CURRICULUM VITAE

Donna Patrick Date: June 15, 2016

Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology

Carleton University

1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6

613-520-2600 ext. 8070; FAX: 613-520-3785

Education:

Ph.D. University of Toronto, 1998. Thesis: Language, power, and ethnicity in an Inuit community.

M.A. McGill University, 1988. Thesis: Structural and social aspects of language change in a Francophone town in Western Canada.

B.A. Honours, McGill University, 1983. Thesis: Language and solidarity in two adolescent peer groups

Employment:

a)  Academic employment

CARLETON UNIVERSITY

2013– Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology (Cross-appointed to the Institute of Political Economy (0%); the School of Linguistics and Language Studies (0%); and the School of Canadian Studies (0%))

2011-2013 Director, School of Canadian Studies

2007–2013 Professor, School of Canadian Studies, Department of Sociology and Anthropology.

2003–2007 Associate Professor, School of Canadian Studies, Department of Sociology and Anthropology.

FREIE UNIVERSITÄT BERLIN

2003 Guest Professor, John F. Kennedy School of North American Studies, Summer semester.

BROCK UNIVERSITY

2000–2003 Associate Professor, Department of Applied Language Studies.

2001–2003 Director, Centre for Canadian Studies.

1996–2000 Assistant Professor, Department of Applied Language Studies.

UNIVERISTY OF BUCHAREST

2000 Guest Professor, Master’s Programme in Canadian Studies, February intensive

2001 course.

2003

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO

1995 Lecturer, Department of Anthropology.

1991–1992 Teaching assistant, Department of Anthropology.

1994–1995

b)  Other employment

1989–1990 Adult education director/instructor: Kativik School Board,

Quaqtaq, QC.

1989 English language teacher, TESL Centre, Concordia University, Montréal.

1988–1989 English language lecturer, Xi’an Jiaotong University, PR China

(employed through a CIDA project at St. Mary’s University, Halifax).

1988 Lecturer, Qufu Normal University, Qufu, Shandong, PR China.

June–July English language teacher, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg.

1987, 1988

Professional Honours:

1983 James McGill Award

1990-1994 SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship

1999-2003 University of Bucharest, Romania, Invited lecturer.

2003 John. F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Freie Universität, Berlin. Invited Guest Professor.

Current Research Interests:

Indigenous peoples in Canada and the Arctic; Urban Aboriginal/Inuit communities; Language, culture, and nationhood; critical literacies and multimodality; sociology of language; minority languages and multilingualism; endangered languages and language revitalization; language rights and policy; language, political economy, and ideology; language and globalization; sociolinguistics and the intersection of language with culture, politics, race, class, gender, and ethnicity; language practices in institutional settings.

Publications

Books

2003. Language, Politics, and Social Interaction in an Inuit Community. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter Press, 269 pp

Books collaborations

1999. Linguistic Minorities and Modernity: A sociolinguistic ethnography. Monica Heller in collaboration with Mark Campbell, Phyllis Dalley and Donna Patrick. London/New York: Longman, 287 pp.

Books edited

2004. Language rights and language survival, ed. by Jane Freeland and Donna Patrick. Manchester: St. Jerome Press, 303 pp.

Chapters in edited books

Under Final Review. [Submitted April 2016] Lane, P. and Costa, J. eds., Standardizing Minority Languages: Competing Ideologies of Authority and Authenticity in the Global Periphery. Routledge Critical Studies in Multilingualism, 2016.

2016. “Indigenizing Language Policy in Canada: Redressing Racial Hierarchies”. In Plurilinguisme et pluriculturalisme. Eds. Gillian Lane-Mercier, Denise Merkle et Jane Koustas. Montréal: Les Presses de l’Université de Montréal. Pp. 125-138.

2015. “Inuit Language Policy and Education and the Plan Nord: Situating Inuit Policy for Inuit Futures”. In Québec Policy on the Arctic: Challenges and Perspectives. Arctic and International Relations Series. Jackson School of International Studies. University of Washington, Canadian Studies Center. Pp. 46-49.

2015. “Language rights and language endangerment in Canada: The case of Aboriginal languages”. In Language and Identity Politics: A Cross-Atlantic Perspective. Ed. By Christina Spaeti and Damir Skenderovic. Berghahn Books. Pp. 119-136.

