Dr. Paige Raibmon

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Professor

Department of History


Paige Raibmon, Professor, Department of History. My research and teaching revolve around a range of questions united by my interest in Indigenous peoples’ endurance and resurgence in the face of settler colonialism’s historical workings and on-going implications. In my research, I focus primarily on the place currently called “British Columbia.”  I have a long-standing commitment to collaborative and community-based research practices.  And I have a keen interest in exploring new modes and genres of scholarly output.


  • BC Studies Conference 2025

    May 2-4, 2025

  • The BC Studies Conference was hosted on UBC Vancouver Campus from May 2 – 4, 2025.


Publications


  • P. Raibmon, “Violence that Dispossesses: Continuity on the Settler Colonial Timeline,” Canadian Historical Review, 106, no.3 (September 2025), 375-404.
    2025
  • T. Willard and P. Raibmon, “A Relational Discourse through Secwépemc Authorship: A Review Conversation,” Canadian Historical Review, Volume 102 Issue 1 (March 2021): 152-167.
    2021
  • E. Paul, D. McKenzie, P. Raibmon, and H. Johnson. E. Paul, As I Remember It: Teachings (ʔəms tɑʔɑw) From the Life of a Sliammon Elder. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2019.
    2019
  • J. Jenson, F. Polletta, and P. Raibmon, “The Difficulties of Combating Inequality in Time,” Daedalus: Journal of the American Acadamy of Arts and Sciences, 148, 3 (Summer 2019): 136-163.
    2019
  • P. Raibmon, “Obvious but Invisible: Ways of Knowing Health, Environment, and Colonialism in a West Coast Indigenous Community,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 60, 2 (2018): 241-273.
    2018