Category Archives: Canadian Studies Program UC Berkeley

New Hildebrand Fellow studies Asian diaspora; How are Asian voters shaping West Coast politics?

A newsletter from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Upcoming Events

  • Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
  • “Reshaping City Politics? Asian Voters’ Demands for Change in San Francisco and Vancouver”

Program News

  • New Hildebrand Fellow, Claire Chun, studies diasporic representations of Asian-Canadian identity

Research Opportunities

  • Deadline approaching to apply for Canadian Studies research funding!

External Events

  • Memorial University of Newfoundland Alumni Meetup
  • Canadian authors at the Bay Area Book Festival

UPCOMING EVENTS

If you require an accommodation to fully participate in an event, please let us know at least 10 days in advance.
Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase

Wednesday, April 26 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Philosophy | RSVP

Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward E. Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present overviews of their projects.

“Affordability for Whom? The Impacts of Foreign Buyer Taxes on British Columbia and Ontario Rental Housing Markets”

Taesoo Song, Ph.D. student, City and Regional Planning

During the mid-2010s, British Columbia and Ontario provincial governments implemented foreign buyer taxes (FBTs) to discourage foreign investment to promote affordability in the housing market. Although limited empirical evidence suggests that the taxes were effective in curbing house prices, there has been no significant discussion of their potential impacts on the rental market. Understanding this relationship would be crucial in meeting the housing needs of lower-income and immigrant households. Using empirical data from the Canadian Housing Mortgage Corporation and the Canadian Census, Taesoo examines how FBTs have impacted the regional rental markets and their implications for housing policy and planning.

“Climate Change and the Causes of the Late Ordovician Mass Extinction”

Joshua Zimmt, Ph.D. candidate, Integrative Biology

Joshua’s work attempts to understand the interactions between life and the Earth system, primarily through the study of extinction events. He dissertation research focuses on the exceptional fossil and rock records on Anticosti Island, Quebec, to understand how climate change may have caused the Late Ordovician mass extinction, one of the largest known extinction events. By producing a better understanding of this critical interval in the history of life, Joshua’s research will serve as a case study of global change that can be used to better understand our rapidly changing modern world.

COSPONSORED EVENT

Reshaping City Politics? Asian Voters’ Demands for Change in San Francisco and Vancouver

Monday, April 24 | 1:00 pm PT | Online | RSVP

The Canadian Studies Program is proud to partner with the Citrin Center for Public Opinion on a panel discussing the growing political importance of Asian-American and Asian-Canadian voters in two West Coast cities. Participants will discuss the outcomes of recent elections in San Francisco and Vancouver, and what they could indicate about each region’s future.

Panelists will include Lorraine Lowe, executive director of Vancouver’s Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden; Kareem Allam, former campaign director for Vancouver mayor Ken Sim and partner, Fairview Strategy; Ann Hsu, former San Francisco School Board commissioner and founder and head of school for Bert Hsu Academy; and Neil Malhotra, Edith M. Cornell Professor of Political Economy, Stanford Graduate School of Business. The panel will be moderated by David Broockman, associate professor, Travers Department of Political Science, UC Berkeley.

This event is also cosponsored by the Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative.

Image: “Stop Asian Hate” protester in Vancouver. Photo by GoToVan on Wikimedia Commons.

PROGRAM NEWS

New Hildebrand Fellow, Claire Chun, Studies Diasporic Representations of Asian-Canadian Identity

Canadian Studies is pleased to introduce Claire Chun as the third recipient of an Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowship for Summer 2023.

Claire is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Ethnic Studies with a designated emphasis in gender, women and sexuality studies. She holds a B.A. in politics and social and cultural analysis from New York University. Her dissertation research examines the ways that Asian North American diasporic art and media critically engage issues of settler colonial and militarized imperial violence through aesthetic practices of more-than-human kinship and entanglements.

Claire’s fellowship will support field research in Vancouver and Toronto, where she will explore how Asian diasporic artists based in Canada complicate notions of Asianness by grappling with what it means to occupy and work on ancestral, unceded Indigenous lands. She is particularly interested in how Asian Canadian visual cultures are shaped by and respond to transpacific histories of war, racialized surveillance, and environmental contamination in North America, Asia, and the Pacific Islands.

RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES

Deadline Approaching to Apply for Canadian Studies Research Funding!

Deadline: May 5, 2023

The Canadian Studies Program is currently accepting applications for several funding opportunities for graduate and undergraduate students. Please forward this information to any friends, students, or colleagues who may be interested!

The Edward E. Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowship

Accepting applications for Fall 2023

Amount: Up to $5,000 per semester

This fellowship funds research that contributes to knowledge about Canada and/or the Canadian-U.S. relationship. Applications are open to UC Berkeley graduate students in any discipline and of any citizenship. This fellowship is meant to cover direct travel and research costs.

The Rita Ross Undergraduate Prize in Canadian Studies

Amount: $250

This prize recognizes undergraduates who have written a superior research paper or other project on a Canadian topic. The competition is open to any UC Berkeley undergraduate student in good academic standing, in any college or discipline. Submissions must be an original paper or project produced in a UC Berkeley class or independent study during the 2022-2023 academic year.

