CRDCN 2018 National Conference Hamilton, October 18 & 19, 2018 Preliminary program As of September 24, 2018 Organizing committee Scientific committee Mike Veall, Chair Michelle Dion Academic Director, McMaster RDC Political science, McMaster University Department of Economics, McMaster University Emmanuel Guindon Joe Di Francesco Centre for Health Economics and Policy Canadian Research Data Centre Network Analysis, McMaster University Michael Haan Sarah Fortin Sociology, Western University Canadian Research Data Centre Network Kris Inwood Christine Hollins Economics, University of Guelph McMaster University Lisa Kaida Peter Kitchen Sociology, McMaster University McMaster RDC Matthew Kwan Byron Spencer Department of Family Medicine, McMaster Research Program Director, CRDCN University Professor Emeritus, McMaster University Stéphanie Lluis Assisted by Economics, University of Waterloo Evan Saunders Felice Martinello McMaster University Department of Economics, Brock University Dean Mountain Workshops by DeGroote School of Business, McMaster Kelly Cranswick University Statistics Canada Bruce Newbold Sarah Fortin Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster CRDCN University Lisa Oliver Andrea Noack Statistics Canada Sociology, Ryerson University Valerie Preston Geography. York University Acknowledgements Tammy Schirle The CRDCN is a partnership between a Economics, Wilfrid Laurier University consortium of Canadian universities and Valerie Tarasuk Statistics Canada, supported by funding Nutritional Sciences, University of Toronto agencies. Our services and activities are made possible by the financial or in-kind support of Allison Williams the SSHRC, the CIHR, the CFI, Statistics Canada Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster and participating universities which we University gratefully acknowledge. Marisa Young Sociology, McMaster University Location of activities The main conference (regular, plenary, and poster sessions) will be held at the Sheraton Hamilton located at 116 King Street West, Hamilton. The conference dinner will be held at the Art Gallery of Hamilton, located at 123 King Street West, Hamilton. The welcome reception will be at the Braley Health Centre, located at 100 Main Street West, Hamilton. Preconference workshops will take place at the L.R. Wilson Hall, McMaster University (access via Sterling Steet, corner of Forsyth Avenue N.) Additional information For your convenience, a limited number of rooms is available at a special rate at the Sheraton Hamilton. Reserve your room online, before September 15, or by phone at 1-888-627-8161 and ask for the “CRDCN National Conference” rate. Self- and valet parking facilities at the Sheraton ($12.50-$22.50 per day). Taxi in Hamilton: Hamilton Cab 905-777-7777; Blue Line taxi 905-525-0000 Wifi will be available at the Sheraton Hamilton and at McMaster University. 3 Our keynote speakers Nicole M. Fortin Nicole is a Professor of Economics at the University of British Columbia and a research fellow of the International Institute for the Study of Labor, IZA. Her research interests focus on two themes: wage inequality and its links to labor market institutions, and issues related to the economic progress of women. Her contributions in applied econometrics, published in Econometrica, comprise the widely used DFL reweighting decomposition methodology and the RIF (recentered influence function)-regression methodology. She has co-authored the chapter on Decomposition Methods in the authoritative Handbook of Labor Economics published in 2011. Matthew Mendelsohn Matthew is the Deputy Secretary to the Cabinet for Results and Delivery in the Privy Council Office, leading the federal government’s Results and Delivery Unit and Impact and Innovation Unit. Prior to returning to the federal public service, Matthew was the founding Director of the Mowat Centre, a public policy think tank in the School of Public Policy & Governance at the University of Toronto. During that time he published and lectured widely on government transformation, democratic institutions and intergovernmental politics. Matthew received his B.A. from McGill University and Ph.D. from the Université de Montréal. 