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Wendy Chan

Professor of Sociology, Department Chair
Sociology & Anthropology

Biography

Wendy Chan is a criminology-trained social scientist interested in the intersections of gender, race and class differences in the context of the criminal justice system, mainstream media, immigration and welfare systems. Her past projects have examined the criminalization of marginalized groups in Canada, focusing specifically on the ideological underpinnings of their treatment by social institutions and the state.


She is currently working on two projects in the area of domestic violence. The first project examines legal access to justice for victims of domestic violence and the second explores the barriers to service provision for abused immigrant
women in BC.

Education

PhD University of Cambridge
MPhil University of Cambridge
MA University of Sheffield
BA, Hons. Carleton University 

Areas of Interest

Race, racialization and criminal justice; immigration policies, enforcement and control; welfare, poverty and social exclusion; criminalization of poverty; violence against women; domestic homicides; feminist and critical criminology

Select Publications

Books

  •  (2020) Halifax: Fernwood Publishing
  •  (2014) Co-authored with Dorothy Chunn. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  •  (2007) Co-authored with Kiran Mirchandani. Halifax: Fernwood Publishing.
  •  (2005) Co-edited with Dorothy Chunn and Robert Menzies. London: Glasshouse Press.
  •  (2001) Basingstoke: Palgrave Press.
  • Crimes of Colour: Racialization and the Criminal Justice System in Canada (2001) Co-edited with Kiran Mirchandani. Peterborough: Broadview Press.

Awards & Funding

  • 2016-2017 Principal Investigator for Justice Partnership and Innovation Program - Family Violence Initiative, Department of Justice
    Dismantling Barriers to Safety: Developing a coordinated model of community interventions for abused immigrant women in BC"
  • 20162019 Co-Investigator for Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Insight Grant
    Domestic Violence and Access to Justice Within and Across Multiple Legal Systems

Currently Teaching