Our Mandate

CURE’s mandate is a crucial foundation for the database and the research which stems from it. Our mandate is as follows:

+Broaden the kind of academic work that is available to students
+Give community organizations, specifically those which experience social and economic marginalization, access to the knowledge and resources circulating in the academic sphere
+Facilitate productive, mutually transformative interactions between students and activists that redefine the boundary between universities and the communities which surround them

This mandate is necessary for CURE to avoid the pitfalls associated with academic research, specifically with academic research that takes community organizing and activism as its object. Co-optation of grassroots knowledges and movements by the academic sphere is a widespread parasite which CURE aims to avoid by giving community organizations the autonomy to define their research needs. Nevertheless, the relationship between researcher and researched remains fraught, albeit in a potentially very productive way; a rich tradition of heterodox methodologies has arisen from the attempts to navigate this complicated relationship.

This article by Prof. Steven Jordan outlines a branch of research methodology called Participatory Action Research, tracing its problematic history and proposing an alternative method: Activist Ethnography. We include it here as a suggested reading for participants undertaking long-term projects with CURE.

In addition , CURE actively supports QPIRG’s position on anti-oppression:

QPIRG is committed to being inclusive and accessible to all; we recognize the links between various forms of oppression and are actively opposed to discrimination o­n the basis of gender, race, class, sexual orientation, dis/ability, health, size, citizenship status, language and spiritual beliefs.

Community Project Database

   

Health & Disability

Mental_and_Physical-Health

   

Law & Public Policy

Law & Policy

   

Labour

   

Food Security

   

Indigenous Solidarity

   

Anti-Oppression

   

Youth & Education

   

Migration

   

Class & Poverty

   

Environmental Justice

   

Gender & Sexuality

 

Art & Community

   

Media & Communications

 

Media & Communications

   

International Solidarity & Anti-Imperialism

International Solidarity & Anti-Imperialism

   

Anti-Police Brutality & Prisoner Solidarity

   

Public Space & Urban Planning