Adjunct professor, Department of Geography, Environment and Geomatics, University of Guelph
Anna Stanley is Adjunct Professor at the University of Guelph in the Department of Geography, Environment and Geomatics and Visiting Fellow (Environmental Justice and the Law), Faculty of laws at the University of Ottawa. Prior to Joining the university of Guelph she was faculty at the national university of Ireland, Galway on the west coast of Ireland. She has also held a number of visiting professorships including at York University and the University of Toronto. Her research focuses on the political economy of settler colonialism in Canada with specific reference to mining and mineral exploration, infrastructure development and toxic exposure.
Experience
2017–present
Assistant Professor, Department of Geography
2015–2017
Faculty of Environmental StudiesVisiting Fellow, York University, FES
2014–2015
Visiting Professor, Department of Geography and Program in Planning, University of Toronto
2008–2014
Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, National University of Ireland, Galway.
Education
2006
University of Guelph, Doctor of Philosophy in Geography
Publications
2020
Who Pays For Canada? Taxes and Fairness, In Press Chapter: Who dies for Canada: How settler colonial dispossession funds the state. In Tough, D and &, Heaman, E (In Press) Who Pays For Canada? Taxes and Fairness McGill- Queens University Press.
2020
Environmental Justice. International Library of Law and the Environment (Series)., In Press Chapter (reprint)Just Space or Spatial Justice? Difference, Discourse, and Environmental Justice. In Press, In Anna Grear (Ed.), Environmental Justice. International Library of Law and the Environment (Series). UK: Edward Elgar Publishing.
2019
Journal of Cultural Economy, (Accepted) Risk Management and the Logic of Elimination
2019
Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, Aligning against Indigenous jurisdiction: Worker savings, colonial capital and the Canada Infrastructure Bank. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 1-19, doi: 10.1177/0263775819855404