Associate Professor of Gender, Religion and Critical Studies; Academic Director of the Community Research Unit, University of Regina
Dr. Michelle Stewart is an Associate Professor in Gender, Religion and Critical Studies as well as affiliated faculty in the Department of Justice Studies at the University of Regina located on Treaty 4 Territory.
Michelle is an applied social scientist working on a number of interdisciplinary teams at the regional, national and international level including the Saskatchewan Population Health and Evaluation Research Unit. Michelle is involved in research and evaluation projects focused on cognitive disabilities, mental health and racialized inequalities as they present in the criminal justice and child welfare systems of settler states. More specifically Michelle looks at the over-representation of Indigenous peoples in these systems and the ongoing role of colonization that produce these racialized effects in Canada. Working with individuals, families, community members and frontline workers, Michelle uses participatory and community-based research models to co-design projects and mobilize research findings. The overall goal of which is to change programs and practices so as to bring about better justice outcomes for individuals while also working on the systemic root causes of these forms of marginalization and oppression. From delivery of frontline training to scholarly and artistic outputs, Michelle works at multiple levels and with a wide variety of stakeholders to try and address inequalities. Michelle currently holds Tri-Council funding for research, evaluation and arts-based projects across Canada. She is also the project lead on a multi-year project sponsored by Public Safety Canada that focused on Truth and Reconciliation Call to Action #34. For more information about some of the justice-related projects please visit: https://fasdresearchproject.com.
In addition to projects that seek to directly intervene on the justice and child welfare systems, Michelle is also involved in a number of strengths-based initiatives across Canada. These projects place an emphasis on making resources available to communities and include supported employment opportunities through projects that are focused on lived experience, community making and arts-based practices. For more information about some of these projects please visit: http://improvenabled.ca
Michelle is dedicated to community-engaged and publicly-available scholarship in her own work and supporting the work of others. She is the Academic Director of the Community Research Unit. For more information about the Community Research Unit please visit: http://www.uregina.ca/arts/community-research/
A better future: How to defund and reimagine policing
Jun 13, 2020 11:00 am UTC| Insights & Views Life
On May 25, social media erupted with the image of a Black man once again whispering I cant breathe while under the knee of a white police officer for eight minutes and forty six seconds. George Floyds death sparked horror,...
A sustainable future begins at ground level
Canada needs a national strategy for homeless refugee claimants
An eclipse for everyone – how visually impaired students can ‘get a feel for’ eclipses