CMS Grad Fellows Program – Apply by Friday!

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There’s still time for your graduate students to apply to be a 2023-24 CMS Grad Fellow

Applications close on Friday, Sept 22 at 11:59pm – we hope you’ll share this info with your advisees and any other students or colleagues whose work is related to human migration and mobilities.

The CMS Grad Fellows Program supports outstanding UBC graduate students who are engaged in research related to human migration and mobilities. The annual program offers an interdisciplinary community in which students may expand and deepen their migration studies through opportunities for mentorship, speaker and workshop events, presenting research-in-progress, and more. Fellows are also supported by a $400 financial award. 

Grad Fellows are a vital part of our academic community, contributing to the relationships and initiatives that underpin the Centre’s research excellence. 

You can read more about the program on our website, including details on eligibility and how to apply. 

  • Complete applications are due by September 22, 2023
  • Applicants must be currently enrolled in any graduate program the UBC Vancouver campus
  • 12 Fellows will be selected for this year’s cohort
  • The program runs Oct 2023–April 2024

We look forward to your applications!

Kindest Regards, 

Atmaza Chattopadhyay (She, They)
Program and Administrative Assistant
Centre for Migration Studies
The University of British Columbia | xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) Territory
C.K. Choi 324 – 1855 West Mall | Vancouver BC | V6T 1Z2 Canada

atmaza.chattopadhyay@ubc.ca  | +1-604-822-9506

 

EIW 2023: Let’s Get Social!

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Let’s Get Social
Register Now | Join us September 26-28, 2023 | In person

Get tickets

Entrepreneurship Immersion Week is only one week away! Beyond the keynotes, panels and workshops, we’re looking to make your networking opportunities even that much more fun with some of the great events we have planned.

 

So, let’s get social:

Vancouver Entrepreneur’s Form Networking Social
September 26 • 5:45PM • UBC Robson Square

VEF September event social in collaboration with EIW is open to conference attendees and VEF members only.

 

EIW Lounge Networking Event
September 27  7:30PM • UBC Robson Square

With musical performances from musician Jacob Weil, Tom Urban, MJ Araujo, and hosted by Ky Sargeant.

 

EIW Closing Party & INNOVATE Vancouver Book Launch in collaboration with Global Village Publishing
September 27 • 5:00PM • UBC Robson Square

As we mark the end of EIW 2023, we will be hosting a party with Global Village Publishing celebrating the launch of INNOVATE Vancouver Vol. 2!

View Full Agenda

 

Entrepreneurship Immersion Week is brought to life by the support of dedicated sponsors and collaborators.

Did we miss anything? 
Send us your events

Looking to join a startup?
Visit our job board

Ready to build your company?
Learn more

 

 

Upcoming Changes to Multi-factor Authentication for Students

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MFA for Students Pop-up Booth cheat sheet

# Summary of what is happening.

## Dates

Starting Oct 2, 2023, students will be presented with an MFA sign-up prompt on every CWL login until enrolled (”nag screen”).

Oct 24-25, 2023 is the Final enrollment pop-ups on campus before MFA is mandatory starting Nov 1, 2023.

On Jan, 2024, MFA is enabled for Canvas and VPN access.

## Who will be Challenged

Only active students including student employees and volunteers will be challenged with MFA. This does not include applicants, alumni or non-credit learners.

Students will be challenged when they login to any UBC application that uses CWL authentication from off-campus or when they are connecting to the UBC VPN.

Students will not be challenged when on-campus or when logging in to systems that do not use CWL authentication.

## Ways to Authenticate

  • Duo Mobile App (free – works on phone and tablet) • Hard Token (available for purchase from the UBC Bookstore) • Bypass Code (details at it.ubc.ca/mfa) • Touch ID / U2F (details at it.ubc.ca/mfa)

## Technical Support Available to Students

  • it.ubc.ca/mfa
  • it.ubc.ca/support

UBC Vancouver

  • 604.822.2008 (Monday – Friday, 8:00 am – 5:00 pm) • Walk-in – Walter C Koerner Library (Monday – Friday, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm)

UBC Okanagan

  • 250.807.9000 (Monday – Friday, 7:30 am – 4:30 pm)

Edmund

IRES Seminar Series – Thurs, Sept 21 with Lori Daniels

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The next IRES Seminar is:
September 21, 2023: IRES Faculty Seminar with Lori Daniels
How to create record-breaking wildfire seasons in BC: A reflection on recent megafires and their drivers
Location: Beaty Museum Allan Yap Theatre (Basement, 2212 Main Mall). Please speak with the Admin desk on the main floor before going down to the Theatre. 

