Articles tagged with: CRC

  • Brock profs to share teen mental health, water research at Science Meets Parliament

    Canada may contain a wealth of freshwater, but for Julia Baird, the country’s water sustainability isn’t a given.

    Through her work, the Canada Research Chair (CRC) in Human Dimensions of Water Resources and Water Resilience explores the importance of managing water effectively.

    The Associate Professor in Brock’s Environmental Sustainability Research Centre and Department of Geography and Tourism Studies will share her work during a trip to Ottawa to represent the University at the Science Meets Parliament 2024 event May 6 and 7.

    Alongside Baird will be Danielle Sirianni Molnar, CRC in Adjustment and Well-Being in Children and Youth, whose work focuses on youth perfectionism and well-being.

    The Brock Associate Professor of Child and Youth Studies will highlight her research into teens who, on the outside, are high achievers exceeding the expectations of their teachers and parents. On the inside, however, they experience high levels of stress and anxiety that contribute to poor mental health, Sirianni Molnar says.

    Baird and Sirianni Molnar will join other Tier 2 CRCs, Indigenous Principal Investigators and Banting Postdoctoral Fellows across the country to discuss topics arising from their research with Members of Parliament, Senators, staff and civil servants.

    “One of the really exciting things for me is that the event is about creating connections to those who are directly involved in policy-making, relationships that can be built over time,” says Baird.

    “This is a fantastic opportunity to learn how research gets translated into policy so that we can have greater impact with the public and get our research findings to where it helps youth and their families,” says Sirianni Molnar.

    Organized by the Canadian Science Policy Centre and the Office of the Chief Science Advisor, Mona Nemer, the two-day event brings together the country’s scientific and political communities through virtual workshops, face-to-face meetings, observation of committee meetings, attending Question Period and a networking reception.

    “Brock University researchers make important and valuable contributions to scientific discovery in Canada,” says Vance Badawey, Member of Parliament for Niagara Centre. “I’m happy that Dr. Julia Baird and Dr. Danielle Sirianni Molnar will be representing Brock at Science Meets Parliament 2024 and proud they will be representing the Niagara community on the national stage.”

    Chris Bittle, Member of Parliament for St. Catharines, says next month’s event is an opportunity to showcase Brock’s “world-class research.”

    “I look forward to Dr. Julia Baird and Dr. Danielle Sirianni Molnar using this national platform to highlight their critically important research and share their knowledge with policy-makers from across the country,” he says.

    Baird is looking forward to connecting with officials at the Canada Water Agency, created last year to improve freshwater management across the country.

    “I explore the concept of governance and water resilience a lot in my work and was hoping to discuss those themes,” she says. “I’d love to talk about decision-making and how we can organize ourselves in ways that supports the long-term sustainability of Canada’s water.”

    Sirianni Molnar hopes her meetings will help her take the pulse on mental health issues among Canadian youth as well as raise awareness of perfectionism among youth.

    “I want to understand the perspectives of government officials: what are they seeing and hearing from their constituents about mental health needs?” she says. “This would be really helpful for my team and I to know so that we could better direct our research and more effectively align our resources.”

    She’s also looking forward to gaining communication and networking skills from training sessions offered at the event.

    Baird agrees, saying she aims to foster these communication and networking skills with Niagara community members to help them connect with local policy-makers.

    Baird and Sirianni Molnar are also looking forward to meeting fellow researchers from across Canada.

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  • CRC Spotlight: Brock researcher examining ways to foster water resilience


    The federal government’s 
    Canada Research Chairs program invests up to $311 million per year to attract and retain some of the world’s most accomplished and promising minds. Chairholders are recognized to be national and international experts in the fields of engineering and the natural sciences, health sciences, humanities and social sciences. Brock University has 10 active Canada Research Chairs, with more to be announced. This monthly series profiles the work, and lives, of Brock’s Chairholders.

    When she wants to take a break in her busy schedule, Julia Baird heads out to a lake or river.

    “I’ve always found water to be a source of calm in my life,” says the Associate Professor in Brock’s Environmental Sustainability Research Centre (ESRC) and the Department of Geography and Tourism.

    “Water is critical to life; it’s inherent in us that we’re connected to water,” she says. “I think of the well-being of future generations and how important it is to support sustainability.”

    As Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Human Dimensions of Water Resources and Water Resilience, Baird investigates activities that have an impact on water. She studies how decisions regarding water use are made at the government, community and individual levels through her Water Resilience Lab.

    “The diversity of voices, and how those voices are included and connected, is critical for creating the right conditions for water sustainability,” she says.

    Central to her work is the concept of water resilience, which Baird says involves “being able to continue to support the well-being of the system despite whatever disturbances may arise.”

    Baird says there are three ways to respond to disturbances in the environment, such as floods or droughts brought about by climate change: persist where possible in spite of disturbances, adapt to situation or transform the way society operates to mitigate or avoid disastrous impacts.

    Ideally, decision-making processes related to water, as well as related areas such as land-use planning, agricultural operations, coastline protection and erosion control, are guided by water resilience principles and practices.

    Baird has long been fascinated by how people make decisions and how individuals influence decisions carried out at the political level. Her research looks at how psychological traits, such as empathy and self-efficacy at the individual level, can motivate the public to support decisions that lead to water sustainability.

    Empathy is associated with attitudes that reflect stronger support for resilience-based approaches for the environment.

    In a study led by Baird, participants in six countries who read three scenarios describing situations of flooding, drought and depleted fish stocks gave moderate to strong support for governance taking a resilience-based approach.

    “We know that empathy is malleable, it can change in people,” says Baird. “The question is, how can we build empathy broadly so that the public will influence changes that can have positive impacts down the line?”

    Baird earned her PhD in Environment and Sustainability from the University of Saskatchewan in 2012 and came to Brock as a post-doctoral fellow. She became Associate Professor in the ESRC and the Department of Geography and Tourism Studies in 2021.

    In that same year, Baird was granted her Canada Research Chair position, which was renewed in 2022.

    Baird has had a number of accomplishments during her terms, including:

    In her second term, Baird plans to test interventions to build empathy broadly in society and examine the long-term impacts of empathy interventions on behaviour.

    “Ultimately, our work is centered on finding solutions to some of today’s most pressing water issues,” says Baird. “I’m motivated by that every day.”

    Story reposted from The Brock News

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