
About Dr. Masaya Llavaneras Blanco
I am an interdisciplinary professor, researcher, and author working on global inequalities from a southern feminist lens. My research focuses on migration and human mobilities in the so-called global south, especially among women who work or have worked as domestic workers and other forms of paid and unpaid care and intimate work. I have spent the last 9 years working in collaboration with migrant organizations, organizations of denationalized and stateless communities, unions, and different governmental and non governmental organizations in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
I am also a scholar-activist concerned with how development is critiqued, imagined and carried out from a feminist perspective rooted in the Global South. I carry out that work with Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN) and in collaboration with other feminists based in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean and Pacific regions. Part of that work centred research on the corporate capture of development, and more recently, the often drastic political shifts that took place in our countries during the COVID19 pandemic.
My classrooms are interactive spaces where students are active participants in the learning process. I am Assistant Professor at the Centre for Global Studies at Huron University College in Ontario, Canada. I teach a diversity of courses that range from Development Studies, Refugee and Migration Studies, and Gender Studies.


About Dr. Masaya Llavaneras Blanco
I am an interdisciplinary professor, researcher, and author working on global inequalities from a southern feminist lens. My research focuses on migration and human mobilities in the so-called global south, especially among women who work or have worked as domestic workers and other forms of paid and unpaid care and intimate work. I have spent the last 9 years working in collaboration with migrant organizations, organizations of denationalized and stateless communities, unions, and different governmental and non governmental organizations in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
I am also a scholar-activist concerned with how development is critiqued, imagined and carried out from a feminist perspective rooted in the Global South. I carry out that work with Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN) and in collaboration with other feminists based in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean and Pacific regions. Part of that work centred research on the corporate capture of development, and more recently, the often drastic political shifts that took place in our countries during the COVID19 pandemic.
My classrooms are interactive spaces where students are active participants in the learning process. I am Assistant Professor at the Centre for Global Studies at Huron University College in Ontario, Canada. I teach a diversity of courses that range from Development Studies, Refugee and Migration Studies, and Gender Studies.


About Dr. Masaya Llavaneras Blanco
I am an interdisciplinary professor, researcher, and author working on global inequalities from a southern feminist lens. My research focuses on migration and human mobilities in the so-called global south, especially among women who work or have worked as domestic workers and other forms of paid and unpaid care and intimate work. I have spent the last 9 years working in collaboration with migrant organizations, organizations of denationalized and stateless communities, unions, and different governmental and non governmental organizations in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
I am also a scholar-activist concerned with how development is critiqued, imagined and carried out from a feminist perspective rooted in the Global South. I carry out that work with Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN) and in collaboration with other feminists based in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean and Pacific regions. Part of that work centred research on the corporate capture of development, and more recently, the often drastic political shifts that took place in our countries during the COVID19 pandemic.
My classrooms are interactive spaces where students are active participants in the learning process. I am Assistant Professor at the Centre for Global Studies at Huron University College in Ontario, Canada. I teach a diversity of courses that range from Development Studies, Refugee and Migration Studies, and Gender Studies.

About Dr. Masaya Llavaneras Blanco
I am an interdisciplinary professor, researcher, and author working on global inequalities from a southern feminist lens. My research focuses on migration and human mobilities in the so-called global south, especially among women who work or have worked as domestic workers and other forms of paid and unpaid care and intimate work. I have spent the last 9 years working in collaboration with migrant organizations, organizations of denationalized and stateless communities, unions, and different governmental and non governmental organizations in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
I am also a scholar-activist concerned with how development is critiqued, imagined and carried out from a feminist perspective rooted in the Global South. I carry out that work with Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN) and in collaboration with other feminists based in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean and Pacific regions. Part of that work centred research on the corporate capture of development, and more recently, the often drastic political shifts that took place in our countries during the COVID19 pandemic.
My classrooms are interactive spaces where students are active participants in the learning process. I am Assistant Professor at the Centre for Global Studies at Huron University College in Ontario, Canada. I teach I diversity of courses that range from Development Studies, Refugee and Migration Studies, and Gender Studies.

About Dr. Masaya Llavaneras Blanco
I am an interdisciplinary professor, researcher, and author working on global inequalities from a southern feminist lens. My research focuses on migration and human mobilities in the so-called global south, especially among women who work or have worked as domestic workers and other forms of paid and unpaid care and intimate work. I have spent the last 9 years working in collaboration with migrant organizations, organizations of denationalized and stateless communities, unions, and different governmental and non governmental organizations in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
I am also a scholar-activist concerned with how development is critiqued, imagined and carried out from a feminist perspective rooted in the Global South. I carry out that work with Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN) and in collaboration with other feminists based in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean and Pacific regions. Part of that work centred research on the corporate capture of development, and more recently, the often drastic political shifts that took place in our countries during the COVID19 pandemic.
My classrooms are interactive spaces where students are active participants in the learning process. I am Assistant Professor at the Centre for Global Studies at Huron University College in Ontario, Canada. I teach I diversity of courses that range from Development Studies, Refugee and Migration Studies, and Gender Studies.

About Dr. Masaya Llavaneras Blanco
I am an interdisciplinary professor, researcher, and author working on global inequalities from a southern feminist lens. My research focuses on migration and human mobilities in the so-called global south, especially among women who work or have worked as domestic workers and other forms of paid and unpaid care and intimate work. I have spent the last 9 years working in collaboration with migrant organizations, organizations of denationalized and stateless communities, unions, and different governmental and non governmental organizations in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
I am also a scholar-activist concerned with how development is critiqued, imagined and carried out from a feminist perspective rooted in the Global South. I carry out that work with Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN) and in collaboration with other feminists based in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean and Pacific regions. Part of that work centred research on the corporate capture of development, and more recently, the often drastic political shifts that took place in our countries during the COVID19 pandemic.
My classrooms are interactive spaces where students are active participants in the learning process. I am Assistant Professor at the Centre for Global Studies at Huron University College in Ontario, Canada. I teach I diversity of courses that range from Development Studies, Refugee and Migration Studies, and Gender Studies.

About Dr. Masaya Llavaneras Blanco
I am an interdisciplinary professor, researcher, and author working on global inequalities from a southern feminist lens. My research focuses on migration and human mobilities in the so-called global south, especially among women who work or have worked as domestic workers and other forms of paid and unpaid care and intimate work. I have spent the last 9 years working in collaboration with migrant organizations, organizations of denationalized and stateless communities, unions, and different governmental and non-governmental organizations in the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
I am also a scholar-activist concerned with how development is critiqued, imagined and carried out from a feminist perspective rooted in the Global South. I carry out that work with Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN) and in collaboration with other feminists based in Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean and Pacific regions. Part of that work centred research on the corporate capture of development, and more recently, the often drastic political shifts that took place in our countries during the COVID-19 pandemic.
My classrooms are interactive spaces where students are active participants in the learning process. I am Assistant Professor at the Centre for Global Studies at Huron University College in Ontario, Canada. I teach a diversity of courses that range from Development Studies, Refugee and Migration Studies, and Gender Studies.
