Media releases

  • New report calls for diplomacy between sovereigns in First Nations-provincial relations

    MEDIA RELEASE: July 17 2023 – R0058

    A new report co-authored by a Brock University researcher is outlining how relations between First Nations and provinces in Canada are impacted by conceptions of sovereignty and diplomacy.

    Liam Midzain-Gobin, Assistant Professor in Brock’s Department of Political Science, wrote “Reimagining Canada as Inter-National: Understanding First Nations-Provincial Relationships” with Caroline Dunton, a research associate at the University of Ottawa, and Robert Tay-Burroughs, former senior adviser to New Brunswick’s commissioner on systemic racism.

    Their report was published by the Centre of Excellence on Canadian Federation at the Institute for Research on Public Policy last week.

    In it, the researchers examine differences between provincial relations with Indigenous Peoples in British Columbia and New Brunswick. Midzain-Gobin says the report grew out of the team’s previous opinion piece in Policy Options, published shortly after the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) Act became law in Canada in 2021.

    Noting that UNDRIP had first been enacted as law in British Columbia, the researchers set out to highlight the role that provinces should play in reconciliation.

    “While the federal government has legal responsibility for ‘Indians and lands reserved for Indians,’ it’s actually the provinces that have the greatest impact, but we don’t really talk about that,” says Midzain-Gobin. “There are hundreds if not thousands of interactions on policy files and regular points of contact between First Nations related to lands, waters, the environment, child and family welfare, judicial policy — these are all areas under provincial jurisdiction that impact Indigenous lives.”

    Midzain-Gobin says the often-heard political claims that implementing UNDRIP and recognizing sovereignty among First Nations would create economic instability ought to be revised given how much overall stability other diplomatic relationships with sovereign nations provide for Canada.

    “Having provinces implement the Declaration will actually bring stability to relationships with Indigenous Peoples — that’s what a diplomatic lens can bring,” he says. “Reimagining the relationships as existing among nations actually brings more expertise to the table and means decisions are not only made together but that they are better decisions.”

    He says an “inter-national” approach to governance would also be “less fraught” in terms of long-term instability caused by drawn-out court battles.

    “When everybody has participated in and accepted an economic development or resource development decision, you’re a lot less likely to end up in court or have major decisions be overturned or have cases drag on for 15 to 20 years, which is the situation we’re in right now,” says Midzain-Gobin. “This model might mean negotiations take a bit longer, but then action happens faster without getting held up in the courts.”

    He adds that provinces are already well versed in diplomacy because they regularly manage overlaps in jurisdiction with other provinces, different levels of government, trading partners and U.S. states that share borders.

    “The provinces certainly have the tools and capacity to engage in diplomacy. Part of what we’re saying is that they need to rethink what their relationships with Indigenous Peoples are,” he says. “These are diplomatic relationships, not stakeholder relationships.”

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock expert says anxious people more likely to act to mitigate climate change

    EXPERT ADVISORY: July 13 2023 – R0057

    The angst of naturally anxious people may actually help the planet, says a Brock University expert in biology and psychology.

    “If you have high environmental values and high trait anxiety, you’re much more likely than others to engage in actions that mitigate climate change,” says Professor of Biological Sciences and Psychology Gary Pickering.

    Pickering’s lab examines the relationships between environmental values, climate action and personality with the goal of understanding what motivates, and prevents, individuals from doing what they can to address the climate change crisis.

    His past research includes lifestyle changes youth are willing, and unwilling, to make and the role confidence plays in youth taking action.

    In his latest research, Pickering and post-doctoral fellow Gillian Dale used a Brock-created tool called the HEXACO Personality Inventory to tease out factors that would make it more likely for people to recycle, reuse, take public transport and eat less red meat, among other lifestyle changes.

    The HEXACO scale includes six major personality traits: honesty-humility; emotionality; extraversion; agreeableness; consciousness; and openness to experience. Within these groupings are sub-categories of traits.

    In their April 2023 study, “Trait anxiety predicts pro-environmental values and climate change action,” Pickering and Dale surveyed 336 Canadian participants through an online questionnaire that gathered their demographic information and assessed their personality according to the HEXACO scale. The survey also asked participants about their environmental values and whether they had changed their actions due to climate change considerations.

    About 81 per cent of participants said climate change considerations motivated them to change their behaviours, with 37 per cent identifying climate change as being a “major factor.”

    The researchers found that trait anxiety was the strongest predictor of both pro-environmental values and climate change action.

    “For individuals with high environmental values, a moderate degree of anxiety can motivate them to change their behaviours around climate action, but there is a sweet spot; too much anxiety may paralyze people into inaction,” says Pickering.

    Pickering makes a distinction between ‘trait’ and ‘situational’ anxiety saying that, while everyone experiences anxiety under certain conditions, some people are “hardwired” from birth with the tendency to be anxious.

    The study identifies personality traits most likely to result in high environmental values: anxiety, greed avoidance, sentimentality, diligence, perfectionism, prudence, aesthetic appreciation and unconventionality.

    Regarding climate change actions, people most likely to exhibit environmentally friendly behaviours are those who scored higher for anxiety, greed avoidance, sentimentality, aesthetic appreciation, unconventionality, inquisitiveness, social boldness and sociability.

    When the researchers examined participants’ demographics, they found women and those with a liberal political affiliation were more likely to have high environmental values and take climate change actions than their male and conservative counterparts.

    Brock University Professor of Biological Sciences and Psychology Gary Pickering is available for media interviews on the topic.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209

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    Categories: Media releases