Undergraduate Research Funding

Accepting applications for Summer and Fall 2023

Amount: Variable

Funding is available for undergraduate students interested in conducting organized research for a UC Berkeley class or as part of an independent study project. Awards are made at the director’s discretion.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Memorial University of Newfoundland Alumni Meetup

Tuesday, May 2 | 6:30 pm | Palo Alto, CA | RSVP

Memorial alumni and friends in the Greater San Francisco Bay area are invited to join an evening of networking and socializing in Palo Alto. Attendees will enjoy light appetizers, raffle prizes and the opportunity to reminisce about all things Memorial University and Newfoundland and Labrador. The event is free, but advance registration is required.

Canadian Authors at the Bay Area Book Festival

May 6-7 | Berkeley, CA | More information

The Bay Area Book Festival is one of the world’s premier celebrations of writers, readers, and the written word, bringing together some of the best contemporary authors from across the globe. This year, the festival line-up includes two exciting debut literary voices from Canada, thanks to the generous support of the Consulate General of Canada in San Francisco.

Dazzling Debuts

May 6 | 12:30 pm | More information

Award-winning Tibetan-Canadian author Tsering Yangzom Lama joins a panel of debut authors from around the world to discuss their works and paths to publication, as well as give advice to aspiring authors.

Indigenous Perspectives in Genre Fiction

May 6 | 3:30 pm | More information

Cree author Jessica Johns joins a panel of Native American and First Nations authors with new works in the genres of mysteries, thrillers, and horror. How do these writers incorporate historical and modern traumas into their work, deal with literary stereotypes, and help shape perceptions of contemporary Indigenous communities?

We Measure the Earth with Our Bodies: In Exile from Tibet

May 7 | 11:30 am | More information

Tsering Yangzom Lama will discuss her debut novel, We Measure the Earth With Our Bodies, a finalist for the Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize. The multi-generational epic draws on Lama’s own family history as it traces sixty years of a Tibetan refugee family and their journey to Canada.

Horror: History That Goes Bump in the Night

May 7 | 2:30 pm | More information

History comes back to haunt the living in this panel on contemporary horror, and Jessica Johns joins to discuss her debut novel, Bad Cree. In the novel, a young woman’s nightmarish dreams begin to manifest, and it soon becomes clear that the forces of industrial intrusion on Native land are not only relevant – they’re malevolent.

Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Facebook  Twitter
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Moses Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720

Info session tomorrow: Get your master’s covered at McGill! Plus other upcoming events

A newsletter from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Upcoming Events

  • Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase
  • “Reshaping City Politics? Asian Voters’ Demands for Change in San Francisco and Vancouver”

Research Opportunities

  • McCall MacBain Scholars info session
  • Deadline Saturday to submit papers to the ACSUS 26th Biennial Conference

External Events

  • “Meeting Global Skills and Talent Needs in Changing Labor Markets”
  • Why Canada Matters Speaker Series: Dr. Andrea Geiger

UPCOMING EVENTS

If you require an accommodation to fully participate in an event, please let us know at least 10 days in advance.
Hildebrand Graduate Research Showcase

Wednesday, April 26 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Philosophy | RSVP

Learn about the research Canadian Studies funds through our Edward E. Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowships, as recipients present overviews of their projects.

“Affordability for Whom? The Impacts of Foreign Buyer Taxes on British Columbia and Ontario Rental Housing Markets”

Taesoo Song, Ph.D. student, City and Regional Planning

During the mid-2010s, British Columbia and Ontario provincial governments implemented foreign buyer taxes (FBTs) to discourage foreign investment to promote affordability in the housing market. Although limited empirical evidence suggests that the taxes were effective in curbing house prices, there has been no significant discussion of their potential impacts on the rental market. Understanding this relationship would be crucial in meeting the housing needs of lower-income and immigrant households. Using empirical data from the Canadian Housing Mortgage Corporation and the Canadian Census, Taesoo examines how FBTs have impacted the regional rental markets and their implications for housing policy and planning.

“Climate Change and the Causes of the Late Ordovician Mass Extinction”

Joshua Zimmt, Ph.D. candidate, Integrative Biology

Joshua’s work attempts to understand the interactions between life and the Earth system, primarily through the study of extinction events. He dissertation research focuses on the exceptional fossil and rock records on Anticosti Island, Quebec, to understand how climate change may have caused the Late Ordovician mass extinction, one of the largest known extinction events. By producing a better understanding of this critical interval in the history of life, Joshua’s research will serve as a case study of global change that can be used to better understand our rapidly changing modern world.

COSPONSORED EVENT

Reshaping City Politics? Asian Voters’ Demands for Change in San Francisco and Vancouver

Monday, April 24 | 1:00 pm PT | Online | RSVP

The Canadian Studies Program is proud to partner with the Citrin Center for Public Opinion on a panel discussing the growing political importance of Asian-American and Asian-Canadian voters in two West Coast cities. Participants will discuss the outcomes of two recent elections in San Francisco and Vancouver, and what they could indicate about each region’s future.

Panelists will include Lorraine Lowe, executive director of Vancouver’s Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden; Kareem Allam, former campaign director for Vancouver mayor Ken Sim and partner, Fairview Strategy; Ann Hsu, former San Francisco School Board commissioner and founder and head of school for Bert Hsu Academy; and Neil Malhotra, Edith M. Cornell Professor of Political Economy, Stanford Graduate School of Business. The panel will be moderated by David Broockman, associate professor, Travers Department of Political Science, UC Berkeley.

This event is also cosponsored by the Berkeley Interdisciplinary Migration Initiative.

Image: “Stop Asian Hate” protester in Vancouver. Photo by GoToVan on Wikimedia Commons.

RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES

McCall MacBain Scholars Info Session

Tuesday, April 11 | 1:30 pm | 1229 Dwinelle | RSVP

The McCall MacBain Scholarship is an exciting fellowship opportunity that fully funds master’s degrees and living expenses at McGill University in Montreal. As a McCall MacBain Scholar, you will connect with mentors, develop your leadership skills, and receive full funding to start a master’s or professional degree at McGill University. You’ll join an interdisciplinary cohort of scholars from around the world, dedicated to purposeful leadership and action grounded in integrity, empathy, and courage.

The scholarship covers all tuition and fees, plus a living stipend of $2,000 per month during academic terms, summer funding options, and a relocation grant.

This one-hour information session includes a short presentation, followed by a Q&A. Register at scholarships.berkeley.edu. If you would like to learn more about McCall MacBain Scholars but cannot attend the session, subscribe to their email list.

Call for Proposals: ACSUS 26th Biennial Conference

Deadline: Saturday, April 15, 2023

The deadline to submit papers for the Association for Canadian Studies in the United States (ACSUS) 26th Biennial Conference has been extended to April 15.

In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Association for Canadian Studies in the United States (ACSUS), the Association will host its 26th biennial conference, November 16-19, 2023, in Washington, D.C. The conference is open to all proposals with a significant Canadian focus. The Association welcomes papers and panel proposals from students, professors, independent scholars, and practitioners related to the theme, “Canada: Near and Far”.

ACSUS also welcomes strong proposals from students at both the graduate and undergraduate level, including individual submissions as well as group proposals. Students accepted to the colloquium will receive funding support from ACSUS in the form of: 1) $125 USD to cover registration and a 2-year ACSUS membership and 2) $1,000 USD to assist with travel and accommodation costs.

Learn more about applying to the conference or student colloquium here.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Meeting Global Skills and Talent Needs in Changing Labor Markets

Tuesday, April 11 | 7:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

As demographic pressures, technological advances, economic shifts, and pandemic disruptions rapidly reshape labor markets in the United States and globally, the resulting labor shortages and skills gaps are sparking conversations about the role that immigration could serve.

On April 11, join the Migration Policy Institute (MPI) for a discussion with senior policymakers and other experts to the extent to which labor market needs should shape future immigration policy decisions, and how countries are adjusting – and could adjust – their immigration systems to meet human capital and competitiveness needs. Participants will include Christiane Fox, Deputy Minister for Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada.

Why Canada Matters Speaker Series: Dr. Andrea Geiger

Friday, April 14 | 10:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

Western Washington University’s Center for Canadian-American Studies continues their “Why Canada Matters” speaker series with a talk from historian Andrea Geiger. Dr. Geiger will discuss her book, Converging Empires: Citizens and Subjects in the North Pacific Borderlands, which examines the role of the North Pacific borderlands along the northernmost stretches of U.S.-Canada border that divide Alaska from the Yukon and British Columbia, as well as those that follow the contours of the B.C. and Alaska coast, in the construction of race and citizenship in both the United States and Canada. She will speak to the intersecting nature of the race-based legal constraints imposed by Canada and the United States on Japanese immigrants and Indigenous people in this borderlands region, arguing for the importance of giving Canada an equal place in our studies of both transpacific and borderlands history.

Andrea Geiger is professor emerita of history at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia. Her most recent book is Converging Empires: Citizens and Subjects in the North Pacific Borderlands, 1867-1945. Dr. Geiger spoke to Canadian Studies at Berkeley about her book last semester.

Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Facebook  Twitter
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Moses Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720

Wed: New challenges in Arctic archaeology; New faculty affiliate studies equitable urbanism

A newsletter from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Upcoming Events

  • “Fragility and Resilience: Climate Change and Arctic Archaeology”

Program News

  • Canadian Studies welcomes urbanist Karen Chapple as newest faculty affiliate

Research Opportunities

  • Deadline extended to submit papers to the ACSUS 26th Biennial Conference

External Events

  • “Hockey Night in Cascadia: From Canada’s Game to a Kraken Future”
  • “Meeting Global Skills and Talent Needs in Changing Labor Markets”
  • Why Canada Matters Speaker Series: Dr. Andrea Geiger

UPCOMING EVENTS

If you require an accommodation to fully participate in an event, please let us know at least 10 days in advance.

Fragility and Resilience: Climate Change and Arctic Archaeology

Wed., April 5 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Philosophy | RSVP

The human history of the North American Arctic has been a cycle of expansions and contractions, of mobility and migration, and of fragility and resilience. Archaeology brings a long-term perspective to the relationship between humans and the arctic environment. More recently, however, the face of archaeological research and knowledge production has undergone rapid change, particularly in the past decade. Just as geneticists and isotopic chemists have discovered the wealth of information locked in the archaeological record of the arctic, these formerly frozen sites are rapidly melting or eroding into the sea. In addition, Inuit scholars and communities are redefining their relationship with archaeology and archaeologists. Based on the author’s own field work, this talk focuses on the historical ecology of Smith Sound at the northern edge of what is now Canada and Greenland. New questions and new methods have enhanced our understanding of a place that exemplifies both isolation and long-distance social bonds, precariousness and resilience.

Note: The speaker will share artifacts from excavations in Greenland at the in-person presentation.

