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SSHRC Partnership Grant: 2020-2027

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Inclusive Communities for Older Immigrants (ICOI): Developing multi-level, multi-component interventions to reduce social isolation and promote connectedness among older immigrants in Canada

Project Summary

Older adults are the fastest-growing subpopulation in Canada, projected to reach 25% of the population by 2030. In preparation, governments at all levels have committed to prioritizing their needs through the design and delivery of age-friendly initiatives, services, and cities. Despite these efforts, insufficient attention has been paid to the specific concerns of older immigrants, who comprise 30% of all older adults in Canada, and more in major cities like Toronto (65%) and Vancouver (50%). A critical but unaddressed issue is social isolation of older immigrants, which limits their community and civic engagement, reduces income security, and increases risk of elder abuse, disability, and early death. All older adults are vulnerable to isolation, but older immigrants are at greater risk due to migration-related social, cultural, and economic challenges that affect their sense of isolation/connectedness.

Our Inclusive Communities for Older Immigrants (ICOI) partnership will engage in a 7-year multidisciplinary, multi-sector, multi-province project that will build sustainable connections to generate knowledge about social isolation and connectedness among older immigrants, support multidirectional knowledge exchange, and improve older immigrants' lives. Specifically, it will 1) clarify intersecting factors affecting older immigrants social isolation vis-a-vis their social, economic, and political inclusion/exclusion in urban and suburban settings; 2) contribute to models related to social isolation/connectedness based on empirical data unprecedented in its scope and comprehensiveness; 3) design, implement, and evaluate interventions to promote social connectedness; and 4) develop sustainable knowledge-sharing and research collaborations among key players. Informed by complementary theoretical approaches, ICOI will focus on 3 interconnected research streams: social, economic, and political inclusion.

ICOI currently includes 48 researchers and 38 community partners in 9 cities in 4 major immigrant-receiving provinces (BC, AB, ON, QC). Partners in each city are committed to improving policy and services for older immigrants; have strong connections with the Punjabi-, Arabic-, and Mandarin-speaking communities we focus on; and bring practice and policy expertise in aging, immigration, aging-in-place, age-friendly cities, capacity-building and resilience, and programs and services. Organizationally, ICOI includes Provincial Teams; Research Streams; Support Committees; an Executive Committee; and an Advisory Council. It will provide opportunities for >150 students and junior academics.

Using critical ethnography and mixed methods, the project will be carried out in 4 phases 1) establish which social, economic, and political factors most strongly contribute to social isolation/connectedness among older immigrants; 2) identify and assess interventions used in fostering social connectedness; 3) co-design multi-level, multi-component interventions to promote social connectedness among older adults in the three communities and build community capacity via implementation with community partners; and 4) evaluate the interventions' feasibility, fidelity of implementation, and effectiveness. We will engage in multi-directional KMb activities throughout the project, with close and frequent engagement with our community partners. The extensive experience of our academic team in conducting multiphase, cross-national, research projects will ensure ICOI's success and the timely completion of activities. Findings will yield a comprehensive understanding of how to reduce older immigrant's isolation, build capacity and resilience, and ultimately foster social connectedness, civic society participation, and quality of life among older immigrants.

Team members

Team members

Principal Investigator

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Co-Investigators (by last name alphabetical order)

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M-E Laquerre.jpg
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Collaborators (by last name alphabetical order)

Dr. Satwinder Bains, University of Fraser Valley, BC

Dr. Helene Berman, University of Western Ontario, ON

Dr. Naomi Lightman, University of Calgary, AB

Dr. Raktim Mitra, Ryerson University, ON

Dr. Lu Wang, Ryerson University, ON

Advisory Committee (by last name alphabetical order)

Dr. Eva Soom Ammann, Bern University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland

Lori Cameron, AMSSA, BC

Dr. Ruxandra Oana Ciobanu, University of Geneva, Switzerland

Dr. Parvathy Kanthasamy, Vasantham, ON

Roxanne Riddell, United Way Elgin Middlesex, ON

Kim Turcotte, City of Edmonton

Community Partners

Community Partners (in alphabetical order)

Seniors Transition Office

University Partners

University Partners
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