Student News
Dobrila Cukarski, Dr. Nakhaie, and Dr. Lippert Granting Inequities: Racialization and Gender Differences in Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada's Grant Amounts for Research Elites. Read it here
Ayesha Mian Akram was selected as a recipient of the 2021 Congress Graduate Awards which recognizes exceptional graduate students who will be presenting their work at the Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences. Ayesha was nominated by the Canadian Sociological Association. Please click here for Ayesha's profile.
Jane Mcarthur writes Guest Column: Breast cancer awareness is not enough: Public health strategies need to be based on prevention. This article is published in theconversation.com, read the article here .
Jane Mcarthur writes Guest Column: Blaming women for breast cancer ignores environmental risk factors. This article is published in theconversation.com, read the article here .
Jane Mcarthur is a chapter contributor in "Sick of the System," a new e-book from between the lines. To downoad the e-book click here .
Windsor ambassador bridge workers included in in-depth investigation published in Toronto Star, read the article here .
Jane Mcarthur writes Guest Column: How governments can make public health decisions when some information about coronavirus is missing
Jane Mcarthur discusses the risk mitiation strategies that must be considered to address COVID-19, read the article here .
Jane Mcarthur writes Guest Column: Prioritizing Collective Responsibilities in response to COVID-19
Jane Mcarthur discusses the human need for solidarity is evidenced by the actions people have taken to combat physical distancing and isolation necessary with COVID-19, read the article here .
Jane Mcarthur writes Guest Column: Are Canadian water officials using the denial playbook?
Jane McArthur discusses the findings of a disturbing investigation into the lead in Canadian tap water as a guest column for the Windsor Star. For more information, read the Windsor Star article here.
Jane Mcarthur, an environmental sociology researcher and PhD candidate at the University of Windsor discusses how menstration products are contributing to our carbon footprint
For more information, read the Windsor Star article here.
Travis Reitsma, a PhD candidate in sociology at the University of Windsor who studies poverty reduction, comments on Windsor Public Library's new policy
Travis Reitsma adovacates for the homeless commenting on Windsor Public Library's new policy. For more information, read the Windsor Star article here.
Jane McArthur writes Guest Column: Take off rose-coloured glasses for Breast Cancer Awareness Month
Jane McArthur discusses the knowledge gap when it comes to breast cancer prevention in a guest column for the Windsor Star. For more information, read the Windsor Star article here.
Make your mark: UWindsor sociology students make bookmarks for mental health
Sociology students have been making bookmarks featuring inspirational quotes to raise money to establish self-care kiosks across campus. For more information, read the Windsor Star article here.
Jane McArthur is placed in top five of the Storytellers contest
The storytellers contest is an annual challenge to find innovative ways to communicate the impact of social sciences and humanities research. The final round of the competition took place live in Vancouver. For more information, read here.
Jane McArthur praised for commitment to cancer education and wins scholarship
Her research and advocacy has earned doctoral candidate Jane McArthur a $2,500 US scholarship from Sociologists for Women in Society, a non-profit organization dedicated to the development of feminist sociological theory. Check out the article from the DailyNews here.
Allison Gray was selected as a Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2018
A Handbook of Food Crime: Immoral and Illegal Practices in the Food Industry and What to Do about Them (Policy Press, 2018), co-edited by PhD candidate Allison Gray was selected as a Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2018.
Jane McArthur and Amy Peirone have placed in the top 25 of SSHRC’s storyteller competition
PhD candidates Jane McArthur and Amy Peirone have placed in the top 25 of SSHRC’s storyteller competition. Jane’s entry is titled “Bridging the Gap on Environmental Breast Cancers” and Amy’s is “Location, Location, Location: The Geography of Justice in Canada.” For the full list of the top 25 and links to their videos, see here.
Amy Peirone has also been awarded a two year SSHRC post-doctoral fellowship
Amy Peirone has also been awarded a two year SSHRC post-doctoral fellowship to work with Myrna Dawson at the University of Guelph. The title of the project is “Intimate partner violence in Canada: Types, Risks, & Consequences.”
Tarran Maharaj recently published his first book
PhD. candidate Tarran Maharaj recently published his first book, Empowering (dis)Coloured Female Bodies Via Food Pedagogy.
Jane McArthur was recently interviewed on WE-TV's
PhD. candidate Jane McArthur was recently interviewed on WE-TV's (Windsor-Essex TV) WE Now! program about her recent ongoing research into breast cancer awareness among affected communities. The interview can be found in its entirity on WE-TV's Youtube Channel.
Jane McArthur was recently interviewed by the Windsor Star
PhD. candidate Jane McArthur was recently interviewed by the Windsor Star regarding her research and is seeking interviewees who work or have worked for the Ambasssador Bridge Company. More details can be found in the article, "Researcher seeks 20 women for breast cancer study".
