Media releases

  • Brock research shows lags and promise in municipal-Indigenous relations

    MEDIA RELEASE: 1 December 2021 – R0128

    A new research paper suggests relations between municipalities and urban Indigenous populations can provide a means of enacting changes recommended by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) if appropriate steps are taken.

    In “Municipal-Indigenous Relations in Ontario: Initiatives in Brantford, Hamilton, and Niagara,” which will soon appear in the Journal of Canadian Studies, Brock University Assistant Professor of Political Science Joanne Heritz analyzes the current level of engagement with and representation of urban Indigenous populations in the single-tier municipalities of Hamilton and Brantford, and the upper tier of the two-tiered municipality of Niagara Region.

    The study looks at three key areas: government interface, Indigenous culture as a municipal asset and economic and social development. Contrasting these three categories, Heritz shows that while municipalities can be policy innovators with formal mechanisms for Indigenous inclusion, some — including Niagara — need more focus and action.

    “Some municipalities are taking the initiative in building relations with urban Indigenous Peoples by creating Indigenous Advisory Committees and responding to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action,” says Heritz, noting that Hamilton has implemented an urban Indigenous strategy and has had an Aboriginal Advisory Committee in place for almost 20 years. “But others have yet to develop urban Indigenous policies.”

    The paper’s findings are in keeping with two previous studies Heritz has completed in this area, looking first at select urban centres across Canada and then at numerous municipalities in Saskatchewan. Because the provinces have no mandates related to urban Indigenous populations, each municipality has approached Indigenous relations in its own way.

    “Over half of Canada’s Indigenous Peoples live in urban centres and their numbers are growing, yet they are proportionately underrepresented in policy processes at the local level of government — even in municipalities that have significantly higher Indigenous populations,” says Heritz. “There are also comparatively few programs and services available for urban Indigenous Peoples.”

    Heritz also finds that the overall size of the municipality, rather than their proportionate population of Indigenous peoples, is often the biggest factor in the level of engagement shown.

    “Large municipalities like Hamilton, with proportionately lower Indigenous populations, have been most innovative in initiating Indigenous justice and health services,” Heritz says. “Compared to Hamilton, Niagara Region is lagging in building formal relations with Indigenous Peoples such as Indigenous advisory committees.”

    Heritz hopes her research will help municipalities understand the need to take up specific Calls to Action from the TRC. She gives the example of intercultural competency, or Indigenous awareness training, and notes that some municipalities provide education for management staff but not frontline workers, citing issues like shift considerations and budgetary concerns. But she adds that her interviews for the study took place prior to the pandemic and the broad uptake of digital platforms and asynchronous training options, which might be leveraged to overcome such challenges.

    She thinks the municipalities that have moved forward with formal policy processes to engage Indigenous communities can demonstrate for other municipal governments how to create meaningful and effective mechanisms by which Indigenous voices can be heard.

    “There are responsibilities for municipalities specifically included in the TRC’s Calls to Action,” says Heritz. “Displaying an Indigenous flag, making an Indigenous land acknowledgement or removing a statue are just the beginning of the responsibilities Canadians need to take to build relations with Indigenous Peoples in local government.”

    Heritz’s next phase of research will cover the provincial capitals of Atlantic Canada, where Indigenous-identity populations are increasing significantly and the process of “coming to terms with municipal-Indigenous relations-building” is just beginning, she says.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University [email protected] or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Black Friday: Good deals, but at what cost?

    MEDIA RELEASE: 23 November 2021 – R0127

    To marketing expert Eric Dolansky, the supposed rationale behind Boxing Day at least made some sense. The concept was retailers unloading unsold Christmas inventory at a big discount. But Black Friday?

    “It’s sort of meaningless in Canada,” says Dolansky, Associate Professor of Marketing, International Business and Strategy in Brock University’s Goodman School of Business. “We don’t have a holiday, we don’t have everyone out shopping. There’s no story for why we celebrate Black Friday in Canada except for retailers to advertise to us and tell us we’d be fools to miss out on these deals.”

    And that must-buy pressure has morphed far beyond one day, he says.

    “Black Friday wasn’t a thing in Canada 10 or 15 years ago and now it seems like it’s the entire month of November,” says Dolansky, who is available to speak with the media this week in advance of Friday, Nov. 25.

    Also available to speak to the issue is Jennifer Good, Associate Professor of Communication, Popular Culture and Film at Brock, who is an expert in environmental communication and had an op-ed column published in the Hamilton Spectator recently about the impact of consumerism on climate change.

    “Black Friday is perhaps the most iconic example of the challenges currently facing humanity,” says Good. “In the era of climate change and the sixth mass extinction, the most materially consumptive part of the world buys record quantities of stuff the day after giving thanks.”

    Good says the consumption mentally goes back to end of the Industrial Revolution when mass production and advertising teaching us to be consumers converged.

    That marketing push has never let up, but Good says now is definitely the time to alter our thinking.

    “If there is going to be change, arguably we need to collectively question Black Friday,” she says. “This means telling Black Friday stories that include the environmental and climate change toll.”

    And if you are feeling the need to be a consumer this Friday, Dolansky’s advice is to be an educated buyer.

    “The consumer has the opportunity to look into these deals and compare prices more easily than ever before,” he says.

    To the rumours that some stores raise prices artificially in advance of big sales days like Black Friday, Dolansky points out that Canadian law says in order to advertise something as 60 per cent off, for example, that item must be sold at full price for at least one month per year.

    “It’s up to the consumer to be a sophisticated enough buyer to make the effort to look more closely at those claims,” he says.

    Jennifer Good, Associate Professor of Communication, Popular Culture and Film, and Eric Dolansky, Associate Professor of Marketing, International Business and Strategy, are available for media interviews this week.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University [email protected] or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases