Lori Lee Oates
Teaching Assistant Professor (Ph.D. Exeter)

Research Interests
Resource Curse; Gender and Climate Justice; Indigenous Land Displacement; Colonialism in Policing; Colonialism in Media; Decolonizing Research Methods; Orientalism and Race; Nineteenth-Century Social Theory; Sociology of Religion.
Contact Information
Office: AA4067
Email: loates@mun.ca
Ph: 709-864-7445
Personal Profile
Dr. Oates holds degrees in Sociology, Political Science, and an M.Phil. (Humanities) from 糖心视频 University of Newfoundland. She worked in senior roles in the provincial government before returning to university full time in 2011 to pursue a Ph.D. After being awarded an international doctoral studentship from the University of Exeter, she researched the transnational movement of occult philosophies, as driven by British and French imperialism. This research was conducted at the British Library, Oxford Special Collections, the Gladstone Library, Knebworth House, Hertfordshire County Archives, and Biblioth猫que Nationale. At present, this research is being published as her first monograph with SUNY Press. It has also been presented in multiple locations across Europe including Latvia, Paris, Gothenburg, London, Edinburgh, and Amsterdam.
In 2024, Dr. Oates was awarded an SSHRC Insight Development Grant to research the resource economy of Newfoundland and Labrador. The project is aptly titled Cursed: How the Resource Curse Manifests in Newfoundland and Labrador. A frequent commentator in local and national media, she has been published in The Globe and Mail, The Hill Times, and Canada鈥檚 National Observer. She has also worked as a Senior Policy advisor in the Office of the Minister of Status of Women with Government of Canada. There she held files on decriminalization of sex work, women鈥檚 entrepreneurship, and pay equity.
Teaching
Dr. Oates regularly teaches courses in Sociology of Policing, Social Inequality, Deviance, Qualitative Research Methods, and Introduction to Sociology.
Affiliations
International Studies Association
Canadian Sociological Association
Research
鈥淚mperial Occulture: The Theosophical Society and Transnational Cultures of Print鈥, The International History Review, 2021, Vol. 43(4), 815-835.
Gender and Climate Justice,鈥 Special Section on Gender and Climate Justice, Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture, & Social Justice with Sritama Chatterjee. Vol. 45:3.
鈥楥ursed: How the resource curse manifests in Newfoundland and Labrador鈥, Network in Canadian History and Environment, February 10, 2025.
鈥楾he problem with Axe the Tax,鈥 Network in Canadian History and Environment, October 9, 2024.
鈥楾he neocolonialism of using police to enforce problematic environmental policy鈥 for The Network in Canadian History and Environment, RCMP 150 series, May 10, 2023.
鈥楳ega Dams 鈥 Part 3: The Atlantic Loop and the Green Energy Transition鈥, Network in Canadian History and Environment, October 27, 2022.
鈥楳ega Dams 鈥 Part 2: The Global Contexts and Canadian Mega Dam Failures鈥, Network in Canadian History and Environment鈥, October 14, 2022.
鈥楳egadams 鈥 Part 1: A Tale of Muskrat Falls and Gull Island鈥, Network in Canadian History and Environment, October 7, 2022.
鈥楳eghan Markel and the colonial roots of tabloid media鈥, Imperial and Global Forum, March 25, 2021.
鈥榃hen is colonialism a genocide? The case of Indigenous women and girls in Canada鈥, Imperial and Global Forum, July 4, 2019.
Book Reviews
Review of Pax Economica: Left-Wing Visions of a Free Trade World by Marc-William Palen for the Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History, Vol. 25: 3 (2024).
Review of Empireworld: How Imperialism has Shaped the Globe by Santhnam Sanghera on 鈥楲SE Review of Books鈥, July 25, 2024, found online at .
Review of Eugene Lindon鈥檚 Fire and Flood: A People鈥檚 History of Climate Change from 1979 to present, for Environmental History, 2023, Vol. 28(3), 594-595.
Review of Imperial Encore: The Cultural Project of the Late British Empire by Caroline Ritter. Published on 鈥楲SE Review of Books鈥, July 2021, found online at .
Review of The Contamination of the Earth: A History of Pollutions in the Industrial Age, by Fran莽ois Jarrige and Thomas Le Roux (Translated by Janice Egan and Michael Egan). Published in 鈥楪lobal Environmental Politics鈥, 2021, Vol. 21(3), 197-199.
Media
The Signal: Is the 鈥榬esource curse鈥 hindering the Newfoundland and Labrador economy?
Niche Conversations 2.9 Lori Lee Oates on 鈥楥limate change is colonialism鈥
Interview with Ross Lord, Global National regarding the Bay du Nord oil and gas development, ran June 9, 2022.
鈥楾he global rise of the far right is coming home to Canada,鈥 Canada鈥檚 National Observer, December 19, 2024.
鈥極il and gas approvals spell ecocide,鈥 Canada鈥檚 National Observer, August 18, 2023.
鈥榃ildfire in N.L. are yet another sign we must move faster on climate change,鈥 Canada鈥檚 National Observer, August 15, 2022.
鈥楴ew research says leave 40 percent of existing fossil fuels in the ground,鈥 Canada鈥檚 National Observer, June 24, 2022.
鈥楴ewfoundland and Labrador oil is neither low carbon nor ethical,鈥 Canada鈥檚 National Observer, June 6, 2022.
鈥楥anada could be the first country on Earth to pay international royalties鈥, Canada鈥檚 National Observer, May 11, 2022.
鈥楴ewfoundland and Labrador鈥檚 culture helped it to achieve Canada鈥檚 highest vaccination rate鈥, The Globe and Mail, January 21, 2022.
鈥楧aughters of the Vote and gender equality in Canadian politics: The journey continues鈥, The Hill Times, March 3, 2021.
鈥楨verything old is new again in Newfoundland and Labrador鈥, The Globe and Mail, February 10, 2021.
鈥楴ewfoundland and Labrador has a new premier: It is time to get real about how our money is being managed鈥, The Globe and Mail, August 28, 2020.