Jamie Lundine (she/her) is a PhD candidate, feminist researcher, and writer.
Jamie holds an MSc in Public Health from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and a BA (Hons) in Geography, with a Major in African Studies from McGill University. Before returning to post-secondary studies, Jamie lived and worked in Nairobi, Kenya for seven years, where she co-founded a social enterprise and worked on various digital mapping and technology projects. For this work, in 2017, Jamie was recognized by Pacific Standard magazine as a Top 30 Thinker Under 30 in social and behavioural sciences.
Jamie’s PhD research examines knowledge production practices, with a specific focus on power and privilege in academic journal peer review. Her doctoral research is funded by a SSHRC Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canda Graduate Scholarship (CGS) and a doctoral scholarship from Coalition Publica.
Her work is interdisciplinary, unapologetically feminist, and increasingly informed by disability studies and disability justice.
When she’s not thinking about and reading scientific articles, Jamie also reads and writes creative non-fiction and practices yoga. In 2019, she completed a 200-hour yoga teacher training certificate.