Articles by author: Brock University

  • Brock prepares to welcome the world as Canada wins bid for global wine summit

    MEDIA RELEASE: R00111, 30 May 2016

    It was announced in the UK this weekend (May 28) that Canada has been selected to host one of the world’s most prestigious international wine conferences.

    The 10th International Cool Climate Wine Symposium (ICCWS) will take place in July 2020, attracting hundreds of grape and wine researchers, trade professionals and media from wine regions around the world to gather and share research knowledge.

    Canada was one of four countries seeking to host the 2020 event, alongside Australia, New Zealand and Chile.

    Brock University in St. Catharines, Ont. will be the host site for the event. Brock is home to the Cool Climate Oenology and Viticulture Institute (CCOVI), an internationally recognized centre where researchers focus on the priorities of Canada’s grape and wine industry.

    Held every four years, this will be the first time the conference has come to Canada. Previous sites have included Tasmania, Seattle and this year’s just-completed event in Brighton, England.

    Established in 1984, the ICCWS focuses on wine production in the cooler climate winemaking regions of the world.

    “We are excited for the opportunity to provide our international colleagues with an engaging conference program,” said CCOVI director Debbie Inglis. “With ever-changing conditions within the grape and wine industry, the conference will examine how adversity drives innovation to achieve success.”

    "Canada’s wine industry growth and success is based on a proud history of continuous improvement," said Dan Paszkowski, President and CEO of the Canadian Vintners Association.

    “We are thrilled to have been selected to host the 10th International Cool Climate Wine Symposium, which is a direct reflection of the collaboration of our wine and grape producers from across Canada partnering to introduce our diverse cool climate wine regions, premium quality wines and research excellence to the world.” 

    ICCWS delegates will be invited through pre- and post-conference programming to visit Canada’s diverse wine producing regions in British Columbia, Nova Scotia, Ontario and Quebec. Spanning from the Atlantic to Pacific, Canada is home to more than 650 wineries.

    Canada’s conference pitch was a collective effort between CCOVI and stakeholder organizations across the country. The announcement that Canada will be the next host country was made Saturday, May 28 at the ninth ICCWS conference in Brighton, United Kingdom.

    Canada’s grape and wine stakeholders see this as a unique opportunity to showcase their industry to the world:
    •    Maggie Anderson, Marketing Director, British Columbia Wine Institute: “The British Columbia Wine Institute is thrilled to be part of the 2020 ICCWS to be held in Canada. Our region is continuing to garner international recognition for the quality of wines we are producing. The ICCWS will offer our industry the opportunity to showcase both our wines and region to key international wine influencers at a time when the industry is gaining major recognition from our international peers.”

    •    Gillian Mainguy, Manager, Winery Association of Nova Scotia: “The Wines of Nova Scotia celebrate with the other wine producing provinces in Canada to learn that the next International Cool Climate Wine Symposium will be hosted in Wine Country Ontario in 2020. Putting together the bid to host the 2020 symposium in Canada was a collaborative effort lead by Dr. Debra Inglis from CCOVI; and this effort demonstrates that working together we can achieve great things.”

    •    Sylvia Augaitis, Executive Director of Marketing, Wine Marketing Association of Ontario: “Ontario’s award-winning wine industry is proud to be an integral part of Canada’s cool climate wine story and is excited for the 2020 ICCWS. We look forward to showcasing the diversity of the authentic wines from our region,” said Augaitis. “We are delighted to have this opportunity to continue building international excitement and recognition for our wines, while working in close collaboration with our partners from across the country.”

    •    Louis Chasse, President, Vignerons Independants du Quebec: “As the coldest winegrowing province in the country, Quebec growers have to be innovative,” said Chasse. “Our members are looking forward to sharing our research and experience in grape growing in temperatures ranging from -30C to 40C, with the world.”

    For assistance arranging interviews:
    * Kaitlyn Little, Marketing and Communications Officer, Brock University, klittle@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x4471 or 289-241-9154
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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock-led research finds low-income mothers have less access to maternity leave

    MEDIA RELEASE: R00110, 27 May 2016

    Some 40 per cent of employed mothers across Canada — with the exception of Quebec — are excluded from maternity or parental benefits under the federal Employment Insurance (EI) program, new Brock-led research has found.

    In contrast, only 10 per cent of mothers in Quebec are excluded from that province’s Parental Insurance Plan, formed in 2006 when Quebec exited the federal EI parental leave program, the research shows.

    In addition, mothers in households earning $30,000 or more receive disproportionately higher access to benefits than lower-income households, especially under the federal EI program.

    “Our findings quantify the extent to which Canada’s two labour market-based parental leave benefit programs unevenly reproduce and exacerbate class inequality,” says the study, Parental-leave rich and parental-leave poor: Inequality in Canadian labour market based leave policies.

    The research, led by Lindsey McKay, postdoctoral fellow in The Department of Sociology and a Research Associate with Brock’s Social Justice Research Institute, set out to examine if and how social class — defined by family income — determines mothers’ access to maternal or parental leave under the federal EI and Quebec programs.

    The research team, which includes Brock’s Canada Research Chair in Gender, Work and Care Andrea Doucet and Sophie Mathieu, lecturer at the Universite de Montreal, examined statistics from the national Employment Insurance Coverage Survey, compiled by Statistics Canada.

    “We point out a growing divide between Quebec and the rest of Canada and between households with different incomes, in terms of parental leave benefits in the first year of an infant’s life,” the research team concludes.

    “The implication is that where parents live in Canada, and how much they earn, matters to whether and how care work is supported.”

    The study also notes that the 2013 federal government survey excludes residents of Canada’s three territories and Indigenous people living on First Nations reserves.

    The study was published May 19 in the Journal of Industrial Relations.

    See story in The Brock News.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:
    Cathy Majtenyi, Research Communications/Media Relations Specialist, Brock University, cmajtenyi@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550, x5789 or 905-321-0566
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    Categories: Media releases