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"At least I can feel like I've done my job as a mom": Mothers on low incomes, household food work, and community food initiatives

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Martin, Mary Anne, Thesis advisor (ths): Andrée, Peter, Degree committee member (dgc): Hobbs, Margaret, Degree committee member (dgc): Power, Elaine, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

This study examines the household foodwork of low-income mothers in Peterborough,

Ontario and considers how community food initiatives (CFIs) such as community gardens and

good food box programs can support these women in their efforts to feed their families

adequately. I draw on multiple data sources: interviews with representatives from

Peterborough CFIs; interviews with and illustrations by 21 local low-income mothers; debrief

sessions following participants' tours of CFIs; and my ongoing involvement with two local food

networks. The mothers' extensive foodwork considerations, strategies, and struggles reflect

an engagement with three main ideals that are placed further out of reach through poverty

and food insecurity. Women experienced pressure through these ideals: the "good mother,"

to take primary responsibility for their children's well-being through food; the "good

consumer," to participate in society as individual consumers; and the "good food program

participant," to avoid indications of over-reliance on food programs. Each ideal reflects the

neoliberal exaltation of self-sufficiency and its flipside, the vilification of dependence. The

research results highlight the need for CFIs to focus on the broader, systemic discursive and

material challenges that can hamper the foodwork of all low-income mothers, in addition to

addressing the immediate needs of their own participants. Towards this goal, Peterborough

CFIs employ principles of universality, social inclusion, democratic processes, and broadening

of social imaginaries. In their efforts, CFIs must navigate between cultivating collectivity and

interdependence on the one hand, and engaging with this familiar, individualizing neoliberal

ethos on the other hand. This study provides insights about the subjectivities of low-income

mothers that may be useful for CFI programming as well as more analytic examinations of the

role and impact of CFIs. It also reveals the common feminization, devaluation, and under

resourcing of the food-related work of both mothers and CFIs. In doing so, the study points to

the urgent need for broad dialogue and political action regarding poverty, dependence, caring

labour, and the roles of citizens and the state in ensuring that households can adequately

feed themselves.

Author Keywords: Community Food Initiatives, Community Food Programs, Domestic Labour, Food Insecurity, Gendering of Caring Labour, Household Food Work

2018

Farmer knowledge exchange about climate change adaptation in the Peterborough region of Southern Ontario

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Noyes, Indra, Thesis advisor (ths): Elliott, Paul, Thesis advisor (ths): Hutchinson, Tom, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

Agricultural adaptation is a significant component of the larger challenge humans face in adapting to the impacts of climate change. There are extensive studies of agricultural adaptation, however little is known about how farmers in Ontario share knowledge about effective adaptation practices. This qualitative research study contributes to the understanding of the educational context within which Ontario farmers meet the demands of extreme weather on their farms. The research investigates how farmers exchange knowledge about climate change adaptation. Eight semi-structured interviews were conducted in the context of a grounded theory research approach and coded according to the systematic design. Results suggest that knowledge transfer is two-fold: farmers adapt to stresses through experimentation and engage in knowledge exchange through informal and non-institutional formal education. This study outlines the mechanisms by which adaptation and knowledge transfer occur. Implications of the research are discussed in relation to academic literature and policy.

Author Keywords: agricultural adaptation, Climate change, education, farming, grounded theory research, knowledge exchange

2018

A review of the first- and second-year experience of a group of Trent University students admitted below admission requirements

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Nicholson, Eliza, Thesis advisor (ths): Bruce, Catherine, Degree committee member (dgc): Smale, William, Degree committee member (dgc): Elliott, Paul, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

This study used qualitative research methods to explore the first- and second-year experiences of Trent University students who were admitted below admission requirements in September 2015. Through review of an on-line questionnaire completed by 13 students and two-rounds of semi-structured interviews completed by 5 students, information was gathered on the students' experiences, specifically regarding self-efficacy for academic achievement, self-efficacy for self-regulated learning, locus of control, student engagement, and sense of belonging. The major findings of this case study were grouped into four driving themes: self-awareness as a learner, goal-setting and motivation, the Trent community, and course experience. Participants of the study felt that the inclusive social and learning environments at Trent University enhanced their sense of belonging within the university community. These findings are not meant to be generalized, as they arose from this specific group of students at Trent University.

