2022-2024 GC Leading Scholars


  • Abdul-Fatawu Abdulai
    Abdul-Fatawu Abdulai, Assistant Professor, Nursing
    Email: fatawu.abdulai@ubc.ca
    Website

    My program of research is on health informatics, human-computer interaction and the design and evaluation of digital health technologies. Specifically, I seek to explore how digital health technologies and trauma-informed user-centered design approaches can be leveraged to address inequities in sexual and reproductive health access for marginalized populations. Primarily, I conduct informatics-related research on endometriosis-associated sexual pains, sexually transmitted infections, and reproductive health. I apply user-centered design and integrated knowledge translation approaches by engaging patients and healthcare professionals in my program of research.

    Digital Health, User-Centered Design, Human-Computer Interaction, Trauma-Informed Care


  • Hassan Ahmad
    Hassan Ahmad, Assistant Professor, Law
    Email: ahmad@allard.ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a legal scholar, advocate, and activist interested in how governments and courts devise laws that concern human rights and environmental harm on the part of multinational corporations. How do dispute resolution laws mimic global economic forces? In my work, I analyze legal doctrines and, at times, employ comparative and historical methods to understand how dispute resolution laws have interacted with the global economy across time and space. Currently, I am working on two projects: a monograph entitled The New Corporate Immunity: Law, Sovereignty, and Human Rights in the Third World and a project around climate change litigation.

    Human Rights, Courts, Torts, Corporations, Dispute Resolution


  • Anwar Ahmed
    Anwar Ahmed, Assistant Professor, Language and Literacy Education
    Email: anwar.ahmed@ubc.ca
    Website

    My current research investigates if contemporary approaches to teaching argumentative writing are supportive of democratic disposition and citizenship. My key objective is to find out if pedagogies of argumentative writing encourage students to take a combative and hegemonic approach to knowledge creation and to ignore cognitive biases while exerting their rhetorical skills to win an argument. If this is the case, then I will explore ways to de-emphasize the combative approach to academic writing and promote the idea of argument as a dialogical social practice in which the primary goal is to understand, rather than defeat, the Other.

    Argument, Academic Writing, Democracy, Dialogue, Citizenship


  • Dominic Alford-Duguid
    Dominic Alford-Duguid, Assistant Professor, Philosophy
    Email: dominic.alfordduguid@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a philosopher of mind and language, with a strong side interest in the philosophy of law. Much of my research concerns the relationship between perception and thought. Among the other things it allows us to do, perception enables us to think about the observable properties of objects (e.g., their colour, their shape, their size, etc.). I investigate what this fact should lead us to say about perception and thought, especially perception’s ability to inform us about the outside world. In philosophy of law, by contrast, I write on the nature of law, as well as informational privacy.

    Thought, Perception, Representation, Privacy, Law


  • Fatema Amijee
    Fatema Amijee, Assistant Professor, Philosophy
    Email: fatema.amijee@ubc.ca
    Website

    A primary focus of my work is the Principle of Sufficient Reason (roughly: 'Everything has an explanation'). The principle was a prime tenet of early modern rationalism, and thus much of my work in the history of early modern philosophy concerns metaphysical themes in Leibniz, Spinoza, Du Châtelet, and other early modern rationalists. I also spend a lot of my time thinking about the Principle of Sufficient Reason as a thesis within contemporary metaphysics. Aside from metaphysics and early modern philosophy, I also work at the intersection of feminist philosophy and Islamic studies, with a particular focus in Quranic interpretation.

    Principle of Sufficient Reason, Explanation, Emilie Du Châtelet, Islam, Feminism


  • Irem Ayan
    Irem Ayan, Assistant Professor, French, Hispanic and Italian Studies
    Email: irem.ayan@ubc.ca
    Website

    As a trained conference interpreter, I work at the intersections of feminist standpoint theory, settler colonialism, and theories of resistance to investigate how the implications of dominant ideologies of gender, class, and racialization affect the way interpreters perform and/or resist their task of becoming the voice of the speaker. I explore the dark side of being a marginalized interpreter, looking at the various ways in which interpreters are sexualized, harassed, discriminated, and treated as non-persons, drawing also on frameworks that analyze emotional labour and worker exploitation. My current ethnographic research explores the experiences of Indigenous interpreters in British Columbia.

