PhD candidate Christina Pilgrim wins a Black Excellence in Mentorship Award
Congratulations to Sociology PhD candidate Christina Pilgrim on being selected as a 2025 Faculty of Arts and Science Black Excellence in Mentorship award recipient.
Congratulations to Sociology PhD candidate Christina Pilgrim on being selected as a 2025 Faculty of Arts and Science Black Excellence in Mentorship award recipient.
The Department of Sociology at 91TV invites applications from suitably qualified full-time graduate students at 91TV interested in teaching an undergraduate course during the 2025/2026 academic year. Fall term appointments are for the period of September 1, 2025 to December 31, 2025 with classes in session from September 2, 2025 to December 5, 2025. Winter term appointments are for the period of January 1, 2026 to April 30, 2026, with classes in session from January 5, 2026 to April 3, 2026.
Date
Wednesday February 26, 2025Location
Faculty of Law | Room 201
The article – ‘“An epidemic of violence”: Examining U.S.
PhD candidate Daniela Zuzunaga Zegarra publishes a new article in the International Journal of Communication. ‘Racism in the Platformized Cultural Industries: Precarity, Visibility, and Harassment in Canada’ – is available open access here:
Date
Friday November 29, 2024Location
Associate Professor of Sociology and Research Chair in Multiculturalism at McGill University
Research focus: social construction of state classifications for immigrants as well as their material and symbolic effects
This talk takes us inside the Department of Citizenship and Immigration (currently Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada) in the 1950s and 1960s, a time when Canada was facing strong economic and political pressures to change its immigration system. Specifically, it examines the role played by high-level immigration bureaucrats in crafting the move from a selection system centred on national origins to one emphasizing individual merit and social ties. It argues that the overlooked interplay between immigration case processing and policymaking provides new insights into the timing and content of this paradigmatic policy shift. This is especially important for understanding how notions of race and social class shaped new immigrant selection criteria and made Canada multicultural along
middle-class lines. The talk concludes with a discussion of the contemporary implications of this historical case study.
Date
Friday November 8, 2024Location
As developing states adopt neoliberal policies, more and more working-class women find themselves pulled into the public sphere. They are pressed into wage work by a privatizing and unstable job market. Likewise, they are pulled into public roles by gender mainstreaming policies that developing states must sign on to in order to receive transnational aid. Their inclusion into the political economy is very beneficial for society, but is it also beneficial for women? In The Stigma Matrix Fauzia Husain draws on the experiences of policewomen, lady health workers, and airline attendants, all frontline workers who help the Pakistani state, and its global allies, address, surveil, and discipline veiled women citizens. These women, she finds, confront a stigma matrix: a complex of local and global, historic, and contemporary factors that work together to complicate women's integration into public life. The experiences of the three groups Husain examines reveal that inclusion requires more than quotas or special seats. This book advances critical feminist and sociological frameworks on stigma and agency showing that both concepts are made up of multiple layers of meaning, and are entangled with elite projects of hegemony.