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Recent Submissions
Item type: Item , Indigenous Data Sovereignty Primers: A Guide for Researchers(University of Waterloo, 2026-06) Indigenous Sovereignty, Autonomy, Governance, Ethics (ISAGE); Hill, Jade; Jamieson, Jordan; Anderson, Sara; University of Waterloo, RDM Institutional Strategy Working Group; University of Waterloo, RDM Advisory GroupResearch does not happen in a vacuum. It is shaped by histories, relationships, and systems of power that continue to influence how knowledge is produced, shared, and valued. For Indigenous Peoples, research and data practices have been deeply entangled with colonial systems that have extracted knowledge, resources, and stories without consent, without context, and without accountability. For generations, data about Indigenous Peoples, lands, and knowledge systems has been collected by governments, academic institutions, and other external actors and used in ways that have defined, categorized, and governed Indigenous lives. Census data has been used to control identity. Environmental data has enabled resource extraction on Indigenous territories. Cultural knowledge has been recorded, archived, and circulated far from the communities it comes from. In many cases, these processes have removed knowledge from its relational and cultural context, turning living systems of knowing into objects of study. These practices are not only in the past. They continue, often in less visible ways. Data may be collected under the assumption that it is neutral, publicly available, or disconnected from the people and places it relates to. Research may proceed without recognizing Indigenous presence, authority, or governance. Even well-intentioned work can reproduce extractive patterns when it does not account for the histories and relationships that shape Indigenous data. Indigenous Data Sovereignty (IDSov) emerges within this context as both a response and a reassertion. It reflects the inherent rights of Indigenous Peoples to govern data about their communities, lands, cultures, and knowledge systems. It is rooted in self-determination, but it is also grounded in longstanding Indigenous laws, governance structures, and relationships that have always guided how knowledge is held, shared, and protected. IDSov challenges the assumption that data can be separated from people and place, and instead affirms that data is relational, contextual, and governed. This guide was developed to support researchers in engaging with these realities. It is not simply a technical resource about data management, but an invitation to rethink how research is approached, particularly in relation to Indigenous Peoples. Many researchers may not set out to work with Indigenous communities but may still encounter Indigenous data through land-based research, demographic datasets, archival materials, or emerging technologies. In these situations, responsibilities do not disappear because relationships are less visible. The Indigenous Data Sovereignty Primers provide accessible, practical guidance across research contexts. Each primer can be read on its own, but together they offer a broader understanding of how Indigenous Data Sovereignty applies across the research lifecycle, from data collection to analysis and sharing. This guide does not offer a single prescriptive approach. Indigenous governance systems and community expectations are diverse and context specific. Instead, it encourages researchers to ask critical questions about authority, relationships, and responsibility, and to move away from extractive approaches toward practices grounded in respect, reciprocity, and accountability.Item type: Item , Environmental bonds and public liability for resource extraction site cleanup(University of Waterloo, 2024) Insley, MargaretGovernments have been left with large liabilities for cleanup at natural resource extraction sites after firms have declared bankruptcy. This research studies the impact of different forms of financial assurance on a firm's optimal actions over the full life cycle of a hypothetical natural gas well, in a world of uncertain natural gas prices, when firm bankruptcy may shift cleanup costs to the government. A firm's stochastic optimal control problem is described by an HJB equation with the natural gas price modelled as a stochastic differential equation. The impact of financial assurance is examined in relation to firm investment decisions, the cleanup liability imposed on government and resource taxation revenue. A Cash Deposit and Surety Bond are contrasted with the case of no financial assurance requirement. The "fair" fee (assuming the absence of arbitrage opportunities) is determined for the Surety Bond issued by a third party. Numerical results demonstrate that in the presence of distortionary taxes, there is a trade off between indemnifying the government against cleanup costs versus maintaining government tax and royalty revenues. A numerically plausible case is presented in which the total value of the natural gas well (to the firm and the government) is not increased by the imposition of a strict form of financial surety.Item type: Item , Canada's racialized immigrant women(University of Waterloo, 2024) Ferrer, Ana; Dhatt, Sumeet SinghImmigrants have traditionally lagged behind labour outcomes of Canadian born workers, a fact that is more obvious for immigrant women and for recent arrivals (those entering Canada within the last five years). In this report we explore the barriers and challenges faced by racialized newcomer women in the Canadian labour market and how differences in their characteristics are (or aren't) related to differences in labour market outcomes. We use a specially designed survey to capture the experiences of a sample of racialized newcomer women regarding integration into the labour market and what resources and strategies have been most helpful in achieving career success and improving their quality of life. We follow with an in-depth analysis of the labour market environment of immigrant women to Canada using data from the Labour Force Survey and the O*Net database. This allows us to quantify to what extent immigrant women may be facing barriers and challenges in the labour market, not only along many standard measures of job quality, such as employment, pay, or type or contract, but also examining other non-standard measures of job quality that are informative of the resilience of the jobs immigrants hold, such as the tasks they perform in their jobs.Item type: Item , The economics of Canadian immigration levels(University of Waterloo, 2024) Doyle, Matthew; Skuterud, Mikal; Worswick, ChristopherIn the hope of addressing chronic labour shortages and sluggish economic growth, the Canadian government plans to increase immigration in the coming years to per capita levels not reached since the 1920s. We argue that economic immigration in the Canadian context should aim to boost GDP per capita in the full population including the newcomers. We then examine the potential for increases in Canadian immigration levels to achieve this objective. Our analysis suggests that Canada is not well-positioned to leverage heightened immigration to boost GDP per capita owing primarily to weak capital investment and quantity-quality tradeoffs in immigrant selection. We conclude by providing a framework for identifying the optimal level of economic immigration.Item type: Item , Establishing a FAIR, CARE, and efficient synthetic health data sharing ecosystem for Canada(University of Waterloo, 2024) Chen, Helen; Grossman, Maura R.; Sen, Anindya; Tsao, Shu-FengObtaining access to real-world health data is a significant challenge, mainly due to privacy and security implications. Consequently, researchers and technology innovators - particularly those operating in the health data science and AI technology development spaces - increasingly resort to synthetic health data to bridge the data gap. High-quality synthetic data has the potential to expedite research and development of novel technologies. However, synthetic health datasets in Canada are scarce, and no existing synthetic health datasets conform to the Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR) standards. Moreover, while federated learning with synthetic health data. This paper explores the ethical considerations and value proposition of generating and sharing synthetic health data. Our goal is to facilitate the development of a reliable and sustainable synthetic data infrastructure that supports the ethical, responsible, and efficient use of synthetic health data. An important contribution of this research is the establishment of a framework that balances the social benefits of innovation from data sharing with the social costs that occur when individual privacy is compromised. The use of synthetic data significantly reduces the potential for individual harm and is a cost-effective means to lower data-sharing costs. We believe that this framework will pave the way for a more robust and secure synthetic data ecosystem, enabling the generation of valuable insights that can drive positive health outcomes for Canadians.