Margot R. Challborn
Margot is thrilled to join the School of Disability Studies as the Ethel Louise Armstrong Post-Doctoral Fellow. Her doctoral research, in the Department of Political Science (University of Alberta), examined the governance of intimate life in Canada via expansions to legal parentage for polyconjugal families. In her dissertation, Complicated Love: Parentage, Conjugality, and Family Diversity in Canada, she argued that current reforms to legal parentage, and judicial decisions surrounding poly-conjugal multi-parentage recognition, still adhere to the hetero/homo-normative, monogamous (or “monogamish”), nuclear family form. Moreover, the expansion of multi-parentage in some contexts is made possible by the ongoing criminalization of the deviant, racialized, polygamous “other”.
At the School of Disability Studies, Margot is eager to begin her next project, titled Madness, bodily autonomy, and citizenship: the “choice” of Medical Assistance in Dying in Canada. While her doctoral research focuses on the governance of intimate life via parentage and spousal relationships, her postdoctoral research shifts the focus of relationships with others to one’s relationship with death (and thus also, to life). In this way, she extends her current focus on queer, critical race, and feminist approaches to intimacy and governance, to the intersections of intimacy, race, and ability. Margot’s work emerges from her lived experience as a queer, mad-identified, woman of colour.
Teaching interests:
- Critical disability and mad studies
- Madness and MAiD legislation
- Intimacy, kinship, parentage
- Settler colonialism
- Critical race theory
- Gender and sexuality
- Gender and politics
- Canadian politics
- Madness, bodily autonomy, and citizenship: the “choice” of Medical Assistance in Dying in Canada
Journal articles:
- Challborn, M. R., & Harder, L. (2019). Sex and the genuine marriage: consummation and conjugality in Canadian citizenship. Citizenship Studies, 23(5), 407-423.
Under review:
- Challborn, M.R. Polyamory and legal parentage in Canada: the possibilities C.C. (Re) and BCSC 767 for expanding conceptions of kinship.
Non-refereed:
- Challborn, M.R. “Why and How Cities Matter to Early Learning and Care,” Edmonton Council for Early Learning and Care. October 2021.
- Challborn, M.R. “Still in the Bedrooms of the Nation,” Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. January/February 2019.
- Challborn, M.R. “Very little magic in “Conjuring the Sex Positive”,” Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. November/December 2017.
- President’s Doctoral Prize of Distinction, University of Alberta, 2017, 2016, 2015
- Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship, University of Alberta, 2015
- SSHRC Canada Graduate Master’s Scholar, University of Alberta, 2014
- Walter H. Johns Graduate Fellowship, University of Alberta, 2014
- Queen Elizabeth II Master’s Scholarship, University of Alberta, 2013
- Board of Governors’ Award for Outstanding Community Achievement, Carleton University, 2013