    Translation, Interpreting, Gender, Race, Settler Colonialism


  • Alifa Zafirah Bandali
    Alifa Zafirah Bandali, Assistant Professor, Gender, Race, Sexuality and Social Justice
    Email: alifa.bandali@ubc.ca
    Website

    My research and teaching prioritize social justice issues and approaches – in particular the importance of an intersectional framework. I draw on my own life histories and positionality to explore and highlight Muslim women’s representations in the media. I am interested in how artists (among others) challenge and resist dominant tropes and stereotypes that depict Muslim women as powerless, as suspects and as victims of religious oppression. I am committed to research and teaching that focuses on: Creative activism; women, work and care primarily in Southeast Asia; emotional labour; feminist and anti-racist pedagogies.

    Social Justice, Feminist and Creative Activisms, Art, Anti-Racism


  • Ignacio Barbeito
    Ignacio Barbeito, Assistant Professor, Forest Resources Management
    Email: ignacio.barbeito@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a forest scientist interested in how to balance multiple—and sometimes contradictory—objectives such as wood production, wildlife habitat management, biodiversity conservation and carbon sequestration in the context of climate change. Promoting mixed-species forests could be part of the solution, as they can improve forest resilience to increasing forest fires, droughts and pest outbreaks. I use hands-on and data-driven methods involving countless measurements of tree girth and height; core samples that cut through tree rings; as well as sifting through stacks of data collected over the years. My ultimate goal is to provide forest managers guidance and tools to support their decisions.

    Forest Management, Climate Change, Resilience to Disturbances, Forest Fires, Drought


  • Nadine Borduas-Dedekind
    Nadine Borduas-Dedekind, Assistant Professor, Chemistry
    Email: nadine.borduas@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am an atmospheric chemist interested in the fate of molecules in the atmosphere. My group strives to bring a molecular perspective to atmospheric processes to address issues of air quality and climate. We use gas phase and aerosol instruments to study the emissions of wildfire smoke and indoor personal care product and to study the fate of molecules in clouds and in biogeochemical cycling.

    Atmospheric Chemistry, Photochemistry, Biogeochemistry, Atmospheric sciences, Indoor Air


  • William Brown
    William Brown, Assistant Professor, Theatre & Film
    email: will.brown@ubc.ca
    Website

    My work straddles theory and practice, focusing primarily at the present time on film as a medium for allowing us to see, hear, think and feel beyond the human. While this means that there is in my work an 'ecological' engagement with the non-human world of animals, plants and matter, it also involves an investigation into how film historically has helped to construct the human in white, heteropatriarchal terms, and the ways in which to look 'beyond the human' must of necessity engage with issues of race, gender, sexuality, ability, class, nationality and other technologies of (de)humanisation.

    Film Studies, Film-Philosophy, Posthumanism, Research-Creation, Race


  • Stephen Kwame Dadugblor
    Stephen Kwame Dadugblor, Assistant Professor, Journalism, Writing and Media
    email: stephen.dadugblor@ubc.ca
    Website

    My research is at the intersection of democratic deliberation, culture, and rhetoric. I study the ways in which postcolonial African societies draw upon cultural deliberative resources to refashion and decolonize their social worlds in the aftermath of colonialism. Currently, I am at work on two major projects. The first, Deliberating Electoral Disputes, investigates citizen deliberations surrounding electoral politics in Ghana. The second, Forging Peace, Cultivating Citizenship attends to the rhetorical processes by which the Ghanaian nation-state fosters an ethos of peace and non-violence across ethnolinguistic and religious differences to cultivate citizenship following military interventions in the country's politics.

    Democracy, Deliberation, Memory, Africa, Decolonization


  • Tamara Robin Etmannski
    Tamara Robin Etmannski, Assistant Professor of Teaching, Civil Engineering
    Email: tamara.etmannski@ubc.ca
    Website

    The ‘Educational Leadership’ research I am interested in is connected to exploring ways to broaden engineering education by exposing students to real-world problems and multidisciplinary teams. This includes work connected to experiential and community learning practices. In parallel with this work, I am also a Co-Director of the Environmental Engineering undergraduate program and am continuing to conduct some more technical engineering research exploring the viability of up-cycling arsenic-ridden sludge (a by-product from the use of drinking-water filters) and building a business case to improve the negative impacts associated with the use of such widespread technologies.