Jane McArthur's storyteller presentation
Jane McArthur is one of five top research storytellers awarded from SSHRC (Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council). Check out this article about the Storytellers contest. You can also review her video here called "Bridging the Gap on Environmental Breast Cancers"
Jane McArthur co-authored with Filipe Durante from the School of Social Work at UWindsor. Priotiizing Collective Responsbilities in the Response to COVID-19: https://canadiandimension.com/articles/view/prioritizing-collective-responsibilities-in-the-response-to-covid-19
Scholarships
Sociologists for Women in Society is proud to announce the recipient of the 2019 Barbara Rosenblum Cancer Dissertation Scholarship, Jane E. McArthur. Special thanks go to the 2019 Barbara Rosenblum Cancer Dissertation Scholarship Subcommittee that includes: Ana-Porroche-Escudero (Chair), Melissa Day, Susan Ferguson, and Nona Gronert.
This scholarship was established with a bequest from Dr. Barbara Rosenblum, an active and longstanding SWS member, who died February 14,1988 after a long battle with breast cancer. Colleagues, friends, and family made contributions to the fund in Barbara's memory, and fundraising efforts continue to ensure that a $2500 scholarship can be offered every year. The purpose of the scholarship is to encourage doctoral research in sociology, anthropology, psychology and related fields on women’s experience of breast cancer and other reproductive cancers and the prevention of these cancers. Another goal of the scholarship is to encourage scholars to make this type of research accessible to the public through speaking and publishing for lay audiences.
Jane E. McArthur, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Doctoral Fellow in Sociology/Social Justice at the University of Windsor, in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, combines her educational background in communications with her twenty-five years of working on issues of environmental and occupational health through community based research, education and advocacy.
With past experience in Research Coordination and Assistance on projects including the "Risk Exploration Project," “Living and Working in Essex and Kent Counties,” and "Lifetime Histories Breast Cancer Research Study," McArthur’s work is rooted in community based health investigations with a view to prevention.
Though her work for improved well-being and justice has often had breast cancer as a focus, she also works through broader issues of health and well-being as they intersect with gender, race, class and inequalities in power, all with a view to empowerment and social change from the grassroots up through various levels of governance. With a recognition of the importance of the role of the media in contributing to the construction of realities in contemporary society, investigating the production of discourses are a pivotal aspect of McArthur’s ongoing work in community environmental health perspectives.
McArthur’s dissertation research examines how women who work in an environment with an identified risk of breast cancer construct understandings and narratives of their risks and how women perceive and exercise agency in the acceptance, avoidance or negotiation of those risks. McArthur expects to graduate with her Ph.D. in 2019. McArthur has received multiple awards and scholarships for her research, including Social Sciences Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Top 25 Storyteller, is an Informed Opinions Expert, an Affiliated Researcher with Health Research Centre for Violence Against Women (HRCVAW), a Member of the Windsor Cancer Research Group (WCRG), and is a champion for getting issues from the margins into the mainstream.
The central question of McArthur’s research is: How do women who work (or have worked) in an environment identified as posing an increased risk of breast cancer construct narratives and understandings of their breast cancer risks? and secondarily: How do they place environment in their narratives? And finally: How do these women perceive and exercise agency in the context of those risks? The significance of this research will be in its contribution to knowledge around women’s understandings of breast cancer, and also in how women are able to assess risks for breast cancer in their own and others’ lives and make corresponding decisions about mitigating those risks.
McArthur is personally motivated to conduct this research given her prior experience in the area of occupational and environmental health research and advocacy, and in particular in studies of women and breast cancer in conjunction with advocacy around research findings as related to these issues. She envisions this effort of obtaining evidence-based understandings of women’s perspective on risks for breast cancer, and particularly whether and how they incorporate environmental risks in their narratives, as a continuation of the work she has been involved in for many years towards influencing prevention policy and regulatory revisions. McArthur sees the proposed research as an opportunity to provide insights and evidence of a particular ontological status that can contribute in new ways to the broader issue of environmental breast cancer in the context of improvements for women’s public health.
McArthur created a video on her research with women workers at the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor, ON, Canada, and their stories of environmental breast cancer risks. This video has been chosen as a Top 25 in the national Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Storytellers competition. Click here to view the video. Click here to read the article from SSHRC about the Storytellers challenge.
We hope you will join us in congratulating Jane E. McArthur and that you will make plans to join us for the 2019 SWS Awards Reception to be held on Sunday, August 11, 2019 starting at 6:30 pm at the Hilton Midtown, New York, NY. More details will come soon regarding Summer 2019 Meeting Registration.
Sydney Chapados (MA program), Ayesha Mian Akram (PhD program), and Greer Vanderbyl (MA program) were awarded Ontario Graduate Scholarships.
Sydney Chapados (MA program) was awarded 2020-21 SSHRC Doctoral Scholarship
Sandra Okoye (MA program) was awarded the 2019-20 University of Windsor Community Scholarship