
Areas of specialization
- Refugees, Diasporas and Exiles
- Settler-Colonialism, Postcolonialism, Anti-Racism
- Nonviolence, Peace, Feminist and Social Justice Movements
- Ethnography and Autoethnography
- Israel/Palestine Culture and Politics
- US Culture and Politics
- Human Rights and Humanitarianism
- Indigenous Practices and Relations
Background
BA (Trent); MA (Notre Dame); PhD (McMaster)
Jasmin Habib holds a PhD in Anthropology and an MA in International Peace Studies. Her research publications focus on the politics of empire and the practices of decolonization with primary interest in the experiences of war-affected refugees now living in Israel, Palestine, Canada and the United States; indigenous practices and relations of autonomy in North America; and the architecture of consent for contemporary state violence (systemic and direct).
Dr. Habib鈥檚 work is primarily ethnographic and collaborative. Her research methodologies and practices are informed by postcolonial, diaspora, indigenous and feminist theories of the state; and the theories of spatial and visual cultures of violence/non-violence.
Dr. Habib is past-Editor-in-Chief and Anglophone Editor of Anthropologica, the flagship journal of the Canadian Anthropology Society, and General Editor of the Cultural Spaces series at the University of Toronto Press.
She is completing her book manuscript entitled Transnational Palestine: History, Memory, Identity as well as co-editing a book on Arab Canadians with Rachad Antonius; and a book on the US-Canada border with Jane Desmond.
Academic Awards (selected)
Research
- SSHRC, Partnership Grant, Migration and Food (co-applicant, with J. Crush)
- BSIA Seed Grant, Securitising Emotions, Emotionalising Security
- SSHRC Partnership Development Grant, A Socio-Cultural Mapping of the Canadian Arab Community (PI)
- Waswanipi First Nation, Waswanipi Community-Building History Project: A First Peoples鈥 History of the Waswanipi First Nation (book, website, documentation) (co-PI with S. Gull and H. Feit)
- UW-SSHRC/Robert Harding Award. Critical Distance: Israeli Emigrants and the Israel/Palestine Conflict
- UW-SSHRC Research Grant, Diaspora Dissidents: Crossing the Israel-Palestine Divide
- SSHRC, Standard Research Grant, Ethnography and Indigenous Co-Authorship: Multi-Vocal Texts and a Monograph on James Bay Crees Visions and Practices of Relational Co-Governance (co-PI with H. Feit)
- Initiatory Research Grant, What鈥檚 Left of the Jewish Left? Research Office, Laurier University
- SSHRC - Northern Development Research Program. Ethnographic Writing and Indigenous Co-Authorship: Dialogues Among Anthropologists and James Bay Crees (co-PI, with H. Feit)
Knowledge Mobilization and Workshop Grants
- BSIA Workshop Grant, Women鈥檚 International Mentorship Network
- SSHRC / CRSH. Les Possedes et leurs mondes 2.0 (collaborator with F. Laugrand)
- BSIA Workshop Grant, Mass Extinction: Indigenous Perspectives (co-PI, A. Mitchell)
- SSHRC/CRSH. Research and Film Production, The Preservation, Promotion and Dissemination of Canadian Anthropology (collaborator with F. Laugrand)
- BSIA Workshop Grant, Critical Distance: Israeli Emigres and the Israel-Palestine Divide, Balsillie School of International Affairs
- UW-SSHRC, Clandestine Migration Routes and Human Insecurity, (with support from Watson Institute, Brown University and Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research, University of Amsterdam) (co-PI, C. Mainwaring)
Professional Awards (selected)
2022 Weaver Tremblay Award, Canadian Anthropology Society
2021 Outstanding Performance Award, University of 蓝莓视频
2018 Outstanding Performance Award, University of 蓝莓视频
2017 Faculty of Arts Service Award, University of 蓝莓视频
2009 Outstanding Performance, University of 蓝莓视频
2007 Merit Award, Office of the Vice-President and Provost, Wilfrid Laurier University
Select Publications
Books and edited volumes
- 2019. . University of Toronto Press.
- 2017. With V. Dominguez .
- 2018 Special Issue: Who Shares the Land: Algonquian Territoriality and Land Governance. Editors, Melanie Chaplier, Jasmin Habib and Colin Scott, Anthropologica. 60(1):1-166.
Articles and chapters
- Forthcoming. with Amir Locker-Biletzki, 岣瞣munist omed Veshar: On Israel鈥檚 Ron Workers鈥 Choir. Journal of Israeli History.
