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EUC Research Update - November 2022

Welcome to the November 2022 edition of the EUC Research Update聽 - bringing you highlights from research activities at 91亚色's Faculty of Environmental & Urban Change. We invite you to view our past updates on our Research News page.

Research Spotlights

A pair of foot standing behind a raibow

Wiley Sharp on making places, making lives: Queer and trans youth strategies for more-than-survival in suburban Toronto

Read the Research Spotlight

A family of immigrant at an airport

Valerie Preston on building migrant resilience across the cities of Ontario and Quebec

Read the Research Spotlight

Chan Arun-Pina on wings of transformation: A post occupancy evaluation (POE) of India鈥檚 first gender-neutral (student) hostel

Read the Research Spotlight

Sophia Ilyniak on de/centering the 鈥榗ommunity benefit鈥 in Toronto鈥檚 inner suburbs

Read the Research Spotlight

Balikisu Osman on climate risks and household responses to food insecurity in northern Ghana

Read the Research Spotlight

Zachary Dark on the utility headquarters as a symbol of eco-modernism

Read the Research Spotlight

Accolades and Awards

Kean Birch

Congratulations to Kean Birch on his appointment as Director of 91亚色鈥檚 recently established Institute for Technoscience and Society (ITS). ITS will serve as a global hub of critical and interdisciplinary research and knowledge mobilization on the relationship between technoscience and society, especially the configuration of social power underpinning scientific claims, medical practices, emerging technologies and sites of innovation.

Birch is co-editor of Science as Culture and Series Editor of Technoscience & Society Book Series published by the University of Toronto Press. His most recent book is a co-edited volume titled Assetization: Turning Things into Assets in Technoscientific Capitalism (MIT Press, 2020).


Congratulations to our graduate students who received Tri-Council awards in 2022:

  • Melvin Chan - ES PhD, SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship on Learning with animals: Exploring diverse rabbit-human interactions in the animal shelter
  • Zachary Dark - ES PhD, Joseph-Armand Bombardier SSHRC CGS Doctoral Scholarship on Climate Crisis Colonialism: Sustainable Energy, Hydroelectric Dams, and the Canadian State
  • Barbara Kerr - Geography MSc, Alexander Graham Bell Graduate Scholarship NSERC CGS-M on Identifying landscape pattern fragmentation with an agent-based process
  • Danielle Legault - Geography MA, Joseph-Armand Bombardier CGS Master's Scholarship on Looking a Gift Horse in the Mouth: Investigating Animal Welfare in Canadian International Development Initiatives
  • Alyssa Marchese - MES, Joseph-Armand Bombardier SSHRC CGS Master's Scholarships on Factory Farming in Canada: Laws and Human/Animal Injustices
  • Maureen Owino - ES PhD, CIHR Travel Award for her research on Black communities and Black people living with HIV
  • Frederick Peters - MES, Joseph-Armand Bombardier SSHRC CGS Master's Scholarships on Retrofitting Mass Housing, Planning for Climate Change
  • Amanda Rooney - MES, Joseph-Armand Bombardier SSHRC CGS Master's Scholarship on Planning for Resilient Food Systems
  • Isaac Thornley - ES PhD, SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship on No Pipeline to Transition: Ideology, Disavowal and the Politics of the Trans Mountain Expansion
  • Taliya Seidman-Wright - Geography MA, Joseph-Armand Bombardier SSHRC CGS Master's Scholarship on Indigenous-settler relations in Toronto鈥檚 food movement: A study of Indigenous food sovereignty

We are also taking this opportunity to celebrate completed PhDs over the last year in Environmental Studies and Geography.

PhD in Environmental Studies:

Susan Chiblow - Understanding Anishinaabek G鈥檊iikendaaswinmin (knowledge) on N鈥檅i (water), Naaknigeiwn (law) and Nokomis Giizis (Grandmother Moon) in the Great Lakes Territory for Water Governance. Supervisor: Deborah McGregor
Alia Karim - Indigenous Workers and Trade Unions: Settler-Colonial Capitalism, Indigenous Peoples' Labour and Union Engagement. Supervisor: Stefan Kipfer
Sara Marino - Towards a Becoming Encounter: Arts-Based Inquiry and the Representation of Animal-Human Relations. Supervisor: Deborah Barndt
Neil Osborne - Communicating Climate Change: An examination of narrative intuition, transmedia acumen, and emotional intelligence in the presentation of the Transmedia Emotional Engagement Storytelling (TREES) Model. Supervisor: Jose Etcheverry
Camille Turner - Unsilencing The Past: Staging Black Atlantic Memory In Canada and Beyond. Supervisor: Honor Ford-Smith
Anne Wordsworth - Sacrifice or Salvation: How can Animal Lives be Spared and Human Health Improved by Toxics Reform? Supervisor: Harris Ali

