Past Events

E.g., Apr 19, 2024

Wall Catalyst Program November 17, 2022

The Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies and the UBC Emeritus College have assembled a cohort of Emeriti to participate in the 2022-23 PWIAS Catalyst Program.

The Wall Catalyst Emeriti cohort will meet monthly to share research experience and engage with guest lecturers on the topic of the "Climate and Nature Emergency".

For more information on this program and the list of participating Emeriti click here.

Members of the Emeritus College and the general public are invited to attend speaker lectures throughout the year. 

LEcture - Nicholas Coops and Lori DanIELS

Nicholas Coops

Nicholas Coops, Professor, Faculty of Forestry (UBC) and a Canada Research Chair (Tier 1) in remote sensing

Nicholas is the head of the Integrated Remote Sensing Studio (IRSS) within the Faculty of Forestry at UBC, a research lab at UBC investigating and demonstrating applications of remote sensing data to environmental and forest production issues. He has published over 520 peer-reviewed journal papers and was the editor - in - chief of the Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing for a decade. Nicholas was awarded a Killam research scholarship, the Carl Pulfrich Award sponsored by Leica, and the silver and gold medals by the Canadian Remote Sensing Society (CRSS) Award, the highest award for mid-career and senior scholars in remote sensing in Canada. In 2020 Nicholas was a joint winner of the Marcus Wallenberg Prize (known as the Nobel prize in Forestry) for his research into satellite analysis and numerical modelling of tree and forest growth.

Digital Forested ecosystems
New sensors, and data for addressing climate change in Canadian Forests

Canada’s forests are highly sensitive to climate change, in particular increases in forest disturbances such as fire, drought and infestations. Concurrently, Canada’s forest offer significant potential as a natural climate solution, to sequester additional carbon from the atmosphere. Remote sensing and sensor technologies offer significant potential to better understand, and manage Canada’s forest and help provide tools and practical solutions for decision-makers, managers and planners to adapt their forest management practices. These decisions will then improve both resistance to stressors and resilience to disturbance, and thereby ensure the longevity of forest-based communities across Canada. Nicholas will provide an overview of some of these new advances, currently being investigated at UBC, and with collaborators, and discuss their use and adoption as we adjust to a new climate reality for our forests.

Nicholas Coops

Lori Daniels, Professor, Faculty of Forestry (UBC) Forest and Conservation Sciences

"My research strives to advance fundamental scientific knowledge on forest dynamics, which is imperative for conserving and managing contemporary forests and adapting to global environmental change. My research characterizes how natural disturbances, humans and climate interact to drive temperate forest dynamics and resilience. It has produced three key contributions:

(1) My international collaborations demonstrate widespread tree mortality in North and South America, disentangling the relative impacts of drought, insects and pathogens.

(2) Many forests in the Canadian Cordillera are increasingly susceptible to wildfire due to complex interactions among fire suppression, land-use and climatic change.

(3) My novel forest reconstructions include tree-ring methods adapted to address aboriginal cultural uses and traditional management, largely overlooked by forest managers.

My enduring partnerships with local to national governments, environmental organizations, forest management companies, community forests, and First Nations have helped me translate these scientific advances to operational conservation, restoration and management policies and practices."

Wildfires in British Columbia: Causes, Consequences and Coexistence

Wildfire is an essential process in forest ecosystems, but can be incredibly destructive in the wildland-urban interface, as we experienced again during the 2021 fire season. Wildfire is driven by climate, weather and fuels that vary among ecosystems and through time. Combined, land-use change, fire exclusion and global warming have made many forests highly susceptible to intense fires that are difficult to control and spread to large sizes. Revolutionizing forest and fire management will improve ecosystem resilience to climate change, but we will not stop future fires from burning. Successful adaptation must also include individuals and communities learning how to coexist with wildfire.

FORMAT

Members of the UBC Emeritus College and the general public are invited to attend a lecture by the guest speaker. There will be a question period following the presentation.

Join us in-person or through Zoom, please use the following links to register in advance of the meeting date.

View the Recording

Co-sponsors

Emeritus College and Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies

Thursday, 17 November 2022 - 1:00pm to 3:00pm
In-Person or Zoom TBC
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1
Canada

UBC Remembrance Day Ceremony

UBC’s Ceremony for Remembrance Day, November 11, 2022

Since the opening of the War Memorial Gym in 1951, The University of British Columbia has held a ceremony commemorating November 11. This year, 2022 will mark seventy-two years that The University of British Columbia has hosted a Remembrance Day ceremony. This special ceremony is an opportunity for faculty, staff, students, emeriti and members of the on and off-campus community to honour and remember all those who served in times of war, military conflict and peace. 

