Thesis Defense – PhD SOIL Science – Sylvia Nyamaizi

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UBC – LFS Announces The Oral Examination for the Degree of

Doctor of Philosophy
(SOIL Science)

Sylvia Nyamaizi

Improving Agricultural Phosphorus Management to Reduce Environmental Loss in High Phosphorus Soils in the Fraser Valley, British Columbia”

Thursday, February 22, 2024 – 9 AM

Zoom

EXAMINING COMMITTEE

Chair: Dr. K. Bartlett

Supervisory Committee:
Dr. S. Smukler – Co-Supervisor
Dr. A. Messiga – Co-Supervisor
Dr. JT Cornelis – Committee member
Dr. B. Cade-Menum – Committee member

Defense Committee Composition
Dr. S. Smukler – Co-Supervisor
Dr. A. Messiga – Co-Supervisor
Dr. JT Cornelis – Committee member
Dr. A. Bomke – University Examiner
Dr. M. Johnson – University Examiner
Dr. D. Kumaragamage – External Examiner

1st Annual Symposium ‘Supporting Food Systems Transformation with Data.’ 15th March 2024

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We are pleased to announce the 1st Annual Global Academy of Agriculture and Food Systems Symposium, scheduled for Friday, 15th March at the Roslin Institute. This year, our theme is ‘Supporting Food Systems Transformation with Data.

Prof Jess Fanzo, Professor of Climate and Director of the Food for Humanity Initiative at Columbia University will present The Food Systems Countdown Initiative and Dr Mike Clark, Senior Researcher at Oxford, will present on data on the environmental impact of foods.

The event will run from 10 am to 4 pm, followed by a drinks reception. Lunch will be provided.

PhD students and postdocs are invited to submit a 250-word abstract for a poster session. Presenting authors of selected abstracts will receive free registration.

For further information and to register, please visit our website. The full programme and speakers’ bios are attached for your reference.

Register Here

Best regards,

Clarinda

Clarinda Brown
Senior Project Manager
The University of Edinburgh
Global Academy of Agriculture and Food Systems
The Roslin Institute, Easter Bush Campus
Edinburgh EH25 9RG

E.mail:  clarinda.brown@ed.ac.uk   https://www.ed.ac.uk/global-agriculture-food-systems

Working Pattern: Monday to Wednesday

 

The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with registration number SC005336. Is e buidheann carthannais a th’ ann an Oilthigh Dhùn Èideann, clàraichte an Alba, àireamh clàraidh SC005336.

You are receiving this email because you have subscribed to the Food Researchers in Edinburgh mailing list.

HIBAR Research Buddies Launch Event on March 6

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We were in touch recently when you kindly shared some information about the HIBAR Research Buddies Community with graduate students in your department. I’m wondering if you might be willing to also share this invitation to participate in our HIBAR-B Community Launch Event on March 6, from 4-6pm.

This in-person event is open to all current UBC graduate students, and it will be held at the same time on both UBC campuses — Okanagan and Vancouver.

The event is free, but advanced registration is required:  Vancouver event registration and Okanagan event registration.

HIBAR Research Buddies Launch Event March 6, 2024

Further details are included in the attached flyer.

The HIBAR Research Buddies are fostering a community of early career researchers, focusing on graduate students, who care deeply about engaging directly with experts outside academia through their research. You can watch our introductory video here.

