Hear from the top thinkers and writers on meaningful career development and diversity—and its connections to public scholarship, community engagement, knowledge exchange, and other modes of collaboration—for Arts graduate students and postdoctoral fellows.
What might a reading of the ship and the slave as juridical figures reveal about the history of legal personhood? Renisa Mawani reads the ship and the slave as central characters in the history of legal personhood, a reading that highlights the interconnections between maritime law and the laws of slavery, and foregrounds the changing intensities of Anglo imperial power and racial violence in shaping the legal person.
Laurence Ralph presents the Inaugural Racial (In)Justice Lecture at a co-sponsored event by the UBC Department of Anthropology and Sociology. Ralph will present his recently published book, The Torture Letters, which focuses on what it means to be policed in America today, moving from his own experiences with racial profiling as a teenager to the horrific history of police torture in Chicago.
In this talk, Cynthia Cranford focuses on her recently published book Home Care Fault Lines where she argues that understanding both tensions and possibilities for alliances is essential for challenging inequalities in home care.
University of Pennsylvania Prof. Annette Lareau presents a talk titled, “Structural Constraints and the School Choice Strategies of Black American Middle-Class Parents” at UBC Sociology.
The Sociology Research Forum hosts Anna Skarpelis for her talk exploring what we talk about when we don’t talk about race.
In this presentation, Patara McKeen examines what the 1907 anti-Asian riots in Vancouver can teach us about the social constructed-ness of race and ethnicity, drawing from and building on ideas such as W.E.B. Du Bois’ “double consciousness” and Frantz Fanon’s essay on “Race and Culture.”
Dr Sinikka Elliott chairs a virtual book launch of “Black Mothers and Attachment Parenting: A Black Feminist Analysis of Intensive Mothering in Britain and Canada” by Dr Patricia Hamilton. Hamilton’s new book examines attachment parenting (AP), a new parenting philosophy that emphasises breastfeeding, babywearing and bedsharing as key techniques to achieve a secure attachment between parent and child.
UBC Sociology’s Distinguished Speaker Series hots Dr. C.J. Pascoe for her talk titled, “The Politics of Protection: Inequality and Change in High School.”
The Sociology Research Forum hosts Silvia Bartolic, Neil Guppy and Haily Craig for a presentation titled, “Student Vulnerabilities in the Face of the Sars-CoV-2 Virus: Evidence from Higher Education.”