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- Whitney Lackenbauer
Whitney Lackenbauer Co-investigator (WP3) Dr. P. Whitney Lackenbauer is the Canada Research Chair (Tier 1) in the Study of the Canadian North and a Professor in the School for the Study of Canada at Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario. He is also Honorary Lieutenant-Colonel of 1st Canadian Ranger Patrol Group, which encompasses patrols throughout Yukon, the Northwest Territories, and Nunavut. His research focuses on Arctic policy, sovereignty, security, and governance issues; modern Canadian and circumpolar history; military history and contemporary defence policy; and Indigenous-state relations in Canada. This includes a particular focus on discerning ways to strengthen search and rescue (SAR) and emergency response capabilities in the Canadian North by clarifying and harmonizing the roles, responsibilities, and capabilities of the community-based organizations (e.g. Coast Guard Auxiliary, volunteer SAR teams, Canadian Rangers) and devising ways of better incorporating these groups into plans and policies. This research is a component of the North American and Arctic Defence and Security Network (NAADSN) that he leads, which is funded by the Department of National Defence Mobilizing Insights in Defence and Security (MINDS) program from 2019-22. Dr. Lackenbauer will contribute to Work Package 3 “Search and Rescue in Remote Regions.
- Brenna Sobanski
Dalhousie University Brenna Sobanski Research Assistant (WP6) To learn more about Sobanski Brenna, (She/Her) — Faculty of Social Sciences (mcmaster.ca)
- Joshua Brown
Memorial University Joshua Brown Master's Student (WP2) Josh Brown is a Master of Science student in the Geography Department at Memorial University’s St. John’s campus and is co-supervised by Dr. Joel Finnis and Dr. Joe Daraio. His work is contributing to FOCI Safety Work Package 2, ‘Networks and Infrastructure for Adaptation and Mitigation Decision Making’. Specifically, Josh’s research with FOCI will examine the utilization and effectiveness of climate services in the province, aiming to enhance future usage and identify opportunities for collaboration between climate service users and producers.
- Work Package 5 | FOCI
BUILDING COLLABORATIVE INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH INFRASTRUCTURE IN ATLANTIC CANADA'S LOBSTER FISHERIES (WP5) International research has identified social and economic factors as crucial in developing scientific understandings about the relationship between humans and the environment in contexts where the distribution of fish changes due to climate and ocean changes. FOCI’s Work Package on ‘Building Collaborative Interdisciplinary Research Infrastructure in Atlantic Canada’s Lobster Fisheries’, led by Dr. Paul Foley, uses the co-construction research model initiated in the Canadian Fisheries Research Network to develop and test social science methodologies to build capacity for industry-led collaborative research infrastructure in Atlantic Canadian lobster fisheries. This work will gather and integrate new biological data on lobster with new data on social and economic performance of the fishery into a full spectrum sustainability framework that can be used to inform adaptive decision-making in support of harvester, coastal community, and regional resilience in the face of rapid climate and ecosystem change. MEET THE TEAM Paul Foley Lead Melanie Giffin Co-Investigator Barbara Neis Co-Investigator Remy Rochette Co-Investigator Melanie Wiber Co-Investigator HIGHLY QUALIFIED PERSONNEL (HQP) Matthew Addison Master's Student Alumni Moses Adjei Postdoctoral Fellow 2023-24 Priscilla A. Antwi Master's Student Current Diana Burbano Postdoctoral Fellow 2024-25 OUR PARTNERS
- Louise Moyes
Louise Moyes Collaborator (IWP4) Louise Moyes is a St. John’s-based dancer and storyteller who mesmerizes audiences with her captivating Docudances: multidisciplinary and often bilingual shows and films, where the rhythms of voices become her musical score. Combining her talents as a dancer, storyteller, filmmaker, and sociologist, Louise's artistic explorations take us on incredible journeys. She draws inspiration from various aspects of life, including her heartwarming connection with her dog in "My Secret Pig," the similarities between Québécois and Newfoundlanders, the Newfoundland and Labrador fishers, and the musical journey of Franco-Acadian NL musician Florence Leprieur. In recognition of her outstanding contributions, Louise received the prestigious Canada Council for the Arts Victor Martyn Lynch-Staunton Award for Innovation in Dance in 2016, coinciding with her Docudance company's 25th anniversary. Louise collaborated with Robert Chafe, Nancy Dahn, and Timothy Steeves in the on stage production, Taking on Water, contributing her skills in acting, dancing and choreography.
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- Gerald Singh
Gerald Singh Co-investigator (IWP1) Dr. Gerald Singh is an Assistant Professor with the Department of Geography at Memorial University of Newfoundland. He has a PhD in Resource Management and Environmental Sciences from the University of British Columbia. Singh is also the Deputy Research Director with the Nippon Foundation Ocean Nexus Center. His research is primarily situated in the science-policy interface, and focused on understanding the dynamics between social, economic, and environmental dimensions in sustainable development. This focus takes form in the following ways: 1) assessing cumulative anthropogenic impacts on the environment and understanding the consequences to people; 2) determine priority policy actions and plans to achieve specific sustainable development objectives (particularly the Sustainable Development Goals); 3) understand risk and uncertainty in sustainability policy and management. Doing work in any one of these areas means navigating data gaps, and Singh uses a combination of quantitative and qualitative approaches, as well as structured expert elicitation, in his research.
