Dart, Ray
Local Immigration Partnerships: A Case Study in Regional Governance of Durham Region, Ontario
Introduced as part of the Canada-Ontario Immigration Agreement, Local Immigration Partnerships (LIPs) mark a fundamental shift in local settlement policy. To address the gap in knowledge about the implications of this policy change, this thesis research features a case study of Durham Region's LIP. Objectives were designed to examine the impact of Durham's LIP by interviewing 52 key-informants within six sectors involved in settlement and integration. Findings indicate an effective application of the LIP policy with participants pointing to the LIP's vital role in bringing Welcome Centres to Durham, increasing the attention and profile of immigration issues and improving governance relations amongst different sectors in settlement and integration. A product of local circumstances, the LIP has engaged in a quasi-advocacy role educating mainstream service providers and institutions on how to respond to a diversifying population. Results contribute to the relatively under-studied but growing knowledge of the LIP policy while demonstrating that the localization of immigration policy under the appropriate terms can be successful.
Author Keywords: Governance, Integration, Local Immigration Partnerships, Ontario, Regionalization, Settlement
Examining the Role of Intermediary Organizations in Participatory Planning
This research evaluates the role of GreenUP, a non-profit in Peterborough, Ontario, as the intermediary organization for NeighbourPLAN. The project examines GreenUP's role in facilitating and managing NeighbourPLAN, a participatory planning project with multiple local partners and actors. Six critical success factors are used to understand and conceptualize intermediary success (adapted from Holden et al., 2016). Critical success factors include knowledge; governance; relationships; resources; activities; and motivation. Findings from the research highlight the importance of trust, resources, and time within this framework.
Author Keywords: Community Based Research, Intermediary, Neighbourhood, Non-profit, Participatory Planning, Partnership Structure
Volunteer Experiences of Place-making for Sustainable Community Development
This thesis explores the experiences of volunteers who came together to redevelop an
abandoned convent into The Mount Community Centre (The Mount) for the purpose of
sustainable community development. The goal of the research was to explore the
relational processes of place-making at The Mount, to be achieved through two
objectives: first, to describe the nature of collaboration among volunteers in place at The
Mount; and second, to understand the experience of volunteers through their narratives
and descriptions, with respect to the influence of The Mount as a place. Methods
employed were participant observation and key-informant interviews with 24 participants
conducted using a video-documentary approach. The result was a community-based,
qualitative case study comprised of volunteer voices, in their collective narrative of
experience of The Mount's development trajectory. A thematic analysis of volunteer
narratives indicated patterns of connectivity and the expansion of relational networks of
place, implicated in strategic approaches in three experiential phases of Daring, Erring,
and Groundswell along the development's trajectory. In demonstrating how place
influences community organization to address needs, The Mount provides an example for
future inquiry that contributes to the advancement of knowledge in discussions of
voluntarism, place, and sustainable community development.
Keywords: Voluntarism, place-making, sustainable community development,
community-based research
Author Keywords: community-based research, Non-profit sector, Place, Place-making, Sustainable-community development, Voluntarism