Just? Expert Survey (pdf)

Cuban missile crisis: UN mediated

KEEPING WATCH: Monitoring, technology and innovation in UN peace operations (pdf, entire book)

High-tech peacekeeping (pdf)

UN peacekeeping Intelligence in Oxford Handbook.

Intelligence-led peacekeeping in Haiti (pdf)


Walter Dorn is Professor of Defence Studies at the Royal Military College of Canada (RMC) and the Canadian Forces College (CFC). He teaches officers of rank major to brigadier-general from Canada and about 20 other countries. He specializes in arms control, international criminal law, just war theory, peace operations, treaty verification and enforcement, and the United Nations.

As an "operational professor" he participates in field missions and assists international organizations. For instance, he was a UN Electoral Officer for the 1999 referendum in East Timor and a Visiting Professional with the International Criminal Court (ICC) in 2010. He also served as a consultant with the UN's Department of Peacekeeping Operations, including in 2014 as a member of the Expert Panel on Technology and Innovation in UN Peacekeeping. In 2020, during sabbatical leave, Dr. Dorn served with the UN as a "Technology Innovation Expert" exploring technologies for testing, piloting and employing in UN field operations. In 2021, he is doing consulting work for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). 

Dr. Dorn seeks to promote international peace and security through teaching, research and service, including field work. This website offers some of the results of this effort, especially publications.

Two of his books are Air Power in UN Operations: Wings for Peace (Ashgate, 2014) and Keeping Watch: Monitoring, Technology, and Innovation in UN Peace Operations (UNU Press, 2011). He is also developing digital simulations of peace/peacekeeping operations for training and education (www.peacekeepingsim.net).

Further biographical detail can be found on the Bio and Contact page.