Thesis Defense – PhD ISLFS – Jimmy Kyu Baik Ha

Standard

UBC – LFS Announces The Oral Examination for the Degree of

Doctor of Philosophy
(ISLFS)

Jimmy Kyu Baik Ha

“The Impacts of Elevated CO2 on Plant-Insect Interactions Across Multiple Insect Species”

Friday, March 22, 2024 – 12 PM

Exam Location: Room 350, MacMillan Bldg.

 

EXAMINING COMMITTEE

Chair: Dr. R. Turkington

Supervisory Committee:
Dr. J. Carrillo – Supervisor
Dr. J. Cory – Committee member
Dr. M. Isman – Committee member
Dr. S. Smukler – Committee member
Dr. S. Castellarin – Committee member

Defense Committee Composition
Dr. J. Carrillo – Supervisor
Dr. J. Cory – Committee member
Dr. S. Castellarin – Committee member
Dr. R. Guy – University Examiner
Dr. A. Riseman – University Examiner
Dr. L. Abbey – External Examiner

 

Schmidt Science Fellowships

Standard

Internal Deadline – Apr 5, 2024

Schmidt Science Fellowships

The Schmidt Science Fellows program provides the world’s best emerging scientists with new skills and perspectives to develop novel solutions to society’s challenges, become scientific and societal thought leaders, and accelerate ground-breaking discoveries.  The program is looking for the brightest minds in the natural sciences, mathematics, engineering, and computing who are interested in broadening their horizons.  Fellows receive a stipend of $100,000 USD per year and are supported to pursue a one to two year postdoctoral placement at a world-leading laboratory anywhere in the world in a disciplinary pivot from their PhD.  Fellows also benefit from a Global Meeting Series and personalized mentoring program.

UBC is one of select group of the world’s leading science and engineering institutions that are invited to nominate students to the international competition.  In 2023, 32 Schmidt Science Fellows were selected to be recipients globally.

As part of the eligibility requirements, applicants must have completed, or expect to complete, all the requirements for the conferral of their UBC PhD, including a successful defense, between May 15 2024 and June 30, 2025.

Each UBC graduate program is invited to submit one nomination to the university-wide competition. Given the highly competitive nature of this opportunity, graduate programs should nominate only an exceptional individual who will stand out amongst top applicants from around the world.

  • Value: $100,000 USD per year, for up to two years
  • Application deadline: Set by graduate program.  Applicants must submit their application to their UBC graduate program by their graduate program’s internal deadline.
  • Graduate program nomination deadline: April 19, 2024 at 4:00 pm PT

For further information about the opportunity, including detailed eligibility requirements, evaluation criteria and application procedures, please visit our webpage: https://www.grad.ubc.ca/awards/schmidt-science-fellowships. The contact for this funding opportunity is Bree Wilson (bree.wilson@ubc.ca).

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS: GUSTAVE O. ARLT AWARD IN THE HUMANITIES

Standard

Internal deadline – Apr 2, 2024

 Postdocs, sessional instructors, and faculty members may be eligible.

Gustave O. Arlt Award in the Humanities

Named in honor of the first president of the Council of Graduate Schools and first presented in 1972, this award is made annually to a young scholar who has written a book that represents an outstanding contribution to scholarship in the humanities. The recipient must be teaching in a US or Canadian university, have earned a doctorate from a US or Canadian university within 7 years of the award date, and have published a book of scholarly importance within seven years of the award. The 2024 field of competition is Classical Studies and Archaeology.

Each department can submit one nomination to G+PS.

A complete nomination will consist of:

  • nomination form
  • a letter from the Department Head elaborating upon the scholarly contribution made by the nominee’s book (no page limit)
  • three copies of the nominated book (nominated books will not be returned)

Value: $1,000, a certificate and reasonable travel expenses to attend the CGS annual meeting in December

Deadline for nominations: 12 April 2024 at 4:00 pm PT

For further information, including nomination procedures, please see: https://www.grad.ubc.ca/awards/gustave-o-arlt-award-humanities

For questions, please contact Bree Wilson at bree.wilson@ubc.ca.

