Dean of Arts Office:
PAS building, room 2401
Tel 519 888-4567 ext. 48246
Arts Undergraduate Office:
PAS building, room 2439
Tel 519 888-4567 ext. 45870
Information for faculty and staff
Arts computing support for students, faculty, and staff
Visit our COVID-19 information website to learn how Warriors protect Warriors.
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The Science and Technology in Society Collaboration and the Philosophy Department at the University of Waterloo invite you to a lecture by Dr. Nancy Tuana:
"Coupled Ethical-Epistemic Issues in the Climate Sciences"
"Nancy Tuana is the founding director of Penn State’s Rock Ethics Institute and DuPont/Class of 1949 Professor of Philosophy, Science, Technology, and Society, and Women’s Studies. Dr. Tuana is a philosopher of science and feminist science studies theorist who has been a long time advocate of interdisciplinary research and education.
Women’s Studies Announcement!
Conversation with Aruna Papp
Counsellor/therapist, Workshop Facilitator, Motivational Speaker, Human rights activist
In collaboration with the Zonta Club of Kitchener-Waterloo, we have arranged for Aruna Papp to take time out of her busy schedule and come to uWaterloo to speak with faculty and students interested in women’s issues. We encourage you to come out and meet this exceptional woman!
uWaterloo Drama presents
on love
Directed and dramaturged by Naila Keleta-Mae
February 6-9th at 8pm & Feb. 8th & 9th at 2pm
Created by uWaterloo Drama’s own Professor Naila Keleta-Mae in 2008, on love was further developed by uWaterloo Drama students during their Performance Creation course with Keleta-Mae in the fall.
The Waterloo Centre for German Studies invites you to a diversified afternoon about the French Revolution, the complexity of theatre and questions about normality, democracy and self-discovery:
History Speaker Series 2012-2013
“In the Children's Best Interests”: Unaccompanied Children in Germany, 1945-1949
You are invited to hear Dr. Lynne Taylor, associate professor in the history department, tell us the story of these children.
Department of Philosophy Colloquium talk
Robert McCauley
Emory University
Prof. Mark W. Roche of the University of Notre Dame
I encourage you to attend what promises to be a stimulating lecture. Note, Prof. Roche’s lecture will be of interest to all, including undergraduates, members of the nonacademic community. So please advertise widely.
Department of Psychology Colloquium Series Presents
Pediatric Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Dr. Noam Soreni
Reception to Follow in PAS Lounge
Witness (very) short and sweet thesis presentations by Arts graduate students
Over three consecutive days, Arts graduate students will be competing in uWaterloo's faculty heats for 3 Minute Thesis glory. The most compelling Arts 3MTs will then advance as semi-finalists to the University 3MT finals on March 27th.
Arts heats take place in Hhagey Hall 1106, on the main floor of the School of Accounting and Finance on
Dr. James Bielo
Miami University, Oxford, Ohio
Author of Emerging Evangelicals: Faith, Modernity, and the Desire for Authenticity (2011) and Words upon the Word: An Ethnography of an Evangelical Bible Study (2009)
Wayde Compton of Emily Carr University on
"Vancouver Versus Hogan's Alley: Urban Renewal, Negro Removal, and the Myth of Livability"
The Department of Sociology and Legal Studies
University of Waterloo
Fourth Annual James E. Curtis Memorial Lecture
"Why we should care about the widening gap between rich and poor: Inequality and democratic attitudes in cross-national perspective"
Presented by: Robert Andersen, University of Toronto
Dean of Arts Office:
PAS building, room 2401
Tel 519 888-4567 ext. 48246
Arts Undergraduate Office:
PAS building, room 2439
Tel 519 888-4567 ext. 45870
Information for faculty and staff
Arts computing support for students, faculty, and staff
The University of Waterloo acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is centralized within our Indigenous Initiatives Office.