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Theme Count
35

Visual Culture and Black Protest

Race, Media, Technology

Videos in Review: Insights from the Team

Intersectionality

The West Island Black Community Association (WIBCA)

Anti-Black racism

The Intersectional Realities of Being a Black Woman in Anti-Ableist Work

Anti-Black racism

Les femmes noires et la COVID-19 : des sacrifices

Intersectionality

The Importance of Gender in Black Movement Organizing

Anti-Black racism

Being the first hijab-wearing female journalist on Montreal television

Islamophobia

Politics of Trauma

Mind & Body

Defending Human Rights amidst a Pandemic

Human rights advocacy

Perspectives solidaires et révolutionnaires pour Haïti

Institutional change

The West Island Black Community Association (WIBCA)

Generational knowledge

Passing the Mic

Allyship/Solidarity

Critical Race Studies into Soundscape Studies

Environmental Justice

The Importance of Gender in Black Movement Organizing

Gender Advocacy

Critical Race Studies into Soundscape Studies

Race, Media, Technology

The Intersectional Realities of Being a Black Woman in Anti-Ableist Work

Institutional change

L’antiracisme au Québec : passer à l’action

Institutional change

Les femmes noires et la COVID-19 : des sacrifices

Anti-Black racism

Inclusive Anti-Racism: Historicizing Anti-Asian Racism Amidst Pandemics

Anti-Asian racism

Being Métis

Allyship/Solidarity

Defending Human Rights amidst a Pandemic

International student life

Critical Race Studies into Soundscape Studies

Indigeneity

Visual Culture and Black Protest

Anti-Black racism

Can I Look at This: Watching Media of Racial Violence

Race, Media, Technology

The Intersectional Realities of Being a Black Woman in Anti-Ableist Work

Disability Justice

Perspectives solidaires et révolutionnaires pour Haïti

Anti-Black racism

Can I Look at This: Watching Media of Racial Violence

Anti-Black racism

Defending Human Rights amidst a Pandemic

Immigrant experience

Building Coalitions amidst Anti-Asian Racism

Anti-Asian racism

Being the first hijab-wearing female journalist on Montreal television

Allyship/Solidarity

The Importance of Gender in Black Movement Organizing

Intersectionality

Being Métis

Indigeneity

Afrofuturism as a Bridge Beyond

Anti-Black racism

Critical Race Studies into Soundscape Studies

Anti-Black racism

A Pedagogy in Flux

Queering the academy

Course Guides

TERRITORIAL ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

The Decolonial Hub is located on unceded Indigenous lands. The Kanien’kehá:ka Nation is recognized as the custodians of the lands and waters in Tiohtià:ke/Montréal. Historically known as a gathering place for many First Nations. Today, it is home to a diverse population of Indigenous and other people. We respect the continued connections with the past, present and future in our ongoing relationships with Indigenous and other people within the community.

BLACK CANADIAN TRIBUTE

As Black Canadians, land acknowledgements are a moment to honour the implications of being disposed of, displaced and enslaved peoples on stolen lands. To acknowledge our solidarity with the Indigenous peoples of Canada as we frequent and benefit from their lands within our shared histories of genocide, dispossession, and ongoing systemic oppression by settler colonialism. As Black people in Canada, let’s pay homage to the exported Africans, the black and enslaved, who risked their lives for us to be here, together, and live out there without physical chains.

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