About the Speaker

Dr. Christyann Darwent is a professor of anthropology at UC Davis. She is originally from Calgary, where she completed her undergraduate degree in archaeology and undertook her first of several field seasons in the Canadian High Arctic 30 years ago. After receiving her M.A. at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, and a Ph.D. from the University of Missouri, she started her career at UC Davis in 2001. Since then, she has conducted NSF-sponsored archaeological excavations in Kotzebue Sound, Alaska and Inglefield Land, Greenland. For the past decade her lab has also been conducting archaeological research near the Native village of Shaktoolik in Norton Sound, Alaska. In addition to studies of past subsistence practices and social organization among Inuit, Inughuit, Inupiaq, and Yup’ik occupants of the Arctic over the past 1000 years, she has published on the history of Inuit sled dogs using ancient and modern DNA.

This event is co-sponsored by the Department of Anthropology and the Archaeological Research Facility (ARF).

PROGRAM NEWS

Canadian Studies Welcomes Urbanist Karen Chapple as Newest Faculty Affiliate

Canadian Studies is pleased to announce that Dr. Karen Chapple, an urban planning researcher currently at the University of Toronto, has joined the program as our newest faculty affiliate.

Dr. Chapple is the director of the School of Cities at the University of Toronto, where she also serves as a professor in the Department of Geography and Planning. She is also a professor emerita and former chair of the Department of City & Regional Planning at UC Berkeley. In that role, she serves as the current faculty director of the UC Berkeley Center for Community Innovation, an institute dedicated to creating resilient, equitable communities.

Urban planning has been an area of growing activity for Canadian Studies, due to an increase in student interest in issues like sustainable development and combatting housing unaffordability. Dr. Chapple serves as an advisor to current Hildebrand Fellow Taesoo Song, who is studying the effects of Ontario’s Non-Resident Speculation Tax on immigrant communities in Toronto.

Dr. Chapple’s research explores inequalities in planning, development, and governance in North and Latin America, with a focus on economic development and housing. She has published on a broad array of subjects, including the impact of big tech on local housing markets, the fiscalization of land use, urban displacement, community investment, and accessory dwelling units as a smart growth policy. Her 2015 book, Planning Sustainable Cities and Regions: Towards More Equitable Development, won the John Friedmann Book Award from the American Collegiate Schools of Planning.

Dr. Chapple holds a B.A. in urban studies from Columbia University, an M.S.C.R.P from the Pratt Institute, and a Ph.D. from UC Berkeley. Before entering academia, Dr. Chapple spent ten years as a practicing planner in New York and San Francisco. She has previously also served on the faculties of the University of Minnesota and the University of Pennsylvania.

RESEARCH OPPORTUNITIES

Call for Proposals: ACSUS 26th Biennial Conference

Deadline: Saturday, April 15, 2023

The deadline to submit papers for the Association for Canadian Studies in the United States (ACSUS) 26th Biennial Conference has been extended to April 15.

In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Association for Canadian Studies in the United States (ACSUS), the Association will host its 26th biennial conference, November 16-19, 2023, in Washington, D.C. The conference is open to all proposals with a significant Canadian focus. The Association welcomes papers and panel proposals from students, professors, independent scholars, and practitioners related to the theme, “Canada: Near and Far”.

ACSUS also welcomes strong proposals from students at both the graduate and undergraduate level, including individual submissions as well as group proposals. Students accepted to the colloquium will receive funding support from ACSUS in the form of: 1) $125 USD to cover registration and a 2-year ACSUS membership and 2) $1,000 USD to assist with travel and accommodation costs.

Learn more about applying to the conference or student colloquium here.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Hockey Night in Cascadia: From Canada’s Game to a Kraken Future

Wednesday, April 5 | 5:30 pm PT | Online | RSVP

Hockey has a long tradition of fostering binational relations between Canada and the United States through diplomacy, media, and economic exchange. To this end, the Hockey Night in Cascadia dialogue will explore the sport as a catalyst for cross-border engagement and a vehicle for political, social, and economic impact.

Moderated by the Center for Canadian-American Studies, Western Washington University’s Professor Derek Moscato, this event will feature hockey historian Andrew Holman (Bridgewater State University), Geoff Baker (Seattle Times), and Andrew Bloom (Seattle Kraken).

Meeting Global Skills and Talent Needs in Changing Labor Markets

Tuesday, April 11 | 7:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

As demographic pressures, technological advances, economic shifts, and pandemic disruptions rapidly reshape labor markets in the United States and globally, the resulting labor shortages and skills gaps are sparking conversations about the role that immigration could serve.

On April 11, join the Migration Policy Institute (MPI) for a discussion with senior policymakers and other experts to the extent to which labor market needs should shape future immigration policy decisions, and how countries are adjusting – and could adjust – their immigration systems to meet human capital and competitiveness needs. Participants will include Christiane Fox, Deputy Minister for Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada.

Why Canada Matters Speaker Series: Dr. Andrea Geiger

Friday, April 14 | 10:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

Western Washington University’s Center for Canadian-American Studies continues their “Why Canada Matters” speaker series with a talk from historian Andrea Geiger. Dr. Geiger will discuss her book, Converging Empires: Citizens and Subjects in the North Pacific Borderlands, which examines the role of the North Pacific borderlands along the northernmost stretches of U.S.-Canada border that divide Alaska from the Yukon and British Columbia, as well as those that follow the contours of the B.C. and Alaska coast, in the construction of race and citizenship in both the United States and Canada. She will speak to the intersecting nature of the race-based legal constraints imposed by Canada and the United States on Japanese immigrants and Indigenous people in this borderlands region, arguing for the importance of giving Canada an equal place in our studies of both transpacific and borderlands history.

