Media releases

  • International Women’s Day events at Brock to highlight Indigenous women and #MeToo

    MEDIA RELEASE: 5 March 2018 – R00048

    Brock University — Communications & Public Affairs

    Drawing attention to missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, along with highlighting the culture-shifting #MeToo movement, will be the focus of this year’s International Women’s Day events at Brock University on Thursday, March 8.

    Starting at 1 p.m. in TH 244, a panel of faculty and student experts from the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film will present “Pressing for Progress: Women, Hollywood, and #MeToo.”

    Faculty members Christie Milliken, Cristina Santos, Liz Clarke and fourth-year student Yasmin Evering-Kerr will touch on the ways #MeToo and #TimesUp have affected both Hollywood and the field of film studies in recent months. A moderated discussion will be followed by a question-and-answer period.

    Later in the afternoon, the Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies presents a series of events to draw attention to missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

    An art installation and poster display will highlight The REDress Project, which uses red dresses to symbolize Indigenous women who have disappeared or been killed. There will also be banners in high-traffic areas that will highlight personal stories of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

    At 3 p.m., a Round Dance supported by Indigenous women drummers will be held in Market Hall. This will be followed at 4 p.m. by a panel discussion featuring Robyn Bourgeois, an Indigenous scholar and assistant professor in the Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies, in AS 215.

    “The REDress Project and poster display will provide a powerful memorial to Indigenous women who have gone missing or been murdered,” said Margot Francis, Associate Professor in the Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies and co-organizer of the day’s events.

    Francis said Indigenous women are nearly three times more likely to be killed by a stranger than non-Indigenous women, and nearly half of their cases remain unsolved.

    “The most recent of these unsolved cases, that of 15-year-old Tina Fontaine of the Sagkeeng First Nation in Manitoba, who was murdered in 2014, exemplifies the failures of the justice system to address this violence.”

    Jane Theriault-Norman, a student of Mi’kmaw and settler heritage and a second-year Kinesiology major who also helped organize the day’s events, said she was excited and nervous to see the red dresses hanging around the Brock campus.

    “While the installation will be powerful and beautiful, I know it will also be emotional to be confronted with such a strong visual reminder of the violence Indigenous women, girls and gender minorities endure.”

    The Centre’s events were organized in partnership with Aboriginal Student Services, the BUSU Student Justice Centre, the Human Rights and Equity Office and the Ontario Public Interest Research Group, and were supported by the Graduate Students’ Association, OSSTF District 35, Social Justice and Equity Studies, Student Life, the Tecumseh Centre of Aboriginal Research and Education, the Vice-Provost Teaching, Learning and Student Success, the Indigenous Solidarity Coalition, Brock Aboriginal Education Council and CUPE Local 4207.

    All events are open to the public, and everyone is welcome.

     

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases

  • March madness for Brock Badgers in basketball, hockey and curling

    MEDIA RELEASE: 5 March 2018 – R00047

    Three weekends. Three national championships. Three opportunities for athletic glory.

    In case the Brock Badgers’ recent national championships by the men’s and women’s wrestling teams weren’t enough, in the next 23 days the Badgers have three more shots at winning national titles.

    Last month, the Brock men’s and women’s curling teams both advanced to the USPORTS National Championships being held March 24 to 28 in Leduc, Alta.

    Then last weekend, the men’s hockey team and men’s basketball team punched tickets to their respective national finals.

    Saturday night, the hockey team won the third and deciding game of the OUA West Final against the York Lions, and as a result, will host the OUA Queen’s Cup championship game against McGill this Saturday, March 10 at 7:15 p.m. Regardless of the outcome of that game, the Badgers have already secured a berth in the national finals in Fredericton March 15 to 18. It’s an impressive accomplishment for the team led by coach Marty Williamson, who is in his first year behind the bench after being with the Niagara IceDogs. Brock has never won an OUA men’s hockey championship, and this marks just their second appearance at the nationals.

    Also last weekend, the Badgers men’s basketball team earned a wild-card entry to the USPORTS National Championships taking place Thursday, March 8 to Sunday, March 11 in Halifax. Like the hockey team, the last time Brock went to the Nationals was in the 2007-08 season, when the underdog seventh-seed Badgers won their second-ever national title.

    Coincidently, Brock again goes into the USPORTS Final 8 with the No. 7 seed, and will open the tournament Thursday at 1 p.m. EST in the quarter-final against the No. 2 seed Calgary Dinos. The semifinals are scheduled for Saturday with the consolation final, bronze-medal game and championship game set for Sunday.

    Living up to its claim as having the Best Fans in Canada, Brock will be sending a fan bus to Halifax for students, staff and alumni. The Badgers-wrapped highway bus typically used by the school’s varsity teams will leave Brock Wednesday morning and arrive in time for Thursday’s game. The cost is $50 including the bus trip and tickets to all Brock games. Accommodations and meals are not included. Space is limited. For more information, email alaprise@brocku.ca

    For those who can’t make the road trip, a free viewing party for the quarter-final game will be held in Brock’s Market Hall Thursday at 1 p.m. Information on viewing parties for other men’s basketball and hockey national championship games will be posted as they become available. Streaming of the OUA Queen’s Cup hockey championship game is available Saturday night at OUA.TV National championship streams will be available through the USPORTS website.

    Note to media: Story and photo packages will be made available before 6 p.m. each day from Wednesday, March 8 to Sunday, March 11 for men’s basketball and again from Wednesday, March 14 to Sunday, March 18 for men’s hockey. For any additional media requests including photos, video or phone interviews please contact Dan Dakin.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases