Sam Tecle
Sam Tecle is an Assistant Professor at Ryerson University’s Department of Sociology. His work explores Black and Diaspora studies, Sociology of Education, and Urban Studies.
Sam Tecle is an Assistant Professor at Ryerson University’s Department of Sociology. His work explores Black and Diaspora studies, Sociology of Education, and Urban Studies.
Salewa Olawoye is an Assistant Professor in York University’s Department of Social Science and a research scholar at the Institute for Sustainable Prosperity.
Rosalind Hampton is an Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto’s Ontario Institute for Studies in Education in the Department of Social Justice. Hampton’s teaching and research include Black radical thought; Black studies at the university level; Black contemporary art and critical creative praxis; and Black women’s autobiography and storytelling.
Ronald Cummins is an Associate Professor in queer and postcolonial literatures in the Department of English at Brock University. His current book project, Queer Marronage and Caribbean Writing, examines the work of Dionne Brand, Michelle Cliff, Shani Mootoo and Patricia Powell and their representations of the figure of the Maroon—the runaway slave—in narratives which explore […]
Robyn Maynard is Banier Scholar at the University of Toronto, holding a Faculty of Arts & Science Top Doctoral (FAST) fellowship.
Rinaldo Walcott is a Professor in the Women & Gender Studies Institute at the University of Toronto. Walcott researches in cultural studies; queer and gender theory; and diaspora and transnational studies.
Philip Howard is an Assistant Professor in McGill University’s Department of Integrated Studies in Education. His teaching and research expertise include critical race pedagogies; abolitionist pedagogies; critical race studies in education; racially embodied epistemologies; strategies of resistance; and social justice and equity education.
Phanuel Antwi is an Assistant Professor in the University of British Columbia’s English department. His research and teaching interests include critical Black studies; Canadian literature; critical gender race and sexuality studies; settler colonial studies; and material studies.
Paul Lawrie is an Associate Professor in the Department of History at York University. His research is on urbanism, race and labour.
Paul Barrett is an Assistant Professor at the University of Guelph’s School of English and Theatre Studies. His work centres topics in Canadian literature, digital humanities and critical race studies.