Partnership for Change: The RBC Immigrant, Diversity and Inclusion Project
Students
Bachelors of Health Science in Midwifery student Kambili Husbands received support for Working with equity and diversity in midwifery education and practice. Her study sought to develop a better understanding of how a midwifery education program can increase its capacity for the social inclusion of racialized women. The research informed ways of empowering racially diverse women to play a stronger part in midwifery practice, benefiting both their communities and the Canadian healthcare system.
PhD candidate in the Policy Studies Program, Bhutila Karpoche launched the project What is ‘mental health’? Answers from the perspective of the Tibetan refugee population of Toronto, carried out in collaboration with community-based organization, the Tibetan Women’s Association of Ontario. The first study of its kind in Canada to explore Tibetan women’s mental health, the knowledge generated will be used to inform policy programs that address the health and social precarities that Tibetan women in Canada face.
Pallavi Roy, a master’s student in Environmental Applied Science and Management, received support for her project, Newcomers in the green economy. Working in collaboration with CultureLink Settlement Services, she sought to cultivate, share and build upon interest in environmental sustainability among newcomers. Her work included organizing focus groups with 75 participants from 10 different countries to translate their skills and interest in sustainability into development of their own community-based social enterprises.