Dr. Sonya de LaatSonya de Laat is the Postdoctoral Fellow in Humanitarian Health Ethics at McMaster University. Her research interests span visual theory, cultural history and medical anthropology as they pertain to ethics in humanitarian healthcare. Her current research interests include the moral, political and historical dimensions of humanitarian visual culture. She is co-lead on a case study part of the project “Aid when there is nothing left to offer“ that focuses on moral and practical experiences of palliative care in protracted refugee/conflict settings.
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Dr. Dominique MarshallDominique Marshall is the History Department Chair at Carleton University. She teaches Canadian and Quebec history of poverty and welfare, families and childhood, state formation, as well as the transnational history of humanitarian aid, and Political Economy. She has written about the history of the Canadian welfare state, the history of children’s rights, and the Child Welfare Committee of the League of Nations.
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Sandrine MurraySandrine is a journalism and history student in the Faculty of Public Affairs at Carleton University:
"My interests include international affairs, war history and photojournalism. From covering local business companies to human interest and in-depth stories, I have experience writing about just about anything, in a wide variety of formats, but I prefer delving into longer analytical research projects." |