About
The Aging Research Centre – Newfoundland and Labrador (ARC-NL) is focused on promoting and co-ordinating research related to aging that is relevant to Newfoundlanders and Labradorians.
Newfoundland and Labrador has a rapidly aging population and has one of the highest proportions of older adults in Canada. In that context, the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador has a high priority on health and social issues related to later life and recognizes research as being critical to effective policy making.
ARC-NL will build relationships with researchers, encourage students to pursue aging-related research, offer grants and fellowships to support the research, and share that research with the public, particularly our older population.
ARC-NL is led by a Core Leadership Team including a Director. There is a Management Board that provides oversight on key administrative, strategic, policy and financial matters.
Established in 2018, ARC-NL had a successful pilot phase and in 2023 was approved for a five year period (2023-2028) according to MUN Research Centre Policy.
ARC-NL Mission
ARC-NL will foster collaboration between Grenfell and St. John's campuses of Memorial University and create a provincial network of researchers studying late life issues in Newfoundland and Labrador. In addition, ARC-NL will prioritize knowledge mobilization and engagement with older adults.
History of ARC-NL
In 2011, a Memorial University research team funded by the Newfoundland and Labrador Centre for Applied Health Research (NLCAHR) and led by Dr. Leslie Cake (psychology, Grenfell Campus) produced a report based on visits and extensive interviews at centres for research on aging across Canada. The report provided a powerful set of arguments in favour of creating a similar research centre in Newfoundland and Labrador, the only province that at the time did not have such a centre.
Since the release of the 2011 report, a major national conference on aging was held in Corner Brook, NL in 2012. The consensus of the conference was that a dedicated centre would help to attract and manage funding from both the public sector and private donors, recruit and retain a growing corps of qualified and experienced researchers, and develop specialized expertise among graduate students and clinicians. An aging research centre would also link researchers in this province and encourage partnerships with teams and programs in other jurisdictions. A centre would encourage and support collaborations and partnerships linking the university, government, and community stakeholders, and channel research into areas of priority concern for this province's public policy and administration.
In order to support such an Aging Research Centre, initiatives such as NLCAHR's Research Exchange Group on Aging, which was formed in 2007, have been instrumental in developing a research network related to aging and seniors in the province. Moreover, in an effort to further develop a centre and raise the profile of aging research conducted within the province, the division of community health and humanities in Memorial University's faculty of medicine in partnership with Grenfell Campus hired Dr. Benjamin Zendel, Canada Research Chair in aging and auditory neuroscience in 2015.
With funding from Memorial University and the Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Children, Seniors and Social Development, the proposal for a pilot centre for the study of aging was approved by Memorial University's Board of Regents in 2018. The Aging Research Centre-Newfoundland and Labrador (ARC-NL) is based at Grenfell Campus in Corner Brook, NL with a satellite office in St. John's, NL.