No food or drinks allowed in lecture halls.

Time: 12:30pm to 1:20pm

Click here to register for Zoom link. Zoom will be terminated if we encounter tech problems 5 to 10 mins into the seminar.

Talk summary:

British Columbia is smashing wildfire records. The years 2017, 2018, 2021 and 2023 were the four most severe and costly wildfire seasons of the last century. What drives these large, intense, and uncontrollable megafires? Social media is swirling with conspiracy theories about ecoterrorists, arsonists, and lasers from space. In reality, wildfire is driven by climate, weather, and fuels that vary among ecosystems in mountainous landscapes and through time. Global warming, superimposed on a century of colonization land-use change, fire exclusion, and industrial forest management have made many forests highly susceptible to intense fires that exceed modern technologies for control and spread to large sizes with extreme impacts. Revolutionizing forest and fire management will improve ecosystem resilience to climate change, but we will not stop future fires from burning. To successfully adapt, our society must learn to coexist with wildfire

Dr. Lori DanielsProfessor, UBC Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences

Bio:

Dr. Lori Daniels is a Professor of Forest Ecology in the Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences, where she directs the Tree-Ring Lab at UBC. Lori investigates the impacts of natural and human disturbances and climate change on forests. With her research team, she has on-going projects on wildfires, forest dynamics, and social-ecological resilience to climate change across British Columbia. Her enduring partnerships with local, provincial, and national governments, environmental organizations, forest management companies, community forests, and First Nations ensure her scientific advances are translated to active conservation, restoration and management. She contributed to the Blueprint for Wildland Fire Science in Canada and served as a member of the Canadian Wildfire Strategy Implementation Team and the NSERC-Canada Wildfire Research Network. Since 2015, she has given more than 200 media interviews on wildfires and their impacts on forests and communities. She is among the 150 Canadian Scientists recognized in 2017 for research shaping new frontiers and making our world a better place (#150Scientists). She was acknowledged as a Women Leader in international fire science research in 2018, received the 2019 Canadian Institute of Forestry Scientific Achievement Award, the 2022 James J. Parsons Distinguished Career in Biogeography Award from the American Association of Geographers and the 2023 Distinguished Researcher Award from the Association of Fire Ecologists.

 

See you on Thursday 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

 

From citizen science to open-source low-cost technology monitoring vs. policing of small-scale fisheries in Bangladesh (case-study: sharks & rays)

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IOF SEMINAR – September 22, 2023

From citizen science to open-source low-cost technology monitoring vs. policing of small-scale fisheries in Bangladesh (case study: sharks and rays)

Dr. Haque handles a small shark

Dr. Haque completed her doctoral studies at the Nature-based Solutions Initiative in the Dept. of Biology, Oxford, with the support of a Bangabandhu Scholarship. Her research: “Towards a socially just sustainable fishery preserving sharks and rays in the Bay of Bengal”, aims to prepare a sustainability model (replicable for similar contexts in the Global South) for threatened species of sharks and rays in close conjunction with the fishing communities. It places a locally-driven, bottom-up approach from academic literature to action, a narrative absent in the current management regimes. She created a platform for research-based conservation actions collaborating with local fishers and traders to fill the dearth of knowledge on sharks and rays in Bangladesh and initiating actions for mitigating impacts. Dr. Haque launched a collaborative project involving fishers in knowledge co-creation and decision-making, which is socially just and environmentally sound. Since 2021, 10 fishing vessels voluntarily collected spatial data using a mobile app. This endeavour is a pilot for our technological innovation “FishSafe”, an audio-visual device to record by-catch events at sea. Since 2022, 5 fishing vessels are using this device. Fishers are incentivized by access to communication with other boats and land in the absence of mobile networks at sea. This will also act as a non-monetary and sustainable incentive to initiate an organized live release and self-regulated catch monitoring. Dr. Haque works at the challenging intersection of endangered species conservation and fisheries as a means of livelihood generation for fishers of Bangladesh. Her vision is to generate a context-appropriate, community-empowered and collaborative fishery model with preservation and sustainability at its core.

 

Dr. Alifa Haque 

Oxford University & National Geographic Photo Ark EDGE Fellow

Friday, September 22, 2023 – 11:00am  – 12 noon
Online: over Zoom

IOF community members (students, faculty and staff) do not need to RSVP for this seminar series.

UBC members, alumni, and all others, please RSVP at:
https://oceans.ubc.ca/rsvp-iof-seminars/