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Project Summary

Poverty is an ongoing issue in Canada and those socially marginalized such as the Two-Spirit, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans, Queer, plus (2SLGBTQ+) can be considerably more vulnerable to it. 

This innovative, multidisciplinary collaboration will remedy a critical gap in anti-poverty research and policy.

Over the next six (6) years this project will study both the extent and effects of poverty on the 2SLGBTQ+ communities across Canada, and importantly produce an evidence-based action plan that can assist governmental agencies, non-profits, and private organizations to address poverty therein.

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Challenges and Issues to be Addressed

Existing evidence suggests that Two-Spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer plus (2SLGBTQ+) people are both disproportionally affected by poverty and vulnerable to poverty risk. For instance, 52% of 2SLGBTQ+ people were negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, in income and employment (EGALE 2020).

However, given the unreliability of identifying 2SLGBTQ+ people in most nationally representative datasets, this evidence is gleaned from disparate, small-scale investigations. We seek to determine to what extent and why poverty is impacting 2SLGBTQ+ people. The lack of a national scale study of poverty and income inadequacy among 2SLGBTQ+ people hinders the development of effective policy measures, non-profit service provision, and scholarship.

Goal

To create high impact, evidence-based, and policy-relevant knowledge on the nature, extent, determinants, and consequences of poverty in 2SLGBTQ+ communities in Canada.

Objectives


1

Document the lived experiences of poverty among 2SLGBTQ+ communities to create a unique national-level dataset allowing for an intersectional examination of 2SLGBTQ+ poverty rates, poverty risk, and associated root-causes and consequences.


2

Build authentic collaborations between scholars, students, community partners, and 2SLGBTQ+ people with lived experiences of poverty, throughout the research process, for effective societal impact.


3

Mobilize poverty knowledge through a 2SLGBTQ+ lens to inform research, policy, funding, and programming within academia, government, and community.


4

Develop an evidence-based Action Plan, usable by governmental agencies, non-profits, and private organizations, to address 2SLGBTQ+ poverty in Canada.

Partnership

Grounded in community-based participatory research (CBPR), a Community Advisory Board (CAB) of 2SLGBTQ+ people as well as 2SLGBTQ+ peer researchers with experiences of poverty, will inform the entire research process and knowledge mobilization. Their insights will foreground our inquiry and methods.

22 non-profits focusing on 2SLGBTQ+ inclusion and/or poverty reduction partner with this project. Our three institutional partners and the host provide novel training opportunities to students and junior scholars.Ranging from early career researchers to full professors, our scholars bring economic, health, social sciences, and humanities expertise to the team.

Advancing previous work of team members in the Canadian Coalition Against LGBTQ2S+ Poverty, this study is grounded in principles of

(i) valuing lived experience and building trust;

(ii) operationalizing decolonization and intersectionality; and

(iii) engaging authentically with diverse communities to address the complexity of 2SLGBTQ+ poverty, from marginalization to resiliency.