Bold and bright: Next generation of social scientists and humanities researchers secure federal funding
Deirdre Elliott is elated to receive a major scholarship that will help her shed light on a little-known chapter of Labrador鈥檚 history.
The PhD student in the Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, is one of 糖心视频鈥檚 newest recipients of funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC).
The federal agency is investing a total of $1,314,178 into studies led by early career and emerging researchers at 糖心视频. On Jan. 30, Kirsty Duncan, minister of Science and Sport, announced more than to support nearly 3,000 of Canada鈥檚 most talented scholars, including Ms. Elliott.
鈥楽tory worth telling鈥
鈥淩elief! And an overwhelming sense of validation,鈥 Ms. Elliott said when asked about her reaction to the good news.
鈥淚 have worked so long and hard on this project that I am so wholeheartedly passionate about and here was this piece of paper telling me that other people 鈥 strangers to me 鈥 liked it too.鈥
Ms. Elliott, a 糖心视频 alumna of the archaeology master of arts program, is one of three PhD researchers at 糖心视频 receiving the Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship, valued at $105,000 each. Her research focuses on the 鈥渦ntangling鈥 of the history of Labrador Inuit whaling and the use of whale products through archaeology, aided by historic records.
She also wants to understand the roles whales played in Labrador Inuit society and participation in the global economy.
鈥淢aybe because bowheads are now so rare off the Labrador coast, this history seems really difficult to piece together and not enough attention has been paid to trying to tell this story,鈥 she. 鈥淚 am hoping to find a way to change that because I think it鈥檚 a story worth telling, and one that 鈥 I hope 鈥 a lot of people would be eager to hear.鈥
She says her funding will allow her to concentrate on her studies 鈥渨ithout the constant mental burden of accumulating student debt.鈥
Multidisciplinary funding
Here at 糖心视频, the new SSHRC funding includes Insight Development Grant competition awards; the Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships for master鈥檚 students; the Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships Program, Doctoral Scholarships; the SSHRC Doctoral Fellowships Program awards; and the SSHRC Post-doctoral Fellowship Program awards.
The awards will support researchers based in the faculties of Humanities and Social Sciences; Business Administration; Education; Science; and Medicine, as well as the School of Music.
Opening doors
Dr. Nicholas Lynch, assistant professor, Department of Geography, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, is receiving $45,390 to examine the circular economy (CE) in Canadian cities.
鈥淚n a nut shell, the CE is a rapidly growing sustainability agenda that鈥檚 all about 鈥渃losing-loops,鈥濃 he said.
鈥淪pecifically, it promotes circular feedback and resource-efficient industrial processes that facilitate the reuse, repair, refurbishment and recycling of materials and products, as well as 鈥渄esigning in鈥 greater product longevity and repairability of the products we own and use.鈥
Dr. Lynch says SSHRC鈥檚 support is 鈥渇undamental鈥 to his project, allowing him to expand the scope of his research and examine multiple cities and sites in Canada.
鈥淣ot only will this research offer insight into the case of Vancouver and Toronto, but it will also highlight the context of the CE in smaller- and medium-sized cities like St. John鈥檚, important places that are often left out of the sustainability conversation,鈥 he noted.
鈥淲ithout this funding, a comprehensive understanding of a Canadian CE would simply not be possible.鈥
Dr. Lynch says receiving the SSHRC grant represents a 鈥減ivotal opportunity, now and into the future, to bring much needed attention to the ways in which innovative sustainability policies and practices, in Canada and abroad, are shaping our lives and our work.鈥
Understanding our world
Dr. Neil Bose, vice-president (research), says SSHRC鈥橲 latest announcement reflects the wealth of creative scholarship at 糖心视频.
鈥淭his new funding will propel important studies ranging from environmental policy to entrepreneurship among new immigrants in St. John鈥檚,鈥 said Dr. Bose.
鈥淭hrough the ongoing support of the Government of Canada, early career and emerging researchers are better able to understand the world around us. I thank SSHRC for its ongoing support of 糖心视频-led research and congratulate those who have secured funding.鈥
Critical funding
Dr. Aim茅e Surprenant, associate vice-president (academic) and dean, School of Graduate Studies, says the next generation of researchers will benefit from SSHRC鈥檚 investment in a big way.
鈥淲e are exceedingly proud of our graduate student and post-doctoral researchers who have earned these prestigious awards,鈥 she told the Gazette.
鈥淭heir hard work and dedication are an inspiration to us all. The continuing support from SSHRC is vital in helping our students continue their outstanding research and scholarship and we are grateful for their unwavering support and the partnerships SSRHC helps foster and support.鈥
A list of the SSHRC award recipients can be found below.
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
- Dr. Kodjo Attikpo茅, Department of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures. Project: La litt茅rature de jeunesse francophone d鈥橝frique subsaharienne : enjeux culturels et esth茅tiques, $33,836.
- Dr. Caitlin Charman, Department of English. Project: Re-Imagining the Ocean: Atlantic-Canadian Sea Stories and Environmental Policy, $24,012.
