YorkSpace
YorkSpace is York University's Institutional Repository. It supports York University's Senate Policy on Open Access by providing York community members with a place to preserve their research online in an institutional context.

Communities in YorkSpace
Select a community to browse its collections.
- Previously Faculty of Environmental Studies (FES)
- The Global Labour Research Centre (GLRC) engages in the study of work, employment and labour in the context of a constantly changing global economy.
- Lives Outside the Lines: a Symposium in Honour of Marlene Kadar
- Used only for SWORD Deposit by Adminstrator
- Welcome to WILAA, a gathering place for materials related to research projects that explore work-integrated learning and disability-related accessibility and accommodations.
Recent Submissions
Item type: Item , Access status: Open Access , Toronto Living with AIDS Cable Access Video Series (1990-1991), A Guide for Postsecondary Education(2022) Brushwood Rose, Chloë; Demus, Axelle; Supnet, Leslie; Ramsay, Brett"ABOUT OUR EDUCATIONAL GUIDES SERIES One of the central goals of Archive/Counter-Archive is to increase public engagement with our partner organizations and their collections through an “activation” of archival materials that foregrounds the pressing need to rethink what archives can/might do in the 21st century. In order to achieve this goal, we have developed a series of Educational Guides designed to accompany film and video from A/CA’s Case Studies and facilitate their integration into K-12 and postsecondary classrooms. The guides are easily adaptable to different grades and subjects, and educators are encouraged to use these guides as a starting point to create their own lesson plans. Each guide contains important additional context for the materials featured, including information on key participants, essays and reflections, and synopses of selected works for classroom discussion. The guides also include critical discussion questions oriented toward a range of topics to encourage students and teachers to engage critically with A/CA’s archival materials by making connections between their context of creation and contemporary issues and experiences. Toronto Living With AIDS (TLWA) was a 1990-91 public access cable TV program that provided information about HIV/AIDS directly to affected communities. A series of 30-minute videos were created by artists, activists, and community organizations responding to the AIDS crisis. They drew on ideas and strategies from video and performance art, but also employed innovative methods of communication to meet their community-oriented goals. TLWA was coordinated by Michael Balser and John Greyson in collaboration with numerous artists and community organizations, and was screened on cable access television. This educational guide includes important contextual information for the series as a whole, including information on key participants, a critical reflection on the social, political and media contexts, a glossary and suggested further reading. It also suggests a list of five films from the series for classroom viewing, offering film synopses and discussion questions focused on this list."Item type: Item , Access status: Open Access , Beyond the Narrative: Asynchronicity and Fragmentation in Canadian Queer Experimental Film (1990-2000) - A Guide for Postsecondary Education(2023) Brushwood Rose, Chloë; Demus, Axelle; Brossat, Gregory"ABOUT OUR EDUCATIONAL GUIDES SERIES One of the central goals of Archive/Counter-Archive is to increase public engagement with our partner organizations and their collections through an “activation” of archival materials that foregrounds the pressing need to rethink what archives can/might do in the 21st century. In order to achieve this goal, we have developed a series of Educational Guides designed to accompany film and video from A/CA’s Case Studies and facilitate their integration into K-12 and postsecondary classrooms. About the Guide This guide introduces a selection of queer experimental films and videos curated by Chris Chong Chan Fui. It includes a curatorial essay written by Chong, a list of 4 works suggested for classroom viewing, synopses, and discussion questions oriented toward a range of thematic areas."Item type: Item , Access status: Open Access , Cable access queer: revisiting Toronto Living with AIDS (1990-1991)(2021) Conrad, RyanAnalyzing the Canadian AIDS activist community television series Toronto Living With AIDS provides insight into how this extraordinary program came to be, how it was received by various imagined publics, how it ended, and why revisiting this series is useful for today’s video activists.Item type: Item , Access status: Open Access , Anticolonial Platform Studies(Duke University Press, 2025-06-01) Lim, ElishaPlatforms like Amazon, Google, Uber, Apple iOS, and Pinduoduo currently coordinate planetary activity on a massive scale. Critical theorists concerned with labor, education, incarceration, sex, migration, or life on earth must reckon with the global dominance of platforms. Expert insight comes from the twenty‐year‐old field of platform studies, which documents, explains, and tackles the rise of corporate platforms. However, platform studies fails to incorporate the insights of colonial theory. This article opens up an urgent conversation between platform scholars and colonial theorists by offering a primer to the field and then arguing that the East India Company (EIC) fits the definition of a platform. While platforms are theorized as new, neoliberal inventions, this article argues that platforms are a continuation of long‐standing colonial business as usual. The EIC features every characteristic of a platform: a corporation that fostered and facilitated trade within its ecosystem, administering law, collecting taxes, sentencing life and death, and cultivating obedience in order to streamline and stabilize the profits—as well as cultures of radical subversion and resistance. Using the example of the EIC in British Malaya, this article models an anticolonial platform studies that zooms out four hundred years to understand the history behind how modern platform granular classification systems invigorate ethnic conflict, how platform automated ranking systems galvanize identity politics, and how platform grammars always segment populations into exploitable and condemnable differences. The objective of this article is to engage colonial and platform scholars, together, to tackle the crises posed by modern corporate platforms.Item type: Item , Access status: Open Access , Canada and the Three Public Policy Taboos: Promoting Health Equity in Difficult Times(Ontario Tech University, 2025-09-15) Raphael, Dennis; Suthakaran, KhirishaPolitical scientist Julia Lynch outlines three aspects of modern capitalist welfare states that determine the extent of health inequalities: redistribution (transfer of income and wealth from rich to poor); social spending (state expenditures on benefits and assistance as well as social infrastructure); and managing the market economy (legislating working conditions, benefits, and employment security). These processes mediate the contradictions inherent in capitalist societies between capital accumulation or profit making and social reproduction or the ongoing functioning of society. Increasingly, these three public policy directions are seen as taboos by governing authorities, that is, practices to be avoided, and this is especially the case in nations identified as liberal welfare states. In this paper, we explore how Canada – and other liberal welfare states – stand in relation to other Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development countries in its willingness to violate these taboos, thereby reducing health inequalities. Reasons for Canada’s profile are presented as are means of overcoming these taboos in the service of promoting health equity.