    Engineering Leadership, Entrepreneurship, Engineering Impacts and Sustainability


  • Tim Frandy
    Tim Frandy, Assistant Professor, Central, Eastern, and Northern European Studies
    Email: tfrandy@mail.ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a Sámi American, born and raised on Anishinaabe Aki on the south shore of Gitchi-Gami (Lake Superior) amidst the region’s thousands of lakes and deep pine forests. My research involves traditional culture, decolonization, environments, education, and cultural revitalization, and I’ve worked with culture keepers, harvesters, ceremonial leaders, artists, and activists. My translation of Inari Sámi Folklore (2019) is the first polyvocal anthology of Sámi oral tradition published in English, and my co-edited volume with B. Marcus Cederström, Culture Work: Folklore for the Public Good (2022), on explores public arts and humanities projects today in theory and in praxis.

    Indigenous Studies, Decolonization, Folklore Studies, Environmental Humanities


  • Christopher Hammerly
    Christopher Hammerly, Assistant Professor, Linguistics
    Email: chris.hammerly@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a linguist and descendent of the White Earth Nation of mixed Anishinaabe-Norwegian heritage. Much of my work focuses on documenting and understanding my ancestral language Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwe). I use a variety of methods to understand the cognitive representations and processes underpinning human knowledge of syntax (sentence structure) and morphology (word structure), including formal theories, fieldwork, computational models, and experimental tasks. I am especially interested in what patterns of eye movements can reveal about our limits and aptitudes for learning and processing language. Recently, I have also been involved in building (psycho)linguistically-informed language technology for Anishinaabemowin learners.

    Language Revitalization, Psycholinguistics, Syntax, Morphology


  • Julia Henderson
    Julia Henderson, Assistant Professor, Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy
    Email: julia.henderson@ubc.ca
    Website

    I have a background as an occupational therapist and a professional actor. My research employs critical age studies and occupational justice approaches to investigate representations of aging and older age, with a focus on strategies that redress ageism in North American culture. I use qualitative and mostly arts-based methods, especially theatre, to work with older adults on projects that range from collaborative creative engagement with people with lived experience of dementia, to older adult activism, to developing creative accessibility strategies for older adult theatre artists and audiences.

    Critical Age Studies, Older Adults, Theatre and Performance, Dementia, Accessibility


  • Sara Jacobs
    Sara Jacobs, Assistant Professor, Architecture and Landscape Architecture
    Email: sjacobs@sala.ubc.ca
    Website

    I research how socio-ecological relations become legible through landscape to work toward just land futures. I primarily study how attending to interconnected histories of land, racialization, and settler-colonialism allows for reinterpreting contemporary environmental knowledge. As a transdisciplinary scholar of design, environmental history, and geography, I do this work by writing and drawing about how practices of care shape ideas of nature towards life-affirming relations. I often focus on infrastructural or extractive landscapes shaped by social and environmental injustices to show how entanglements between people, water, and more-than-human life refuse the ordering logic of extractive capitalism to create caring relations.

    Keywords or topics of primary interests:


  • Sara Ann Knutson
    Sara Ann Knutson, Assistant Professor of Teaching, History
    Email: sa.knutson@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a historical scholar working at the intersection of global history, archaeology, and museum anthropology with expertise in the Islamic World and its global interactions across premodern Afro-Eurasia. My teaching, research, and educational leadership bridge the premodern-modern divide in the historical discipline by exploring the enduring influence that the Afro-Eurasian past holds in contemporary constructions of cultural heritage and in practices of collection, not least in museums and archives. My current work centres the Islamic World’s role in global history as well as the contemporary communities who are important stakeholders in the construction of this past.

    Museums, Islamic World, Afro-Eurasia, Middle East and North Africa, Heritage


  • Jillian Lerner
    Jillian Lerner, Assistant Professor of Teaching, Art History, Visual Art and Theory
    Email: jillian.lerner@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a historian of modern visual culture with research interests in photography, media theory, and social justice pedagogies. I study the ways that art-forms and technologies of seeing shape human experience and the lifeworld. My current project considers how photographic practices perpetuate or contest imperialist modes of extraction and appropriation. Investigating diverse strategies of sense-making, storytelling, and historical retrieval, I explore how media artifacts and histories can be developed as tools for perceiving, relating, and imagining otherwise. How do we foster responsibility for the worlds (communities, ecologies, stories, futures) we create and destroy?

    Media History, Photography, Pedagogy, Decolonization


  • Jasmin Ma
    Jasmin Ma, Assistant Professor of Teaching, Kinesiology
    Email: jasmin.ma@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a Kinesiologist specializing in helping people with diverse physical abilities to be physically active. My educational leadership activities involve the development and implementation of experiential learning opportunities in community-based exercise settings. My research focuses on supporting strength training behaviour change and developing methods for tailored physical activity interventions among people with chronic disease and disability. Meaningfully engaging community and clinician partners throughout the research process is at the core of my lab’s research approach, with the intention to help ensure that our work gives back to those who the research is intended for.

    Physical Activity, Disability, Behaviour Change, Exercise Prescription, Work Integrated Learning


  • Alexis McGee
    Alexis McGee, Assistant Professor, Journalism, Writing and Media
    Email: alexis.mcgee@ubc.ca
    Website

    Driven by Black studies, history of composition and rhetoric, cultural rhetorics, and Black feminist rhetorical theory, my research intentionally brings historical moments in conversation with contemporary Black expressions of being. Largely, my scholarly activities investigate ways Black women’s rhetorical, sonic ecologies document survival, agency, and resistance so that Black women and girls may apply it to our everyday realities across time, place, and media. My first monograph, From Blues to Beyoncé: A Century of Black Women’s Sonic Rhetoric (forthcoming with SUNY Press) examines how Black women operationalize language, voice, and rhetoric across media as generational strategies for survival.

    Black, Feminist, Rhetoric, Theory


  • Keunhyun Park
    Keunhyun Park, Assistant Professor, Forest Resources Management
    Email: keun.park@ubc.ca
    Website

    With an interdisciplinary background in urban planning and design and landscape architecture, I conduct behavioural research in urban nature through the use of spatial data analytics and digital technologies. My Urban Nature Design Research (UNDER) lab examines 1) urban nature design and planning and its social, behavioural, and health outcomes and 2) technology-driven research for public space monitoring (e.g., sensors, drones, smartphone-based big data). Ultimately, my research aims to understand how to design healthy, just, and resilient cities through urban nature. These projects require interdisciplinary collaboration with experts from forestry, geography, transportation engineering, computer science, and more.

    Urban Forestry, Public Space, Urban Design, Behavioural Research, Environmental Justice


  • Thomas Pasquier
    Thomas Pasquier, Assistant Professor, Computer Science
    Email: thomas.pasquier@ubc.ca
    Website

    I work on computer systems constructed broadly. My main research focus is to devise means to observe computer systems and to act on the collected information. Applications include security, accountability, and transparency. For example, I work on applying machine-learning techniques to automatically detect anomalous behaviors that indicate that a computer system is under attack. I also work on techniques to automate and facilitate the reproducibility of scientific computational results. Finally, I have worked for several years on questions at the intersection of computer science and law.

    Computer Science, Systems, Accountability, Security, Transparency


  • Ethan Raker
    Ethan Raker, Assistant Professor, Sociology
    Email: ethan.raker@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a sociologist-demographer studying the consequences of climate change for community and individual well-being. I focus particular attention to the role of social contexts and political institutions in creating the conditions for disasters and responding or changing in ways that exacerbate inequality. My work often relies upon the application of novel administrative and climate data to address theoretical questions about the relationship between the environment and society. I joined UBC as an assistant professor in 2021.

    Climate Change, Health, Disasters, Neighbourhoods


  • Andrea Reid
    Andrea Reid, Assistant Professor, Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries
    Email: a.reid@oceans.ubc.ca
    Website

    My name is Andrea Reid, and I am a Nisg̱a’a citizen who was raised on Epekwitk (PEI). I now live in Nisg̱a’a Territory, and work both remotely and in-person as an Assistant Professor in the UBC Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries. With a wonderful team, I am helping to launch and lead the Centre for Indigenous Fisheries, committed to the study and protection of culturally significant fish and fisheries. In strong and equitable partnership with Indigenous Peoples and organizations, the Centre undertakes interdisciplinary research, collaborative teaching, and youth-centered outreach that responds to partner-identified needs and priorities.

    Indigenous Fisheries, Indigenous Science, Aquatic Conservation


  • Mohammad Shahrad
    Mohammad Shahrad, Assistant Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering
    Email: mshahrad@ece.ubc.ca
    Website

    I am broadly interested in improving the efficiency of cloud computing systems and have worked across the computing stack toward this goal. So far, this has included building novel scheduling solutions for cloud systems, modeling user-provider interactions to propose new pricing models, and building a new processor for efficient off-chip scalability of cloud workloads. I lead the Cloud Infrastructure Research for Reliability, Usability, and Scalability (CIRRUS) Lab at UBC. My team is currently working on a range of projects to improve the performance and cost efficiency of emerging cloud services.

