Sedef
Arat-Koç |
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| Phone: |
7338 |
| Office: |
JOR725A |
| E-mail: |
saratkoc politics.ryerson.ca |
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Sedef Arat-Koç is Associate Professor in the Department
of Politics and Public Administration, and a member of the Yeates School of Graduate Studies, at Ryerson University .
She received her Ph.D. in Sociology at the University of Toronto. Her
Ph.D. thesis is entitled Peasants, Hegemony and the Politics of
“Normal Times”: The Cases of the Republican Peoples’
Party and the Democrat Party, Turkey. She also holds a Master of
Arts in Sociology from the University of Waterloo, and a Bachelor of
Arts from Bogazici Üniversitesi (Turkey).
Dr. Arat-Koç joined the Department of Politics and
Public Administration in January 2006. Before coming to Ryerson, she was Associate Professor
at the Women’s Studies Program and the Department of Sociology
at Trent University.
Sedef’s research interests include immigration
policy and citizenship, especially as they affect immigrant women; transnational
feminism; politics of imperialism; racialization and the politics of
racism; and reconfiguration of social and political identities under
neoliberal globalization. Currently, she is working on “whiteness”
in Turkey as a cultural, political and class identity in the context
of neoliberalism and post-cold war geopolitics.
Publications include:
- “Görünmezlik ve Aşırı Görünürlülük Paradoksu: Neoliberal Kanada’nın Kamu Politikaları ve Siyasal Söylemlerinde Kültürelleşme ve ‘Toplumsal Cinsiyet’ ” [“Paradox of Invisibility and Hypervisibility: Culturalism and Gender in Canadian Public Policy and Political Discourse”]. In 21. Yüzyıl Feminizmine Doğru: Neoliberalizmin Ötesinde Bir Kadın Hareketi İçin Tartışmalar [Towards a 21st Century Feminism: Debates on a Women’s Movement Beyond Neoliberalism], ed. Aynur Özuğurlu, 95-122. Ankara: Notabene Yayınevi, 2013.
- “Invisibilized, Individualized, and Culturalized: Paradoxical Invisibility and Hyper-Visibility of Gender in Policy Making and Policy Discourse in Neoliberal Canada.” Canadian Woman Studies/Les cahiers de la femme (CWS/cf) 29:3 (Spring/Summer 2012): 6-17.
- “A Transnational Whiteness? New Middle Classes, Globalism and Non-European ‘Whiteness’.” in On Whiteness (e-book), ed. Nicky Falkof and Oliver Cashman-Brown. Inter-Disciplinary Press, 2012.
- “New Whiteness(es), Beyond the Colour Line? Assessing the Contradictions and Complexities of ‘Whiteness’ in the (Geo)Political Economy of Capitalist Globalism.” In States of Race: Critical Race Feminism for the 21st Century, ed. Sherene Razack, Malinda Smith and Sunera Thobani, 147-168. Toronto: Between the Lines, 2010.
- “Contesting or Affirming 'Europe'? European Enlargement, Aspirations for 'Europeanness' and New Identities in the Margins of Europe.” Journal of Contemporary European Studies 18:2 (June 2010): 181-191.
- “Whose Transnationalism? Canada, ‘Clash of Civilizations’ Discourse, and Arab and Muslim Canadians.” In Colonialism and Racism in Canada: Historical Traces and Contemporary Issues, ed. Maria A. Wallis, Lina Sunseri, and Grace-Edward Galabuzi, 266-283. Toronto: Nelson Education Ltd., 2010. Reprinted, with permission, from Transnational Identities and Practices in Canada, ed. Lloyd Wong and Vic Satzewich, 216-240. Vancouver and Toronto: UBC Press, 2006.
- “A Cultural Turn in Politics: Bourgeois Class Identity and White-Turk Discourses.” In Hegemonic Transitions, The State and Crisis in Neoliberal Capitalism, ed. Yildiz Atasoy, 209-226. Routledge Studies in Governance and Change in the Global Era. London and New York: Routledge, 2009.
- ‘(Some) Turkish Transnationalism(s) in an
Age of Capitalist Globalization and Empire: “White Turk”
Discourse, The New Geopolitics and the Implications for Feminist Transnationalism.’
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (Special Issue: Transnational
Theory, National Politics and Gender in the Contemporary Middle East/North
Africa) 3:1 (2007): 35-57.
- “Echoes of the 1930’s: Today’s Hotel Workers Lead the Struggle to ‘Upgrade’ the Service Economy” (with Bryan Evans and Aparna Sundar). Relay: A Socialist Project Review (Jan.-Feb. 2007): 16-17. [Reprinted by MRzine (On-line Monthly Review), March 15, 2007]
- “Whose Social Reproduction? Transnational
Motherhood and Challenges to Feminist Political Economy.” In
Social Reproduction: Feminist Political Economy Challenges Neo-Liberalism,
ed. Meg Luxton and Kate Bezanson, 75-92. Montréal & Kingston:
McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2006.
