Identity | The Harriet Tubman Institute /research/tubman The Harriet Tubman Institute at żě˛ĄĘÓƵ Wed, 15 Apr 2026 19:33:04 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Lace Mahalia Jackson /research/tubman/profile/lace-mahalia-jackson/ Thu, 26 Jun 2025 18:25:44 +0000 /research/tubman/?post_type=profile&p=8584 Dr Lace Jackson (BA(Hons), CQSW, MA, AASW, CPOD, PhD) FRSA, is a Pracademic researcher with substantial experience in social care and leadership practice, Lace has undertaken many roles most recently as an Executive Director for a Clinical Psychotherapeutic Institute within the Charity sector and previously as Director of Social Care Leaning and Development within large two-tier local authorities. Lace's current research focuses on societal and organisational narratives, which present structural, social, and material consequences for marginalised groups; specifically Global Majority leaders, from African, Caribbean, Asian and Sub-Saharan ethnicities, exercising and practicing leadership within postcolonial constraints.

Keywords: Global Majority, Leadership, Identity, Autoethnography, Organisational Narratives, Genre and Narrative Analysis

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Michelle J. Martineau /research/tubman/profile/michelle-j-martineau/ Thu, 21 Nov 2024 18:55:24 +0000 /research/tubman/?post_type=profile&p=8223 Michelle is a PhD candidate in Political Science at the Université de Montréal. She holds a Master’s degree in Public Law (Université des Antilles – Guadeloupe) and a Master’s in Political Science with a concentration in International Relations, Cooperation, and Development (Université du Québec à Montréal). Her Master’s research focused on departmentalization and independence in the Guadeloupean context, spanning from 1950 to 1990. Her doctoral project examines identity (both political and cultural) and its impact on Guadeloupe’s political future in a post-colonial setting. Specifically, she aims to deconstruct the notion of departmentalization, illustrating how epistemic violence has influenced the construction of political and cultural identity in the archipelago. She was the student representative for CRIDAQ (2021-2023) and received scholarships from CRIDAQ as well as the CÉRIUM writing grant (winter 2023). She is the founder of the blog identitescaraibes.org and a columnist for NéoQuébec.

Keywords: Colonization, decolonization, postcolonial and decolonial theories, race, ethnicity, identity, citizenship, assimilation, universalism, France, nationalism, Caribbean geopolitics, regional Caribbean governance, international relations, political violence, (De)colonial feminism, Black studies

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