Andrea Geiger is professor emerita of history at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia. Her most recent book is Converging Empires: Citizens and Subjects in the North Pacific Borderlands, 1867-1945. Dr. Geiger spoke to Canadian Studies at Berkeley about her book last semester.

Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Facebook  Twitter
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Moses Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720

New Hildebrand Fellow studies Canadian art; Trudeau and Biden’s controversial immigration move

A newsletter from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Upcoming Events

  • “Fragility and Resilience: Climate Change and Arctic Archaeology”

Program News

  • New Hildebrand Fellow, Madeleine Morris, studies work of Canadian conceptual artist Joyce Wieland

US-Canada Relations

  • Trudeau and Biden make common cause in Ottawa
  • Trudeau and Biden toughen enforcement of law limiting asylum claims in Canada

External Events

  • “A New Horizon of Opportunity: Canada in the Indo-Pacific”
  • “Meeting Global Skills and Talent Needs in Changing Labor Markets”
  • “Why Canada Matters Speaker Series: Dr. Andrea Geiger”

UPCOMING EVENTS

If you require an accommodation to fully participate in an event, please let us know at least 10 days in advance.

Fragility and Resilience: Climate Change and Arctic Archaeology

Wed., April 5 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Philosophy | RSVP

The human history of the North American Arctic has been a cycle of expansions and contractions, of mobility and migration, and of fragility and resilience. Archaeology brings a long-term perspective to the relationship between humans and the arctic environment. More recently, however, the face of archaeological research and knowledge production has undergone rapid change, particularly in the past decade. Just as geneticists and isotopic chemists have discovered the wealth of information locked in the archaeological record of the arctic, these formerly frozen sites are rapidly melting or eroding into the sea. In addition, Inuit scholars and communities are redefining their relationship with archaeology and archaeologists. Based on the author’s own field work, this talk focuses on the historical ecology of Smith Sound at the northern edge of what is now Canada and Greenland. New questions and new methods have enhanced our understanding of a place that exemplifies both isolation and long-distance social bonds, precariousness and resilience.

Note: The speaker will share artifacts from excavations in Greenland at the in-person presentation.

About the Speaker

Dr. Christyann Darwent is a professor of anthropology at UC Davis. She is originally from Calgary, where she completed her undergraduate degree in archaeology and undertook her first of several field seasons in the Canadian High Arctic 30 years ago. After receiving her M.A. at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, and a Ph.D. from the University of Missouri, she started her career at UC Davis in 2001. Since then, she has conducted NSF-sponsored archaeological excavations in Kotzebue Sound, Alaska and Inglefield Land, Greenland. For the past decade her lab has also been conducting archaeological research near the Native village of Shaktoolik in Norton Sound, Alaska. In addition to studies of past subsistence practices and social organization among Inuit, Inughuit, Inupiaq, and Yup’ik occupants of the Arctic over the past 1000 years, she has published on the history of Inuit sled dogs using ancient and modern DNA.

This event is co-sponsored by the Department of Anthropology and the Archaeological Research Facility (ARF).

PROGRAM NEWS

New Hildebrand Fellow, Madeleine Morris, Studies Work of Canadian Conceptual Artist Joyce Wieland

Canadian Studies is pleased to introduce Madeleine Morris as the recipient of an Edward Hildebrand Graduate Research Fellowship for Summer 2023.

Madeleine is a first-year Ph.D. student in the history of art specializing in twentieth century art of North America, with an emphasis on folk art and modernism of the United States. The Hildebrand Fellowship will facilitate Madeleine’s research on pioneering Canadian nationalist artist Joyce Wieland (1930-1998). Promoting unity between Francophone and Anglophone Canada while maintaining critical distance through absurdist humor, Wieland’s work interrogates US economic and ecological interference in Canada through a feminist and ecocritical lens, utilizing unconventional mediums like textile and olfactory art. Madeleine’s research will closely analyze the artworks and archival documentation of Wieland’s 1971 landmark exhibition True Patriot Love, housed in several Canadian cultural institutions in Montreal, Ottawa, and Toronto. Analyzing Wieland serves as a means to consider North American art across national and temporal borders, focusing on Canada-United States relations and dialogues around national identity between the interwar period and 1960s-1970s.

Before beginning her Ph.D. program, Madeleine received her B.A. in studio art and Italian from Vassar College in 2014 and her M.A. in the history of art and archaeology from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University in 2022.

US-CANADA RELATIONS

Trudeau and Biden Make Common Cause in Ottawa

US president Joe Biden and Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau met in Ottawa last week as President Biden made his first visit to Canada of his presidency. The President was warmly greeted by the Prime Minister, as well as by ordinary Canadians, in what officials described as a “productive” and positive visit.

The trip was the first visit by a US president to the country since 2017, and Biden was clearly eager to affirm the importance of the US-Canada relationship. In a speech to Parliament, Biden declared that the United States has “no better partner” than its northern neighbor. He pointed to the two nation’s shared goals and values and historically close ties, to repeated applause from attending MPs and guests.

As part of the visit, the two leaders issued a joint statement committed to joint action in seven key areas, including clean energy; economic integration; protection of natural resources; advancing diversity; promoting global alliances; and coordinating joint hemispheric defense efforts.

Both countries agreed to increase defense spending following recent provocations from Russia and China. The US has heavily lobbied Canada to increase defense spending to the 2% NATO minimum. Both leaders condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and pledged their complete support for the Ukrainian government. Trudeau also announced an increase and acceleration of investment in modernizing NORAD, a binational radar system that monitors aerial threats. The announcements follows the much-criticized handling of the Chinese spy balloon incident, and at a time when both countries are experiencing frostier relations with China (including an ongoing scandal over alleged Chinese government interference in Trudeau’s own Liberal Party).