Author Keywords: first-year experience, locus of control, post-secondary, self-efficacy, sense of belonging, student engagement

2018

Representations of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women in Canadian Art

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Strautins, Yasmin, Thesis advisor (ths): Sangster, Joan, Degree committee member (dgc): Bailey, Suzanne, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

This thesis focuses specifically on artistic projects that address violence against indigenous women and uses an interdisciplinary approach to examine their meaning and reception. I argue that the mainstream media has negatively stereotyped missing and murdered indigenous women and that art projects have the ability to reframe their lives to the viewing public. I focus on five case studies of works, including Vigil (2002) by Rebecca Belmore, REDress (2011) by Jamie Black, The Forgotten (2011) by Pamela Masik, Walking With Our Sisters (2013) by Christi Belcourt and Shades of Our Sisters (2017), created by Ryerson University students and produced by Maggie Cywink, Alex Cywink and Joyce Carpenter. Art has the capacity to encourage activism, raise awareness and promote reconciliation between indigenous and non-indigenous people. Comparisons can be drawn between how the case studies of these art works have framed the lives of missing and murdered women and the dominant media images that have prevailed in Canadian society.

Author Keywords: activism, art, Canada, indigenous, missing and murdered indigenous women, symbolism

2018

Time to adapt: Characterizing adaptive genetic variation of Canada lynx using coding trinucleotide repeats

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Prentice, Melanie Brooke, Thesis advisor (ths): Wilson, Paul J, Thesis advisor (ths): Bowman, Jeff, Degree committee member (dgc): Murray, Dennis L, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

To better understand species' resilience to climate change and implement solutions, we must conserve environments that maintain standing adaptive genetic variation and the potential generation of new beneficial alleles. Coding trinucleotide repeats (cTNRs) providing high-pace adaptive capabilities via high rates of mutation are ideal targets for mitigating the decline of species at risk by characterizing adaptively significant populations. Ultimately, adaptive genetic information will inform the protection of biological diversity below the species level (i.e., "Evolutionarily Significant Units" or "ESUs"). This dissertation investigates cTNRs within candidate genes to determine their prevalence and influence under selection in North American mammals. First, I evaluated the potential for somatic mosaicism in Canada lynx (Lynx canadensis), and found that tissue-specific mosaicism does not confound cTNR genotyping success in lynx. Second, I assessed a selection of clock gene cTNRs across characterized mammals and found that these repeats are abundant and highly variable in length and purity. I also identified preliminary signatures of selection in 3 clock gene cTNRs in 3 pairs of congeneric North American mammal species, highlighting the importance of cTNRs for understanding the evolution and adaptation of wild populations. I further evaluated the influence of selection on the NR1D1 cTNR within Canada lynx sampled across Canada using environmental correlation, where I estimated the variation in NR1D1 cTNR alleles explained by environmental and spatial variables after removing the effects of neutral population structure. Although most variation was explained by neutral structure, environment and spatial patterns in eastern lynx populations significantly explained some of the variation in NR1D1 alleles. To examine the role of island populations in the generation and distribution of adaptive genetic variation, I used 14 neutral microsatellites and a dinucleotide repeat within a gene linked to mammalian body size, IGF-1, and found that both genetic drift and natural selection influence the observed genetic diversity of insular lynx. Finally, I estimated the divergence dates of peripheral lynx populations and made recommendations towards the conservation of Canada lynx; high levels of genetic differentiation coupled with post-glacial colonization histories and patterns of divergence at cTNR loci suggest at least 4 ESUs for Canada lynx across their range.

Author Keywords: adaptation, Canada lynx, candidate genes, coding trinucleotide repeats, evolution, natural selection

2018

Making home and making welcome: An oral history of the New Canadians Centre and immigration to Peterborough, Ontario from 1979 to 1997

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Macnab, Maddy, Thesis advisor (ths): Sangster, Joan, Thesis advisor (ths): Chazan, May, Degree committee member (dgc): Lem, Winnie, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

This thesis documents an oral history of the New Canadians Centre, the only immigrant-serving organization in Peterborough, Ontario. This case study builds on scholarship that critically examines immigrant settlement work in Canada. Drawing on interviews and archival research, and employing the analytical concept of home, I investigate how differently-located actors have practiced home and welcome in Peterborough in the context of settlement work. I demonstrate how the New Canadians Centre's work consolidated as well as challenged normative discourses of home that disadvantage racialized new immigrants and privilege white settlers represented as "host." I argue that this false binary between immigrant and host is harmful, inadequate in accounting for the complexities of people's lives, and easily reinforced in settlement work without efforts to challenge it. I conclude that accountability to power in settlement work is crucial to envisioning a more inclusive welcome and a more just home in Peterborough and Canada.

Author Keywords: home, immigrant settlement sector, migration, oral history, Peterborough, welcome

2018

Agriculture as Niche Construction: Eco-Cultural Niche Evolution During the Neolithic (c. 6200 - 4900 BC) of the Struma River Valley

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Whitford, Brent Robbie, Thesis advisor (ths): Conolly, James, Degree committee member (dgc): Dubreuil, Laure, Degree committee member (dgc): Fitzsimons, Rodney, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

The Neolithic Period (c. 6200 – 4900 BC) in the Struma River Valley led to numerous episodes of cultural diversification. When compared with the neighbouring regions, the ecological characteristics of the Struma River Valley are particularly heterogeneous and the Neolithic populations must have adapted to this distinctive and localized ecological setting. It then becomes reasonable to ask if the evolution of cultural variability in the Struma River Valley was at least partially driven by the ecological setting and differentiation in the evolution of the early agricultural niche. In this thesis, I apply an approach based on niche construction theory and Maxent species distribution modeling in order to characterize the relationship between culture and ecology during each stage of the Neolithic Period and to assess diachronic change. An interpretation of the results demonstrates that the continuous reconstruction of the early agricultural niche allowed for settlement expansion into new eco-cultural niches presenting different natural selection pressures and that cultural change followed. I also found that cultural and historical contingencies played an equally important role on the evolution of populations and that ecological factors alone cannot account for the numerous episodes of cultural diversification that occurred throughout the region.

Author Keywords: Agriculture, Bulgaria, Eco-cultural Niche Modeling, Greece, Neolithic, Niche Construction

2017

The relationship of policy aims and implementation: Ontario coordinated care planning for people with mental health and addictions issues

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Tallon, Matt, Thesis advisor (ths): Ballantyne, Peri, Degree committee member (dgc): Changfoot, Nadine, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

Background: Ontario's Ministry of Health and Long Term Care (MOHLTC) claims people with mental illnesses/addictions need improved care/overuse emergency departments. MOHLTC expects Coordinated Care Planning (CCP, teams of mental/physical health professionals, social workers and informal caregivers) to improve care and lower emergency department returns/healthcare costs. CCPs are directed by policies, Smith's "problematics," or Deleuze's "expressions," supposedly reflecting "contents"/"everyday worlds."

Research Question: How do Ontario health/allied professionals come together with a person with mental illness/addictions and informal caregiver(s) to address health needs through a CCP?

Method: 1) Analyzed CCP policies; generated questions about creation/implementation. 2) Interviewed eight professionals about interpreting/enacting policies. 3) Connected interview data to policies.

Findings: Opportunities for fragmentation exist in gaining consent; determining eligibility; persons in care, informal caregivers and professionals' participation; person-centeredness; "shame-free" environments; health literacy; records of medications.

Conclusion: CCP participants need to minimize fragmentations which takes time, space, money; creates contradictions in lowering costs/improving care.

Author Keywords: Addiction, Dual Diagnosis, Health Care Policy, Institutional Ethnography, Integrated Health Care, Mental Illness

2017

A wind tunnel and field evaluation of the efficacy of various dust suppressants

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Preston, Colette Alexia, Thesis advisor (ths): McKenna Neuman, Cheryl, Degree committee member (dgc): Boulton, Wayne, Degree committee member (dgc): Buttle, James, Degree committee member (dgc): Eimers, Catherine, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

A series of experiments was designed to assess the relative efficacy of various dust suppressants to suppress PM10 emissions from nepheline syenite tailings. The experiments were conducted in the Trent University Environmental Wind Tunnel, Peterborough, Ontario, and on the tailings ponds at the Unimin Ltd Nephton mine near Havelock, Ontario. Treated surfaces were subjected to particle-free airflow, abrasion with blown sand particles, particle-free airflow after physical disturbance, and were measured independently using a pin penetrometer. In the particle-free wind tunnel tests, three of the surfaces performed well, and PM10 emissions scaled inversely with crust strength. Light bombardment of each surface by saltating sand grains resulted in PM10 emission rates two orders of magnitude higher. All treated surfaces emitted significantly more PM10 after physical disturbance in both the laboratory and field research. The results suggest that the site conditions, inclusive of the potential for dust advection and resuspension, must be taken into account when considering the use of a commercial dust suppressant.

Author Keywords: dust suppression, field testing, mine tailings, wind tunnel experiment

2018

Discontinuities in stream networks: the effects of tributary size and type on benthic invertebrate communities downstream from confluences

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Brochu, Melissa, Thesis advisor (ths): Jones, Nicholas E, Thesis advisor (ths): Frost, Paul C, Degree committee member (dgc): Melles, Stephanie J, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

The network composition hypothesis (NCH) suggests that i) large confluence symmetry ratios (drainage area of the tributary relative to the mainstem) and ii) landscape differences (differences in landscape characteristics between the mainstem and tributary drainages) lead to greater ecological changes below confluences. As a test of the NCH, 34 confluences were sampled in southern Ontario to examine the effects of these two factors on benthic invertebrate communities to infer the degree of ecological change at confluences. Given the typology of streams surveyed, there was subtle evidence that benthic invertebrate communities below confluences changed as a function of confluence symmetry ratio and landscape differences. This indicates that abrupt changes in stream networks are not as common as theory may suggest. Further support for the network composition hypothesis may be found by examining a wider range of stream types and examining single-species responses.

Author Keywords: benthic invertebrates, community similarity, landscape characteristics, stream networks, tributary

2018