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    Research Chat

    Research Chat showcases research contributed by Laurier’s graduate students who share their work in their own words. Visit wlu.ca/Research-Chat to read a follow up article and show notes and links. Research Chat is a partnership between the Office of Research Services, the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, and the Laurier Library.
    en29 Episodes

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    Episodes (29)

    How Municipalities Respond to Homeless Encampments

    How Municipalities Respond to Homeless Encampments

     

    The episode features:

    • Hannah McGurk, (she/her) who completed her Master's degree in the Applied Politics program at Laurier.
    • She is interviewed by Emily Kraemer, (she/her), who completed her Master's degree in the Applied Politics program at Laurier.
    • Her research generated a report that analyzed municipal responses to homeless encampments. The report emerged from a community-engaged research project with the Region of Waterloo and provides a comparison of encampment protocols among six municipalities, through a human rights lens.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Measuring Inclusion to Make Effective Municipal Policy

    Measuring Inclusion to Make Effective Municipal Policy

    This episode features:

    • Emily Kraemer (she/her), who completed her Masters degree in the Applied Politics program at Laurier.
    • She is interviewed by Hannah McGurk, who completed her Masters degree in the Applied Politics program at Laurier.
    • Emily’s research focused on diversity in municipal policy settings and how diversity enriches good decision-making at the municipal level.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

     

    Equal Employment Opportunities for All

    Equal Employment Opportunities for All

    This episode features:

    • Hari KC, (he/him) is a Post-doctoral Fellow working at the Balsillie School of International Affairs at Wilfrid Laurier University.
    • His recently completed PhD research explored international migration flows, centred on Nepal.
    • He is interviewed by Ali Hosseini, (he/him), a PhD student in Global Governance at the Balsillie School of International Affairs.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

     

    Acceptance of Democratic Values in Afghanistan

    Acceptance of Democratic Values in Afghanistan

    The episode features:

    • Ali Hosseini, (he/him), a PhD student in Global Governance at the Balsillie School of International Affairs.
    • He is interviewed by Hari KC, (he/him) a Post-doctoral Fellow working at the Balsillie School of International Affairs at Wilfrid Laurier University.
    • His research focuses on the failure of the international community to assist Afghanistan citizens in accepting democratic values.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

     

    Improving Environmental Impact Assessments

    Improving Environmental Impact Assessments

    The episode features:

    • Carolyn Brown, (she/her) a PhD student in the Department of Chemical and Biological Sciences at Laurier.
    • She is interviewed by Carla Johnston, (she/her) a PhD student in Global Governance at the School of International Policy and Governance at Laurier.
    • Her research focuses on making Environmental Impact Assessments as valuable and informative as possible to address developments' environmental impacts. Specifically, she focuses on fish health near the Mactaquac Hydroelectric Generation Station (MGS), upstream of Fredericton, New Brunswick on the Wolastoq | Saint John River, as part of the Mactaquac Aquatic Ecosystem Study.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

     

    Voices Missing from Global Food Policy Discussions

    Voices Missing from Global Food Policy Discussions

    The episode features:

    • Carla Johnston, (she/her) a PhD student in Global Governance at the School of International Policy and Governance at Laurier  and a member of the Northern Food Systems Research Group,Laurier Centre for Sustainable Food Systems.
    • She is interviewed by Carolyn Brown, (she/her) a PhD student in the Department of Biological and Chemical Sciences at Laurier.
    • Her work examines the link between global and local food policy and ensures Indigenous knowledge and voices are included at all levels of food policy discussions.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

     

    A Better Way for Firms to Model Credit Risk

    A Better Way for Firms to Model Credit Risk

    This episode features:

    • Hiromichi Kato, (he/him) is a PhD student in the Department of Mathematics.
    • He is interviewed by Patrícia Ferreira, (she/her) a PhD student in the Department of Biological and Chemical Sciences and 2022 WinS Hypatia winner.
    • His research uses the power of math to inform financial market decisions to better reflect today's real financial markets.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

     

    Why do Animals have Stomachs?

    Why do Animals have Stomachs?

    The episode features:

    • Patrícia Ferreira, (she/her) is a PhD student in  the Department of Biological and Chemical Sciences and 2022 WinS Hypatia winner.
    • Her research uses the power of CRISPR gene editing to create fish that have no stomachs and then uses these animal models to explore why organisms have stomachs and what the implications are of having a stomach, or not.
    • She is interviewed by Hiromichi Kato, (he/him) a PhD student in the Department of Mathematics.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

     

    Can High-Intensity Exercise Help Navigation?

    Can High-Intensity Exercise Help Navigation?

    The episode features:

    • Gabe Massarotto,  (he/him) a MSc student in the Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education at Laurier.
    • He is interviewed by Seth McCarthy, (he/him) a PhD student in the Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education at Laurier.
    • His research focuses on the effect of high-intensity exercise on learning and memory. This research, which uses 3D technology to test memory recall, may help explain why high-intensity exercise can benefit memory and navigation recall.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Why Exercise Takes Away Appetite

    Why Exercise Takes Away Appetite

    The episode features:

    • Seth McCarthy, (he/him) a PhD student in the Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education at Laurier, and is part of Dr. Tom Hazell’s Energy Metabolism Research Laboratory.
    • He is interviewed by Gabe Massarotto,  a MSc student in the Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education at Laurier.
    • His research focuses on the role of lactate, a substance produced in the body when we exercise, and when/if/how we experience hunger after exercising.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Global Health Policies and African Women Refugees’ Mental Health and Well-being.Rosemary Dupuis, Balsillie School of International Affairs

    Global Health Policies and African Women Refugees’ Mental Health and Well-being.Rosemary Dupuis, Balsillie School of International Affairs

    The episode features:

    • Rosemary Dupuis,  a human rights advocate and feminist pursuing her Ph.D. in Global Governance at the Balsillie School of International Affairs, Wilfrid Laurier University. She is interviewed by Tin Vo, an equity-focused researcher and public health practitioner who is pursuing a PhD in Social Work at Wilfrid Laurier University’s Lyle S. Hallman Faculty of Social Work.
    • Her current research nexus is violence against women and girls, human rights, and trauma/resilience-informed global health governance policy.
    • She explains her work as founder and Executive Director of  JAMII Circle, an NGO supporting the health and well-being of resettled refugee women in South-Western Ontario region (Huron-Perth and Oxford counties) through non-medical evidence-based wellness services
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) is available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Impacts of Climate Warming on Nutrient Availability in Peatlands in Northwest Territories. Caitlyn Lyons, Biological and Chemical Sciences

    Impacts of Climate Warming on Nutrient Availability in Peatlands in Northwest Territories. Caitlyn Lyons, Biological and Chemical Sciences

    The episode features:

    • Caitlyn Lyons, a northern ecologist and environmentalist passionate about sustainability and science communication who is pursuing a PhD in Biological and Chemical Sciences at Wilfrid Laurier University.
    • She discusses her research measuring the impacts of climate warming on the aboveground plant communities in the Northwest Territories.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Discrimination, belonging, and meaning in 2SLGBTQ+ leisure spaces among diverse 2SLGBTQ+ people. Tin Vo, Faculty of Social Work

    Discrimination, belonging, and meaning in 2SLGBTQ+ leisure spaces among diverse 2SLGBTQ+ people. Tin Vo, Faculty of Social Work

    The episode features:

    • Tin Vo, an equity-focused researcher and public health practitioner who is pursuing a PhD in Social Work at Wilfrid Laurier University’s Lyle S. Hallman Faculty of Social Work.
    • Tin shares his dissertation research which examines intersectional discrimination of LGBTQ2S+ people and their social and mental health well-being within LGBTQ2S+ leisure spaces.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) are available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Monitoring Lake Ice Thickness from Space in the Northwest Territories. Gifty Attiah, Geography and Environmental Studies

    Monitoring Lake Ice Thickness from Space in the Northwest Territories. Gifty Attiah, Geography and Environmental Studies

    The episode features:

    • Gifty Attiah is an international student pursuing a PhD in Geography, a joint program run by Wilfrid Laurier University and the University of Waterloo. Gifty is part of the Remote Sensing of Environmental Change lab and has a particular interest in using geospatial tools to solve environmental and climate issues.
    • She shares her current research focused on monitoring lake ice thickness  in the Northwest Territories using remote sensing and modeling.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) are available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Breaking Through Barriers: Exploring Social Enterprise Programs as an Employment Intervention for Reintegrating Women in Ontario. Ali Diebold, Faculty of Social Work

    Breaking Through Barriers: Exploring Social Enterprise Programs as an Employment Intervention for Reintegrating Women in Ontario. Ali Diebold, Faculty of Social Work

    The episode features:

    • graduate research emerging from Laurier Brantford-based research community.
    • Ali Diebold, pronouns she/her, is a feminist community-based researcher, social worker, and human rights advocate who is pursuing a PhD in Social Work at Wilfrid Laurier University.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    By-Law Enforcement Responses to Homelessness and Homeless Encampments in Ontario. Natasha Martino, Criminology.

    By-Law Enforcement Responses to Homelessness and Homeless Encampments in Ontario. Natasha Martino, Criminology.

    The episode features:

    • Natasha Martino, a researcher in the realm of homelessness and policing, pursuing a Master of Arts in Criminology at Wilfrid Laurier University. Natasha’s research interests are homelessness, enforcement agents, including police, by-law, and private security, social control, regulation, and marginalization.
    • Her  research focuses on the role that by-law enforcement and municipal ordinances play in the social control and management of homelessness and homeless encampments across Ontario. This research investigates by-law officers’ perceptions of their work in response to issues associated with homelessness.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Overcoming the unseen: The effects of the COVID-19 crisis on the well-being of Canadian workers. Tyler Pacheco, Social psychology.

    Overcoming the unseen: The effects of the COVID-19 crisis on the well-being of Canadian workers. Tyler Pacheco, Social psychology.

    The episode features:

    • Tyler Pacheco, a PhD student and social psychologist who is working on the research team exploring “Overcoming the unseen. The effects of the COVID-19 crisis on the mental health of Canadian-based workers.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Exploring the History of Infectious Disease in the Era of COVID-19. Eric Story, History

    Exploring the History of Infectious Disease in the Era of COVID-19. Eric Story, History

    The episode features:

    • Eric Story, a historian of infectious disease in the 20th century and outreach manager of the Laurier Centre for the Study of Canada.
    • The COVID-19 pandemic has greatly shaped his current dissertation project, which explores the history of tuberculosis in the era of the First World War and the ways in which masculinity shaped the Canadian state’s response to the disease in war and its aftermath.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Supporting the Success of New Immigrants to Canada. Ali Jasemi, Psychology

    Supporting the Success of New Immigrants to Canada. Ali Jasemi, Psychology

    The episode features:

    • Ali Jasemi, who is pursuing a Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology at Wilfrid Laurier University at the Language & Literacy lab under Dr. Alexandra Gottardo’s supervision.
    • Ali's research is a deeper exploration of the psychological, social, and academic factors that influence general mental health and well-being interplay with the successful cultural adjustment and second language learning of immigrants to Canada.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat

    Exploring how to Integrate and Support International Students into Canada’s Economy. Nelson Graham, Balsillie School of International Affairs

    Exploring how to Integrate and Support International Students into Canada’s Economy. Nelson Graham, Balsillie School of International Affairs

    The episode features:

    • Nelson Graham, pronouns he/him, is a PhD candidate in the Global Governance program of the Balsillie School of International Affairs, hosted by Wilfrid Laurier University.
    • His research investigates the increasing role that higher education intuitions have on the Canadian immigration system.
    • Additional information about the research and transcript (with relevant links) available from wlu.ca/Research-Chat