The US also pledged billions in investments in Canada’s semiconductor industry, in a bid to strengthen self-sufficiency in that critical sector. The move envisions the creation of a North American “chip corridor”, making the region less reliant on foreign sources for crucial materials and creating thousands of good-paying jobs.

Also on the agenda was the crisis in Haiti. US officials have tried to convince Canada to lead an international force to restore order in the failing country, but Canadian leaders are hesitant to do so. The issue was again raised when the leaders discussed ways to manage increasing levels of regional migration, which has been expedited by Haiti’s collapse.

In terms of the environment, Canada and the US pledged further investment in clean energy projects in both countries, and emphasized their commitment to achieve net-zero national power grids by 2035. A major new development was a pledge to increase spending to improve water quality in the Great Lakes, which serves as a source of drinking water for millions of people in both countries. They also agreed to work towards modernizing the Columbia River Treaty. This has been a long-running discussion between the two governents, and Canadian Studies hosted a conference that issued a set of policy recommendations in 2017.

Image source: US Government.

Trudeau and Biden Toughen Enforcement of Law Limiting Asylum Claims in Canada

Prime Minister Trudeau announced a major change to a controversial US-Canada refugee agreement during President Biden’s visit to Ottawa last week.

The deal, which was worked out last year but only announced Friday, would expand Canada’s ability to deport asylum seekers to the United States under the Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA). In exchange, Canada agreed to accept an additional 15,000 migrants from the Latin America and the Caribbean per year.

The STCA was enacted between the US and Canada in 2004, and requires that any person claiming refugee status must make the claim in the first country they arrive in. Under the terms of the agreement, officials at US-Canada border posts will turn back asylum seekers who attempt to cross. While the agreement applies to both countries, the number of asylum-seekers attempting to enter Canada is far greater than those headed the other way, as Canada is seen as more friendly to refugee claims.

However, in a major oversight, the original agreement only applied to official ports of entry. No provision was made for migrants who crossed the border illegally. While entering Canada this way is illegal, asylum seekers could nevertheless claim asylum and have their deportation proceedings halted while the claim was processed. The new deal closes this loophole. With few exceptions, any migrant who makes an asylum claim within 14 days of crossing into Canada from the US by land will now be deported back to the United States, and will lose the ability to make future claims in Canada.

The deal is just one of several of similar immigration policies Biden has announced in recent months, but revising the STCA has also been a priority for Trudeau. While Canada has historically been friendlier towards asylum claims, in recent years irregular migration has become more politically charged as the total number of migrants has increased. Government statistics show that from October to December 2022, over 8,000 asylum claims were made by irregular border crossers. The Roxham Road crossing between New York and Quebec has received particular notoriety, due to its unusually high volume of irregular crossings. An estimated 40,000 people crossed in 2022, and many as 5,000 more in January alone. Quebec provincial leaders have claimed they do not have the capacity to handle the increasing number of asylum claims, and federal officials have felt increasing political pressure to close the crossing.

Both the Trudeau and Biden governments praised the new deal, which they say will make immigration safer and discourage dangerous illegal crossings after two migrants froze to death in two months. However, opponents claim that closing Roxham Road will only cause a humanitarian catastrophe, by encouraging migrants to take even riskier, more isolated routes. Additionally, the 14-day window for deportation will only drive migrants underground and increase smuggling activity. And they note that Trudeau’s acceptance of 15,000 additional refugees per year covers only around 40% of the people that crossed at Roxham alone.

Opponents of the deal hope that it may prove be short-lived, as it takes place against the background of ongoing legal challenges to the Safe Third Country Agreement. Since its inception, the STCA has been criticized by immigration advocates and human rights groups in Canada. Opponents have filed numerous legal challenges to the law, asserting that the way US prosecutes immigration enforcement makes the country unsafe for asylum seekers and that migrants have a human right to seek a better life in Canada.

A 2007 challenge found initial success before being overturned by a higher court. Canada’s Federal Court again ruled in favor of suspending the agreement in 2020, determining that it violated the right to “life, liberty, and security of the person” in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The decision cited the likelihood of detention for asylum claimants sent back to the United States, as well as the risk of deportation to their home country. Canadian Studies hosted a discussion of this decision shortly after it was announced, featuring Audrey Macklin, an expert in human rights law from the University of Toronto, and Berkeley Law professor Leti Volpp.

Like before, the decision was again overturned the following year after an appeal by the Trudeau government, which insisted that the United States was a “safe country” as defined in international refugee law. This time, however, the case has advanced to the Canadian Supreme Court, with a ruling pending for an undetermined date.

In the meantime, the new, stricter policy took effect early Saturday morning. The news has been slow to spread, as Roxham Road remains busy with migrants who may not have yet heard about the change. Stéphanie Valois, president of the Quebec Association of Immigration Lawyers (AQAADI), worries that migrants may be unaware of the risk they now take in crossing irregularly. While in the past they may have expected to claim asylum on arrest, they now face deportation and losing the right to make an asylum claim in Canada ever again.

“I’m disappointed that two political leaders who cast themselves as progressive centrists are turning their backs on asylum-seekers,” says Canadian Studies program director Irene Bloemraad, a sociologist specializing in immigration. “Canada has already committed to an expansion in the number of newcomers they plan to welcome; they could easily shift the proportion of those immigrant spots given to refugees and asylees.”

