Emerging Scholars Colloquium with Salina Abji

I’m looking forward to presenting my research at the upcoming Emerging Scholars Colloquium at Carleton University on Tuesday, March 28, 2017.

“Because Deportation is Violence Against Women!”
Activism in Response to Precarious Migration and the Securitization of Women’s Shelters in Canada

SSS - Protest in Toronto - Oct 2008 - large res

Shelter | Sanctuary | Status campaign, Toronto, 2008. Source: NOII

In 2011, the Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) issued a national directive effectively allowing border guards to enter women’s shelters to investigate and deport “unauthorized” migrants. The policy was implemented despite significant protests from a national coalition of over 200 feminist and migrant rights organizations. In this presentation, I will share findings from my doctoral dissertation, where I analyzed the politics of state responsibility that are produced through such contestations over border enforcement within women’s shelters. State responsibility is a legal principle outlining the human rights obligations of states under international law, including women’s human rights to protection from gender-based violence. However, it is less clear to what extent a state’s obligations extend to women without legal status, who are not formally recognized by the state but who may nevertheless require access to shelter and support services. In my presentation, I’ll discuss two key framing strategies used by activists to prevent border authorities from entering women’s shelters, and the implications of these strategies for how we conceptualize gendered violence and women’s human rights. I’ll also present my analysis of the CBSA’s justification for entering women’s shelters, showing how the state’s use of securitized understandings of responsibility fundamentally undermine the human rights of all women in Canada, including those without status.

March 28, 2017 at 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Location: A715 Loeb Building
Cost: Free
Audience: Anyone
Contact Email: soc-anthro@carleton.ca
Contact Phone: 613-520-2582

View the Event Poster

Check out the event listing

“Shame and Prejudice: A Story of Resilience” by Kent Monkman

 

This exhibit will change the way you look at Canada’s 150-year celebrations this year. I highly recommend it!

I found it deeply moving, smart & timely.

“There’s a Canadian myth about itself that doesn’t include what happened to indigenous people, and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission has shone a lot of light on that. And now I think Canadians are learning what was behind this policy of removing children from communities. What has that meant? That has meant generations of trauma that we’re still recovering from.” ~ Kent Monkman at the Gallery exhibit in Toronto, as quoted in NOW magazine.

Read the article feature in NOW magazine

Learn more about the talented Kent Monkman

The exhibition will be travelling across Canada in case you missed it in Toronto:

Shame & Prejudice: A Story of Resilience
Glenbow Museum
Calgary, AB
June 17 – September 10, 2017

Shame & Prejudice: A Story of Resilience
Agnes Etherington Art Centre
Kingston, ON
January 2018

Shame & Prejudice: A Story of Resilience
Confederation Centre of the Arts
Charlottetown, PE
June 2018

Shame & Prejudice: A Story of Resilience
Art Gallery of Nova Scotia
Halifax, NS
October 2018

Shame & Prejudice: A Story of Resilience
The Galerie de l’UQAM
Montreal, QC
January 2019

Shame & Prejudice: A Story of Resilience
Tom Thomson Art Gallery
Owen Sound, ON
Summer 2019

Shame & Prejudice: A Story of Resilience
Winnipeg Art Gallery
Winnipeg, MB
October 2019

Shame & Prejudice: A Story of Resilience
Museum of Anthropology
Vancouver, BC
April 2020