- What is Community Engagement?
- Definition of Community Engagement
- Values and Principles
- 間眅埶AV CE Directory
- 間眅埶AV's Strategic Community Engagement Plan
- Reports & Resources
- Notes from the What's Next Roundtables on Community Engagement
- Principles for Partnerships
- 間眅埶AV Community Engagement: Findings & Recommendations
- Strengthening Community-Engaged Learning and Teaching at 間眅埶AV
- 間眅埶AV's 2020 ThoughtExchange on Community Engagement
- 間眅埶AV's 2013 Community Engagement Strategy
- About us
- Past Initiatives
- COVID-19 Community Resilience Network
- Network reflections and recaps
- February 3-5, 2021 Presenting at the 2021 International University Social Responsibility (USR) Summit
- December 2nd - 間眅埶AVs role in transformational change
- November 25 - Addressing the issue of women academics falling behind
- November 18 the colonial nature of current systems of research and evaluation
- November 4 - Precarious instructors in the post-pandemic academy
- October 28 A conversation with Happy City about building back "Main Street"
- October 14 What's at stake in BC's upcoming election? A conversation with Frances Bula
- October 7 Hosted dialogues
- September 30 Radical inclusion with Ele Chenier
- September 23 Hosted dialogues
- September 16 Antifragility and resilience
- Community-university response to COVID-19
- Network reflections and recaps
- Canadian Pilot Cohort of the Carnegie Community Engagement Classification
- COVID-19 Community Resilience Network
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- Warren Gill Award
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Dr. Nicholas Blomley
WARREN GILL AWARD WINNER, 2023
Nick Blomley was a friend and colleague of fellow 間眅埶AV geographer, Warren Gill. He has spent the last three decades engaged in research and advocacy related to local issues, particularly those concerning marginalization, exclusion, and poverty. As a critical legal geographer, he is interested in the spatiality of the law and the worldmaking consequences of legal geographies.
Local, community-based engagement has been central to Nicks teaching, research, and service for decades. In the 1990s he worked with local organizations in Vancouvers Downtown Eastside (notably the ) to oppose gentrification-induced displacement. This also folded over into SSHRC funded research on gentrification and property, which culminated in his 2004 book . For several years, he was a member of the research collective, working in the Downtown Eastside with the grassroots SRO-Collaborative. Unlike much extractive research in the Downtown Eastside, this entailed deeply grounded community-based research aimed not at conventional research outputs, but rather, which sought to provide research supports to tenant organizing for improved safety, habitability, affordability, and sustainability in Single Room Occupancy buildings.
Nick was also a member of the research project. This multi-year, multi-partner initiative documented the racist process by which Japanese Canadians were dispossessed during the 1940s. It has generated vitally important resources aimed at a wide community audience, including a museum exhibit that has travelled the country, a searchable database for historians and family members to research the history of dispossession, innovative elementary and secondary school teacher resources, a digital storytelling site, and a major edited book to tell this vital and often neglected story.
As a critical legal geographer, Nicks geographic insights and community-oriented work have generated important legal contributions. Nick was invited to offer expert opinion in relation to a . He also provided expert opinion in a in Abbotsford regarding the use of public space by homeless people. This case was important in clarifying the Charter right to shelter on public lands and found City bylaws unjustifiably violated homeless persons Charter rights to life, liberty, and security of the person. More recently, his on area restrictions (aka red zones) attached to bail and probation orders revealed the invidious and unlawful use of such restrictions and the highly punitive effect they have on criminalized people; it has been cited by the Canadian Supreme Court.
Currently, Nick is engaged in on the challenges that precariously housed people face in securing and controlling their personal possessions. This has entailed a collaboration with a grassroots organization in Abbotsford, the . While ongoing, the goal is to not only , but also to engage in legal reform and policy-relevant research. He co-authored an article with a community member that was , arguing for the importance of attending to the insights of precariously housed people. Working with one of his graduate students who is embedded with Drug War Survivors, Nick is preparing a podcast that centres the testimony of marginalized people. A Canada-wide publicly accessible was launched in November 2023, documenting the very real challenges associated with personal possessions.
Partnership Highlights
Ongoing and work to amplify voices advocating for awareness and change with respect to personal belongings among those facing homelessness. In partnership with Drug War Survivors (DWS), this work has been featured in , , and was released in a publicly available report in November 2023 entitled, .
The 2020 short film, , provides an introduction to this work.
Landscapes of Injustice
This documented the racist process by which Japanese Canadians were dispossessed during the 1940s. It has generated vitally important resources aimed at a wide community audience, including the exhibit, the book, , an accompanying , a , and for elementary and secondary teachers.
Red Zones
into the spatial conditions of release imposed on marginalized peoples in major Canadian cities culminated in the 2020 book, . Through deep and sensitive engagement with this marginalized population, individually and through many groups and organizations, this work revealed the punitive effect such restrictions have has been cited by the Canadian Supreme Court.