Hello,
my name is Linda Mensah (she/her)
I’m a Ghanaian-Canadian,
Cis-het Woman, and Registered Social Worker.
My work is an extension of my lived experience navigating race, gender, class, neurodivergence, and mental health.
As a second-generation Canadian, my story encompasses themes of identity, otherness and belonging.
This experience is what underscores my passion for the mental health and well-being of racialized folx.
For me, the personal is political.
In addition to my lived experience, my qualifications include:
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I have 10+ years of experience in community development, immigrant services, and mental health, working with organizations such as the Elizabeth Fry Society, Project GROW (Ghana Rural Opportunities for Women), Calgary Immigrant Women’s Association (CIWA), Street Haven Women’s Shelter, Mood Disorders Association of Ontario/ Hope + Me (MDAO), the City of Toronto, Nadia Saad Psychotherapy, and WoodGreen Community Services - Walk-in Counselling.
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I am registered with the Ontario College of Social Workers and Social Service Workers (OCSWSSW), the Ontario Association of Social Workers (OASW), and the Canadian Association of Social Workers (CASW).
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I have a BSW from the University of British Columbia, Okanagan where I focused on how post-secondary international community development programs perpetuate colonial violence and harm in the under-developed communities they operate within.
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I also hold an MSW from Toronto Metropolitan University where I completed research on how Canada’s generational status classification system creates ambiguous identities for its second-generation population.