“…While questions of identity have long preoccupied Canadian political and social scientists, little academic research has interrogated how the term identity politics is taken up by Canadian academics. Increasingly, scholars have challenged the treatment of race, ethnicity and gender in Canadian political science (for example, Dobrowolsky et al, 2017; Nath, 2011; Thompson, 2008; Vickers, 2002), and some have written critically about the use of the label identity politics (for example, Abu-Laban, 2017; Bannerji, 2000), yet there has been little systemic inquiry into how the discursive use of identity politics is implicated in the treatment of scholarship that foregrounds race, ethnicity and gender. In this article, we aim to interrogate whose politics are being labelled identity politics in Canadian academic discourse, and what work is done by this analytical distinction.…”