Researcher

Nadia Almasalkhi

Edward E. Hildebrand Fellow, 2024
Department of Sociology

Nadia Almasalkhi is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology. Her research focuses on political transnationalism in Middle Eastern diasporas and the phenomenon of political non-participation. Her dissertation seeks to understand why participation by out-of-country voters sharply increased in Lebanese elections between 2018 and 2022, and why this increase was uneven across destination countries where the diaspora live. Specifically, her project will compare the political engagement of Lebanese in Canada, the United States, and the United Arab Emirates, examining how different...

Allison Evans

Edward E. Hildebrand Fellow, 2023
Department of City & Regional Planning

Allison is a Ph.D. student in city and regional planning. Her work takes a critical approach to housing policy and land use planning. She examines the barriers to creating truly affordable housing, and how municipalities can deliver on their housing goals.

Allison's Hildebrand Fellowship will enable her to study Housing Now, an affordable housing program in her home city of Toronto. Housing Now aims at developing affordable housing through public-private partnerships and surplus city-owned land. Allison's research is motivated by the limited assessments of Housing Now's progress,...

AJ Kurdi

Edward E. Hildebrand Fellow, 2024
Department of Ethnic Studies

AJ Kurdi is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Ethnic Studies, with a designated emphasis in Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies. His dissertation research is a comparative study on different forms of ethnic minority queer organizing in Montreal, Budapest, and Paris, and how they shape the priorities and political orientations of mainstream LGBTQI movements, laws and public policies in North America and Europe.

AJ's Hildebrand Fellowship will support his fieldwork in Montreal during the monthlong Fierté Montréal celebration. He will examine the...

Britt Leake

Edward E. Hildebrand Fellow, 2023-24
Travers Department of Political Science

Britt Leake is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Political Science. His research focuses on understanding the conditions under which democracy succeeds or fails in societies with extensive ethnolinguistic or religious diversity. His dissertation project uses John Rawls’s theory of public reason as a frame through which to examine historical cases from four countries (Canada, India, Lebanon, and Spain) in which different cultural groups tried to make compromises on the terms of a social contract that would be legitimate in the eyes of each group. Britt’s research on Canada will focus...