- “Whose Transnationalism? Canada, “Clash
of Civilizations” Discourse and Arab and Muslim Canadians.”
In Transnational Identities and Practices in Canada, ed.
Lloyd Wong and Vic Satzewich, 216-240. Vancouver and Toronto: UBC
Press, 2006.
- “The Disciplinary Boundaries of Canadian
Identity After 9/11: Civilizational Identity, Multiculturalism and
the Challenge of Anti-Imperialist Feminism.” Social Justice:
A Journal of Crime, Conflict and World Order, (Special Issue:
Race, Racism and Empire: Reflections on Canada) 32:4 (2005): 32-49.
- “Imperial Wars or Benevolent Interventions?
Reflections on ‘Global Feminism’ Post September 11th.”
Atlantis: A Women’s Studies Journal 26:2 (Spring/Summer
2002): 53-65.
- Reprinted with revisions in: Open Boundaries:
A Canadian Women’s Studies Reader, 2nd ed., ed. Barbara
Crow and Lise Gotell, 126-134. Toronto: Pearson Education Canada,
2005.
- Caregivers Break the Silence. A Participatory
Action Research on the Abuse and Violence, Including the Impact of
Family Separation Experienced by Women in the Live-in Caregiver Program.
Toronto: INTERCEDE, 2001.
- “Neoliberalism, State Restructuring and Immigration:
Changes in Canadian Policies in the 1990s.” Journal of Canadian
Studies 34:2 (1999): 31-56.
- “Gender and Race in ‘Non-Discriminatory’
Immigration Policies in Canada: 1960s to the Present.” In Scratching
the Surface: Canadian Anti-Racist Feminist Thought, ed. Enakshi
Dua and Angela Robertson, 207-233. Toronto: Women's Press, 1999.
- “Coming to Terms with ‘Hijab’
in Canada and Turkey: Agonies of a Secular and Anti-Orientalist Emigre
Feminist.” In Emigre Feminism, ed. Alena Heitlinger,
173-188. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999.
- “NAC's Response to the Immigration Legislative
Review Report ‘Not Just Numbers: A Canadian Framework for Future
Immigration’.” In Canadian Woman Studies, Special
Issue on Immigrant and Refugee Women 19:3 (Fall 1999): 18-23.
- “‘Good Enough to Work but Not Good
Enough to Stay’: Foreign Domestic Workers and the Law.”
In Locating Law: Race/Class/Gender Connections, ed. Elizabeth
Comack, 125-151. Halifax: Fernwood Publishing, 1999.
- “From ‘Mothers of the Nation’
to Migrant Workers: Immigration Policies and Domestic Workers in Canadian
History.” In Not one of the Family: Foreign Domestic Workers
in Canada, ed. Abbie Bakan and Daiva Stasiulis, 53-79. Toronto:
University of Toronto Press, 1997.
- Maid in the Market: Women's Paid Domestic
Labour (co-edited with Wenona Giles). Halifax: Fernwood Publishing,
1994.
- “Immigration Policies, Migrant Domestic
Workers and the Definition of Citizenship in Canada.” In Deconstructing
a Nation: Immigration, Multiculturalism and Racism in 90's Canada,
ed. Vic Satzewich, 229-242. Halifax: Fernwood Publishing, 1992.
- Reprinted in Rethinking Canada: The Promise
of Women’s History, 3rd ed., ed. Veronica Strong-Boag
and Anita Clair Fellman, 283-298. Toronto: Oxford University Press,
1997.
- Looking Through the Kitchen Window: The Politics
of Home and Family, 2nd ed. (with Meg Luxton and Harriet Rosenberg).
Toronto: Garamond Press, 1990.
- “In the Privacy of Our Own Home: Foreign
Domestic Workers as Solution to the Crisis of the Domestic Sphere
in Canada.” Studies in Political Economy 28 (Spring
1989): 33-58.
- Reprinted in: Feminism in Action: Studies
in Political Economy, ed. M. Patricia Connely and Pat Armstrong,
149-174. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press, 1992.
- Revised and Updated Version Published as:
“Politics of the Family and Politics of Immigration in the
Subordination of Domestic Workers in Canada.” In Family
Patterns and Gender Relations, 2nd ed., ed. Bonnie Fox, 352-374.
Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2001.
- Revised and updated version reprinted in Gender
in the 1990s, ed. E. D. Nelson and B. W. Robinson, 413-442.
Nelson Canada, 1995.
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