PhD in Geography:

  • Juli谩n Guti茅rrez Casta帽o - Forced Displacement and Racialization: The Colombian Experience. Supervisor: Ranu Basu
  • Kristi Leora Gansworth - Anguilla Rostrata, Our Teacher: Addressing Anishnabe Epistemicide through Eels. Supervisor: Patricia Burke Wood
  • Jarren Richards - Land, Labour, and Under-Industrialization in Post-Reform India: Case Studies from Odisha. Supervisor: Raju Das
  • Terence Rudolph - The Geoeconomic and Geopolitical Dimensions of Migrant Rescue. Supervisor: Jennifer Hyndman
  • Tewodros Asfaw - The Plight of Mixed Ethnic People in Ethiopia: Exclusion, Fragmentation, and Double Consciousness. Supervisor: Joseph Mensah

Young Indigenous Women's Utopia (YIWU)

The Young Indigenous Women's Utopia (YIWU) has received EUC's artist-in-residence award and will be at 91亚色 on Thursday, November 24 for a full-day of sharing about their work, their new book 鈥淜脦Y脗NAW OC脢PIHK鈥 and hands-on interactive workshops on collage making. The event is sponsored by EUC, LaMarsh Centre for Child and Youth Research, Centre for Indigenous Knowledges and Languages, and the research project with McGill University.

Role of arts in research

All events are free, open to the community, and will take place in HNES 140 on 91亚色鈥檚 Keele Campus! Please register at .

This Fall, students in Sarah Flicker鈥檚 Arts-Based Research Methods Class (ENVS 3327) came together to collectively participate in a class mural that visually represented their interpretation of the role of the arts in research.

In response to the question, 鈥淲hy art?鈥 Their collective answer was 鈥榃HY NOT?鈥 as you can see in their mural.


Three retired 91亚色 geographers - Conrad Heidenreich, John Warkentin, and the late David Wood - are all past winners of the Distinguished Alumni Award from the University of Toronto's Association of Geography Alumni (UTAGA). Along with 22 other recipients of the same award, they have each contributed a chapter to a book titled Our Geographical Worlds: Celebrating Award Winning Geography at the University of Toronto 1995 to 2018, edited by Jane Macijauskas. The book is published by U of T's Department of Geography and Planning and its Association of Geography Alumni (UTAGA).

Glen Norcliffe

Heidenreich contributed a chapter titled 鈥On Becoming a Geographer: A Personal Odyssey鈥 (pp. 128-38). Warkentin's chapter is titled 鈥A Country Child鈥檚 Inner City and Geographical Change鈥 (pp. 28-36). And Wood's chapter is: 鈥New World Conservation and Old World Preservation鈥 (pp. 93-99).

Warkentin also contributed professional biographies of award recipients who have died or were too ill to write an essay: Richard Baine (University of Toronto), Trudi Bunting (University of Waterloo), Alexander Davidson (Parks Canada), William Dean (University of Toronto), Richard Ruggles (Queen鈥檚 University), Marie Sanderson (University of Windsor), and William Wonders (University of Alberta). A fourth retired 91亚色 geographer, Glen Norcliffe, also received the UTAGA Distinguished Alumni Award in 2021, when the book was already in production.

Publications and Reports

Congratulations to Gail Fraser and Roger Keil on launching their new books!!

Gail Fraser book launch with Joel Shore

Gail Fraser launched her new novel accompanied by Joel Shore (Faculty of Science) with songs that vividly brought to life the times and places described in the book. The book provides an engaging, deeply moving tale of immigrant struggle, from an arduous life in 19th century Scotland, to the adversities and dangers of mining work in America.

Roger Keil book launch in Kaneff Tower

Roger Keil launched his co-edited book during the seminar held in early November at 91亚色. The book presents a cross-section of state-of-the-art scholarship in critical global suburban research and provides an in-depth study of the planet鈥檚 urban peripheries to grasp the forms of urbanization in the twenty-first century.

Bain, A. and Podmore, J. (2022). . International Journal of Urban and Regional Research. July.

Das, Raju (2022) "Politics of Love, and Love of Politics: Towards a Marxist Theory of Love," Class, Race and Corporate Power: Vol. 10: Iss. 2, Article 2.

Das, Raju J. and Latham, R. E. (2022) "," Class, Race and
Corporate Power: Vol. 10: Iss. 2, Article 6.

Gibson, S., Halvorson, K., Myers, L., and Colla, S. (2022). . iScience. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2022.105613

Mensah, J. and Owusu Ansah, A. (2022). . International Migration. Volume 60, Issue 5, pp. 198-216.

Norcliffe G, Buliung, R., Annika Kruse, A. and Radford, J (2022). 鈥溾 Disability Studies Quarterly, Vol. 42(1).

Norcliffe, G. and Decosse, S. (2022). 鈥.鈥 Geoforum, Vol.136(1), 101-111.

Olusola, A., Adedeji, O., Akpoterai, L., Ogunjo, S., Olusegun, C. and Adelabu, S. (2022). . Soil-Water, Agriculture and Climate Change.


November 13-19 is fostering awareness about the experiences of trans and gender diverse people - an opportunity to learn more about inclusion and to honour lives lost to transphobic violence.

EUC fosters and supports research, engagement and scholarship in queer and transgender studies. Examples include:

EUC faculty publications relating to queer & transgender studies
For the birds launch party

Media and Events

EUC invites you to the launch of the mural on the series of windows next to the HNES lounge on Tuesday, November 22 at 10 am.

The project is part of an Academic Innovation Fund project with Lisa Myers, Traci Warkentin and Gail Fraser centered around migratory bird mortality from window strikes.

The design of the art occurred in ENVS 2122 Environmental Arts for Social Change. The installation was student driven by the Sky Studio Collective.

Lina Brand Correa at the Dahdaleh Seminar Series

Lina Brand Correa will give a talk on Ecological Economics for Public and Planetary Health: Moving Beyond the Neoclassical Paradigm as part of the Dahdaleh Institute Seminar Series on Wednesday, November 23 from 1-2 pm. This seminar presentation aims to highlight the contributions that one such heterodox Economics school of thought (ecological economics) can make to the fields of public and planetary health, making a contrast with what the neoclassical Economics orthodoxy proposes. Everyone welcome! Please feel free to share and register in this event.

Sheila Colla was cited in a article exploring the way bumblebees behave if given an opportunity to interact with a ball. Based on a UK study, it was found that bumblebees, if given tiny wooden balls, will spend time moving them around, seemingly just for fun. And the younger the bee, the more time they spend playing as seen from the video. "I think a main takeaway from this study is that there is still so much to learn about the insect world. Insects are more intelligent than we give them credit for," Colla said. "As a conservation scientist, I hope we keep pollinators around to be able to learn more from them.

Jose Etcheverry recently participated in a as one of the invited climate change experts. The event, held at Evergreen Brickworks, Toronto centered around electrification, clean energy, and achieving net-zero-carbon in Canada by 2030. Etcheverry spoke about the importance of human resources and developing a confident workforce through the Climate Solutions Park project that he is involved in at 91亚色 while recognizing the various challenges and impediments to the energy transition to highlight the immediate work that needs to be done by the industry.

YUGAN Annual Lecture featuring Katherine Gilbson

The Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change and the 91亚色 Geography Alumni Network (YUGAN) invite you to the on Tuesday, Nov 29 from 3-6pm ET at the Second Student Centre. Join us for a fun afternoon gathering with friends old and new as we welcome a distinguished researcher to share their research and celebrate 60 years of Geography @ 91亚色!

The lecture, 鈥淩eimagining Capitalism? or Enacting Post-Capitalist Practices?鈥, will be presented by Professor Katherine Gibson who is a Professorial Research Fellow in the Institute for Culture and Society at Western Sydney University and the 2022 Gough Whitlam and Malcolm Fraser Visiting Professor of Australian Studies, Harvard University. Please register at .

Gibson is an economic geographer with an international reputation for innovative research on economic transformation and over 30 years鈥 experience of working with communities to build resilient economies. As J.K. Gibson-Graham, the collective authorial presence she shares with the late Julie Graham (Professor of Geography, University of Massachusetts Amherst), her books include The End of Capitalism (As We Knew It): A Feminist Critique of Political Economy (Blackwell 1996) and A Postcapitalist Politics (University of Minnesota Press, 2006). Her most recent books are Take Back the Economy: An Ethical Guide for Transforming Our Communities, co-authored with Jenny Cameron and Stephen Healy (University of Minnesota Press, 2013), Making Other Worlds Possible: Performing Diverse Economies, co-edited with Gerda Roelvink and Kevin St Martin (University of Minnesota Press, 2015), Manifesto For Living in the Anthropocene, co-edited with Deborah Bird Rose and Ruth Fincher (Punctum Press, 2015) and The Handbook of Diverse Economies (Edward Elgar, 2020) co-edited with Kelly Dombroski. She is a founding member of the Community Economies Collective.


Join Sheila Htoo, Environmental Studies PhD Candidate, in a talk on 鈥楶eace鈥 as 鈥榩eace for business and development鈥 or 鈥榩eace鈥 as 鈥榓n end to violence, oppression鈥 and 鈥榩resence of justice鈥?: Understanding Karen people鈥 assertion of 鈥榞enuine鈥 peace and peacebuilding process through the Salween Peace Park' on Friday, November 25, 10:00 to 12:00 EST in Room 830, Kaneff Tower, 91亚色 and via Zoom. Htoo's paper examines and discusses how ceasefire and peace talk since 2015 have become a catalyst for capitalist accumulation by dispossession of ethnic civilians of their land, identity and cultural traditions in Karen State of southeast Burma/Myanmar.

The paper highlights one grassroots peacebuilding process that addresses the fundamental root causes of longstanding conflicts, grievances and political injustices through an establishment of the Salween Peace Park. Htoo's doctoral research focuses on the political ecology of war, resources and armed conflicts, ceasefire capitalism, and peacebuilding efforts by Indigenous Karen people in southeastern Burma/Myanmar through the Salween Peace Park movement.

Htoo serves as a chairperson for the Karen Community of Toronto (KCT) as well as an advocacy leader with the Karen Community of Canada鈥檚 (KCC) National Advocacy Team.


CERLAC's Truth be Told

CERLAC presents a virtual book launch on by Glynne Manley on Wednesday, November 30 at 7:30pm via zoom.

Manley was Jamaica's Prime Minister between 1972 and 1980 when his government attempted a series of decolonizing reforms. He was defeated in a violent election in 1980 and the Washington consensus was ushered in. He returned to power in 1989 taking a more moderate stance. Manley's leadership style and legacy is heatedly contested, but does it have any relevance for the present moment? Truth be Told comprises three years of candid interviews with Michael Manley conducted by his wife Glynne leading up to his death in 1997.

Now, in the context of a major shift in the balance of power in the hemisphere, leading scholars of the Caribbean, Canada, the US and Jamaica take up the book in relation to Manley's legacy. They do so through the lens of contemporary issues related to political leadership, the informal economy, gender, mining and extraction, global racism and inequality; and land and labour rights. EUC Professor Anna Zalik is part of the panel of speakers. .


Join us for a screening premiere of the Las Nubes documentary 'We Walk the Earth' (2022) and panel discussion on Indigenous Struggles and their Search for Well-Being on Wednesday, November 23. We Walk the Earth speaks of Indigenous persistence in their homelands after more than 500 years of colonialism. It recounts struggles in Costa Rica for Indigenous rights to land, to self-governance and autonomy. Through the words of Bribri, Cab茅car, Brunka and Br枚ran men and women, stories emerge of the pains suffered in the struggle to rightfully recover Indigenous Territories. The restoration of life and wellbeing through Indigenous Peoples鈥 stewardship of their land offers alternative ways to understand our relationship with the Earth.

The film was directed by Felipe Montoya, with Gilbert Gonz谩lez Maroto as the academic lead. The documentary was made by EUC's Las Nubes Project and the Faculty of Health at 91亚色 in collaboration with the Universidad T茅cnica Nacional de Costa Rica, San Carlos Campus and 91亚色 Libraries and the financial support of EUC, FoH, 91亚色 International and 91亚色 Libraries. .


Dayna Scott

Dayna Scott's work documenting Indigenous community鈥檚 stand against mining companies was featured in . For the past seven years, Scott has worked closely with the Neskantaga First Nation as they fight to preserve their homelands in the sensitive peat-lands of northern Ontario. Notably, the Neskantaga First Nation is one of several First Nations profoundly impacted by the Ring of Fire, a gigantic, proposed nickel mining development in the mineral-rich James Bay Lowlands. The area is also believed to hold vast deposits of chromite, copper and platinum. 鈥淰arious governments have hitched their hopes to the Ring of Fire as a potential driver of Ontario鈥檚 economy,鈥 said Scott who holds the 91亚色 Research Chair in Environmental Law and Justice in the Green Economy. 鈥淭he struggle for jurisdiction,鈥 she added, 鈥渋s a high-stakes struggle.鈥 For more info on Scott's work, read the EUC research spotlight on Novel approaches to restoring Indigenous governing authority over lands and waterways. The research 鈥 along with a related project 鈥淎ssembling Infrastructures Of Indigenous Jurisdiction鈥 鈥 will be the focus of a forthcoming book Fire in the Ring: Settler Law and Indigenous Jurisdiction on the Critical Minerals Frontier.