2015. “Inuit Language Policy and Education and the Plan Nord: Situating Inuit Policy for Inuit Futures”. In Québec Policy on the Arctic: Challenges and Perspectives. Arctic and International Relations Series. Jackson School of International Studies. University of Washington, Canadian Studies Center. Pp. 46-49.

2014 “Inuit in Canada”. In The Arctic Contested. Edited by Keith Battarbee and John Erik Fossum, Peter Lang in association with the Nordic Association for Canadian Studies (NACS) and ARENA Centre for European Studies, University of Oslo. Pp. 167-177.

2013. “Inuitness and territoriality in Canada”, In Forte, Maximilian, (Ed.) Who is an Indian? Race, Blood, DNA, and the politics of Indigeneity in the Americas. Univeristy of Toronto Press. Pp. 52-70.

2012. “Indigenous Contexts”, Chapter in the Routledge Handbook of Multilingualism, edited by Marilyn Martin-Jones, Adrian Blackledge and Angela Creese (eds.), Abingdon, UK: Routledge Press. Pp. 29-48.

2012. “Indigenous Studies in the Canadian Studies Context”, in Canadian Studies: The State of the Art, ed. by Verduyn, Christl and Jane Koustas. Halifax/Winnipeg: Fernwood Publishing. (with Timothy Di Leo Browne and Mallory Whiteduck). Pp 224-243.

2011. “Regaining the childhood I should have had”: The transformation of Inuit Identities, Institutions and Community in Ottawa” In Howard, Heather and Craig Proulx (eds.) Aboriginal Peoples In Canadian Cities: Transformations and Continuities. (with Julie-Ann Tomiak, Lynda Brown, Heidi Langille, and Mihaela Vieru) Wilfrid Laurier Press. Pp. 69-85.

2010. “Canada”, in Handbook of Language and Ethnic Identity, Second Edition, ed. by Joshua Fishman and Ofelia Garcia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 286-301.

2010. “‘Transnational’ Migration and Indigeneity in Canada: A Case Study of Urban Inuit”. In Indigenous Cosmopolitans: Transnational and Transcultural Indigeneity in the Twenty-First Century, ed. by Maximilian Forte. New York: Peter Lang Publishing. New York. (with Julie Tomiak). Pp. 127-144.

2010. “Language dominance and minorization”. Handbook of Pragmatics, Highlights [HoPH 7]. Published in the volume: Society and Language Use, by Jaspers, Jürgen, Jan-Ola Östman and Jef Verschueren (eds). Pp. 176-191.

2007. “Indigenous language endangerment and the unfinished business of nation-states”, in Monica Heller and Alexandre Duchêne (eds.) Discourses of endangerment: Interest and ideology in the defense of languages ( “Advances in Sociolinguistics” Series, Continuum International Publishing Group) pp 35-56.

2007. “Language endangerment, language rights, and indigeneity”, in Monica Heller (ed.) Bilingualism: A Social Approach (Palgrave Macmillan) pp 111-134.

2006. “English and the construction of Aboriginal identities in the eastern Canadian Arctic”, in Catherine Evans Davies, Janina Brutt-Griffler and Lucy Pickering (eds), English and Ethnicity (Signs of Race Series, Palgrave Macmillan Press) pp 167-190.

2004. (with Jane Freeland). “Introduction” (Chap. 1), in Language rights and language survival: Sociocultural and sociolinguistic perspectives. ed. by Jane Freeland and Donna Patrick, (St. Jerome Press, Manchester UK) pp. 1-34.

2004. “The politics of language rights in the Eastern Canadian Arctic” , in Jane Freeland and Donna Patrick (eds), Language Rights and Language Survival: Sociocultural and sociolinguistic perspectives. Chap. 9 (St. Jerome Press, Manchester, UK) pp. 171-190.

2003. “Language, Socialization and Second Language Acquisition in a Multilingual Arctic Quebec Community”, in Robert Bayley and Sandra Schecter (eds.), Language Socialization in Bilingual and Multilingual Societies. (Multilingual Matters, Clevedon, UK) pp 165-181.

2002. “Language dominance and minorization”, in Jef Vershueren, Jan-Ola Ostman, Jan Blommaert and Chris Bulcaen (eds.), Handbook of Pragmatics 2001 (John Benjamins Publishing) pp 1-16.

