Search
Displaying 1 - 20 of 41
Author (aut): Holbrook, J.A., Author (aut): Wixted, B., Author (aut): Lewis, B.S., Author (aut): Cressman, D.
Date created: 2011
This article can be accessed from the publisher athttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08109028.2012.727276
Author (aut): Wixted, B., Author (aut): Holbrook, J.A.
Date created: 2012
The article can be accessed from the publisher at http://www.inderscience.com/info/inarticle.php?artid=45299
Author (aut): Wixted, B.
Date created: 2012
The article is available from the publisher at http://www.inderscience.com/info/inarticle.php?artid=45293
Author (aut): Hira, Anil, Author (aut): Wixted, B., Author (aut): Arechavala-Vargas, Ricardo
Date created: 2012
Author (aut): Holbrook, J.A., Author (aut): Wixted, B., Author (aut): Chee, F., Author (aut): Klingbeil, M., Author (aut): Shaw-Garlock, G.
Date created: 2009
Author (aut): Ma, Bowinn, Author (aut): Lee, Uytae, Author (aut): Johal, Am, Author (aut): Roach, Melissa, Author (aut): Smith, Paige, Author (aut): Feng, Kathy, Author (aut): Bardi, Alyha, Author (aut): Tornes, Steve, Author (aut): Alex Masse
Date created: 2022-07-26
Alessandra Pomarico is a founder of Free Home University. Originally from Italy and with a PhD in Sociology, Alessandra has been curating international and multidisciplinary artists' residency programs in Italy and Europe. Her practice is based on facilitating collaborative, context-based art projects, with a focus on social change. She previously taught History and Italian Literature in high schools in disadvantaged areas.Resources: Free Home University: https://www.fhu.art/Ecoversities Alliance: https://ecoversities.org/Learning With Covid: https://ecoversities.org/how-to-hospice-the-current-system-learning-with-covid/16 Beaver: https://16beavergroup.org/Society of the Friends of the Virus: https://16beavergroup.org/mondays/2020/03/22/society-of-the-friends-of-the-virus-volume-1/Firefly Frequencies: https://fireflyfrequencies.org/Giorgio Agamben, Jean-Luc Nancy, & Roberto Esposito exchange letters: https://www.lacan.com/symptom/philosophy-the-coronavirus/Chto Delat: https://chtodelat.org/People of Flour, Salt, and Water: https://www.fhu.art/people-offlour-salt-and-water-sessionInstitute of Radical Imagination: https://instituteofradicalimagination.org/When the Roots Start Moving. First Movement: To Navigate Backward: Resonating with Zapatismo: https://instituteofradicalimagination.org/2021/09/07/to-navigate-backward-resonating-with-zapatismo-book/To Be Determined artist residency video: https://www.sfu.ca/content/sfu/vancity-office-community-engagement/library/2016/to-be-determined.html
Author (aut): Alessandra Pomarico, Author (aut): Johal, Am, Author (aut): Melissa Roach, Author (aut): Paige Smith, Author (aut): Kathy Feng, Author (aut): Alyha Bardi, Author (aut): Steve Tornes, Author (aut): Alex Masse
Date created:
Elisabeth Pasquette:I am an assistant professor of Philosophy and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of North Carolina, and affiliate faculty with the Department of Africana Studies, the Center for Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights Studies. I received my B.A. from Trent University (Peterborough, Ontario, Canada), my M.A. from the University of Guelph (Ontario, Canada), and my Ph.D. from York University (Toronto, Ontario, Canada).My research interests include social and political philosophy, decolonial theory, feminist theory, critical race theory, queer theory, and continental philosophy. My publications can be found in philoSOPHIA, Philosophy Compass, Radical Philosophy Review, Hypatia, Philosophy Today, and Badiou Studies. My first book — Universal Emancipation: Race beyond Badiou — was published with the University of Minnesota Press in October 2020.Currently, I am working on two book projects. The first book is an edited collection with a number of exceptional Badiou scholars, which centers around theories of sexuality in, through, and against Alain Badiou's conception of "indifference to difference" and what Louise Burchill calls Badiou's "turn" in a 2011 paper titled "Figures of Femininity in the Contemporary World."The second book is a single author manuscript on the writings of Sylvia Wynter. Therein, I analyze Wynter's articulation of emancipation and solidarity by developing her account of Indigeneity alongside her discussion of anti-Black racism. More specifically, my project seeks to engage Wynter's project around five themes: environmental racism, feminist theory, Marxism, representations of Shakespeare's Caliban, and ceremony as method for solidarity.I incorporate much of my research into my teaching and pedagogy. I teach classes on feminist theory, Indigenous theory, critical race theory, and decolonial theory at both the undergraduate and graduate level. My classes have been cross-listed with Philosophy, Women's and Gender Studies, Liberal Studies, Africana Studies, and Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights Studies.
