Ingrid Waldron

She has studied the impact of discrimination on the physical and mental health of African Nova Scotians, Miꞌkmaq and refugee communities in Canada.

[4] ENRICH uses community engagement, multi-disciplinary partnerships, training and government consultations to support local people in addressing the health effects associated with environmental racism.

ENRICH developed a research team composed of members across Nova Scotia, hosted a series of workshops entitled “In Whose Backyard?

[10] It considers settler colonialism as the overarching theory, and explores how environmental racism is compounded by other forms of oppression.

[12] Variety said the film "makes a very convincing case for protections against environmental harm being applied equally to all members of society".

[14] She has identified that black women feel that white doctors and mental health practitioners do not understand how racism impacts their lived experience.