For those attending the ceremony there is free parking available in North Parkade ( https://parking.ubc.ca/map ). Limited parking is available along the north side of University Blvd (6000 and 6100 block) on a first come, first served basis for veterans or those with accessibility needs.

Click for More information

Friday, 11 November 2022 - 10:00am
War Memorial Gym
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada

Co-housing Women's Group November 10, 2022

Baba Yaga House and other models for living for women retirees

The recent crises in long term care as a result of the Pandemic have emphasized the need for coming up with new models for aging demographics. It remains a well-documented fact that women generally have fewer access to resources than men when it comes to this stage of their lives. The group is intended to comprise those who wish to delve further into the possibilities for self-governing models of group living that combine independent spaces with communal ones (co-housing, coop housing etc.). The Baba Yaga model set up in France has inspired people across the world: https://www.rfi.fr/en/france/20130305-babayagas-house

We will share experts and expertise (including inspiring writers, artists and film directors) that exist in the field to see what is possible. It is anticipated that pooling our knowledge will provide a range of realistic models for the future and may even have direct practical outcomes. While the call to participate is initially directed at women only we will decide at the first meeting whether to stay with this model.

Guest Speaker:  Lynn Ross, CEO of PAL: www.palvancouver.org 

Join the Co-housing Women's Group mailing list: Please email sneja.gunew@ubc.ca and express your interest.

Meeting Format: Zoom. Group members will receive the Zoom links in advance of all meetings.

Thursday, 10 November 2022 - 4:00pm
Zoom meeting
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada

Groves of Academe - November 7, 2022

READING:  Femi Kayode, Lightseekers 

If you would like to join the group please contact convenor, Graeme Wynn (wynn@geog.ubc.ca). 

Learn more about the group and the format of their activites here

Monday, 7 November 2022 - 2:30pm
Online Zoom Meeting
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada
Photo Group

Photo Group November 4, 2022

Theme: Britannia Shipyards walk

Format: Zoom 

Those who were on the walk at Britannia Shipyards will be sharing some of their photos. If you were not on the walk, you are welcome to join the meeting to see the photos submitted by the walkers.

For Zoom details, please contact Richard Spencer at richard@rhspencer.ca

Friday, 4 November 2022 - 3:00pm
Zoom online by request
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada

Community Volunteer Group October 27, 2022

We are thrilled to be joined by three notable representatives from Academics Without Borders (AWB) to hear about the organization and the wide range of volunteer opportunities available: Greg Moran, Executive Director AWB , Corrie Young, Associate Executive Director AWB, and Geraldine H. Van Gyn, Professor Emerita at the University of Victoria and AWB volunteer.  Brief bios are below.

Greg Moran became executive director of Academics Without Borders in October 2017.Immediately prior to taking on the executive director role, Greg was the director, special projects at the Higher Education Quality Council of Ontario for two years. Greg served as provost and chief academic officer of Aga Khan University (AKU) from 2011-2015 and was based in Nairobi, Kenya, for three of those years. AKU is an international institution of higher learning operating in eight countries on three continents, with campuses in Pakistan, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, England, and Afghanistan. He is professor emeritus of Psychology and provost emeritus at Western University. 

Corrie Young has been a project manager with AWB since 2010 and the associate executive director since 2014. Prior to joining AWB, Corrie was the executive assistant to the Rector and an assistant lecturer in the Faculty of Arts, Media and Social Sciences at the National University of Rwanda. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Human Geography from the University of Alberta and a master’s degree in Human Security and Peacebuilding from Royal Roads University.

Geraldine Van Gyn became professor emerita at UVic after 35 years of teaching and research in the areas of motor control and learning, research methods, and teaching and learning in higher education. She was the director of the UVic Learning and Teaching Centre for six years, program coordinator for the Kinesiology program for over 15 years, and received the Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2013,  the Ralph W. Tyler Award for Outstanding and Distinguished Research in both 1995 and 1997 by the Cooperative Education Association (USA) and the Dr. G. Branton Award for Exemplary Research from the Canadian Association for Cooperative Education in 2008. As professor emerita, she has volunteered for AWB.

Meeting Format: Zoom

Join the Community Volunteer Group mailing list: members receive the Zoom links in advance of all meetings. Please email Nancy.Gallini@ubc.ca and express your interest.

We hope to see you on Thursday, October 27!
Nancy Gallini
Niamh Kelly
Pete Malleson

Thursday, 27 October 2022 - 4:00pm
Zoom online by request
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2
Canada

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