- Dr. Justin Fantauzzo, Department of History. Project: Long After the War: Malaria, Ex-Servicemen, and State Support in Post-war Britain, $50,000.
- Dr. John Geck, Department of English. Project: Spatial Literacy, National Identity, and Luxury Taste in Middle English Manuscripts: A Place-Name Analysis, $41,886.
- Dr. Pam Hall, Department of Geography. Project: The Middle River: Making and Moving Knowledge in Miawpukek/Conne River, Newfoundland, $69,834.
- Dr. Nicholas Lynch, Department of Geography. Project: Circular Is Smart?: Building the Circular Economy in Canadian Cities, $45,390.
Total: $264,958
Faculty of Business Administration
- Dr. John Fiset, Project: The Tower of Babel: The effect of linguistic ostracism on employee withdrawal and occupational health and safety, $45,989.
Faculty of Education
- Dr. Leah Lewis, Project: The Hearthstone Studio: Public Art Hive as Space for Learning, Creativity, Exchange, and Wellness, $69,731.
- Julia L. Brenan, Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Exposing toxic legacies: The history of WWII industrial contamination on Indigenous lands and the implications for people and the archaeological record, $80,000.
- Vashti L.S. Campbell, Faculty of Medicine. Project: White-washing normative representations of race and culture in the (sub)texts of psychiatry, $60,000.
- Monique McGrath, Ethnomusicology Program, School of Music. Project: Decolonizing music therapy: co-creating Indigenous perspectives with autistic children in Uganda, $40,000.
- Katherine A. Morton, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Unsettled ground: An institutional ethnography of the Alberni Indian residential school. $20,000.
- Daniel W. Neill, Ethnomusicology Program, School of Music. Project: Meaning in making: masculinity, class, and labour intersectionality in pedal steel guitar cultures, $40,000.
Total: $240,000
- Laura E. Kelvin, 糖心视频 University of Newfoundland. Project: Avertok Archaeology Archive Project, $81,000.
- Louise Bell, Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science. Project: Recent Adverse Events Experienced and Mother鈥檚 Psychological Distress, $17,500.
- Brittany A.P. Bennett, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Sexual Offenders: Stigmatization, Public Anxieties and Legal Reform, $17,500.
- Megan De Vries, Department of Political Science, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Impact and effectiveness: a study of the Canadian Parliamentary Budget Office, $17,500.
- Beth A. Downey, Department of English, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Religious Intertextuality in Michael Crummey鈥檚 Galore, $17,500.
- Justin M.W. Drover, Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science. Project: Nudging Eyewitnesses: Enhancing Memory Through Social Influence, $17,500.
- Heather L. Elliott, Department of Anthropology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Women at sea: studying gender in the Marine Sector, $17,500.
- Gale M. Franklin, Ethnomusicology Program, School of Music. Project: Music Making and Consumption in the Ottawa Syrian Diaspora: Music as a site for healing, fostering a sense of belonging, and forming Syrian-Canadian identities, $17,500.
- Megan E. Garlie, Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Degenerative Joint Diseases at the Fortress of Louisbourg, $17,500.
- Nelson Graham, Department of Geography, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: The experiences of immigrant entrepreneurs in St. John鈥檚, NL: Opportunities and challenges, $17,500
- Natalie E. Keith, Department of English, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Research into Intertextuality and its Applications in Fantasy and Fairy Tales, $17,500.
- Miranda N. Monosky, Department of Geography, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Arctic Landscapes of Risk: Exploring the Baker Lake Landfill, $17,500.
- Samantha E. Morton, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Aid Workers and the Clash of Local and International Gender Equality Norms in Lao PDR, $17,500.
- Michelle E. Porter, Department of English, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Home and M茅tis Land: Writing Memory, Future, and Reconciliation, $17,500.
- Vanessa N. Potvin, Department of Geography, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: Improving Closure and Reclamation Strategies through Community-Based Participatory Research at the Raglan Mine, Nunavik, $17,500.
- Alexander A. Shuttleworth Cucinelli, Department of Linguistics, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: The phonological development of Friulian: a case study, $17,500.
- Alexa D. Spiwak, Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: A Slater or Two: Exploring the 17th-Century Slate Industry at Ferryland, $17,500.
- Emily Winters, Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science. Project: Public Perceptions of Substance Use and Indigenous Canadians, $17,500.
Total: $297,500
- Jacob A. Danson Faraday, Ethnomusicology Program, School of Music. Project: The performance and politics of touring sound technicians at Cirque du Soleil, $105,000.
- Deirdre A. Elliott, Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. Project: The hunt for whales: Labrador Inuit whaling in the archaeological record. $105,000.
- Nadine R. Yildiz, Department of Psychology, Faculty of Science. Project: Developmental dyscalculia, math anxiety and low math performance, $105,000.
Total: $315,000
Jeff Green is a senior communications advisor with the Office of the Vice-President (Research). He can be reached at jeffg@mun.ca.