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Usha George

Usha George

Toronto Metropolitan University, Member Citizenship and Participation Theme
EducationPhD, Ahmadu Bello University
Areas of ExpertiseImmigration and settlement in Canada, immigration policy in Canada, race relations, diversity, diversity and organizational change

 

Usha George is the immediate past Director of the Toronto Metropolitan Centre for Immigration and Settlement, leading three research studies: a SSHRC Insight Grant on the citizenship experiences of racialized women in Toronto; a SSHRC Partnership Development Grant on Syrian resettlement; and an IRCC-funded Service Delivery Improvement Grant on the entrepreneurial activities of newcomers in Ontario. She was recently awarded a SSHRC grant to explore the integration experiences of South Asian women in the Greater Toronto Area.

From 2016 to 2017 Usha served as interim Vice-president, Research and Innovation at Toronto Metropolitan University and as the Dean of the Faculty of Community Services from 2006 to 2016. In 2015, she was awarded the Errol Aspevig Award for Outstanding Academic Leadership. She is the past director of the Ontario Metropolis Centre of Excellence for Immigration and Settlement (CERIS). Usha’s scholarly activities span the continuum of immigrant transition from newcomers to citizens. Her research has attracted over $14 million in funding. She has published extensively on immigrant settlement and integration and her work has contributed to policy and program changes in the area of newcomer settlement. She has paid special attention to the intersectionality of oppressions faced by racialized immigrant women.

Recent Publications

George, U., Benayoune, A., & McDermott, T. (2020).  (PDF file) A Partnership Approach to Syrian Refugee Resettlement in Toronto and Mississauga: Preliminary Findings. Ryerson Centre for Immigration & Settlement. 

McAlpine, A. A., George, U., Kobayashi, K., & Fuller-Thomson, E. (2022). Physical Health of Older Canadians: Do Intersections Between Immigrant and Refugee Status, Racialized Status, and Socioeconomic Position Matter? (external link)  The International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 95(3), 326–348. 

McAlpine, A., Kobayashi, K., George, U., & Fuller-Thomson, E. (2022). Self-Reported Health of Working-Age Refugees, Immigrants, and the Canadian-Born (external link) . Advances in Public Health, 2022, 1–12. 

George, U. (2022). Immigrant and Refugee Families in Canada (external link) . In Albanese, P. (Ed.), Canadian Families Today (5th ed), 232-257. Oxford University Press.