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Executive Producers for this episode are:
Dr. Jessica Braimoh is a critical sociologist and an assistant professor in the Social Science Department (Criminology) at York University. Her research is focused on the ways social institutions and systems respond to experiences of marginality. She studies the link between criminalization, racialization and class among other systems of domination. She is interested in the ways social institutions are coordinated in their response to marginality.
Dr. Marcus Sibley is an assistant professor in the Department of Criminology at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax. His research critically examines intersecting forms of policing and surveillance in the context of homelessness, sex work and human trafficking, and gender-based violence.
Guests for this episode include:
Dr. Carrie Anne Marshall is an assistant professor at Western University in the School of Occupational Therapy. Her research focuses on the intersection between poverty and mental wellbeing. The majority of her research focuses on homelessness and the transition between unhoused to housed.
Brian Hart is a retired parish priest. In 2006, he bought a property on Big Island in Prince Edward County that is now known as Kate's Rest. He's been living on the property with his friends for 17 years. Kate's Rest is owned and operated by the Kate's Rest Foundation and those who call the property home, which also hosts a 50,000 square foot aquaponics farm. Kate's Rest provides permanent housing and support for people who were homeless or at risk of homelessness.
This episode was produced by Avery Moore Kloss from Folktale Studio.
It was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
More information on the Centre for Research on Security Practices at crsp.online.
By Centre for Research on Security Practices (CRSP)Executive Producers for this episode are:
Dr. Jessica Braimoh is a critical sociologist and an assistant professor in the Social Science Department (Criminology) at York University. Her research is focused on the ways social institutions and systems respond to experiences of marginality. She studies the link between criminalization, racialization and class among other systems of domination. She is interested in the ways social institutions are coordinated in their response to marginality.
Dr. Marcus Sibley is an assistant professor in the Department of Criminology at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax. His research critically examines intersecting forms of policing and surveillance in the context of homelessness, sex work and human trafficking, and gender-based violence.
Guests for this episode include:
Dr. Carrie Anne Marshall is an assistant professor at Western University in the School of Occupational Therapy. Her research focuses on the intersection between poverty and mental wellbeing. The majority of her research focuses on homelessness and the transition between unhoused to housed.
Brian Hart is a retired parish priest. In 2006, he bought a property on Big Island in Prince Edward County that is now known as Kate's Rest. He's been living on the property with his friends for 17 years. Kate's Rest is owned and operated by the Kate's Rest Foundation and those who call the property home, which also hosts a 50,000 square foot aquaponics farm. Kate's Rest provides permanent housing and support for people who were homeless or at risk of homelessness.
This episode was produced by Avery Moore Kloss from Folktale Studio.
It was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
More information on the Centre for Research on Security Practices at crsp.online.