New research stories from McGill University.

Using artificial intelligence to study the social impact of disruptive weather events

Does a “disruptive weather event” imply extreme weather? Not necessarily, say two McGill University researchers. Instead of focusing on social impacts, weather research tends to focus on meteorology.

Classified as: extreme weather, climate change, Gault Nature Reserve, Male reproduction
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Published on: 15 Aug 2022

In Policy Magazine's new Emerging Voices series by students, five Max Bell School MPPs were invited to write articles on issues important to them.

The fourth article is "A Plea for Greening Canada’s Housing Policy" about the housing and climate change crises wreaking havoc on the Canadian economy by Nimmi Hamid.

Classified as: mpp perspectives, climate change, public policy
Published on: 29 Jun 2022

In Policy Magazine's new Emerging Voices series by students, five Max Bell School MPPs were invited to write articles on issues important to them.

The first article is "A Country Covered by Water, but not by Insurance" by Caroline Merner. Caroline Merner is a Master’s student at the Max Bell School of Public Policy at McGill University and holds a Bachelor of Arts in Sustainability and International Development from Dalhousie University. Caroline co-founded Youth4Nature (formerly Climate Guides), a non-profit organization mobilizing youth for nature and climate action.

Classified as: mpp perspectives, MPP students, MPP research, Canada, climate change, environmental change, natural disaster
Published on: 17 Jun 2022

A hot, "unstable and sticky" summer awaits Quebecers, according to The Weather Network, which predicts periods of abundant heat, often followed by severe thunderstorms. This will be the "fifth consecutive summer where temperatures will be above seasonal normals, which has never happened since we started compiling data" in 1942, according to André Monette, chief meteorologist at The Weather Network. (CTV News)

Classified as: McGill experts, Jill Baumgartner, Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, Institute for health and social policy, heat waves, summer, weather, Weather forecast, thunderstorm, extreme heat, climate change, Sustainability, Mohammad Reza Alizadeh, Department of Bioresource engineering
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Published on: 1 Jun 2022

Here are some interesting new stories from McGill University Media Relations:

Classified as: McGill University, Research, deep space food challenge, technology, health, science, environment, climate change, Sustainability
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Published on: 24 May 2022

A new study from McGill University finds higher incidence of lung cancer and brain tumors in people exposed to wildfires. The study, which tracks over two million Canadians over a period of 20 years, is the first to examine how proximity to forest fires may influence cancer risk.

Classified as: Cancer, lung cancer, brain tumors, wildfires, Forest fires, cancer risk, climate change, Sustainability, Canada
Published on: 10 May 2022

April 7, 2022 | As Canadians wait to hear Ottawa's spending plans in today's budget, there are conflicting views worldwide over whether countries should be producing more oil and gas to help Europe — or saving the world from climate change and leaving fossil fuels in the ground. Director Chris Ragan comments in this article from CBC News that believes governments have to be risk-takers by helping to stimulate investment in new climate friendly technology.

Read the article in full here.

Classified as: chris ragan, carbon tax, Canada, budget, fiscal budget, climate change
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Published on: 7 Apr 2022

April 5, 2022 | In this McGill Tribune article, Max Bell School director Chris Ragan comments on the relationship between war and climate change and expresses his belief that Putin's incursion into Ukraine will cause the West to seriously rethink its reliance on Russian oil and gas.

Read the article.

Classified as: max bell school of public policy, max bell school, chris ragan, Christopher Ragan, climate change, war, Ukraine, Russia, Oil and gas
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Published on: 6 Apr 2022

Veterinarian and Ph.D. candidate (NRS) Vivian Arguelles Gonzalez weighs in on silvopastoralism, an alternative agricultural system that could address the environmental impacts of livestock, and provide farmers with social and economic benefits that include creating new jobs, developing new skills, reducing costs and improving their incomes.

Classified as: Vivian Arguelles Gonzalez, sustainability farming, climate change
Published on: 16 Mar 2022

February 4, 2022 | This paper presents an in-depth analysis of women earthquake survivors during and after the 2015 earthquake in Nepal by looking at women’s experience of evacuation, relief, and recovery. In particular, it examines how gender intersects with socio-economic factors such as citizenship, caste, ethnicity, income, debt, and location to shape women’s disaster experience.

Access the article.

Classified as: Luna KC, Research Network on Women Peace and Security, RNWPS, disaster relief, climate change
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Published on: 21 Feb 2022

In the summer of 2021, Max Bell School Master of Public Policy candidates Danielle Appavoo, Mariel Aramburu, Ricardo Chejfec, and Anil Wasif responded to a call to the academic community from Québec’s Minister of Finance, M. Eric Girard. The Minister was interested in proposals from universities and research groups, namely on (i) fiscal policy in Québec, (ii) the province’s economic potential and (iii) the fight against climate change.

Classified as: Cap-and-Trade, max bell school of public policy, mpp perspectives, carbon market, climate change, Green Economy, carbon pricing
Published on: 10 Feb 2022

November 24, 2021 | RN-WPS Youth Advisory Board member Muzna Dureid explains why Canada should modernize its immigration policy to respond to people displaced by climate change.

Read the article.

Classified as: Muzna Dureid, climate change, RNWPS
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Published on: 17 Jan 2022

January 10, 2022 | "Nearly 5% of global greenhouse gas emissions can be traced to health care activities in developed countries," writes MPP alumna Henna Hundal. Read her full argument for the crucial importance of including the healthcare sector in decarbonization efforts. 

Read the article.

Classified as: mpp perspectives, max bell school of public policy, max bell school, Henna Hundal, healthcare, climate change
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Published on: 12 Jan 2022

November 3, 2021 | As the 26th UN Climate Change Conference takes place in Glasgow, Maryruth Belsey Priebe and Tevvi Bullock ask is there adequate attention to gender in urban-climate-conflict discussions, pledges, and policies? Their blog is evidence of why the gender-climate-security nexus is critical for countries to be better prepared to deal with climate change.

Read the article.

Classified as: Maryruth Priebe, Research Network on Women Peace and Security, RNWPS, climate change
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Published on: 25 Nov 2021

A multidisciplinary team of researchers, including McGill's Scott Weichenthal, an Associate Professor in the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health, has been awarded the Brockhouse Prize for Interdisciplinary Research in Science and Engineering from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC).

Classified as: climate change, air pollution, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Published on: 17 Nov 2021

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