4 Conference program at a glance Wednesday, October 17 - McMaster University 8h30-9h00 Registration & continental breakfast L.R. Wilson Hall 9h00-17h00 Preconference workshops L.R. Wilson Hall 18h00-21h00 Welcome reception Braley Health Centre Thursday, October 18 - Sheraton Hamilton 7h45-8h30 Registration & continental breakfast Foyer Working breakfast with Pierre Turcotte, Status of 8h00-8h20 Centre ballroom Women Canada 8h30-9h00 Words of welcome East ballroom 9h00-10h30 Simultaneous sessions Center, East, or South ballrooms 10h30-11h00 Break Foyer 11h00-12h30 Simultaneous sessions Center, East, or South ballrooms Lunch 12h30-13h45 followed by a special address by Martin Taylor, East ballroom CRDCN 13h45-14h30 Poster session West ballroom 14h30-16h00 Simultaneous sessions Center, East, or South ballrooms 16h00-16h30 Break Foyer Keynote address by Matthew Mendelsohn, 16h30-17h30 East ballroom Government of Canada 18h00-22h00 Visit to the Art Gallery and conference dinner Art Gallery of Hamilton Friday, October 19 – Sheraton Hamilton 8h00-8h45 Registration & continental breakfast Foyer 8h00-8h30 Working breakfast with Brad Seward, Mowat Centre Centre ballroom 8h45-10h00 Simultaneous sessions Center, East, or South ballrooms 10h00-10h30 Break Foyer 10h30-11h30 Keynote address by Nicole Fortin, UBC East ballroom 11h30-12h15 Lunch East ballroom 12h15-12h45 Special address by Anil Arora, Statistics Canada East ballroom 12h45-13h30 Poster session West ballroom 13h30-14h45 Simultaneous sessions Center, East, or South ballrooms 14h45-15h00 Break Foyer 15h00-16h15 Plenary session East ballroom 16h15-16h30 Poster awards and closing remarks East ballroom 5 Detailed conference program Wednesday, October 17 8h30-17h00 Preconference workshops McMaster University 8h30-9h00 Registration to the workshops and continental breakfast L.R. Wilson Hall, room 1003 New and forthcoming datasets in the RDCs (1) L.R. Wilson Hall, room TBA Employment and education 9h00-12h00 Spatial perspective and mapping: introduction to statistical analysis using R, ArcGIS Pro, and Insights for L.R. Wilson Hall, room TBA ArcGIS 12h00-13h00 Lunch (will be provided) L.R. Wilson Hall, room 1003 13h00-13h45 Gender-based analysis Plus and intersectionality L.R. Wilson Hall, room TBA Leveraging data at Indigenous Services Canada, Crown- 14h00-14h45 Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada L.R. Wilson Hall, room TBA New and forthcoming datasets in the RDCs (2) 15h00-17h00 Health and immigration L.R. Wilson Hall, room TBA Putting the squeeze on big data: using SAS to prepare 13h30-16h30 large datasets L.R. Wilson Hall, room TBA 18h00-21h00 Welcome reception Braley Health Centre Thursday, October 18 7h45-8h30 Registration and continental breakfast Foyer Working breakfast Centre ballroom 8h00-8h20 Pierre Turcotte, Status of Women Canada A Short Introduction to the Research Program at SWC Words of welcome East ballroom Mike Veall, Academic Director, McMaster RDC, 8h30-8h50 McMaster University Jim Dunn, Associate Vice-President Research (Acting), McMaster University Statistics Canada’s National Consultation Day East ballroom 8h50-9h00 Kelly Cranswick, Statistics Canada 6 Thursday, October 18 Session 1A Parents, children and schools Chair: TBA Marie Melanie Fontaine, Université du Québec à Montréal The Motherhood Penalty in Canada: Trends, Geographical Patterns and the Link with Family-Friendly Policies Kenny Chatoor, Higher Education Quality Council of Ontario Room TBA The Role of Parental Education on Postsecondary Participation and Labour Market Outcomes Ashley Calhoun, Western University Does Moving Matter? Measuring Residential Mobility on Children's Mental Health Outcomes Ricardo Meilman Cohn, Simon Fraser University Sorting, Peer Effects and School Effectiveness in Private and Public Schools Session 1B Aging and longevity Chair: TBA 9h00-10h30 Evelyn L. Forget, University of Manitoba Deaths of Despair Tammy Schirle, Wilfrid Laurier University The Evolution of Longevity: Evidence from Canada Room TBA Byron Spencer, McMaster University Age-Income Dynamics Over the Life Course: Cohort Transition Patterns Based on Canadian Tax Returns Sung-Hee Jeon, Statistics Canada The Impact of CardioVascular Health Shocks on Employment and Earnings Session 1C Long term impact of childhood Chair: Marisa Young, McMaster University Kathy Georgiades and Michael Boyle, McMaster University Prevalence of Mental Disorders and Service Contacts among Children and Youth in Ontario Jinette Comeau and Li Wang, McMaster University Room TBA Changes in Child Psychiatric Disorders and Need for Professional Help Between 1983 and 2014 in Ontario Kathryn Wiens, University of Toronto 7 Examining Joint Effects of Adverse Childhood Experiences on Mental Health Outcomes Zhiwei Gao, Memorial University Sex-Specific Association Between Childhood BMI Trajectories and Asthma Phenotypes 10h30-11h00 Break Foyer Thursday, October 18 Session 2A Changing Family Patterns Chair: TBA Lisa Strohschein, University of Alberta Teen pregnancy in Canada: A multidimensional life course approach Laura Wright, University of Saskatchewan Consequences of Teen Parenthood: Differences between Room TBA Teen Moms and Teen Dads in a Contemporary Canadian Cohort Anne Milan, Statistics Canada Diversity of lone mothers in Canada in the labour force Blandine Legendre, McGill University Exploring economic consequences
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