2001. (with Peter Armitage). “The James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement and the social construction of the Cree ‘problem’”, in Colin Scott (ed.), Aboriginal Autonomy and Development in Northern Quebec and Labrador. (UBC Press) pp 206-232.

2001. “Languages of State and Social Categorization in an Arctic Québec Community”, in Monica Heller & Marilyn Martin-Jones (eds.), Voices of Authority: Education and linguistic diversity (Ablex Publishing Westport , CT) pp 297-314.

Articles in refereed journals

Under Revision. [to be submitted summer 2016] (with Benjamin Shaer and Gabriele Budach). Language and Territorialization: Food consumption and the creation of urban Indigenous space. Semiotic Review.

2015. (with Cathy Kell, Gabriele Budach) “Introduction”. Special Issue on “Objects and Language in Trans-contextual Communication”. Social Semiotics 25 (4): 387-400..

2015. (with Gabriele Budach, Teevi Mackay). “‘Talk around objects’: Designing trajectories of belonging in an urban Inuit community”. Social Semiotics Vol. 25, No. 4, 446-464.

2015 (with Eve Haque) Indigenous languages and the racial hierarchisation of language policy in Canada. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development 36(1):27-41.

2014. (with Gabriele Budach). “Urban-rural dynamics and Indigenous urbanization: The case of Inuit language use in Ottawa” Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, special issue “Deconstructing the urban-rural dichotomy: Language dynamism in Indigenous language contexts”. 13: 236-253.

2013 (with Gabriele Budach and Igah Muckpaloo). Multiliteracies and Family Language Policy in an Urban Inuit Community. Language Policy. Volume 12 (1): 47-62. 2012 (with Gabriele Budach). «Chaque objet raconte une histoire»

Les pratiques de littératie auprès des Inuits en milieu urbain. Cahiers de l'Acedle. Volume 9, numéro 2, 2012. pages 85 à 108 http://acedle.org/spip.php?rubrique217

2011. Donner une voix aux Inuits urbains: «Photovoice» comme une pratique de multilittératie dans la construction d’identité et de savoirs transfrontaliers (with Gabriele Budach, University Southampton, United Kingdom). Cahiers de L’ILOB Vol. 2. Pp. 35-55.

2008. (with Julie-Ann Tomiak). "Language, Culture, and Community among Urban Inuit in Ottawa" Etudes/Inuit/Studies thematic issue on Urban Inuit, 32(1). Pp.55-72.

2008. Inuit Identities, Language, and Territoriality. Thematic issue: Plurilinguisme et Identités/Plurilingualism & Identities in Diversité Urbain. Special Issue, Automne. Pp. 91-108.

2007. Aboriginal language endangerment in Canada. Anthropologie et Societés 31:1, spring, special edition on Dynamiques et pratiques langagières. Pp. 125-141.

2005. Language Rights in Indigenous Communities: The Case of the Inuit of Arctic Québec. Journal of Sociolinguistics, Volume 9, Number 3:369-389.

2004. Understanding Canada through a linguistic lens: French, English and Aboriginal realities in an English-dominant world. International Journal of Canadian Studies, 30: 207-214.

1999. (with Perry Shearwood), The Roots of Inuktitut bilingual education. The Canadian Journal for Native Studies. 19: 249-262,..

1999.Women and Work in Arctic Quebec. Inuktitut language programmes and Inuit education. Zeitschrift für Kanada-Studien: Arbeit und Arbeitswelt. 19.Jahrgang/Nr. 1 Band 35. pp.163-174,..

1994. Minority language education and social context. Etudes/Inuit/Studies 18(1/2): 183–199.

Articles in referred conference proceedings

2013. (with Mary Jane Norris and Nicholas Ostler). Endangered Languages beyond Boundaries: Community Connections, Collaborative Approaches, and Cross-Disciplinary Research. In Proceedings of the 17th Foundation for Endangered Languages (FEL) Conference. Ottawa, Carleton University. Pp. 1-4.

2000. Language Markets and Minority Language Maintenance in an Arctic Quebec Community. Texas Linguistic Forum 43: Proceedings from the 6th Symposium about Language and Society –Austin, pp. 177-188.