Image: Migrant woman enters Roxham Road crossing. Author: Daniel Case on Wikimedia Commons.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

A New Horizon of Opportunity: Canada in the Indo-Pacific

Thurs., March 30 | 6:00 pm PT | San Francisco, CA | Buy tickets

The Indo-Pacific is rapidly becoming the global center of economic dynamism and strategic challenge. Encompassing 40 economies, more than 4 billion people and more than one-third of all economic activity worldwide—what happens in the region will play a critical role in shaping the future of the international order.

Join the Consulate General of Canada at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco for a thought-provoking discussion examining the role and significance of Canada’s enhanced engagement in building a peaceful, prosperous and sustainable Indo-Pacific region. Consul General Rana Sarkar and Dr. Yves Tiberghien, professor of political science, Konwakai Chair in Japanese Research, and director of the Center for Japanese Research at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, will hold a fireside chat exploring this new horizon of opportunity, as well as the importance of the Bay Area as an international cultural, commercial and financial hub and vital gateway to the Indo-Pacific region. The discussion will be moderated by Ian McCuaig, chair of Asia-Pacific Affairs Forum for the Commonwealth Club of California.

Tickets are available to attend either in person or online.

Meeting Global Skills and Talent Needs in Changing Labor Markets

Tuesday, April 11 | 7:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

As demographic pressures, technological advances, economic shifts, and pandemic disruptions rapidly reshape labor markets in the United States and globally, the resulting labor shortages and skills gaps are sparking conversations about the role that immigration could serve.

On April 11, join the Migration Policy Institute (MPI) for a discussion with senior policymakers and other experts to the extent to which labor market needs should shape future immigration policy decisions, and how countries are adjusting – and could adjust – their immigration systems to meet human capital and competitiveness needs. Participants will include Christiane Fox, Deputy Minister for Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada.

Why Canada Matters Speaker Series: Dr. Andrea Geiger

Friday, April 14 | 10:00 am PT | Online | RSVP

Western Washington University’s Center for Canadian-American Studies continues their “Why Canada Matters” speaker series with a talk from historian Andrea Geiger. Dr. Geiger will discuss her book, Converging Empires: Citizens and Subjects in the North Pacific Borderlands, which examines the role of the North Pacific borderlands along the northernmost stretches of U.S.-Canada border that divide Alaska from the Yukon and British Columbia, as well as those that follow the contours of the B.C. and Alaska coast, in the construction of race and citizenship in both the United States and Canada. She will speak to the intersecting nature of the race-based legal constraints imposed by Canada and the United States on Japanese immigrants and Indigenous people in this borderlands region, arguing for the importance of giving Canada an equal place in our studies of both transpacific and borderlands history.

Andrea Geiger is professor emerita of history at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia. Her most recent book is Converging Empires: Citizens and Subjects in the North Pacific Borderlands, 1867-1945. Dr. Geiger spoke to Canadian Studies at Berkeley about her book last semester.

Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Facebook  Twitter
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Moses Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720

Indigenous Canadians are leading a clean energy boom; Arctic archaeology; Housing & urbanism

A newsletter from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Upcoming Events

  • “Fragility and Resilience: Climate Change and Arctic Archaeology”

Local News

  • UToronto / UC Berkeley urbanist Karen Chapple featured on KQED Forum

News From Canada

  • Indigenous Canadians lead country’s green energy boom

External Events

  • “Antiquities and the Far Right in Settler Colonies: A View from Canada”
  • “A New Horizon of Opportunity: Canada in the Indo-Pacific”

UPCOMING EVENTS

If you require an accommodation to fully participate in an event, please let us know at least 10 days in advance.

Fragility and Resilience: Climate Change and Arctic Archaeology

Wed., April 5 | 12:30 pm PT | 223 Philosophy | RSVP

The human history of the North American Arctic has been a cycle of expansions and contractions, of mobility and migration, and of fragility and resilience. Archaeology brings a long-term perspective to the relationship between humans and the arctic environment. More recently, however, the face of archaeological research and knowledge production has undergone rapid change, particularly in the past decade. Just as geneticists and isotopic chemists have discovered the wealth of information locked in the archaeological record of the arctic, these formerly frozen sites are rapidly melting or eroding into the sea. In addition, Inuit scholars and communities are redefining their relationship with archaeology and archaeologists. Based on the author’s own field work, this talk focuses on the historical ecology of Smith Sound at the northern edge of what is now Canada and Greenland. New questions and new methods have enhanced our understanding of a place that exemplifies both isolation and long-distance social bonds, precariousness and resilience.

Note: The speaker will share artifacts from excavations in Greenland at the in-person presentation.

About the Speaker

Dr. Christyann Darwent is a professor of anthropology at UC Davis. She is originally from Calgary, where she completed her undergraduate degree in archaeology and undertook her first of several field seasons in the Canadian High Arctic 30 years ago. After receiving her M.A. at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, and a Ph.D. from the University of Missouri, she started her career at UC Davis in 2001. Since then, she has conducted NSF-sponsored archaeological excavations in Kotzebue Sound, Alaska and Inglefield Land, Greenland. For the past decade her lab has also been conducting archaeological research near the Native village of Shaktoolik in Norton Sound, Alaska. In addition to studies of past subsistence practices and social organization among Inuit, Inughuit, Inupiaq, and Yup’ik occupants of the Arctic over the past 1000 years, she has published on the history of Inuit sled dogs using ancient and modern DNA.

