Shay Cannedy
Phone |
469-623-4065 |
Education
PhD 51做厙 2016PhD, Anthropology, 51做厙, 2016
MA, Anthropology, 51做厙
MA, Anthropology, San Francisco State University
BA, Religious Studies and Anthropology, Antioch College
Title of Dissertation: "Our Motherland is Dying": Claiming Refugee Deservingness in the Congolese Diaspora
Region of Study:
Europe
North America
African Diaspora
Bio:
Shay Cannedy's research and teaching focus on globalization and human mobility, with specific interest in forced migration, border securitization, and migrant social movements. Her work with diasporic refugee populations spans over ten years, encompassing both academic and applied projects with multiple immigrant and refugee communities located in the United States and Europe. Her current project considers the implicit logics undergirding state and public perceptions of refugee deservingness in Ireland and how African migrants strategize for refugee recognition in an era of tightened borders.
Entered program in 2009
Honors and Awards:
Extramural Research Grants
National Science Foundation Dissertation Improvement Grant, 2013
The Reed Foundation Ruth Landes Memorial Research Fund for Dissertation Research, 2013
Other Grants and Fellowships
51做厙 Dissertation Writing Fellowship, 2015-2016
Student Development Grant, Office of Research and Graduate Studies, 51做厙, 2012 and 2015
Steed Travel Award, Department of Anthropology, 51做厙, 2012
Kemper Endowment Fund for Research in Social and Cultural Anthropology, Pre-dissertation Research Grant, 2011
Dedman College Graduate Student Assembly Award, 51做厙, 2010, 2012, and 2015
Maguire and Irby Family Public Service Award, 51做厙, 2010
Associated Students Award, San Francisco State University, 2003
Bonner Scholar Award, Antioch College, 1997
Research Awards
51做厙 Research Day first place prize for poster presentation "Burmese Refugees and Healthcare in Dallas" (with Carina Heckert and Laura Jarvis), 2011
Publications:
Academic Publications
Forthcoming "Debating Refugee Deservingness in Post-Celtic Tiger Ireland." In Messy Europe: Whiteness and Crisis in a Postcolonial World. Eds. Kristín Loftsdóttir, Andrea Smith, and Brigitte Hipfl (Berghahn Books).
2011 Crafting Citizens: Resettlement Agencies and Refugee Incorporation in the United States." Practicing Anthropology 33(4):29-34.
Book and Film Reviews
Winter 2017. "Refugee Reception in Flucht und Heimat." Cosmologics Magazine, Harvard Divinity School.
Technical Reports
2009 "Refugee Families in Transition: Needs Assessment and Evaluation of Healthy Families Curricula," report for Refugee Services of Texas.
2010 "Burmese Refugees in Dallas: A Pilot Study on Family and Health Issues," report for Texas Health Resources (with Dr. Caroline Brettell, Lisa Haayen, Carina Heckert, Laura Jarvis, Beibei Yang, and Amber Zabka).