Skip to main content
Headshot image

Daniel Salée, PhD

  • Professor, Political Science
  • Professor, School of Community and Public Affairs

Contact information

Biography

Daniel Salée's research in recent years has focussed on the politics of ethnicity and citizenship in the Canadian and Quebec contexts, with a particular emphasis on Indigenous peoples/settler state relations, the handling of ethnocultural diversity by hegemonic Eurodescendant populations and socioinstitutional processes of otherization and marginalization of members of racialized minorities. In addition to this current research focus, his scholarly interests also cover issues related to Quebec nationalism, Quebec political culture and federal-provincial relations in Canada. His work has been published in a variety of international and national scholarly journals and edited collections. Dr. Salée is a founding member of DIALOG -- le réseau québécois d'échange sur les questions autochtones and a member of Concordia's Center for the Study of Politics and Immigration (CSPI)

Education

BA (Honours), McGill University, 1977
MSc (Political Science), Université de Montréal, 1981
PhD (Political Science), Université de Montréal, 1987

Research interests

The politics of Indigenous Peoples-settler relations in Québec and Canada; the politics of ethnocultural diversity in Quebec and Canada; nationalism; federal-provincial relations in Canada

Teaching activities

SCPA 201                 Introduction to Public Policy and the Public Interest
SCPA 412                 Senior Research Seminar
POLI 204                  Introduction to Canadian politics and government
POLI 638/803           Graduate Seminar in Canadian and Quebec Politics
POLI 645/815           Indigenous Peoples and the State in Canada
POLI 684/813           Advanced Seminar on Quebec Politics and Public Policies

Selected publications

Books

Guimont Marceau, Stéphane, Jean-Olivier Roy and Daniel Salée (eds.) (2020). Peuples autochtones et politique au Québec et au Canada. Identités, citoyennetés et autodétermination. Collection Politeia. (Montreal: Presses de l’Université du Québec). 285 pages 

Journal articles and book chapters


Salée, Daniel (2022). “The New Face of Quebec Nationalism: Reconsidering the Nationalism/Democracy Nexus”, American Review of Canadian Studies, vol. 52, no. 2, 2022, pp. 119-138.


Salée, Daniel (2022). "Dialogue of the Deaf: Quebec Academics and Bill 21", Québec Studies, vol. 74, pp. 153-160.


Salée, Daniel and Carole Lévesque (2021). "Canada's Aboriginal Policy and the Politics of Ambivalence: A Policy Tools Perspective" in Katherine Graham and David Newhouse (eds.), Sharing the Land, Sharing A Future (Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press), pp. 424-451.


Salée, Daniel and Salma El Hankouri (2021). “Indigenous Peoples-Settler Relations and the Politics of Language in Twenty First Century Canada”  in Judith Weisz Woodsworth (ed.), Translation and the Global City. Bridges and Gateways. (Milton Park, Abingdon: Routledge), pp. 81-104.

Salée, Daniel, Stéphane Guimont Marceau and Jean-Olivier Roy (2020). "Peuples autochtones, territoires et citoyennetés: Le Québec face à ses défis" in Stéphane Guimont Marceau, Jean-Olivier Roy and Daniel Salée (eds.), Peuples autochtones et politique au Québec et au Canada. Collection Politeia (Montreal: Presses de l'Université du Québec), pp. 1-32.

 

Salée, Daniel (2016). "Vivre-ensemble et dynamiques de pouvoir: éléments pour comprendre l’anxiété antipluraliste actuelle des Québécois” in Alain G.Gagnon and Jean-Charles Saint-Louis (eds.), Les conditions du dialogue au Québec. Laïcité, réciprocité, pluralisme (Montreal: Québec Amérique and CRÉQC), pp. 253-281.


Salée, Daniel and Carole Lévesque (2016). “The Politics of Indigenous Peoples-Settler Relations in Quebec: Economic Development and the Limits of Intercultural Dialogue and Reconciliation”, American Indian Culture and Research Journal, vol. 40, no. 2, pp. 31-50. 




Took 32 milliseconds
Back to top

© Concordia University