Upcoming Events
Wine Appreciation Group | April 18
Exploring the Wines of Canada (especially wines of British Columbia): A Tasting Seminar
Expertise level: all levels.
In the past 35 years, Canada has grown its quality wine industry in each of Ontario and British Columbia and Nova Scotia. How have our wineries developed so many internationally acclaimed bubbly, white, red and dessert wines from areas such as the Annapolis Valley, Niagara Peninsula and Okanagan Valley? Join us in a 2.5 hours taste-tour of the wine country of Canada (main focus BC); exploring a brief history, terroir and… through tasting… the flavours of 4-6 Canadian (BC) wines (attendance-budget-dependent). A (just retired) UBC wine science instructor will quickly review basic wine appreciation techniques, and key wine regions. Tips on pairing wines with food provided “enroute”.
Cost to participate: $19.00 ($15 + $4 for one ISO glass)
Deadline to RSVP for Exploring the Wines of Canada - April 14th 6:00 pm
The Wine Appreciation Group has a limited number of drop-in spaces available for the April and May sessions. Please reach out to David MacArthur at david.mcarthur@ubc.ca to register.
Tuesday, 18 April 2023 - 6:30pmWall Catalyst Program | April 20
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 are invited to attend speaker lectures throughout the year.
LEcture - Advancing climate solutions in a politically polarizing world
Dr. Andrew J. Weaver is a Professor in the School of Earth and Ocean Sciences at the University of Victoria. He was also the Canada Research Chair in Climate Modelling and Analysis until he was elected as a BC Green Party MLA in the 2013 BC Provincial Election representing the riding of Oak Bay-Gordon Head.
In 2015 Dr. Weaver assumed leadership of the BC Green Party, leading them to an historic election result in the 2017 provincial election with three elected MLAs holding the balance of power in an NDP minority government. He returned to UVic after completing two terms as an MLA.
Advancing climate solutions in a politically polarizing world
Over the last century, scientific understanding of the causes and consequences of global warming has evolved to the point that it is, for all intents and purposes, an extremely well understood problem. The fundamental question facing society is whether the present generation has a moral and/or ethical obligation to future generations in terms of the type of world we leave behind as our legacy. Science alone cannot, and will not, ever answer this question.
In this talk Dr. Weaver will explore the challenges and opportunities associated with curbing the increase of atmospheric greenhouse gases, with particular emphasis on the complexities arising from the ongoing political polarization of society. Emphasis will be on the need for more evidence-based decision-making within the political establishment if we collectively wish to reverse the disturbing trend towards decision-based evidence-making in the formation of provincial and national policy.
Format: IN-PERSON AND ON ZOOM
Co-sponsors Emeritus College and Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies
Thursday, 20 April 2023 - 1:00pmTravel Group | April 20
Cycling in Puglia and a visit to Malta
with Peter Dodek, Professor Emeritus of Critical Care Medicine
In September 2019, my wife and I booked a self-guided cycling trip through Puglia, Italy. After brief visits to Bari, Monopoli, Polignano a Mare, and Matera , we criss-crossed the heel of Italy on backroads and stayed in delightful small towns. Then, we flew to Malta to immerse ourselves for several days in the place where the 'west' defeated the Ottomans in 1565 and the Nazis in 1942.
Format: Hybrid
If you wish to receive the zoom link for the meeting and are not already on the EC Travel group list, please contact Paul Steinbok at psteinbok@cw.bc.ca.
A zoom link will be sent out before each meeting.
Thursday, 20 April 2023 - 3:00pmSeries at Green College | April 20
'Disciplines Over Time: Making, Keeping and Breaking the Boundaries of Knowledge' is a cross departmental collaboration between UBC's Green College and Emeritus College.
This series will bring together scholars who inhabit the same academic discipline or field of study, and are at different stages of their careers, to talk about how the boundaries separating their field of specialization from other fields have changed over time. The conversation will inevitably lead to a consideration of cross-disciplinary influences and interdisciplinary trends, as participants account for changes in the cognitive strength of sub-disciplines and the rise and fall of disciplinary paradigms. The intent will be to identify underlying reasons for the observed changes and, by the end of the series, to draw some general conclusions about mechanisms of (inter)disciplinary interaction and development, in the spirit—if not necessarily the style—of Thomas Kuhn and Michel Foucault.
Series Convener: Donald Fisher, Past-Principal, UBC Emeritus College
INDIGENOUS STUDIES
Jo-ann Archibald Q’um Q’um Xiiem, Professor Emerita, Educational Studies;
Hagwil Hayetsk (Charles Menzies), Professor, Anthropology;
Caroline Running Wolf (Apsáalooke), Green College Society Member and PhD Student, Interdisciplinary Studies
This series, co-hosted with UBC Emeritus College, brings together scholars who inhabit the same academic discipline or field of study, and are at different stages of their careers, to talk about how the boundaries separating their field of specialization from other fields have shifted over time. This sixth and final event in the series will stage a conversation between scholars of Indigenous Studies. The moderator will ask the panelists a series of questions about their perspectives on the discipline, and the discussion will be opened at an early stage to members of the audience. The goal of the event is to grasp the interdisciplinary nexus that is ‘Indigenous Studies’ in Canadian and other universities and to peer into possible futures of the field.
HYBRID FORMAT
Join us in-person at Green College on the UBC Vancouver Campus or virtually. The session will be followed by a reception.
Co-Hosts
Emeritus College and Green College
Thursday, 20 April 2023 - 5:00pmHealthy Aging Program Seminar | April 24
with Dr. Aric A. Prather, University of California, San Francisco
Aric A. Prather, PhD is a Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of California, San Francisco. Dr. Prather’s research centers on the causes and consequences of insufficient sleep, with a focus on how poor sleep impacts the immune system to increase one’s risk for infectious illness and inflammatory disease. His work also focuses on social determinants of sleep and sleep disparities. A licensed clinical psychologist, Dr. Prather helps run the UCSF Insomnia Clinic and treats patients with insomnia using cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I). Dr. Prather is an elected fellow to the Academy for Behavioral Medicine Research and the American Psychosomatic Society, has published more than 100 empirical papers, and is the recent author of The Sleep Prescription (Penguin Life), which provides practical, research-based guidance for improving one’s sleep.
This lecture may be viewed in-person at St. Paul's Hospital or over Zoom.
Monday, 24 April 2023 - 6:00pmHealthy Aging Program Seminar | April 25
with Dr. Aric A. Prather, University of California, San Francisco
Aric A. Prather, PhD is a Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of California, San Francisco. Dr. Prather’s research centers on the causes and consequences of insufficient sleep, with a focus on how poor sleep impacts the immune system to increase one’s risk for infectious illness and inflammatory disease. His work also focuses on social determinants of sleep and sleep disparities. A licensed clinical psychologist, Dr. Prather helps run the UCSF Insomnia Clinic and treats patients with insomnia using cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I). Dr. Prather is an elected fellow to the Academy for Behavioral Medicine Research and the American Psychosomatic Society, has published more than 100 empirical papers, and is the recent author of The Sleep Prescription (Penguin Life), which provides practical, research-based guidance for improving one’s sleep.
This lecture may be viewed in-person at the Rudy North Lecture Theatre in the Centre for Brain Health at UBC or over Zoom.
Tuesday, 25 April 2023 - 12:00pm