MFRE Speaker Series: Bruce Turris, Fisheries Management: How theory becomes operationalized

Standard

Join us this Friday, Feb 17, 2023, to hear from Bruce Turris, Executive Manager for Canadian Groundfish Research and Conservation Society, as he shares valuable insights on Fisheries Management: How Theory becomes Operationalized.

Fisheries Management: How theory becomes operationalized

Date: Friday, February 17, 2023

Time: 3:00-4:30 pm

Location: MCML 160

Bruce is an economist, but very much a practitioner. For the first 17 years of his career, he was an official with the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans, in the Pacific region. He subsequently went into private practice, working very closely with industry as well as the government. He does extensive consulting work outside of Canada, as well as within, with examples being the US (both coasts), China, and Europe.

Bruce provides policy advice, strategic planning, and management services to clients such as commercial fishing associations, government agencies, and environmental organizations. He has been active in the field for 30 years, involved in the design, development, and implementation of cooperative and shared management and monitoring arrangements in fisheries throughout North America

Regards,

Olivier

Olivier Ntwali, BSc Ag. Econ, MFRE
Academic Program Manager
Master of Food and Resource Economics| Land and Food System
The University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional Territory
Macmillan Building – 348A- 2357 Main Mall | Vancouver BC | V6T 1Z4 Canada
Phone: 6047718961| olivier.ntwali@ubc.ca| http://mfre.landfood.ubc.ca/

 

Competition Announcement: Indigenous Graduate Fellowships (IGF) 5th Year Award and IGF Research & Travel Award

Standard

The Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies is pleased to announce two new funding opportunities for Indigenous graduate students:

IGF 5th Year Award
Indigenous Graduate Fellowships (IGF) 5th Year Award – Graduate School – University of British Columbia – Vancouver – Canada (ubc.ca)

Indigenous PhD students in their 4th year are now able to apply for 5th year funding through the IGF 5th Award. The award, valued at $18,200 per annum plus tuition, is awarded on the recommendation of the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies to full-time Indigenous doctoral students from all disciplines to fund their 5th year of study, where research involves community-engaged methodologies and approaches.

A complete application must be submitted online to the Faculty of Graduate & Postdoctoral Studies by uploading a complete application form via the Qualtrics link provided below. Complete applications must be received by 4:00pm on Thursday, March 23, 2023. Late or incomplete applications will not be considered; it is the applicant’s responsibility to ensure that their application is complete by the deadline.

Applicants to the IGF 5th Year Award may also be eligible for funding through the IGF Research & Travel Award. Applicants are welcome to apply for both awards, through a single application, or by submitting two separate applications if they wish to tailor the content differently for each funding stream.

IGF Research & Travel Award
Indigenous Graduate Fellowships (IGF) Research & Travel Award – Graduate School – University of British Columbia – Vancouver – Canada (ubc.ca)

Funding in support of research and travel expenses for Indigenous graduate students has been made available through the IGF Research & Travel Award to current holders of the Indigenous Graduate Fellowship. Recipients of the award will be engaged in work that contributes directly or indirectly to community engagement and relationship building with Indigenous communities. Successful candidates will receive a minimum of $3,000 for Master’s students and a minimum of $5,000 for Doctoral students.  Additional funding may be offered depending on budget availability.

A complete application must be submitted online to the Faculty of Graduate & Postdoctoral Studies by uploading a complete application form via the Qualtrics link provided below. Complete applications must be received by 4:00pm on Thursday, March 23, 2023. Late or incomplete applications will not be considered; it is the applicant’s responsibility to ensure that their application is complete by the deadline.

Applicants to the IGF Research & Travel Award may also be eligible for funding through the IGF 5th Year Award. Applicants are welcome to apply for both awards, through a single application, or by submitting two separate applications if they wish to tailor the content differently for each funding stream.

Application deadline for both awards: 4:00 pm PT on Thursday, March 23, 2023

For information on eligibility and application procedures, including application forms, please consult the G+PS webpages linked above. For questions, please contact Bree Wilson at bree.wilson@ubc.ca.

_________________________________________________________________________________

DUE TONIGHT: Last call to submit your abstract to the LFS Grad Student Conference!

Standard

Abstract submissions for the 2023 LFS Grad Student Conference are due at 11:59pm TONIGHT!

Where: GSS Loft (we are back in person!)

When: Thursday March 2, 2023

How: Submit your abstract here by Feb 10th | Register to attend here by Feb 27th

You can find more information on the conference here, and guidelines for presenters here.