Kind regards,

 

Michele Mossman

HIBAR Research Buddies

IRES Seminar Series: Thurs, Feb 15 with Ta Phurisamban and Jade Radke

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This week’s IRES Seminar is in the Beaty Museum Allan Yap Theatre.
February 15, 2024: IRES Student Seminar with Ta Phurisamban and Jade Radke
Time: 12:30pm to 1:20pm
Location: Beaty Museum 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 min into the seminar.
When Indigenous and Western sciences collide: re-storying/restoring Mekong expertise through community-engaged research

 

Talk summary:

Indigenous science and traditional knowledges enact different worlds from their Western scientific counterparts. Their exclusion in modern freshwater and biodiversity governance is not only symptomatic of entrenched colonial structures and mechanisms, but also poses existential threats to life on Earth, particularly as Indigenous-stewarded lands and waters sustain some of the world’s richest biodiversity. In this presentation, Rapichan will examine what a community-based Mekong River and fish monitoring project combined with ethnographic research of Indigenous ethnic Mekong River dwellers can reveal about expertise, intimate knowing, and being in a world that is alive. How might river science (and management) look differently when recentring and restoring ways of knowing and worlding otherwise? Rapichan will also share some reflections on preliminary work needed to engage with Indigenous, ethnic, and/or local communities in generative ways.

 

Ta PhurisambanIRES PhD Candidate

Bio:

Rapichan (Ta) Phurisamban is an interdisciplinary rivers scholar of Tai, Mon, and Chinese ancestry, and a PhD candidate in Terre Satterfield’s lab at the Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability. Their current work draws on critical ethnography, community-engaged research, and decolonial and Indigenous theories to understand the Mekong River as a living entity, and how Indigenous Mekong peoples’ ways of knowing and living with the river can inform the terms of engagement beyond modern freshwater and biodiversity governance. Through their involvement in decolonial environmental justice and journey into intersectional veganism, they recognize their obligations to foreground in their research the voices, expertise, and experiences of humans and more-than-humans who have been marginalized and dismissed. They continue to learn, many times through mistakes, how to cultivate ethical relations with peoples and places where they live and work.

The role of happiness in pro-environmental action

 

Talk summary:

Despite the climate emergency, very few people are acting on climate change. One potential reason for inaction is that climate communication often focuses on the negative effects of climate change and the need to make personal sacrifices. Such communication can make people retreat from the issue rather than engage with it. To address this, we combine happiness science with climate science in a new happy climate approach that focuses on the happiness benefits of pro-environmental action.

 

  Jade Radke, IRES MA Student

Bio:

Jade Radke (she/her) is an MA student in the Behavioral Sustainability Lab at the Institute for Resources, Environment, and Sustainability (IRES) and is supervised by Dr. Jiaying Zhao. Prior to joining IRES, she received her BA in Honours Psychology and specialized in Applied Behavior Analysis. Her current research focuses on the use of positive reinforcement to elicit pro-environmental behavior change. She is a recipient of the CGS-M Fellowship 2022-2023 and the Indigenous Graduate Fellowship 2022-2024.

 

 

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

Enhancing Marine Conservation through Adaptive Management in the Northern Shelf Bioregion MPA Network: Insights from a Commercial Fisherman

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IOF SEMINAR – February 16, 2024


Enhancing Marine Conservation through Adaptive Management in the Northern Shelf Bioregion MPA Network: Insights from a Commercial Fisherman

This seminar explores the perspective of a small-scale commercial fisherman operating within the Northern Shelf Bioregion in British Columbia regarding the implementation of static conservation models in a dynamic ecological system. The existing approach to MPA implementation is limited by siloed governance structures and the lack of stakeholder insight on localized impacts of climate change, migratory species dynamics, and fisheries management. This talk will describe the importance of incorporating local knowledge into decision-making processes, fostering integration with existing fisheries management, and promoting adaptive conservation strategies that consider ecological variability and uncertainty. The nuanced experience and insight of local fisher’s highlights the critical role of stakeholders in balancing political objectives, conservation, food security, and the sustainability of coastal economies. This approach advocates for a holistic coastal management framework that enhances ecological resilience, supports coastal economies, and ensures the long-term sustainability of marine resources in the Northern Shelf Bioregion.
Fraser McDonald
GoodFish Seafood Co.
Commercial Fisherman
IOF Adjunct faculty member
Friday, February 16, 2024 – 11:00am  – 11:50am
Live: AERL Theatre, 2202 Main Mall, UBC
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/