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Dr. Baharak Yousefi receives Dean鈥檚 Convocation Medal
As one of SFU's most outstanding graduate students from the , Dr. Baharak Yousefi is recognized with the Dean of Graduate Studies Convocation Medal. On behalf of SFU, we congratulate Dr. Yousefi on her outstanding achievements.
Additional Convocation Medal Award Winners
Dr. Baharak Yousefi鈥檚 doctoral thesis, , analyzes, what she calls, 鈥減arallel libraries鈥 and how these spaces enable other forms of knowledge curation, production and circulation. Her thesis represents a provocative analysis of public knowledge and public institutions.
Parallel libraries are community-created sites of critical and radical librarianship that, in some ways, mirror the basic functions of contemporary public libraries but are also purposefully created to operate beyond the standard model鈥攖o support underserved and marginalized communities.
Yousefi conducted semi鈥憇tructured interviews with 20 parallel library workers (often these library workers were also founders of the parallel libraries), in 15 cities across 6 countries in North America, Europe and Oceania. Her insightful and sensitive writing demonstrates how these spaces challenge inequality, exclusion and neoliberal constraints on public institutions often reflecting feminist, anarchist, pro-labour, Black and queer liberation and anti-colonial agendas.
The writing in her thesis is noted for its poetic cadence and storytelling clarity; moving beyond a conventional dissertation structure while remaining rigorous. Yousefi鈥檚 narrative integrates personal, spatial, historical, and political registers while also weaving participant voices alongside scholarly literature.
A seasoned librarian at SFU鈥檚 Vancouver campus, Yousefi is co-editor of a published book on feminist library leadership, author of multiple pieces on critical librarianship and the recipient of multiple awards and recognitions.
Yousefi鈥檚 academic supervisor, Eugene McCann, describes why her thesis is so special. Says, McCann, 鈥淭he dissertation is by far the most engagingly written piece of work I have seen from a student in 28 years of supervising graduate work. It is a no exaggeration to describe it not only as a quality piece of academic analysis, which it is, but as a thoughtful, sensitive, inventive, and profound meditation of public knowledge and public institutions.鈥
Yousefi shares her appreciation of all of the support she鈥檚 received as a student in Geography as well as from the library workers who contributed to her research.
Says Yousefi, 鈥淚 would like to extend my sincere gratitude to Dr. Eugene McCann for his care, generous mentorship, and boundless intellectual curiosity over the past several years. It's been an immense privilege to spend time in the company of human geographers at SFU鈥攐ne of the most generative, engaged, and radical spaces of study I have encountered in my years as both a student and a librarian in higher education. I am honoured to receive the Convocation Medal, and I share this recognition with the library workers who spoke with me about their work. Their vision and practice form the heart of this project.鈥
Yousefi is SFU鈥檚 librarian for History, International Studies, and Graduate Liberal Studies. She has served in various leadership roles within 51社区黑料Library and the broader information sector. In her many roles, she continues to advance critical librarianship, public knowledge scholarship, contributing to socially engaged, justice鈥憃riented research and practice.
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