A bold and urgent intervention that grapples with the ethics and politics of social science research practice, focussing on ethical challenges and dilemmas faced by marginalized scholars and researchers committed to equity and social justice.
Racism is normalized as benevolence in the helping professions of education, social work, public health and justice. What might it look like to transform these professions with anti-racist education and a serious reckoning with colonial history?
A story for every immigrant struggling between cultures, every youth rebelling against parents, and every woman facing assault alone.
This book acknowledges the equity work BIPOC staff do in all institutions as both a burden and a survival mechanism, then explores how this necessary work be done in a less harmful way.
A cutting-edge critical social work textbook that unites social work theory with practice.
This research-creation project by artist Rehab Nazzal documents the politics of surveillance and mobility in contemporary Palestine through photos, hand-drawn maps and critical essays in English and Arabic.
The book provides a social history of Montreal’s first Haitian street gang and the changing city in which it emerged.
The first book to examine prison labour in Canada argues unionizing incarcerated workers is critical for prison justice and labour movements.
A gripping tale that combines fictional characters with real historical events of a time when the housing system dispossessed Indigenous Peoples across the north.
A betrayed middle-aged mother embarks on a quest that takes her straight into B.C.’s wildfires and her ancient Mughal ancestry.
This story of land theft through the course of three diseases exposes how colonialism facilitates illness and profits from it.
Abolition is not only a political movement to end prisons; it is also an intimate one deeply motivated by love.