Social Sciences
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Lauren McLeod Cramer
Lauren McLeod Cramer is an assistant professor in the Cinema Studies Institute at the University of Toronto. Her work focuses...
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Ann Lopez
Dr. Ann Lopez is a Jamaican-born professor of educational leadership and policy at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education...
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Beverley Essue
Beverley Essue is an associate professor at the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation at the Dalla Lana School...
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Beth Coleman
Beth Coleman is the inaugural director of the University of Toronto’s Black Research Network – an Institutional Strategic Initiative and...
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Mireille Norris
Mireille Norris is an assistant professor at the Temerty Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto and a geriatrician...
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Lori Chambers
Lori Chambers is a postdoctoral fellow at the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work. As a community health researcher, her work...
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Notisha Massaquoi
Notisha Massaquoi is an assistant professor in the department of health and society at U of T Scarborough, with a...
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Sharlene Mollett
Sharlene Mollett is an associate professor in the department of human geography at U of T Scarborough. As a feminist political ecologist and cultural geographer, Mollett studies the relationship between land and culture, and how gender and race shape access to natural resources. Her research areas include land and natural resource conflicts, development geography and property rights.
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Nicole Charles
Nicole Charles is an assistant professor in the department of historical studies at the University of Toronto Mississauga. Her research focuses on women, gender and sexuality studies, including Caribbean feminisms and Black feminist health science studies. Utilizing an interdisciplinary approach in her research, Charles questions issues of care, gendered and racialized risk, technoscience and coloniality in the Black Atlantic.
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Funké Aladejebi
Funké Aladejebi is an assistant professor in the department of history at the University of Toronto. Her research focus is oral history, Canada’s education system, Black Canadian women’s history, and transnationalism.