Speakers

Slides (PDF Handout)

Slides (Plain Text PDF)

Julie Baumann, SafeSpace London Co-Founder and Community Coordinator The Policing of Sex Work in London, Ontario: Instruments of Surveillance and Moments of Resistance The Policing of Sex Work in London, Ontario: Instruments of Surveillance and Moments of Resistance
Tamara Bernard, Researcher for ONWA, PhD Candidate at Lakehead University Creating Safe Spaces for Indigenous Women in Canada Creating Safe Spaces for Indigenous Women in Canada
Rupaleem Bhuyan, PhD, Associate Professor, Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto Promoting Collective Action among Migrant Communities to Address the Structural Violence of Precarious Status and Precarious Work Promoting Collective Action among Migrant Communities to Address the Structural Violence of Precarious Status and Precarious Work
Dillon Black, Project Coordinator at Ottawa Coalition to End Violence Against Women (OCTEVAW) Transparency is Power: Gendered Violence, Technology & Surveillance Transparency is Power: Gendered Violence, Technology & Surveillance
Elisha Corbett, PhD Candidate at Queen's University in Political Studies and a former Senior Researcher with the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Media Representations of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls: Creating, Maintaining, and Silencing the Violence Media Representations of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls: Creating, Maintaining, and Silencing the Violence
Jodi Hall, Professor and Research Consultant at School of Nursing and Centre for Research and Innovation, Fanshawe College; Assistant Adjunct Professor at Arthur Labatt Family, School of Nursing, Western University The Policing of Sex Work in London, Ontario: Instruments of Surveillance and Moments of Resistance The Policing of Sex Work in London, Ontario: Instruments of Surveillance and Moments of Resistance
Kalimah Johnson, Founder and Executive Director of SASHA Center Unpacking the SASHA Model: The “Black Women's Triangulation of Rape" and Why an Abandoned Warehouse in Detroit is JUST NOT BIG ENOUGH Unpacking the SASHA Model: The “Black Women's Triangulation of Rape" and Why an Abandoned Warehouse in Detroit is JUST NOT BIG ENOUGH
Patricia McGuire, Assistant Professor, School of Social Work, Carleton University Creating Safe Spaces for Indigenous Women in Canada Creating Safe Spaces for Indigenous Women in Canada
Janet Mosher, Associate Professor at Osgoode Hall Law School and the Director of Clinical Legal Education at Osgoode Mapping Law's Role in Gender-Based Structural Violence Mapping Law's Role in Gender-Based Structural Violence
Jade Peek, Director of Community Care & Advocacy, Kind Space Solutions through Intersectional Methodologies Solutions through Intersectional Methodologies
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