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The Waterloo Institute for Complexity (WICI) is  pleased to announce that we will cohost the premier International Conference on Artificial Life next year, 17-21 August 2026. The conference theme for ALIFE 2026 is "Living and Lifelike Complex Adaptive Systems". 

Plans are to host the meeting jointly with the prestigious Applied Mathematics, Modeling and Computational Science (AMMCS) conference at Wilfrid Laurier University, as part of the AMMCS-ALIFE Congress.
Wednesday, November 5, 2025

New WISIR Director Announcement

Dr. Maryam Mohiuddin Ahmed Appointed Director of the Waterloo Institute for Social Innovation and Resilience (WISIR) 

The Waterloo Institute for Social Innovation and Resilience (WISIR) is pleased to announce that Dr. Maryam Mohiuddin Ahmed has been appointed as its new Director. 

Founded by Dr. Frances Westley, WISIR has long been a global leader in advancing research, teaching, and practice on social innovation and systems change. The Institute has served as a hub for scholars and practitioners committed to addressing complex societal challenges through collaboration, experimentation, and resilience-building. 

In assuming this new role, Dr. Ahmed expressed deep gratitude to those who have guided WISIR’s evolution over the years. 

“I am profoundly grateful to Dr. Frances Westley, whose vision and scholarship gave life to WISIR and deeply influenced the field of social innovation around the world,” she shared. “I also want to honor the thoughtful leadership of Dr. Dan McCarthy and Dr. Sean Geobey, whose stewardship has carried forward WISIR’s legacy of rigor, compassion, and collaboration. It’s an honor to continue building on their work with our remarkable community.” 

As Assistant Professor (Teaching Stream) of Business at the University of Waterloo, Dr. Ahmed brings a unique blend of scholarship, practice, and relational leadership to the Institute. A social innovation scholar-practitioner, her work foregrounds decolonial and relational approaches to social entrepreneurship, finance, systems change, and knowledge co-creation. Her research and pedagogy center “dialogues of wisdoms” and plural ways of knowing, doing, and being to reimagine social innovation as a path toward more equitable, regenerative futures. 

Dr. Ahmed is also a co-steward of the Transition Bridges Project (TBP), a collaborative initiative pioneering systems mediation to address the polycrisis. TBP's practice involves acting as intermediaries across actors, scales, and systems to facilitate dialogue, mutual understanding, conflict transformation, and collective action toward resilient, regenerative communities. 

She completed her PhD in Sustainability Management at the University of Waterloo’s Faculty of Environment, where she was named Valedictorian. She also holds an LL.M. in International Law from the University of California, Berkeley, and B.A./LL.B. degrees from LUMS University in Pakistan. 

As a former co-founder of the Social Innovation Lab and Daftarkhwan, Pakistan’s largest co-working network, Dr. Ahmed has long bridged academic inquiry with lived practice through community-engaged learning, critical pedagogy, and systems-mediation experimentation. 

“WISIR has always been more than an institute,” she notes. “It’s a living community of practice - an ecosystem of people who believe in reimagining systems more in tuned with justice, equity, and regeneration. I look forward to continuing this journey together.” When asked about WISIR’s future directions, Dr. Ahmed is excited to promote radical interdisciplinarity and more inter-systemic approaches to research and practice, while centering pluriversal ways of knowing, doing and being rooted in wisdoms from around the world.  

 

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Map the System at UWaterloo and Beyond

Map the System at UWaterloo and Beyond
Paul Heidebrecht discusses UWaterloo’s involvement in Map the System and how it has been integrated as both a curricular and co-curricular learning opportunity, and the impact on students. Gabriel Jabile presents his map, which won this year’s Map the System campus finals at Waterloo, and reflects on his experience competing at the Canadian finals at the Banff Systems Summit and the global finals at Oxford, where he was recognised with an award for excellence for the inclusion of underrepresented voices in his research.
Understanding Livestock Disease Outbreaks in Uganda
Gabriel Jabile
View Article
Link to Session
Thursday, August 21, 2025

Imagining a Regenerative Future

 POSTPONED:  WICI event

Please register to be kept up to date with how to be involved in bioregioning and our events.  

Be part of a community effort to reimagine the future of the Grand River. The launch begins a shared journey of mapping next steps and building relationships to support resilience and thriving communities across the Grand River Watershed. All are welcome.

Are you or someone you know, an active complex systems scholar outside UW, but in Canada? University of Waterloo Institute for Complexity and Innovation (WICI) is seeking applicants for a new category of WICI membership: External Core Membership & External Node Coordinators. We are considering starting a Canadian Network for Complex Systems (CNCS), with our external core members establishing the first nodes.

Are you or someone you know, an active complex systems scholar outside UW, but in Canada? University of Waterloo Institute for Complexity and Innovation (WICI) is seeking applicants for two new categories of WICI membership: External Core Membership and External Node Coordinator Membership. We are considering starting a Canadian Network for Complex Systems (CNCS), with our external node coordinator members establishing the first nodes.

A formal letter with background information and application guidelines can be viewed here.

Judges reviewed a total of 24 complex-systems presentations and chose seven winners at April's Student Project Symposium. Choosing the top three in each category was not an easy task! Thank you to all who participated to make this event a success, and a special thanks to Kirsten Wright for her hard work in organizing and promoting the event. Congratulations to our winners!

Graduate Session Winners Undergraduate Session Winners

1st Prize - Kathryn Fair

'Climate change & the future of forest-grassland mosaics'

1st Prize - Erica J. McDonald 

'Examining the association between marginalization and emergency room wait times in Ontario'

2nd Prize - Hazem Ahmed

'Addressing barriers to adoption of source-control stormwater management practices on private residential yards in Kitchener/Waterloo'

2nd Prize - Amanda Pereira

'Quality of care for persons with concurrent substance use and mental health'

3rd Prize (tied) - Ajar Sharma

'Cauvery River: Path dependencies and feedbacks in water sharing conflicts'  

3rd Prize (tied) - Julia Goyal

'Navigating health and safety in Airbnb’s self-regulating system'

3rd Prize - Mona Qutub

'Potential unintended consequences of co-operative education: Food insecurity among undergraduate students at the University of Waterloo'

Graduate Session prize winners, from left to right: Hazem Ahmed, Kathryn Fair, Julia Goyal (missing from photo: Ajar Sharma)

Undergraduate session prize winners (left to right): Erica McDonald, Amanda Pereira and Mona Qutub