PhD. Students

The following PhD. students are currently enrolled in our department's Sociology PhD. program.

Tichana Adam

adam112@uwindsor.ca

Area of Interest: Classical sociological theory, metatheory, Hegelianism, Kantianism, Marxism, political economy, and philosophical sociology


Andrew Chapados

chapadoa@uwindsor.ca

Man standing in nature smiling

Area of Interest:  I am interested in LGBTQ+ families and the process of creating safe social spaces.


Jennifer Halliday

hallidaj@uwindsor.ca

Young woman against a wooden wall, smiling

Areas of Interest: environmental and animal well-being and conservation, ethics and morality, environmental racism, and the representation of diverse ontologies and epistemologies in policy.


Laisa Massarenti-Hosoya

hosoya@uwindsor.ca

 

Area of Interest: As an interdisciplinary researcher, my interests encompass decolonial studies, gender, feminism, social movements, human rights, dam impacts, land rights, Indigenous Peoples, traditional knowledge, domestic violence, and public policy.


Bridget Nicholls

nicho11q@uwindsor.ca

Area of Interest:  animal protection organizations, equity, diversity, and inclusion, human-animal work and humane jobs, human-animal violence link, organizational challenge and change, and sociolegal organizations and leaders.


Tarran Maharaj

maharajt@uwindsor.ca

Area of Interest: Food Poverty, Food Literacy, Social Innovation, Global Indigeneity, Community-Service-Learning, On-Campus Food-Systems-Programs, Self-Reflective Experiential Learning / Lived-Experiences, Professional Academic Micro-Aggressional-Behavioural-Patterns, Modern-Day Passive Aggressive Socio-Academic Racist Practices


Diwen Shi

shi13r@uwindsor.ca

Aread of Interest: Gender Studies, Intimate Relations, East Asian Culture, Ethnography


Samantha Wauthier-Paspuleti

wauthies@uwindsor.ca

Area of Interest: While my research interests tend to vary, I have a longstanding interest in all things liminal - be they spaces, research methods or otherwise.

Although my previous academic record derives from the disciplines of Anthropology and Sociology, my approach to research stems from a combination of social scientific disciplines,

such as history, archeology, religious studies, and anthrozoology. I have an interdisciplinary interest in qualitative approaches to identity, space/place, symbolism, ritual, and belief.


Dara Vosoughi

vosough@uwindsor.ca

Interest Areas: migration, border dynamics, the lived experiences of migrants and refugees. Furthermore, I am interested in examining, understanding,

and breaking down societal constructions of criminality, exploring its practical manifestations and implications on the lives of those vulnerable to criminalization.

I strive to better understand how social and legal frameworks of citizenship and legal-personhood affect individual and communal experiences with belonging,

integration and identity, particularly within the context of involuntary migration. My research goals aim to unravel the often-conflated concepts of criminality and illegality.