Mark Winfield

Mark Winfield's expertise was featured in a on Ford government's proposed changes to the Greenbelt. With the proposal to build thousands of homes in parts of the Greenbelt while adding other protected land elsewhere, the plan will accordingly cause a host of ecological problems. "Taking land out of the system has a cascading set of effects," says Winfield. Accordingly, the "hardening of surfaces," due to the construction of roads and buildings where there were none before, will affect how that land can then interact with water systems, how groundwater is recharged, and how runoff works and the provision of habitats. "The more we fail to protect source waters and recharge areas where drinking water comes from, a core purpose of the Greenbelt, the more pathways are possible for contaminants to get into drinking water. This should be of concern to everyone who drinks Lake Ontario's water at home," he says.

Winfield also wrote an article for on "Ontario's risky play on nuke power" bringing attention to the new 300MW nuclear power reactor that is at the center of Ontario Power Generation (OPG) initiative paving the path for the future of province's electricity system. Winfield mentions that OPG is following the expanded nuclear-based pathway which also included the last month's extension of the aged Pickering nuclear facility's lifetime. Accordingly, this contributes to increases in electricity-related emissions that are projected to grow to 600% in Ontario by 2040 in comparison to emission values of 2017. "The Ford government鈥檚 unwillingness to consider different approaches to meeting the province鈥檚 electricity needs is particularly surprising given the range of alternatives available to it," he says.

- November 22, 2022, 12pm

Ecological Economics for Public and Planetary Health: Moving Beyond the Neoclassical Paradigm - November 23, 2022, 1pm

- November 24, 2022, 12pm

- November 24, 2022, HNES 140, 91亚色

- November 25, 2022, 10am-12 noon, Kaneff Tower 830

Power to the People: Electricity and Urban Life in Nineteenth-Century Nigeria - November 25, 2022, 1pm, Kaneff 626

Coral Reefs: From Climate Victims to Survivors - November 29, 2022, 11:30am

- November 29, 2022, 3pm, Second Student Centre, 91亚色

CERLAC presents the 2022-2023 Michael Baptista Lecture Series: Archival Justice and Digital Collaborative Scholarship - November 29, 2022, 6pm

- November 30 at 7:30pm

- January 27-29, 2023

Parks and Protected Areas Research Network 2023 eSummit - February 27-March 2, 2023

Congress 2023: Reckonings and Reimaginings - May 27-June 2, 2023, 91亚色, Toronto, Canada

- November 22, 2022

- November 25, 2022

- November 29, 2022

- December 1, 2022

- December 1, 2022

- December 2, 2022

- December 14, 2022 (Registration)

- December 15, 2022

- December 15, 2022

- Shepherd Phase - December 20, 2022

- Rolling deadline

- No deadline

- No deadline

- No deadline

- Strengthening Canada's quantum research and innovation capacity - applications accepted until October 2023.

For more info, do check the  from all three federal research funding agencies and the , including agency-specific and jointly administered programs.

Important note: Please check eligibility criteria and requirements before you apply. Also note that these are agency deadlines which vary from your respective institutional deadlines for internal review, endorsement, and approval.

 - Government of Canada launches the National Women鈥檚 Health Research Initiative

  - Seeking members for NSERC鈥檚 Committee on Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

- Tri-agency Interdisciplinary Peer Review Committee broadened

- Transgender Awareness Week

鈥 Mitacs reopens applications for graduate-student internships in Ontario

- Transdisciplinarity: Universities have a chance to lead

- President鈥檚 2022 Annual Report reinforces 91亚色鈥檚 commitment to right the future

Contact Us

The EUC Research Update is compiled by the Research Office at EUC: Research Officer Rhoda Reyes, Associate Dean Research, Graduate & Global Affairs Philip Kelly, and Research Assistant Igor Lutay. Thanks to Paul Tran for the web design and development.

We welcome the opportunity to pass along research-related information and achievements from our whole community - faculty, postdocs, visiting scholars, students, and retirees.

News for future updates can be submitted using the EUC Kudos and News form, circulated monthly. Or, send your news directly to: eucresea@yorku.ca

If you are not on the EUC community listserves, but would like to receive this Research Update each month, send an email to eucresea@yorku.ca

Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change (EUC)

4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario,  Canada M3J 1P3

(416) 736-5252

eucresea@yorku.ca

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