This event is co-sponsored by the Department of Anthropology and the Archaeological Research Facility (ARF).

LOCAL NEWS

UToronto / UC Berkeley Urbanist Karen Chapple Featured on KQED Forum

Dr. Karen Chapple, director of the School of Cities at the University of Toronto, was a featured guest on an episode of KQED Forum that aired last week. Professor Chapple, who studies economic development, housing, and inequality in North American cities, was invited to address the future of downtown San Francisco following the recent collapse in demand for office space. In a perspective informed by Toronto’s similar housing issues, she discussed challenges facing the conversion of old office buildings to housing, as well as issues of broader regional planning currently facing the greater Bay Area.

In addition to her appointment at the University of Toronto, Dr. Chapple is a professor emerita of city and regional planning at UC Berkeley’s College of Environmental Design. She has served as an advisor to Hildebrand Fellow Taesoo Song, who is studying the effects of Ontario’s Non-Resident Speculation Tax on immigrant communities in Toronto.

NEWS FROM CANADA

Indigenous Canadians lead country’s green energy boom

Canada is well-known as among the world’s largest energy economies, with the sector forming over 10% of the country’s GDP. At the same time, the country is globally recognized as an advocate for climate change solutions. While Canada’s energy industry has traditionally been dominated by oil and gas, both ordinary Canadians and their leaders have recently prioritized greening the sector. Earlier this year, Prime Minister Trudeau announced a national net-zero emissions by 2050, and thanks to both strong government support and public interest, Canada has seen an explosion of green energy projects in recent years.

What’s less well known is that much of this “green” sea change is being led by Indigenous communities across the nation. Over the last few years, Native entities have become key investors in this field. According to a 2020 report by advocacy group Indigenous Clean Energy Social Enterprise (ICE), Indigenous groups have meaningful involvement in over 197 medium-to-large projects across the country, a number that’s only grown in the last three years. These investments are now so substantial that ICE estimates that Indigenous groups have some level of ownership or defined benefit agreement for over 20% of Canada’s energy infrastructure.

This heavy investment by band governments into renewables isn’t accidental. It addresses two key priorities for these communities, and it comes at a time when their interests dovetail with Federal policies around the environment and Reconciliation. For one, these projects advance with the values of sustainability and environmental stewardship that Indigenous peoples have long espoused. But these projects also advance their goals of sovereignty and economic self-reliance. Indigenous communities are increasingly pushing for greater control over new projects on their lands. For many, this includes a partial stake in new infrastructure, if not outright ownership, in lieu of the employment agreements or financial compensation typical in past projects.

A recent Canadian Studies Hildebrand Fellow, Aaron Gregory, received research funding to study one of these projects in 2021. Gregory, now an assistant professor of Native American Studies at Cal Poly Humboldt, traveled to British Columbia to study a sea energy project developed through cooperation between the Scia’new First Nation and the provincial government. Typical of this push for Native self-empowerment, the project challenges a provincial energy monopoly and increases the band’s economic self-sufficiency, all while providing a better quality of life to local residents. As Indigenous communities develop greater experience in the sector, experts predict that similar projects will only increase their share of Canada’s energy production in coming years.

Image: St. Leon Wind Farm, Manitoba. Photo by Loozrboy on Wikimedia Commons.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Antiquities and the Far Right in Settler Colonies: A View from Canada

Tuesday, March 21 | 5:30 pm PT | Online | RSVP

The “Freedom Convoy” protestors who occupied Ottawa and several Canadian locations in the winter 2022 raised millions of dollars via online platforms, most notably GiveSendGo. In mid-February 2022, a list of these donors was leaked to journalists and researchers, providing a glimpse at the motivations of those who give financial support to white nationalism. It also gives us a window into the uses and abuses of ancient-to-modern history by individuals (c)overtly supporting such movements, and, thereby, poses serious questions regarding the political impacts of historical illiteracy.

In this presentation, Dr. Katherine Blouin (associate professor of Ancient History and Classics, University of Toronto) will present the preliminary results of an ongoing research project dedicated to the use of historical references in the Freedom Convoy fundraising campaign.

This event is sponsored by the Archaeological Institute of America San Francisco as part of their Ellen And Charles S. La Follette Lecture Series.

A New Horizon of Opportunity: Canada in the Indo-Pacific

Thurs., March 30 | 6:00 pm PT | San Francisco, CA | Buy tickets

The Indo-Pacific is rapidly becoming the global center of economic dynamism and strategic challenge. Encompassing 40 economies, more than 4 billion people and more than one-third of all economic activity worldwide—what happens in the region will play a critical role in shaping the future of the international order.

Join the Consulate General of Canada at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco for a thought-provoking discussion examining the role and significance of Canada’s enhanced engagement in building a peaceful, prosperous and sustainable Indo-Pacific region. Consul General Rana Sarkar and Dr. Yves Tiberghien, professor of political science, Konwakai Chair in Japanese Research, and director of the Center for Japanese Research at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, will hold a fireside chat exploring this new horizon of opportunity, as well as the importance of the Bay Area as an international cultural, commercial and financial hub and vital gateway to the Indo-Pacific region. The discussion will be moderated by Ian McCuaig, chair of Asia-Pacific Affairs Forum for the Commonwealth Club of California.

Tickets are available to attend either in person or online.

Canadian Studies Program
213 Moses Hall #2308
Facebook  Twitter
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Moses Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720