1999. Language and power in an Arctic Quebec community. In Jef Verschueren, ed. Language and Ideology: Selected papers from the 6th International Pragmatics Association, Vol. 1. Antwerp: International Pragmatics Association. pp. 452-461.

1993. Teaching English Second-Language literacy in a Northern Native community. In William Cowan, ed., Papers of the 24th Algonquian Conference. Ottawa: Carleton University.

Major encyclopedia or dictionary articles

Forthcoming. 2016-2017. (Chapter currently Under Review). “Language Policy and Education in Canada”. Volume 1, "Language Policy and Political Issues in Education", 3rd Edition, Encyclopedia of Language and Education. Springer.

2013. “Endangered Languages in Canada”. The Encyclopedia of Applied Linguistics, edited by Carol A. Chapelle. Maldon: Wiley.

2006. “People’s of Canada”. The World and its Peoples Encyclopedia. Brown Reference Group. London: UK.

Published technical reports

2001. Final Report on the Language Survey of Kuujjuaraapik. Kativik School Board, Kuujjuaq/Montreal, QC. June, 2001.

2008. Final Report to the Ottawa Inuit Children’s Centre: Community Consultation Research Project, Presented to the OICC, April 24, 2008 (with Julie-Ann Tomiak and Sheila Grantham, Carleton University), 38 pp.

Articles in non-refereed journals and miscellaneous scholarly publications

2010. “Commentary, New Directions in Research in Canada, Notes from the Field.” In North American Dialogue, Newsletter of the Society for the Anthropology of North America. Volume 13, No. 2, October 2012. Pp. 5-10.

(with Peter Armitage). 1995. The James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement and the social construction of the Cree ‘problem’. AGREE Working Paper, Montréal, QC.

1993. Aboriginal self-government and the Canadian constitutional process. Anthropology in Action 16: 12–13.

Review articles

2005. Understanding Canada through a linguistic lens: French, English and Aboriginal realities in an English-dominant world. International Journal of Canadian Studies. Volume 30. pp. 207-214.

Books reviews in scholarly journals

2005. 'Review of Richard Bauman and Charles L. Briggs , Voices of Modernity: Language Ideologies and the Politics of Inequality.' Canadian Journal of Sociology Online, May - June 2005. <http://www.cjsonline.ca/reviews/voices.html

2005. Language, Politics, and Social Interaction in an Inuit Community, Reviews Counterpointed by Donna Patrick, High Plains Applied Anthropologist No. 2, Vol. 25, Spring 2005, pp. 94-96

2004. Joy Kreeft Peyton, Donald A. Ranard, and Scott McGinnis (eds): Heritage Languages in America: Preserving a national resource Center for Applied Linguistics, 2001. 309 pp. In Applied Linguistics, pp. 273-276.

Journalistic writing

1989. Evacuation from Beijing. McGill News (alumni magazine).

2010. Ottawa Citizen. Saturday, June 19. Feature on Urban Ottawa Inuit, Sarah and Maggie Ekoomiak.

Papers Presented

to learned societies

“Redressing Language Policy for First Nations, Inuit, and Metis in Canada”. Presented at the Canadian Association of Applied Linguistics annual conference, Calgary, May 30-June 1.

“Indigenizing Language Policy in Canada: Redressing Racial Hierarchies”. Presented at “Pour et Contre des Modèles de Pluriculturalisme et Plurilinguisme Officiels”. International Conference, McGill University, May 5-7, 2016.

“Perspectives from Indigenous Languages: Inuit Family Language Policy to Classroom Practice” (with Carol Rowan, Concordia University). Presented at Colloque du CCERBAL 2016: Invited Symposium “From Family Language Policy to Classroom Practice: Perspectives from Official, Indigenous and Immigrant Languages. Université d’Ottawa, Institut des langues officielle et du bilinguisme/ Official Languages and Bilingualism Institute. April 28-29, 2016.

“Food Security and Cultural Sustainability: The Case of Urban Inuit in Canada”. Presented at the Society for Applied Anthropology (SfAA) annual conference, Vancouver, April 2, 2016.

“Inuit mobility and urbanization: Crossing the ‘urban-rural’ divide.” American Anthropological Association (AAA), Chicago, November 20-24, 2013.