Our faculty members regularly publish their research in leading journals including Social Forces, Social Science Research, Social Science & Medicine, Work, Employment, and Society, Urban Studies, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Canadian Review of Sociology, American Journal of Sociology, British Journal of Sociology and others.
We publish award-winning books with university presses like Oxford, Cambridge, Columbia, Duke, Toronto, UBC, and with other publishers including Palgrave, Routledge, Between the Lines, Pluto and Bloomsbury.
Beyond publications, many of our faculty members are public sociologists, sharing their work with the media, policy makers and community partners.
Browse the cutting edge research from our tireless and dedicated faculty members who continue to push boundaries and gain recognition for their contributions. We hope their efforts help and inspire your work. Please feel free to reach out to us for collaboration opportunities.
Featured Publication
Another Marx: Early Manuscripts to the International
Following the break-up of the Soviet Union, Marx was regarded as a thinker doomed to oblivion about whom everything had already been said and written. However, the international economic crisis of 2008 favoured a return to his analysis of capitalism, and recently published volumes of the Marx-Engels-Gesamtausgabe (MEGA²) have provided researchers with new texts that underline the gulf between Marx's critical theory and the dogmatism of many twentieth-century Marxisms.
This work reconstructs with great textual and historical rigour, but in a form accessible to those encountering Marx for the first time, a number of little noted, or often misunderstood, stages in his intellectual biography.
Pat Armstrong
Chapter in Edited Book
Armstrong, P., Armstrong, H., Daly, T., & Choiniere, J. (2019). Caring for seniors the neo-liberal way. In M. P. Thomas, L. F. Vosko, C. Fanelli, & O. Lybchenko (Eds.), Change and continuity: Canadian political economy in the new millennium (pp. 229–244). McGill-Queen’s University Press.
Luin Goldring
Chapter in Edited Book
Landolt, P., & Goldring, L. (2019). Chapter 8 Assembling noncitizen access to education in a sanctuary city: The place of publich school administrator bordering practices. In X. Bada & S. Gleeson (Eds.), Accountability across borders: Migrant rights in North America (pp. 214–236). University of Texas Press.
Guida Man
Chapter in Edited Book
Man, G., & Chou, E. (2019). Global restructuring, gender, and education migration: Chinese immigrant women professionals in Canada. In A. H. Kim & M.-J. Kwak (Eds.), Outward and upward movement: International students in Canada, their familiies, and structuring institutions (pp. 177–196). University of Toronto Press.
Nancy J. Mandell
Chapter in Edited Book
Mandell, N., King, K., Weiser, V., Reston, V., Lam, L., Kim, A., & Luxton, M. (2019). Building bridges with senior immigrant groups: Do cap protocols work? In R. Berman (Ed.), Corridor talk: Canadian feminist scholars share stories of research partnerships (pp. 124–140). Inanna Publications and Education Inc.
Ann H. Kim
Chapter in Edited Book
Mandell, N., King, K., Weiser, V., Reston, V., Lam, L., Kim, A., & Luxton, M. (2019). Building bridges with senior immigrant groups: Do cap protocols work? In R. Berman (Ed.), Corridor talk: Canadian feminist scholars share stories of research partnerships (pp. 124–140). Inanna Publications and Education Inc.
Michael Nijhawan
Chapter in Edited Book
Ben-Zaken, A., Bremmer, J., Dalmia, V., Gordon, R., Nijhawan, M., & Sangari, K. (2019). Afterword: De- and neotraditionalization. In M. Fuchs, A. Linkenbach, M. Mulsow, B.-C. Otto, R. B. Parson, & J. Rüpke (Eds.), Religious individualisation: Historical dimensions and comparative perspectives (Vol. 1, pp. 1165–1172). De Gruyter.
Michael Nijhawan
Chapter in Edited Book
Nijhawan, M. (2019). Constructing a genuine religious character: The impact of the asylum court on the Ahmadiyya community in Germany. In M. Fuchs, A. Linkenbach, M. Mulsow, B.-C. Otto, R. B. Parson, & J. Rüpke (Eds.), Religious individualisation: Historical dimensions and comparative perspectives (Vol. 1, pp. 1139–1164). De Gruyter.
Michael Nijhawan
Chapter in Edited Book
Nijhawan, M. (2019). Migrant precarity and religious individualisation. In M. Fuchs, A. Linkenbach, M. Mulsow, B.-C. Otto, R. B. Parson, & J. Rüpke (Eds.), Religious individualisation: Historical dimensions and comparative perspectives (Vol. 1, pp. 737–758). De Gruyter.
Michael Nijhawan
Chapter in Edited Book
Hermann-Pillath, C., Mulder-Bakker, A., Nijhawan, M., Otto, B., Patera, I., & Ramelli, I. (2020). Afterword: Practices. In M. Fuchs, A. Linkenbach, M. Mulsow, B.-C. Otto, R. B. Parson, & J. Rüpke (Eds.), Religious individualisation: Historical dimensions and comparative perspectives (Vol. 1, pp. 797–804). De Gruyter.