As a post-colonial feminist scholar Dr. Ticku’s research interests include globalization, citizenship, migration, belonging and nationhood. Her work examines the ways in which issues of belonging and citizenship are negotiated under conditions of neoliberal globalization. By tracing the historical genealogies which accompany migrants, ideas, and urban landscapes, she examines how these histories are embedded in ideas of belonging, policy and the making of space. In particular, she traces how forms of power and oppression intersect in shaping both policy and everyday lived experiences for migrant communities globally.

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Dr. Alisha Ticku holds a PhD in Political Science from York University, Toronto, Canada. Her MA was completed at the Institute on Globalization and the Human Condition at McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada. Her teaching and research interests include Feminist Political Economy, Globalization Studies, International Development Studies, Urban studies and Critical Race and Feminist Post-colonial theory. In addition to academic work, Dr. Ticku continues to pursue poetry as an artistic medium to address intergenerational trauma and motherhood.

 curriculum vitae. course of life.