The University of British Columbia
UBC - A Place of Mind
The University of British Columbia
Centre for Migration Studies
Faculty of Arts
Centre for Migration Studies
Faculty of Arts
  • Research
    • Research Groups
    • Research by Faculty Affiliates
    • Belonging in Unceded Territory Project
    • Bridging Divides Research Program
    • Publications
  • Programs & Initiatives
    • Global Migration Podcast
    • Annual Research Conference
    • Workshop Award
    • International Art Competition
    • Superdiversity Website
  • Graduate Student Training
    • Graduate Certificate in Migration Studies
    • Best Graduate Student Paper Award
  • Community Engagement
    • CMS-Sector Research Collaborations Day
    • Community Resources
    • Partner Organizations
  • News & Events
    • News
    • Events
    • Newsletter
    • Past Workshops
    • CMS Launch Party 2022
    • Event Recordings
  • People
  • About
    • Governance
    • Strategic Plan 2022-2025
    • Annual Report
    • Get Involved
    • Donate
    • Internal
    • Contact Us
Home / Profiles / Maria Jose Athie Martinez

Maria Jose Athie Martinez

Adjunct Professor and PhD Candidate
email athie.mj@gmail.com
launchhttps://www.mariajoseathie.com/
Geography and Methods
AREAS: Canada | AREAS: Caribbean | AREAS: Latin America | METHODS: Community-Engaged Research
Thematic Research Area
Borders and Sovereignty | Children and Migration | Citizenship | Climate Migration | Culture and Migration | Democratic Theory and Practice | Diasporas and Transnationalism | Economics of Migration | Health and Diaspora | Health and Migration | Indigenous Studies | Integration and Inclusion | International Students | Language, Literacy, and Linguistics | Narratives and Politics of Belonging | Refugees and Forced Migration | Sovereignty | Undocumented Migration and Statelessness
Student Group
Doctoral Candidate
Home Department
Educational Studies

About

I work on Indigenous education within the American continent. Migration is a big part of Indigeneity from its conception.


On this page
About

Maria Jose Athie Martinez

Adjunct Professor and PhD Candidate
email athie.mj@gmail.com
launchhttps://www.mariajoseathie.com/
Geography and Methods
AREAS: Canada | AREAS: Caribbean | AREAS: Latin America | METHODS: Community-Engaged Research
Thematic Research Area
Borders and Sovereignty | Children and Migration | Citizenship | Climate Migration | Culture and Migration | Democratic Theory and Practice | Diasporas and Transnationalism | Economics of Migration | Health and Diaspora | Health and Migration | Indigenous Studies | Integration and Inclusion | International Students | Language, Literacy, and Linguistics | Narratives and Politics of Belonging | Refugees and Forced Migration | Sovereignty | Undocumented Migration and Statelessness
Student Group
Doctoral Candidate
Home Department
Educational Studies

About

I work on Indigenous education within the American continent. Migration is a big part of Indigeneity from its conception.


Maria Jose Athie Martinez

Adjunct Professor and PhD Candidate
email athie.mj@gmail.com
launchhttps://www.mariajoseathie.com/
Geography and Methods
AREAS: Canada | AREAS: Caribbean | AREAS: Latin America | METHODS: Community-Engaged Research
Thematic Research Area
Borders and Sovereignty | Children and Migration | Citizenship | Climate Migration | Culture and Migration | Democratic Theory and Practice | Diasporas and Transnationalism | Economics of Migration | Health and Diaspora | Health and Migration | Indigenous Studies | Integration and Inclusion | International Students | Language, Literacy, and Linguistics | Narratives and Politics of Belonging | Refugees and Forced Migration | Sovereignty | Undocumented Migration and Statelessness
Student Group
Doctoral Candidate
Home Department
Educational Studies
About keyboard_arrow_down

I work on Indigenous education within the American continent. Migration is a big part of Indigeneity from its conception.

Centre for Migration Studies
Faculty of Arts
1234 Street
Vancouver, BC Canada V0V 0V0
   
Contact Us
We acknowledge that the UBC Vancouver campus is situated on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam).
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Copyright |
  • Accessibility