By Samantha Craggs
A group of Social Sciences faculty members at Brock have launched a new research unit with a focus on environmental and sustainability issues.

From left, Brock University's Richard Mitchell, Tim Heinmiller, Brad May, Diane Dupont, Steven Renzetti, Tony Ward and Ryan Plummer
The Brock Environmental Sustainability Research Unit (BESRU), which launched last month, is housed within the Department of Tourism and Environment.
“Over the last year, we have been working together, getting to know each other and increasingly recognizing where our interests were coalescing,” said Ryan Plummer, professor of Tourism and Environment and a founding member of BESRU.
The group’s primary areas of research include water resources and resilience, environmental governance, climate change and adaptation, and First-Nations social justice and equity.
“These are really the three big areas, the three initial themes that sparked our collective interest,” Plummer said. “Formally establishing the research unit was a way for us to now start doing some really interesting collaborative and world-class international research around some of these areas in which we have strength.”
BESRU’s founding membership includes:
· Diane Dupont (Economics)
· Tim Heinmiller (Political Science)
· Brad May (Tourism and Environment)
· Richard Mitchell (Child and Youth Studies)
· Ryan Plummer (Tourism and Environment)
· Steven Renzetti (Economics)
“Brock is located wholly within a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve,” Mitchell said. “With this designation comes the invitation to engage in exactly these kinds of integrative, cross-faculty and transdisciplinary research endeavors.”
As the group continues to develop its research agenda, new faculty and students from across the University will join the fold.
“In the social sciences, we think about environment in a fairly broad sense and not only in terms of the ‘natural’ environment,” said Thomas Dunk, Dean, Faculty of Social Sciences. “And there’s a lot of expertise in the Faculty of Social Sciences at Brock in these diverse areas.
“The linkages between what happens to the natural environment and the way that society is organized and the way people behave — all of these things are all wrapped up together. So it is only fitting that a cross-cutting group of members from our Faculty have teamed up to closely examine issues related to the environment and sustainability.”
Samantha Craggs is a member of the communications team at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario who is dedicated to delivering news from that educational institution in one its official publications, The Brock News, which Niagara At Large encourages you to visit at http://www.brocku.ca/brock-news .
(We encourage you to contribute news and commentary of your own to Niagara At Large which you can visit at www.niagaraatlarge.com for information that matters about our greater Niagara region and beyond.)
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I would hope that this group will take up the cause of reforesting Brock Lands which are proposing in the St. Catharines Official Plan for a future subdivision. Doing so will protect the Niagara Escarpment and make Brock a serious player in unversity efforts to counter global warming.
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Agreed. I’d much rather see reforestation over another sprawling subdivision. Brock should take the lead in this reforestation initiative.
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