2019

February 6, 2019 | Writing our Way to Freedom: Commemoration for the Congress of Black Writers

In 1968, in the midst of the Quiet Revolution when radical ideas were being debated in classrooms, cafés, and factories across the city, Black Caribbean university students at McGill and Sir George Williams along with members of Montreal’s Black community organized the Congress of Black Writers. For four days, those attending the McGill event grappled with the ongoing consequences of colonialism and the afterlife of slavery for people of African descent.
Over 50 years later, we gathered again at McGill to commemorate this historic event and explore the multitude of ways that Black people continue to fight for justice using their voice and their words as they write their way to freedom. This event, taking place at the McGill Faculty Club, featured a panel of 4 excellent speakers including Senator Anne Cools, Mr. Rodney Saint-Éloi, Ms. Elena Stoodley and Dr. Dorothy Williams, and was moderated by Ms. Pat Dillon-Moore. The speakers each had a chance to look back on the Commemoration and then join in on a discussion of the past, present, and future of Black resilience, resistance and power.

 


February 22, 2019 | The Challenges of Coexistence: Language Policy in Canada

Much has been written recently about language policy in Canada, in light of political developments in provinces like New Brunswick and Ontario, the 50th Anniversary of the Official Languages Act and the announced recognition of Indigenous languages in Canada. The objective of this Symposium was to discuss language policy in Canada, with a particular emphasis on language minorities. The event focused on Canada’s two official languages and their fate at the federal and provincial levels while also bringing to the fore issues related to other languages present in Canada, including Indigenous languages.
Following a short introduction, a first panel provided retrospective insights on official (and non-official or not-yet official) languages in Canada (i.e. a sort of “lay of the land” from the perspective of various language groups). A second panel, then looked forward, taking a more prospective approach. It aimed to facilitate a conversation about the co-existence of Canada’s Official Languages with the recognition of Indigenous languages, and arguably of the country’s rich linguistic diversity.
This event was fully bilingual, and will included simultaneous interpretation.

 


March 21 & 22, 2019 | MISC's 24th Annual Conference: Federalism and Canada's Shifting Political Landscape

On March 21st and 22nd, MISC hosted it's 24th Annual Conference, featuring 9 different panels that discussed several different issues facing today's Canadians, and how they relate to federalism and our shifting political landscape. Hosted in collaboration with the Institute for Research on Public Policy (IRPP), the objective of this year’s conference was to improve our understanding of how recent and forthcoming provincial elections and other ongoing political trends are likely to impact federalism, intergovernmental relations and public policy in Canada. More specifically, the conference addressed the following questions: First, how are recent and forthcoming elections in provinces like Alberta, BC, Ontario, and Quebec and related political trends likely to impact debates over crucial policy issues ranging from trade, energy policy, and environmental protection to immigration, and Indigenous affairs? Second, how will public opinion and the media shape these debates and, more broadly, the future of Canadian federalism? Third, what is the potential impact of these intergovernmental debates on the next federal elections and public policy in Canada? Fore more information on the conference and its participants, you can visit the event's page here. Pictures can be viewed here and video clips of the conference and all the panels can be found here

 


March 26, 2019 | The Winter 2019 Eakin Lecture, Counteracting Erasure and 'Unvisibility': Expressions of Black Identity in Contemporary American and Canadian Fiction 

Ralph Ellison suggests that the unnamed protagonist of his 1952 novel has become an "invisible man" simply by being a black man in the United States of his time. Canadian feminist scholar Katherine McKittrick contends in her 2006 book Demonic Grounds: Black Women and the Cartographies of Struggle that the state Ellison's protagonist experiences is better described as "unvisibility," a condition that renders him an an “imperceptible social, political, and geographic subject." She goes on to argue that contemporary black Canadians face a similar condition. For the Winter 2019 Eakin Lecture on March 26th, Professor Derek C. Maus comparatively discussed works by three pairs of contemporary African-American and black Canadian authors – Percival Everett and Andre Alexis, Dany Laferrière and Jesmyn Ward, Colson Whitehead and Esi Edugyan – and examined the ways in which they resist and overthrow the cultural forces that erase or otherwise contribute to the "unvisibility" of black identity in North America. For more information on the lecture, visit the event's page here. Pictures of the event will be available shortly. 


April 3, 2019 | The Winter 2019 Mallory Lecture, Canada's Climate Impasse: A Way Forward

Hewers of wood, drawers of water and emitters of...hot air?

Canadians consistently state that environmental issues, including action on climate change, are a priority for them. Canadian governments consistently fail to meet our international obligations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. While they took very different paths, all arrived at the same result: increased GHG production in Canada. Did Stephen Harper really believe that Kyoto was a « socialist plot »? When Justin Trudeau proclaimed « Canada is back » at the Paris climate conference, how could Canadians know that he was back with Stephen Harper's plan, targets and timeline? Does Maxime Bernier really believe that CO2 is just plant food and therefore cannot be considered pollution? Why is the NDP opposed to oil pipelines as a matter of principle but in favour of gas pipelines? Thomas Mulcair's contribution to the Winter 2019 Mallory Lecture focused on the smoke screens used in Canadian politics, the climate reality that we are in and the different policy solutions that we should already be adopting. Fore more information on the lecture, visit the event's page here. Pictures of the event can be viewed here, and the recording of the lecture can be found here

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