Media releases

  • Reopening requires us to reconsider our vulnerability, says Brock prof

    MEDIA RELEASE: 15 July 2020 – R0114

    While much of the province will be moving to Stage 3 reopening on Friday, July 17, it will still take time for people to become comfortable with their vulnerability and rebuild trust in each other, says Brock University Professor of Philosophy Christine Daigle.

    Daigle, who also serves as the Director of the Posthumanism Research Institute, has been researching how the pandemic and quarantine experience has affected how we experience ourselves and others.

    While many of us have been able to socialize through online apps, the computer as a tool never entirely replaces being in the presence of others, she says.

    “I think there is a need for everyone, especially people who have been really cautious about isolating, to readjust to being in the presence of others,” says Daigle.

    “We humans are fundamentally trustful that other people are OK. That’s why we’re always surprised, shocked and hurt when people fail to meet expectations,” she says. “Now people are still well intentioned, but they may still be a threat. You can’t entirely trust that someone is not a threat.”

    While there is still a great amount to learn about how the virus operates, taking precautions, such as wearing masks, signals to others that we know we may be a threat but we are trying to minimize that threat and be trustworthy and responsible, says Daigle.

    St. Catharines became the first Niagara municipality to mandate masks be worn inside public places when council passed a bylaw Monday, July 13. The Ontario government is allowing much of the province, with the exception of Niagara and several other regions, to move into Stage 3 reopening.

    “Despite measures by organizations to revive trust, it will take a long while for people to regain their trust in others and it may never come back to what it was,” says Daigle. “This pandemic may serve to make us realize that we were never invulnerable the way we thought we were.”

    She suggests that rather than trying to make ourselves invulnerable, we recognize our vulnerability and use it to make better choices as a society.

    “Vulnerability is a fundamental characteristic,” says Daigle. “We feel it is a negative and want to be invulnerable. But we can come to understand it and embrace existing as vulnerable beings.”

    Brock University Professor of Philosophy Christine Daigle is available for media interviews.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Partnership to address low-impact development in Lincoln

    MEDIA RELEASE: 15 July 2020 – R0113

    Using a high-profile waterfront project as its initial focus, three Niagara organizations are bringing their extensive research and municipal experience together to address sustainable infrastructure development.

    Brock University signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) last year with the Town of Lincoln and Vineland Research and Innovation Centre (Vineland) to explore the need for nature-based solutions with immediate application and policy relevance to pressing landscape issues.

    The partners have now launched “The Prudhommes Project: building community resilience through blue-green infrastructure development,” which is researching ecosystem-focused approaches in urban landscapes.

    While the focus of The Prudhommes Project is the high-profile Lake Ontario waterfront development, it won’t be limited to the Prudhommes Landing development. The Town of Lincoln has made a key part of this development a publicly maintained greenspace at the waterfront. This public infrastructure is an essential part of the Town’s park and greenspace infrastructure.

    “The Prudhommes Landing development is significant and much-anticipated,” said Mike Kirkopoulous, Chief Administrative Officer, Town of Lincoln. “In partnering with Brock and Vineland, we collaborate with world-class researchers who can assist with understanding the multi-functional benefits of green-blue infrastructure, allowing for data-driven and informed decisions.”

    Green-blue infrastructure refers to the incorporation of vegetation and water elements in urban designs. Given the proximity of the development to Lake Ontario, the initial project focus for the Prudhommes Landing development is to evaluate and test how to use green-blue infrastructure design to help the Town of Lincoln create a resilient socio-ecological community.

    “In working closely with all our partners on this project, we will generate actionable knowledge about green-blue infrastructure right here in Niagara with widespread scholarly and practical implications,” said Ryan Plummer, Professor and Director of Brock’s Environmental Sustainability Research Centre and Darby McGrath, Vineland’s Program Leader, Greening the Landscape. This will also allow us to share how other leading jurisdictions and governments are building, supporting, incentivizing and creating world-class destinations,” added Plummer.

    He said the MOU falls directly in line with Brock and the ESRC’s goals of community engagement, experiential education and research excellence.

    The importance of the project was recently recognized by the Mitacs Accelerate program, which requires academic (Brock) and industry (Vineland) collaboration. Vineland is a not-for-profit organization funded in part by the Canadian Agricultural Partnership and delivers innovative products, solutions and services through an integrated and collaborative cross-country network to advance Canada’s research and commercialization agenda. The Mitacs program will partially fund a post-doctoral fellow for the next three years to work on the project.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca or 905-347-1970

    Cheryl Lennox, Director, Marketing and Communication, Vineland Research and Innovation Centre cheryl.lennox@vinelandresearch.com

    Michael Kirkopoulos, Chief Administrative Officer, Town of Lincoln mkirkopoulos@lincoln.ca

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    Categories: Media releases