- Jacob Sargent
Memorial University Jacob Sargent Research Assistant (WP8) More to come.
- Wendy Smith
Wendy Smith Co-investigator (WP7) Wendy Smith earned her Ph.D. at the Harvard Business School and is currently Professor of Management at the Lerner School of Business and Economics at the University of Delaware. She brings to the team expertise in studying social enterprises, particularly through a lens of paradox theory. In her previous research, she has studied social enterprises around the world. Most notable her recent research explored the in-depth decision making across the first 10 years of Digital Divide Data, an award-winning work integration social enterprise started in Southeast Asia in 1999. This project explored how the senior leaders applied a paradoxical approach to effectively address the ongoing competing demands between their social mission to stop the cycle of poverty through enabling increased work opportunities and their business goals to be an operationally sustainable business. This research led to a publication in Administrative Science Quarterly, one of the top journals in the field of organizational studies, as well as publications in practitioner journals such as the Harvard Business Review and other blog posts. Working with PI Slawinski on SSHRC-funded (partnership development grant) research with Shorefast on Fogo Island NL, Smith has gained expertise in social enterprise research and development in Newfoundland and Labrador. This more recent work includes collaboration on the development of the PLACE model for social enterprise and community development, and on related workshops and publications in other blog posts. Smith has also collaborated with PI Slawinski on unpacking the competitive and cooperative dynamics in industry-wide alliances, by studying the Canadian Oil Sands Innovation Alliance (COSIA), an initiative to advance environmental standards among companies in the Alberta Oil Sands. Finally, Smith offers expertise in research, analysis and publication. She has spent the last three years as an associate editor at the Academy of Management Journal, one of the top journals in organization studies, accruing insight on the development of academic publications.
- Melanie Wiber
Melanie Wiber Co-investigator (WP5) Melanie Wiber is Professor Emerita of Anthropology in the University of New Brunswick and Co-Editor of the Journal of Legal Pluralism. She has extensive experience in collaborative interdisciplinary research, including as a co-investigator on the SSHRC-funded Coastal CURA (Community and University Research Alliance), as lead for a Working Group on the Socio-Economics of Integrated Management for the Oceans Management Research Network that was co-funded by SSHRC and DFO, and as a co-investigator with the NSERC-funded Canadian Fisheries Research Network. In the FOCI Consortium, Dr. Wiber is Co-Investigator on WP5: “Building collaborative interdisciplinary research infrastructure in Atlantic Canada’s lobster fisheries.”
- Newsletters | FOCI
FUTURE OCEAN NEWS Learn more about the research, initiatives, and achievements of FOCI’s network of researchers, HQP, collaborators, and partners in our newsletter "Future Ocean News". Future Ocean News March 2025 Future Ocean News December 2024 Future Ocean News September 2024 World Ocean Day June 2024 Future Ocean News May 2024 Future Ocean News April 2024 Future Ocean News March 2024 Future Ocean News January 2024 Future Ocean News December 2023 Future Ocean News September 2023 Future Ocean News July 2023 Future Ocean News March 2023 Future Ocean News December 2022 Future Ocean News October 2022 Future Ocean News March 2022 Future Ocean News February 2022 Future Ocean News December 2021 Future Ocean News November 2021 Future Ocean News September 2021 Future Ocean News August 2021 Future Ocean News July 2021 World Ocean Day June 2021
- Jason Thistlethwaite
Jason Thistlethwaite Co-investigator (IWP2) Dr. Jason Thistlethwaite is an Associate Professor in the School of Environment, Enterprise, and Development (SEED) at the University of Waterloo. His research on flood risk management has been supported by SSHRC (2015-2017, 2018-2022), a MEOPAR Early-Career Scholar Grant (2015-2017), and the Canadian Water Network (2016-2017). These projects provided training for 1 Postdoctoral Fellow, 3 PhDs, and 4 MAs. In 2017, he was appointed to the Government of Canada’s National Roundtable on Flood Risk (a cabinet-level committee) and his work is informing Public Safety Canada and the Insurance Bureau of Canada’s (IBC) efforts to design flood insurance for high risk areas. Dr. Thistlethwaite’s expertise in public policy, flood risk management and urban climate change will benefit the project to inform decision-making on strategies to reduce risk. His recent research includes an international instrumental analysis of urban flood risk management strategies, and an evaluation of the suitability of these instruments in Ontario municipalities. He also recently completed an evaluation of existing flood maps in Canada to inform public decision-making on risk reduction. Dr. Thistlethwaite leads the Canadian Coastal Resilience Forum (CCRF), a Community of Practice dedicated to strengthening social resilience to natural hazards by facilitating the sharing of knowledge across a variety of sectors and identifying/promoting effective governance strategies.