    Cloud Computing, Software Systems


  • Elif Sari
    Elif Sari, Assistant Professor, Anthropology
    Email: elif.sari@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a queer feminist anthropologist, an uninvited immigrant on the unceded Coast Salish territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) First Nation, and a new faculty member in the UBC Department of Anthropology. Currently, I am working on my first book manuscript, which offers an engaged ethnography of LGBTQ asylum from the Middle East to North America by focusing on the experiences of Iranian queer and trans refugees waiting in Turkey. I am also excited to start two new research projects, one focusing on private refugee sponsorship programs in Canada, and one exploring the connections between migration, sexuality, and art (particularly drag).

    Asylum, Borders, Diaspora, Gender and Sexuality


  • Rosanne Sia
    Rosanne Sia, Assistant Professor, Gender, Race, Sexuality and Social Justice
    Email: rosanne@mail.ubc.ca
    Website

    I do historical research at the intersection of performance studies, critical race theory, and gender & sexuality studies. My first book project, Fantasy in Motion: Performing Racial Imaginaries in the early Cold War, looks at women of Asian and Latinx descent who danced and sang on early Cold War nightclub circuits. I was lucky enough to meet a number of former nightclub entertainers who were in their eighties and nineties. I felt an urgent need to share what I had learned about lives that I found so extraordinary, daring, and brave in the face of racism and sexism. My book draws on both oral histories and archival research to explore how entertainers crossed boundaries of genre, nation, language, race, and sexuality that exceeded Cold War narratives of racial integration.

    Transpacific, Latinx, Gender and Sexuality, Performance, Cold War History


  • J. Logan Smilges
    J. Logan Smilges, Assistant Professor, English Language and Literatures
    Email: logan.smilges@ubc.ca
    Website

    With commitments to trans feminism and disability justice, I understand my work in queer & trans disability studies, rhetorical studies, and the history of medicine as a means to advocate for gender-expansive equity and anti-ableism. I am particularly interested in writing genealogies that reveal how ideas related to sexuality, gender, and disability are mutually entwined. For example, my first book Queer Silence: On Disability and Rhetorical Absence (2022) charts the foundational role of disability in the field of queer studies, and my current book project Neurotrans Intimacies dials in on the cultural and political entanglements of transness and mental disability.

    Disability, Gender, Sexuality, Theory


  • Giulia Toti
    Giulia Toti, Assistant Professor of Teaching, Computer Science
    Email: giulia.toti@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am an Assistant Professor of Teaching in the computer science department. I have a variegated background (a Master's degree in Biomedical Engineering and a PhD in Computer Science, specifically in Machine Learning), but now my focus is on computer science education. I am currently designing a new course on responsible use of data science: given its wide applicability and popularity, I believe it is important for students to understand their role not only as technical experts, but as future decision-makers. I am also interested in alternative grading systems, such as Mastery Learning.

    Data Science Ethics, Alternative Grading, Mastery Learning


  • Desiree Valadares
    Desiree Valadares, Assistant Professor, Geography
    Email: desiree.valadares@ubc.ca
    Website

    My research theorizes repair in the context of landscape preservation. I study the aftermath of redress movements that coalesce around the preservation and stewardship of Second World War confinement landscapes in Hawai’i, Alaska, and British Columbia. I work alongside community organizations, cultural heritage professionals, and policymakers and draw insights from archival research and place-based methods including architectural drawing, photography, and participant-action research. Broadly, my research contributes to ongoing debates on war reparations, Asian-Indigenous relations, land tenure in settler colonial contexts, and infrastructural and environmental histories of Second World War prison camps in former US territories and in western Canada.

    Redress, Social Movements, War Reparations, Landscape, Preservation, Land Claims


  • Katherine Wagner
    Katherine Wagner, Assistant Professor, Economics
    Email: katherine.wagner@ubc.ca
    Website

    My work focuses primarily on Environmental and Energy Economics. I study how economic policy can prevent further climate change from occurring and encourage adaptation to its effects. On the first topic, I have ongoing work on the costs of delayed action on carbon pricing. We show that manufacturing plants that open when energy prices are low consume more energy throughout their lifetime, regardless of subsequent prices. On the second topic, I’m analyzing the equity implications of natural disaster insurance reform; my previous work studies why homeowners’ willingness to pay in this market is puzzlingly low even when insurance benefits are high.

