Ten FASS Faculty Members Receive SSHRC Insight Development Grants

The Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) support research in its early stages. They are valued at a maximum of $75,000 over 2 years and support research by both individuals and teams.
Congratulations to the following faculty members who received competition!
Beth MacLeod (Linguistics and Language Studies)
The project 鈥Individual variation in the perception-production link: evidence from phonetic imitation,鈥 with a co-applicant at the University of Ottawa, explores the link between the way an individual produces speech and the way that same individual will perceive others鈥 speech.
Cheryl Harasymchuk (Psychology)
With a collaborator at Illinois State University, the project 鈥Friendship in Middle Adulthood: The Role of Self-Concept Clarity in Shaping Close Connections鈥 explores challenges to maintaining close, adult friendships during periods of life transitions that alter people鈥檚 identity.
David Sidhu (Psychology)
The project 鈥Name Sound Symbolism and Personality Judgments,鈥 with two co-applicants at the University of Calgary, explores the relationship between sound and meaning in language, particularly how it relates to people鈥檚 names.
Jean-Michel Landry (Sociology and Anthropology)
With a co-applicant at the Universit茅 Saint-Joseph (Lebanon), 鈥The Making of Religious Sects in Contemporary Lebanon鈥 examines the political process by which the Lebanese state consents or refuses to grant the status of religion (or sect) to a particular spiritual tradition.
Johanna Peetz (Psychology)
鈥The role of similarity in financial values for relationship outcomes and impacts of financial stress鈥 examines the impact of shared or different financial values in romantic relationships.
Julie Murray (English)
鈥A Literary History of 鈥榃omen-as-Index鈥鈥 uses literary analysis to explore the concept of women-as-index 鈥 which is used as a metric in the policy world of gender and development 鈥 in its own terms.
Lyndsey Hoh Copeland (Music)
鈥Sounding Indigenous in South Africa: Music and Performance Heritage in Khoisan Revival,鈥 with 杏吧原创 collaborator Nduka Otiono (Institute of African Studies) as well as three other co-applicants and collaborators, aims to investigate and collaboratively archive the music and performance practices of people in South Africa鈥檚 Cape region who identify as Khoisan and are known as the 鈥渇irst people.鈥
Malini Guha (Film Studies)
鈥On Traction: Moving Images and their Realities鈥 explores the idea of whether or not the concept of objective reality is productive for the study of moving image work made by Black, Indigenous and other artists of colour.
Tamara Sorenson Duncan (Linguistics and Language Studies)
鈥Examining Diverse Perspectives on Inclusion in French Immersion,鈥 with 杏吧原创 co-applicant Alexandra Arraiz Matute (Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies) and six collaborators from other institutions, aims to bridge the gap between research and practice in providing equitable access to French immersion in Canadian schools.
Vivian Solana Moreno (Sociology and Anthropology)
鈥Intimate Transnational Aid: Regenerating Political Movements through Spanish-Sahrawi Relations鈥 investigates the long-standing intimate ties between Sahrawi refugees in Spain and a large network of Spanish advocates in solidarity with the Sahrawi nationalist, anti-colonial movement (鈥渢he Polisario Front鈥).
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