Dr. Chizuru Nobe-Ghelani is a racialized migrant settler who is originally from rural Japan. Her scholarship and pedagogy are informed by extensive social work practice in the area of health and wellbeing with marginalized communities both locally and internationally. Her research is centred on t...
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Dr. Chizuru Nobe-Ghelani is a racialized migrant settler who is originally from rural Japan. Her scholarship and pedagogy are informed by extensive social work practice in the area of health and wellbeing with marginalized communities both locally and internationally. Her research is centred on the politics and policies pertaining to migrant communities, particularly regarding the colonial and racial politics of Canadian citizenship, historical and contemporary immigration, refugee and citizenship policies, social and structural determinants of migrant health and Indigenous-Migrant relations.
Dr. Nobe-Ghelani loves to work with the community and is a member of the National Newcomer Collective for Truth and Reconciliation and Siinqee Institute. Her emerging area of scholarship is earth-based healing grounded in trans-local ancestral knowledge. Dr. Nobe-Ghelani explores earth-centred healing not only at an individual level but also at the community and ecological level. Drawing on her cultural and spiritual upbringings of grassroots animism passed down from her Baachan (grandmother), Dr. Nobe-Ghelani believes deeper connections with the more-than-human world can be a threshold for a better world for all beings.
She is a registered social worker, a certified forest therapy guide and trained in horticultural therapy.
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