    Environmental and Energy Economics, Public Economics, Climate Change, Natural Disaster Insurance


  • Tina E. Wilson
    Tina E. Wilson, Assistant Professor, Social Work
    Email: tina.wilson@ubc.ca
    Website

    My work explores how scientific and social justice knowledges combine within helping professions and human welfare systems. On one hand, I am interested in broad cultural shifts in the enduring trifecta of need, help, and who is to blame in relation to perceived social problems. On the other, I engage the “new” for how it creates possibilities for change within established ways of life. My current research explores how the environmental turn challenges modern professions like social work to revisit our human-centric units of analysis and intervention, including how we imagine and attempt to enact social justice.

    Helping Professions; Social Justice, Environment, Academic Disciplines, History and Philosophy of Social Science


  • Kwang Moo Yi
    Kwang Moo Yi, Assistant Professor, Geography
    Email: kmyi@cs.ubc.ca
    Website

    I work in the area of Computer Vision, with a focus on reconstructing and understanding the 3D geometry and the appearance of objects observed as 2D imagery. My methods often consist of novel deep learning methods/frameworks for this purpose.

    Computer Vision, 3D Vision, Deep Learning-Based Vision, Keypoints, Correspondences


  • Shoufu Yin
    Shoufu Yin, Assistant Professor, History
    Email: shoufu.yin@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a historian of Chinese and Inner Asian political cultures and thoughts in global historical contexts. I specialize in areas where social/institutional history meets literature and philosophy. My publications show that it is productive to engage the intellectual world of hitherto overlooked and marginalized groups—including peasant women who fought in wars, Manchu translators who processed imperial documents, anonymous typesetters behind the production of books. Ultimately, my scholarly passion lies in writing new kinds of global intellectual histories that foreground the theoretical contributions of both “canonical” and “everyday” thinkers of different traditions.

    Global History, Intellectual History, Political Culture/Thought, Literary Culture, China and Inner Asia


  • Keren Zaiontz
    Keren Zaiontz, Assistant Professor, Theatre & Film
    Email: keren.zaiontz@ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a performance studies scholar committed to profiling oppositional art practices. My research focuses on contemporary performance, the spaces and places of artistic production—including the city and its sites of redevelopment—the politics of festivals and mega-events, and the global currents of art-activism online and in the streets. My current book project, Authoritarian Intimacies, is a cultural examination of global north authoritarian power from the perspective of its “refuseniks”—dissident artists and satirists, independent reporters, and oppositional proletariats—who risk everything and model perseverance in the face of repressive rule.

    Performance Studies, Performance and the City, Art-Activism and Social Movements, Festivals and Mega-Events, Socially-Engaged Art and Performance


  • Helena Zeweri
    Helena Zeweri, Assistant Professor, Anthropology
    Email: helena.zeweri@ubc.ca
    Website

    My scholarship lies at the intersection of global migration studies, the social impacts of policy, and diasporic identity, with a focus on Australia, the Afghan diaspora, and the US. Grounded in ethnographic methods, my first project examined how migrant sociality becomes an object of moral concern and legal intervention for the Australian state in the wake of increased maritime migration from post-war contexts. My current project looks at the political life of Afghan diasporas in the US and Australia since the Global War on Terror, with a focus on first and second-generation community leaders.

    Migration, Political Life, Empire and Settler Colonialism, Australia, US, Afghan Diaspora


  • Lily Wenya Zhou
    Lily Wenya Zhou, Assistant Professor, Neurology
    Email: lily.zhou@alumni.ubc.ca
    Website

    I am a stroke neurologist and do health services research looking at cost-benefit analysis in health care and stroke epidemiology. Currently, my main research focus is on using data generated during healthcare delivery on a population level (called administrative data) to study and predict health outcomes and to improve the cost-effectiveness of healthcare delivery. The use of administrative data allows us to study and improve the health of people previously under-represented in research, to track health outcomes over decades and to see how treatments work outside of clinical trials.

    Health Services, Epidemiology, Stroke


  • Mila Zuo
    Mila Zuo, Assistant Professor, Theatre & Film
    Email: mila.zuo@ubc.ca
    Website

    I work on global film stardom, transnational Chinese and Asian cinemas, film-philosophy, and critical studies of race, gender, and sexuality. My book Vulgar Beauty: Acting Chinese in the Global Sensorium (2022) explores the ways in which Chinese women film stars perform oppositional stances against white supremacy, Chinese colonialism, heteropatriarchy, gender and sexual normativities, and capitalist work. My current and future research focuses on representations of ancient magical beliefs in global film and media, and cinema as a divinatory and spell-binding phenomenon.

    Film and Media Studies, Esotericism, Philosophy, Embodiment, Stardom