About

Imroze Singh Goindval is a PhD student in the School of Population and Public Health at the University of British Columbia whose research bridges migration, disability, and care. His work examines caregiving for mandhbuddhi (intellectual and developmental disabilities [IDDs]) within Panjabi communities in Panjab (India) and the Panjabi diaspora in British Columbia. Drawing on transnational ethnography, medical anthropology, and feminist political economy, Imroze investigates how families navigate migration and structural inequalities to assemble care across borders and systems. He integrates arts-based and community-engaged research (ABER) and multilingual, culturally grounded mediums to collaboratively generate insights with participants and to build accessible knowledge pathways across linguistic and social worlds. He is founder of Kosh Health, advancing inclusive, community-informed public health communication knowledge/language translation, and accessible systems design.



About

Imroze Singh Goindval is a PhD student in the School of Population and Public Health at the University of British Columbia whose research bridges migration, disability, and care. His work examines caregiving for mandhbuddhi (intellectual and developmental disabilities [IDDs]) within Panjabi communities in Panjab (India) and the Panjabi diaspora in British Columbia. Drawing on transnational ethnography, medical anthropology, and feminist political economy, Imroze investigates how families navigate migration and structural inequalities to assemble care across borders and systems. He integrates arts-based and community-engaged research (ABER) and multilingual, culturally grounded mediums to collaboratively generate insights with participants and to build accessible knowledge pathways across linguistic and social worlds. He is founder of Kosh Health, advancing inclusive, community-informed public health communication knowledge/language translation, and accessible systems design.


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Imroze Singh Goindval is a PhD student in the School of Population and Public Health at the University of British Columbia whose research bridges migration, disability, and care. His work examines caregiving for mandhbuddhi (intellectual and developmental disabilities [IDDs]) within Panjabi communities in Panjab (India) and the Panjabi diaspora in British Columbia. Drawing on transnational ethnography, medical anthropology, and feminist political economy, Imroze investigates how families navigate migration and structural inequalities to assemble care across borders and systems. He integrates arts-based and community-engaged research (ABER) and multilingual, culturally grounded mediums to collaboratively generate insights with participants and to build accessible knowledge pathways across linguistic and social worlds. He is founder of Kosh Health, advancing inclusive, community-informed public health communication knowledge/language translation, and accessible systems design.