- 2018. 鈥Wall Art and the Presence of Absence,鈥 Review of International American Studies.
- 2018. 鈥溾 edited by Melanie Chaplier, Jasmin Habib, and Colin Scott. Anthropologica. 60.1
- 2018, with Michael C. Howard, , Evolving American Presidency Series, Ed. Jeremy Kowalski. Palgrave MacMillan
- 2018, with Amir Locker-Biletzki. 鈥溾 In Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies. 36 (1):1鈥28.
- 2017. 鈥.鈥 American Anthropologist. December, 119: 741鈥744.
- 2017, with V. Dominguez. 鈥.鈥 Berghahn Books.
- 2017. 鈥淚s it un-American to be critical of Israel: Criticism and Fear in the US Context.鈥 In V. Dominguez and Jasmin Habib (eds.). America Observed: On an International Anthropology of the United States. Berghahn Books.
- 2017. , conducted by Jasmin Habib with commentary by Harvey Feit, Anthropologica, 59.1, Pp 89-100.
- 2017. New York: Berghahn Books, 2016. In Review of Middle East Studies, August, 51 (2). Pp. 309-312.
- 2014. . Anthropologica. 56:2, Pp. 229-237.
- 2013. . In Ethnographic Encounters in Israel. Fran Markowitz (ed). University of Indiana Press.
- 2013. . Anthropologica, 55: 211-218.
- 2012. . Anthropologica, 53(2):335-48.
- 2012. . Anthropologica. 52:189-90.
- 2011. . In Property Rights Contestation and Autonomy. William Coleman and Scott Prudham (eds). Pp, 217-238. University of British Columbia Press.
- 2010. . In Oxford Encyclopedia of Human Rights. David P. Forysthe (ed). 198-202. Oxford University Press.
- 2008. . In Renegotiating Community: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, Global Contexts. Diana Brydon and William Coleman (eds). Pp. 183-200. University of British Columbia Press.
- 2007. . Human Rights Quarterly. 29 (4). Pp, 1098-1118.
- 2007. . In Mixed Towns, Trapped Communities: Historical Narratives, Spatial Dynamics, Gender Relations and Cultural Encounters in Palestinian-Israeli Towns. Dan Rabinowitz and Daniel Monterescu (eds). Routledge.
- 2007. . Anthropologica. 49:245-56.
Additional links and information
Experiential Research
Dr. Jasmin Habib always been keen to demystify the scholarly research and writing process for our students. In her role as Editor in Chief and Editor of English Manuscripts for Anthropologica (the journal of the Canadian Anthropology Society), she has introduced students to the practices and responsibilities associated with editing an academic journal, from a paper鈥檚 submission, through review, to its production. In SSHRC funded projects, including 鈥淎 Socio-Cultural Mapping of the Canadian Arab Community: Migration, Settlement and Integration鈥, Jasmin has shared everything from grant proposal-writing strategies, to careful completion of the research ethics review, as well as engaging students in the project itself. Research assistance involved library and media searches for relevant sources; annotating selected sources for scholars, policy makers and the wider community; finding ways to build on a students鈥 own research interests in meaningful ways; and discussing opportunities for and working towards collaboration and co-authorship. Given Jasmin鈥檚 research is ethnographic and draws on postcolonial and postmodern critique, primarily of empire and its violent logics, research topics ranged from the theoretical to the empirical and included, for example, the experiences of war- affected refugees and transnational relationships among and between displaced communities; understanding the links between oil politics, regimes of terror and Canada鈥檚 interventionist as well as (though less evident) peacebuilding policies abroad, especially in the Middle East; and theories and practices of frontline diplomacy.聽 Allowing students to draw on their own experiences and insights 鈥 as well as their engagement in their own and overseas communities -- has enriched Jasmin鈥檚 research. Their contributions have been invaluable.
"How do you know that you have met a Professor who not only has a magic way with words, but also has the key to unlock hidden pieces of knowledge you may already have? You go in for a short interview, and come out hours later having learned so much not only about the professor, but also about yourself!聽 Dr. Jasmin Habib is the embodiment of such a thought-provoking and insightful instructor. She wears many hats: she is a story-teller, a nurturer of curiosity, a supportive mentor, and a facilitator of self-reflective knowledge acquisition." 聽
"My greatest hope is that we have piqued our students' curiosity and that we have inspired them to want to learn more" - Jasmin Habib
Contact information
For students seeking advising appointments, please complete an
Email: jhabib@uwaterloo.ca
Main Campus Office: Hagey Hall 316
Balsillie School Office: BSIA 319