Author (aut): Elisabeth Paquette, Author (aut): Johal, Am, Author (aut): Melissa Roach, Author (aut): Paige Smith, Author (aut): Kathy Feng, Author (aut): Alyha Bardi, Author (aut): Steve Tornes, Author (aut): Alex Masse
Date created:
Bio: David Spaner has worked as a feature writer, movie critic, reporter, and editor for numerous newspapers and magazines. David's also been a cultural/political organizer (Yippie, manager of the punk band The Subhumans). He is the author of Dreaming in the Rain and Shoot It! Hollywood, Inc. and the Rising of Independent Film.In 2021, Spaner published a behind-the-scenes book about the Solidarity resistance movement, Solidarity: Canada's Unknown Revolution of 1983 (Ronsdale 2021) documenting the event using intimate storytelling and melding cultural and rebel politics to provide insight into the conflicts that are still with us. It was the largest political protest in the province's history and threatened to end in an all-out general strike. Resources: Solidarity: Canada's Unknown Revolution of 1983 (Ronsdale 2021): https://ronsdalepress.com/all-books/solidarity/SHOOT IT! Hollywood Inc. and the Rising of Independent Film (Arsenal Pulp Press 2012): https://arsenalpulp.com/Books/S/Shoot-ItDreaming in the Rain: How Vancouver Became Hollywood North by Northwest (Arsenal Pulp Press 2002): https://arsenalpulp.com/Books/D/Dreaming-in-the-Rain
Author (aut): David Spaner, Author (aut): Johal, Am, Author (aut): Melissa Roach, Author (aut): Paige Smith, Author (aut): Kathy Feng, Author (aut): Alyha Bardi, Author (aut): Steve Tornes, Author (aut): Alex Masse
Date created: 2022-05-03
Liz Jackson is the director of the Community Engaged Scholarship Institute at the University of Guelph. Liz has also previously worked as the Research Collection Coordinator at the Improvisation, Community, and Social Practice Project and the Community Engagement Officer at the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation. Currently, Liz is the board chair of Art Not Shame, a community-engaged, multidisciplinary arts organization serving youth and adults. Human rights and the politics and implications of artistic representation are some of the themes which Liz is involved in. Resources: Community Engaged Scholarship Institute (CESI): https://www.uoguelph.ca/research/discover-our-research/centres-institutes-groups/community-engaged-scholarship-institute-cesi Critical Community-Engaged Scholarship (Critical CES): Cynthia Gordon de Cruz: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/316638765_Critical_Community-Engaged_Scholarship_Communities_and_Universities_Striving_for_Racial_Justice CESI's Community Engaged Teaching and Learning (CETL) Program: https://www.cesinstitute.ca/about-cetl CESI's Research Shop: https://www.cesinstitute.ca/about-research-shop Europe's Science Shop Model: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/261948200_Science_shops CESI's Guelph Lab: https://www.cesinstitute.ca/about-guelph-lab Art not Shame: https://artnotshame.org/who-we-are
Author (aut): Liz Jackson, Author (aut): Johal, Am, Author (aut): Melissa Roach, Author (aut): Paige Smith, Author (aut): Kathy Feng, Author (aut): Alyha Bardi, Author (aut): Steve Tornes, Author (aut): Alex Masse
Date created: 2022-05-10
Bio: Kevin Bruyneel is Professor of Politics at Babson College, teaching about race, colonialism and collective memory. He wrote the books, Settler Memory: The Disavowal of Indigeneity in the Political Life of Race in the United States (University of North Carolina Press 2021) and The Third Space of Sovereignty: The Postcolonial Politics of U.S.-Indigenous Relations (University of Minnesota Press 2007). Kevin was born and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia, studied at Simon Fraser University and the New School for Social Research in New York City, and now lives and teaches in MassachusettsResources:Settler Memory: The Disavowal of Indigeneity in the Political Life of Race in the United States by Kevin Bruyneel: https://uncpress.org/book/9781469665238/settler-memory/ Bacon's Rebellion: https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/events-african-american-history/bacons-rebellion-1676/ W.E.B. Du Bois: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/dubois/James Baldwin: https://nmaahc.si.edu/james-baldwinThe White Possessive: Property, Power, and Indigenous Sovereignty by Aileen Moreton-Robinson: https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/the-white-possessiveLayli Long Soldier: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/layli-long-soldierDr. Kim TallBear: https://kimtallbear.com/Cristina Sharpe: https://profiles.laps.yorku.ca/profiles/cesharpe/Cedric Robinson: https://globalsocialtheory.org/thinkers/robinson-cedric-j/I Am Not Your Negro: https://www.pbs.org/independentlens/documentaries/i-am-not-your-negro/Kyle Mays: https://www.kyle-mays.com/Afro Pessimism: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/07/20/the-argument-of-afropessimismFrank Wilderson: https://www.frankbwildersoniii.com/about/Leanne Betasamosake Simpson: https://www.leannesimpson.ca/Robyn Maynard: https://robynmaynard.com/Stuart Hall: https://globalsocialtheory.org/thinkers/hall-stuart/Kēhaulani Kauanui: https://jkauanui.faculty.wesleyan.edu/Jean M. O'Brien: https://shekonneechie.ca/biographies/jean-obrien/Lee Maracle: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/lee-maracle-death-bc-indigenous-writer-poet-1.6245582Jodi Byrd: https://as.cornell.edu/news/new-faculty-jodi-byrdCampuses and Colonialism: https://www.oah.org/insights/opportunities-for-historians/cfp-campuses-and-colonialism-symposium/Malinda Maynor Lowery: http://history.emory.edu/home/people/faculty/lowery-malinda-maynor.htmlStephen Kantrowitz: https://history.wisc.edu/people/kantrowitz-stephen/Alyssa Mt. Pleasant: https://arts-sciences.buffalo.edu/africana-and-american-studies/faculty/faculty-directory/mt-pleasant.html
Author (aut): Kevin Bruyneel, Author (aut): Johal, Am, Author (aut): Melissa Roach, Author (aut): Paige Smith, Author (aut): Kathy Feng, Author (aut): Alyha Bardi, Author (aut): Steve Tornes, Author (aut): Alex Masse
Date created: 2022-05-17
As a sustainability researcher and project manager, Magda is dedicated to assisting communities in their efforts toward positive environmental and social change. She aims to really get at the heart of issues and propose meaningful ways forward.Magda actively supports the growth of knowledge-sharing communities within Community Campus Engage Canada, and oversees operations, research and communications. Prior to joining CCEC, Magda provided extensive research and evaluation support to a multi-year pan-Canadian project titled 'Community First: Impacts of Community Engagement' (CFICE), which explored community-driven community-campus partnerships. During the initial demonstration project phase of CFICE, she also provided direct assistance to a neighbourhood organization (Sustainable Living Ottawa East) over a period of three years.Magda's focus on community draws from experience in sustainability research consulting, where she has assisted individuals and organizations in building positive social and environmental change at neighbourhood scales. In 2019 she completed PhD research on household-scale climate change adaptation activities in urban areas in Canada.Magda is continually inspired by the optimism, compassion and inventiveness that are applied to environmental and social challenges in communities. When away from her work she enjoys seeking out hiking, biking or cross-country skiing adventures, or thinking up art projects and learning new things with her daughters. Resources: — Community Campus Engage Canada (CCEC): https://ccecanada.ca/— Community First: Impacts of Community Engagement: https://carleton.ca/communityfirst/
Author (aut): Magda Goemans, Author (aut): Johal, Am, Author (aut): Melissa Roach, Author (aut): Paige Smith, Author (aut): Kathy Feng, Author (aut): Alyha Bardi, Author (aut): Steve Tornes, Author (aut): Alex Masse
Date created: 2022-05-24
Bio:Shauna Sylvester is a graduate of McGill University and Simon Fraser University and until recently, served as the Executive Director of the SFU Morris J. Wosk Centre for Dialogue. Currently she is Professor of Professional Practice at SFU Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences and in September she is delighted to be moving into a new role as Executive Director of Urban Sustainability Directors' Network for the US and Canada.She has co-founded and led five initiatives: the SFU Public Square, Carbon Talks, Renewable Cities, Canada's World, and IMPACS – the Institute for Media, Policy and Civil Society and has worked with colleagues in launching consortiums like Moving in a Livable Region and Canadian Cities + COP26. Shauna has years of experience working