The Land and Food Systems Graduate Student Conference is a one-day, student-organized conference designed to showcase the diverse graduate research and work taking place in our faculty. This conference aims to highlight the excellent work of our graduate students by providing an opportunity to present at a formal and interdisciplinary academic conference. This one-day event will include an interdisciplinary plenary address, poster and oral presentations, lunch, and an award ceremony. Awards and cash prizes will be presented for outstanding oral and poster presentations.

If you have any questions about the conference or abstract submission, email lfsgrads@gmail.com.

Faculty of Land and Food Systems Graduate Student Council

lfsgrads@gmail.com

Reminder: 2022 UBC Tax Slip Announcement – for LFS Today, Graduate Programs, Student Services

Standard

When Are 2022 Tax Slips Available?

UBC issues electronic tax slips as PDFs that faculty, staff and student employees can download through Workday. T4 and T4A tax slips for the 2022 tax year are expected to be available through Workday by February 28, 2023.

How do I find my T4? (CWL-login required).

More information: https://finance.ubc.ca/announcements/t4t4a-tax-slips-faculty-and-staff-expected-february-28

 

Regards,

Mona Lee
Human Resources Administrative Clerk
UBC Faculty of Land & Food Systems

248 – 2357 Main Mall

Traditional, ancestral and unceded Musqueam territory

Tel 604-827-5312 | mona.lee@ubc.ca

www.landfood.ubc.ca

IRES Seminar Series: Thurs, Feb 16 with Erika Gavenus and Shuoqi Ren

Standard
Next week’s IRES Seminar is in the Beaty Museum Theatre.  Note: No food or drinks allowed in the Theatre.
February 16, 2023: IRES Student Seminar with Erika Gavenus and Shuoqi Ren
Time: 12:30pm to 1:20pm
Location: Beaty Museum Theatre (2212 Main Mall)

Click here to register in advance to receive a Zoom link.

Zoom Rule: If we encounter technical difficulties during the first 5 to 10 mins of the seminar, Zoom will be terminated.

Restorative Diets: A methodological exploration comparing historical and contemporary salmon harvest rates

 

Talk summary:

First Nations face persistent challenges related to the state of their fisheries along the coast of, what some call, British Columbia. Fisheries management strategies imposed by the Crown and State have been implicated in contributing to these challenges. In particular, current strategies continue to set ceilings on First Nations’ harvest rates. Too often the evidence used to determine such ceilings reflects disrupted diets and practices, with repercussions for First Nations working to restore their fisheries, diets, and food systems. I will share how we used the example of salmon to develop methods for estimating a range of harvest rates consistent with less disrupted—restorative—diets, and to consider the magnitude of the difference between harvest rates consistent with restorative compared to contemporary diets. We find salmon harvest rates suggested by contemporary assessments consistently fall below rates consistent with restorative diets.

Erika Gavenus, IRES PhD Candidate

Bio:

Erika Gavenus is a PhD candidate at IRES supervised by Terre Satterfield. She grew up on the lands of the Nichiłt’ana and learned to love fish and fishing on waters long stewarded by Dena’ina and Sugpiaq peoples. Through her doctoral research Erika uses a lens of food justice to examine how imposed fishing regulations can challenge food access for coastal First Nations. She holds a BSc in Global Health from Georgetown University and a MSc in Global Health and Environment from UC Berkeley. Erika is grateful to live and learn on the traditional, unceded, and ancestral territory of the Musqueam.

Multi-dimensional urban environmental justice analysis: exploring patterns, synergies, and trade-offs in Metro Vancouver

 

Talk summary:

Everyone has the right to a safe, clean, healthy, and sustainable environment; however, the uneven geographic distribution of demographics and environmental quality can result in disproportionate exposure to environmental risks or lack of access to benefits for marginalized groups, leading to distributive environmental injustice. In this research, we characterize patterns of urban environmental injustice from integrated assessments of multiple environmental factors in Metro Vancouver using geospatial environmental and demographic data for 2016 and 2006. Results show that the patterns of environmental injustice vary through time and across space; these changing patterns are driven by different aspects of environmental quality. The results can provide insights into urban planning and policymaking, for example, targeting communities with a high level of injustice with a significantly disadvantaged population and limiting traffic-related air pollution emissions in high walkable communities to avoid human exposure in active transportation.

Shuoqi Ren, IRES MSc Student

Bio:

Shuoqi Ren is an MSc student at the Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability, supervised by Dr. Amanda Giang at UBC. Her research interests focus on multi-dimensional assessments and modelling of urban environmental quality and its applications to environmental justice. Her Master’s research characterizes the interactions, synergies, and trade-offs between environmental variables like air pollutant concentrations, walkability, green space, and temperature and investigates whether there are environmental injustices related to the uneven distribution of environmental benefits, risks, and demographics over time in Metro Vancouver.

See you next Thursday in the Beaty Museum 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