Christopher Little
Ph.D. Candidate in Politics, York University
Research Associate
Research Cluster: Migration, Labour, and Political Economy
About Christopher Little
I research the political economy of migration, agriculture and uneven development, with a focus on how dispossession, extractivism and inequality in the Global South shape labour migration to the North. I am interested in the experience of workers within the structural constraints of the world economy, how agency is exercised amidst these forces, and the social reproduction of labour power.
My PhD thesis research focuses on agrarian labour migration flows between Guatemala and Ontario, Canada, and their relationship to transnational processes of agricultural transformation during the era of neoliberal capitalism. I am seeking to understand how circuits of capital and circuits of labour migration interact and reinforce one another through a hemispheric extractive agricultural economy, and to better understand the experience of migrant workers whose labour power is essential to the maintenance of these circuits.
Country(ies) or Region(s) of Specialization: Guatemala, Canada
Keywords: agriculture, migration, labour migration, agrarian question, agribusiness, land distribution, political economy, development, circuits of capital, dispossession, social reproduction, uneven development
Natasha Sofia Martinez
Ph.D. Candidate in Politics, York University
Research Associate
Research Cluster: Migration, Labour, and Political Economy
About Natasha Sofia Martinez
Natasha Sofia Martinez is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Politics, with a specialization in International Relations and Women and Politics. Her proposed dissertation researches the externalization of borders and border management in transit countries within the global South. In particular, she is interested in focusing on the ways in which state and non-state actors within Mexico (a transit country) engage in biopolitical and necropolitical practices against migrants/refugees, prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic. The main goal through this research is to highlight the ways in which migrants/refugees, and their solidarity networks, resist forms of oppression and maintain agency through transnational collective mobility. This project also aims to shed light on several sub themes such as race, colonialism, technology, and security/insecurity.
Country(ies) or Region(s) of Specialization: Mexico, Latin America
Keywords: Migration, Refugees, Biopolitics, Necropolitics, Social Movements
Agata Mergler
Ph.D. Candidate in Humanities, York University
Research Associate
About Agata Mergler
I am an International PhD candidate in Humanities Department. It took me awhile to figure out my new research area, since I had a career before coming to Canada as a PhD in philosophy (Mickiewicz University), specializing in history of 20th German philosophy, working as a lecturer and translator in Poland. Eventually, my dissertation’s preliminary title is: "The Cultural Translation of Latin American Digital Art" and its main research question is “In which conceptual and material ways does Latin American digital art engage in working with digitality that is saturated by Western (neo)colonial modernity and capitalism in terms of cultural translation?” This topic came naturally out of my research on digital media, digital humanities, cultural translation and digital art as well as from a collaborative research/art project called "Haptic/Visual Identities" I have been involved in for three years with Cristian Villavicencio, an Ecuadorian PhD student from University of Basque Country, Spain. One of the main issues connected to the research question of cultural translation is whether working with digitality promotes or inhibits Latin American digital art’s use of minor art practices, thus performing alternative or subversive forms of creativity and promoting alternate forms of globalization (such as decoloniality – Mignolo, worlding, or planetarity – Spivak). The main premise here is that digitality, and the technology connected to it, carry within a certain cultural dictionary.
My other projects include: digital humanities project “Walter Benjamin Digital” (connected to translation theory, media theory and digital humanities) and ongoing pedagogical project “Deterritorializing Culture”.
Country(ies) or Region(s) of Specialization: Latin American; Colombia, Peru, Ecuador
Keywords: Visual Identities, digital media, digital humanities, digital arts
Roshane Miller
M.A. Candidate in Development, York University
Research Associate
Research Cluster: Arts, Literatures, and Languages
About Roshane Miller
Roshane studies cultural diplomacy in the Global South geared towards decent work and economic growth. He has a particular interest in the policy infrastructures and programming that support cultural and creative industry South-South cooperation among UNESCO Creative Cities in Colombia and Jamaica.
Roshane was an instructor in International Business Management at Canadian College. Prior, he served as a teaching assistant at Simon Fraser University in politics, interactive arts and technology, communication, and publishing.
As the Advocate and Policy Advisor at the Graduate Student Society at Simon Fraser University, he was part of a multi-student union team lobbying the British Columbia Legislature on post-secondary tuition prices, student housing, and provisions for mental health services.
Roshane received a Master of Publishing with Distinction from Simon Fraser University. His research focused on knowledge ecosystems and learning organisations. He graduated with a Bachelor of Science (Honours) degree in International Relations from the University of the West Indies, Mona.
Country(ies) or Region(s) of Specialization: Jamaica and Colombia
Keywords: Cultural and Creative Industries; Creative Cities; Cultural Policy; South-South cooperation; Triangular cooperation; Beneficial and Sustainable Tourism; Transcultural media flows; Transmedia Storytelling; Music; Dance; Publishing; SDG 8; SDG 9; SDG 17
Alexander Moldovan
Ph.D. Candidate in Politics, York University
Research Associate
About Alexander Moldovan
Alex Moldovan is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Politics at York University. His research is focused on the intersection of social movements and insecurity, in particular the role of communes in Venezuela’s multifaceted crisis. By using ethnography and archival methods, Alex’s research aims to shed light on the tactics and strategies social movements implement to alleviate the pressures of food scarcity, political violence, and economic collapse. Central to this understanding is a critical investigation of self-defence, self-government, and self-management practices by grass-roots organizations.
Country(ies) or Region(s) of Specialization: Venezuela, Colombia/ Latin America
Keywords: insecurity, social movements, ethnography, food security
Vanessa Moonilal
Ph.D. Candidate in Humanities, York University
Research Associate
Research Cluster: Arts, Literatures, and Languages
About Vanessa Moonilal
Vanessa is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Humanities at York University. Her research interests are in the narrative expression of identity within the Caribbean diaspora, her research is still in progress.
Shanique Mothersill
Ph.D. Candidate in Gender, Feminist & Women's Studies, York University
Research Associate
Research Cluster: Arts, Literatures, and Languages
About Shanique Mothersill
Shanique Mothersill is a Jamaican born Black feminist poet, Graduate Teaching Assistant and PhD student in Gender, Feminist & Women’s Studies at York University. She recently completed her second MA in the Center for Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Florida Atlantic University after completing her first MA in Pan African Studies in African American Studies and a Certificate of Advanced Studies in Women’s and Gender Studies at Syracuse University. In her research, Shanique focuses on theorizing (through poetry) Jamaican women’s aliveness and the ways in which their multiple acts of living help us to further examine and understand gendered and racialized “beingness” and existence in the Caribbean.
Contry(ies) or Region(s) of Specialization: Jamaica
Keywords: Black women’s neocolonial lived experiences, Jamaican women; Black sexuality; poetry; decolonizing knowledges and Black feminist theory & praxis.
Maria Nunez
Ph.D Candidate in Theatre and Performance Studies at York University
Research Associate
About Maria Nunez
PhD student in Theatre and Performance Studies at York University. Marilo holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Guelph (’19) and is a graduate in Acting from Ryerson University (’96). She was the founding artistic director of Alameda Theatre Company and has worked professionally in the theatre and film industry in Canada and the US for the past twenty-five years. Her dissertation research at York University will focus on issues of race and racism within the Canadian theatre context. She is also focusing on the pedagogical work of Cuban American playwright and director Maria Irene Fornes. Her hope is to be able to teach this method of playwriting to Canadian writers.
Countries or Regions of Specialization: Canada, US, Chile, Mexico. Argentina
Keywords: racism, equity in theatre, anti-colonialism, anti-racism, theatre history, Latinx theatre in Canada and the US