globally, in conflict and post-conflict zones, with incredible women's initiatives, media groups, multilateral processes and civil society organizations.In the early 1980s and 90s, she was active with HIV/AIDS, disability, peace and environment organizations. She also worked at IDERA – the International Development Education Research Association, CUSO, Community Living Society and Canada World Youth. Shauna co-chaired SPARC BC's first Community Development Institute, the Civicus World Assembly, led the Canadian forestry working group for the EarthSummit, organized the Canadian meeting for the Beijing Women's conference in 1994 and participated in three COP processes. She has published widely in mainstream newspapers, provided commentary to national and local TV and radio and authored her own climate blog.Resources:The SFU Morris J. Wosk Centre for Dialogue: https://www.sfu.ca/dialogue.htmlThe Social Planning and Research Council of B.C. (SPARC BC): https://www.sparc.bc.ca/Institute for Media, Policy and Civil Society (IMPACS): https://reliefweb.int/organization/impacsCuso International: https://cusointernational.org/Canada World Youth: https://canadaworldyouth.org/CIVICUS World Assembly: https://www.civicus.org/worldassembly/Imagine Canada: https://www.imaginecanada.ca/enCanada's World: https://www.sfu.ca/dialogue/programs/international-relations/canadas-world.htmlCOP26: https://www.un.org/en/climatechange/cop26Fossil of the Year Award: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/canada-tagged-as-fossil-of-the-year-1.827062Carbon Talks: https://carbontalks.wordpress.com/about/Renewable Cities: https://www.renewablecities.ca/about-renewable-citiesSFU Public Square: https://www.sfu.ca/publicsquare/about.htmlRenovictions: https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/housing-tenancy/residential-tenancies/ending-a-tenancy/renovictionsSemester in Dialogue: https://www.sfu.ca/dialogue/semester/Ecotrust Canada: https://ecotrust.ca/The Circle on Philanthropy and Aboriginal Peoples in Canada (The Circle): https://www.the-circle.ca/how-we-work.htmlUrban Sustainability Directors Network: https://www.usdn.org/about.html
Author (aut): Shauna Sylvester, Author (aut): Johal, Am, Author (aut): Melissa Roach, Author (aut): Paige Smith, Author (aut): Kathy Feng, Author (aut): Alyha Bardi, Author (aut): Steve Tornes, Author (aut): Alex Masse
Date created: 2022-06-07
Bio: David Lester is a musician, graphic designer and graphic novelist. His most recent book is Prophet Against Slavery: Benjamin Lay, A Graphic Novel (Beacon Press) created with Marcus Rediker and Paul Buhle. He also illustrated "1919: A Graphic History of the Winnipeg General Strike", (published in English, German and French editions). 1919 was co-winner of the 2020 CAWLS Book Prize. Lester's poster of anti-war protester Malachi Ritscher was exhibited at The Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. He is the guitarist in the rock duo Mecca Normal, cited as an influence on the founders of the feminist social movement Riot Grrrl. He lives in Vancouver, Canada.Resources: David Lester website: https://davidlesterartmusicdesign.wordpress.com/Prophet Against Slavery Benjamin Lay: A Graphic Novel: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/676291/prophet-against-slavery-by-david-lester-with-paul-buhle-and-marcus-rediker/97808070818081919: A Graphic History of the Winnipeg General Strike: https://graphichistorycollective.com/project/1919Mecca Normal: https://meccanormal.wordpress.com/Horde of Two: https://hordeoftwo.wordpress.com/Durruti: A Life in 8 Parts: https://hordeoftwo.bandcamp.com/track/durruti-a-life-in-8-partsHorde of Two: "I Knew I Was a Rebel Then: CD: https://hordeoftwo.bandcamp.com/album/i-knew-i-was-a-rebel-thenBook: Horde of Two: "I Knew I Was a Rebel Then: https://www.bamboodartpress.com/store/horde_of_two-i_knew_i_was_a_rebel_then.htmlEmma Goldman graphic novel in progress: https://emmagraphicnovel.wordpress.com/HEROIN: An Illustrated History by Susan Boyd: https://fernwoodpublishing.ca/book/heroinSolidarity: Canada's Unknown Revolution of 1983 by David Spaner: https://www.amazon.ca/Solidarity-David-Spaner/dp/1553806387
Author (aut): David Lester, Author (aut): Johal, Am, Author (aut): Melissa Roach, Author (aut): Paige Smith, Author (aut): Kathy Feng, Author (aut): Alyha Bardi, Author (aut): Steve Tornes, Author (aut): Alex Masse
Date created: 2022-06-14