IRES Seminar Series: Thurs, March 21 with Jo Fitzgibbons and Imranul Laskar

Standard
Next week’s IRES Seminar is in the Beaty Museum Allan Yap Theatre.
March 21, 2024: IRES Student Seminar with Joanne Fitzgibbons and Imranul Laskar
Time: 12:30pm to 1:20pm
Location: Beaty Museum Theatre, Allan Yap Theatre (Basement, 2212 Main Mall) Please check in at front desk on main floor before going downstairs.
No food or drinks allowed in the Theatre.
Click here to register for Zoom link. Zoom will be terminated if we encounter tech problems 5 to 10 mins into the seminar.
Rewilding as a Plural Boundary Object: Implications for Research and Practice

 

Talk summary:

Roughly one million irreplaceable species face extinction. Addressing this biodiversity crisis will require collaborative effort, not only to prevent further losses, but also to recover lost species and ecological processes. “Rewilding” is one such regenerative approach that uses tools like species reintroduction and landscape restoration to restore degraded ecosystems. However, the meaning of rewilding is hotly contested, and much scientific energy has been devoted to establishing a discrete, “unifying” definition. We argue that rewilding is a “boundary object” that will inevitably be understood, summoned and valued differently by diverse actors with varied goals. This reality comes with pros and cons: boundary objects can be evocative orienting points to foster collaboration and dialogue, but their malleability can also produce conflict, confusion and manipulation. Using case studies of global rewilding projects, we explore the implications of this plurality for practice and scholarship.

  Joanne Fitzgibbons, IRES PhD Candidate

Bio:

Jo Fitzgibbons is a PhD Candidate in CHANS Lab at the UBC Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability (IRES) and a Planning Analyst with the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation. With an interdisciplinary background in urban planning, geography and international development, her research explores inclusion of plural knowledge systems in planning and public engagement, and the role of evocative discourses such as “rewilding” and “resilience” as orienting points for more inclusive sustainability action.

Characterizing uncertainties in the decarbonization of maritime shipping: an expert elicitation study

 

Talk summary:

Maritime shipping is the backbone of global trade and economy. It is also a significant contributor to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, accounting for ~3% of world’s annual GHG emissions, and expected to rise to 17% by 2050. The International Maritime Organization (IMO), a UN special agency and the de facto global shipping regulator, recently adopted an ambitious GHG Strategy aligning the maritime shipping sector with a 1.5°C-warming scenario. However, concrete policy instruments are yet to be adopted, with deliberations underway on adopting a global carbon tax and a GHG intensity standard by 2027. While the regulatory landscape has been rapidly evolving, deep decarbonization of the sector is mired with uncertainties. In this talk, I will present a summary of results from an expert elicitation study that we employ to characterize and understand some of these uncertainties in decarbonizing maritime shipping.

  Imranul Laskar, IRES PhD Candidate

Bio:

Imranul Laskar is a PhD Candidate in Amanda Giang’s lab at IRES. His research interests center around the intersection of science, technology, and policy, specifically within the domains of pollution, energy, and climate. Currently, his research focuses on understanding uncertainties, policy approaches, and air quality co-benefits and trade-offs during decarbonization in the maritime transportation sector. Imranul holds a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering, and an MSc. in environmental engineering from the University of Alberta. He serves in a capacity within the federal government and has previously held research and leadership positions in municipal governments, environmental consulting, and the oil, gas, and petrochemical sectors.

 

See you on March 21 in the Beaty Museum Allan Yap Theatre!

 

_______________________________________________________________________________

Bonnie Leung

RES Program Support (she/her/hers)

Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability (IRES)

University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional Territory

Aquatic Ecosystems Research Laboratory (AERL Building)

Room 429 – 2202 Main Mall | Vancouver, BC | V6T 1Z4 | Canada

 

Email: bonnie.leung@ubc.ca

Tel: 604-822-9249

Thesis Defense – FOOD Science – Elia Castellanos Lopez

Standard

UBC – LFS Announces The Oral Examination for the Degree of

Master of Science
(FOOD Science)

Elia Castellanos Lopez

“Suitability of indigenous Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains isolated from spontaneous fermentations as wine fermentation starter cultures”

Thursday, April 4th, 2024 – 2 PM

Zoom
https://ubc.zoom.us/j/69897386453?pwd=Q3BBUWFLTzl2RUZIQzArSVNiVVZPdz09


EXAMINING COMMITTEE

Chair: Dr. V. Kontogiorgos

Supervisory Committee:
Dr. V. Measday – Supervisor
Dr. S. Castellarin – Committee member
Dr. W. Zandberg – Committee member

Defense Committee Composition
Dr. V. Measday – Supervisor
Dr. S. Castellarin – Committee member
Dr. W. Zandberg – Committee member
Dr. B. Montpetit – External Examiner