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Woolford, Andrew
Professor, Sociology
Department Head, Sociology
Email: Andrew.Woolford@umanitoba.ca
Home Page:
http:/
Keywords
Keyword | Discipline |
---|---|
Aboriginal Studies |
Behavioral/ |
Conflict/ |
Behavioral/ |
Genocide |
Behavioral/ |
Inner-City |
Behavioral/ |
Social Movements |
Behavioral/ |
Sociolegal Studies |
Behavioral/ |
Research Description
I am currently working on three primary research projects:
1) For the past 6 years Bob Ratner (Emeritus, UBC) and I have been gathering data for a comparative analysis of post-genocide/
2) Bryan Hogeveen (U of Alberta) and I are conducting a study titled "Experiencing Neoliberalism in Two Prairie Cities" through which we hope to trace the effects of neoliberal policy shifts at the government level on people living in precarious or marginalized situations in the inner-city;
3) I am beginning a comparative study of Indigenous boarding/
Teaching Description
At the undergraduate level I teach: Criminology; Criminal Justice and Corrections; Sociology of Law; Genocide, Crime and Society; Restorative Justice; and Theorizing Law, Crime and Social Justice.
At the Graduate level I have led (or will soon lead) seminars on Genocide and Criminology, Criminology and the Camps, Restorative Justice, and Truth and Reconciliation.
Public/Media (Non-Technical) Description
I am happy to provide comment on issues related to genocide, reparations, conflict resolution, reconciliation, apology, restorative justice, inner-city Winnipeg, and mediation.
International Activities
Workshop: Colonial Genocide and Indigenous North America
In the workshop "Colonial Genocide and Indigenous North America" researchers from Canada, the USA, Australia and Europe will discuss various destructive aspects of the colonization and subsequent settlement of North America. Massacres, residential/
Partners | Centre for Human Rights Research (University of Manitoba); Rutgers University's Center for the Study of Genocide, Conflict Resolution and Human Rights; Social Justice and Criminology Research Coordinator (University of Manitoba) |
Funding Agencies | Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (Aid to Scholarly Workshops) |
Location | University of Manitoba |
Countries | Canada, United States |
Dates | 2012 - 2012 |
Boarding/
This project compares American Indian boarding schools and Canadian residential schools as total institutions designed for purposes of assimilation and consider whether or not these institutions can be considered genocidal in accordance with recent advances in the genocide studies literature. Based on this historical backdrop, the project contrasts the differing paths toward redressing the boarding/
1) Does the boarding/
2) Why is it that Canada has arrived at a tripartite reparative process for residential schools (i.e., a truth and reconciliation commission, compensation, and a public apology) while American boarding school injustices have been left largely unaddressed?
3) In light of arguments in favor of applying the term genocide to boarding/
4) In what ways is our shared colonial past embedded in our attempts to correct this history? Can mechanisms of “transitional justice” offer a pathway to a decolonized North America that overcomes the destructive pressures of settler colonialism?
Funding Agencies | Fulbright, Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada |
Location | University of New Mexico |
Countries | Canada, United States |
Regions | Manitoba, New Mexico |
Dates | 2012 - 2012 |
Curriculum Vitae
CV_
Currently Recruiting Graduate Students
Potential graduate students should contact the appropriate Faculty.
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