The Man Box
Unpacking masculinity versus toxic masculinity, discovering what privilege is, and learning how to show up as allies to women.
Unpacking masculinity versus toxic masculinity, discovering what privilege is, and learning how to show up as allies to women.
Online event on January 30, 2024 to learn how to implement healthy and realistic habits relating to food.
Meditation has been shown to reduce stress, increase balance and stillness, increase awareness, and even expand acceptance and compassion for yourself and others. Each week will vary slightly. “Practices” include breathing, mindfulness, body awareness, earthly grounding, spacial awareness, centring, and more.
The Institute for Quantum Computing offers graduate students unique opportunities to learn and engage in world-leading research in quantum information.
Join this session to learn about the Master of Applied Science (MASc) and Doctoral (PhD) Collaborative programs in Quantum Information in the Faculty of Engineering.
Join SVPRO in building consent culture at UWaterloo during consent week January 22-26.
Jacob Ezra Thomas Hadajagretha “he makes the clouds descend” Deyohonwede “he is the one who is so real in two ways” was born at Six Nations in 1922. He spent his entire life, before he passed on in 1998, practicing, teaching, and guiding the community in strict Iroquoian culture in the most rigorous way possible. This talk will take us through the rich life experience which made him the most important Iroquoian Elder of the twentieth century.
The most central ceremony of the Haudenosaunee comes five days after the first new moon in January – or January 16th this year.
This talk will guide you through the eight days which consolidate the entire culture in words and activities of thanksgiving as a prelude to the coming year.
As part of the Water Institute's WaterTalks lecture series, Dr. David McDonald, Professor, Department of Global Development Studies, Queen’s University, will present: What’s public about public water?
This event is in person in DC 1302 with a lunch reception to follow in DC 1301 (The Fishbowl).
Debates about water privatization have tended to construct a simplistic binary of public versus private. In reality, ‘public’ water is varied and complex in its institutional and ideological make-up, illustrated in part by the rise of very different types of ‘remunicipalized’ water services over the past ten years as well as the growth of ‘corporatized’ public utilities. Drawing on two decades of empirical and theoretical work on this topic, Dr McDonald will highlight key tensions and synergies in the emerging debates about the nature of public water services.
David McDonald is Professor of Global Development Studies at Queen’s University and Director of the Municipal Services Project. He has conducted research on public services in more than 50 countries and has written extensively in academic and popular formats. His most recent book is “Meanings of Public and the Future of Public Services”
This workshop hosted by Dallas Squire of Onkwehonwe Games offers participants the opportunity to learn about the history and culture of the people of the Six Nations (also called Haudenosaunee) through Traditional Games.
Interactive and hands-on, their approach to teaching is indigenous in its foundation. While learning about traditional games of the Six Nations of the Grand River, participants will simultaneously be learning about and experiencing local First Nations culture. In Kanyen'keha Onkwehonwe translates to ‘the original or first people’. The traditional way of many Onkwehonwe is to live in harmony with Mother Earth. Living in this good way requires a balance of physical, mental, emotional and spiritual health. Games were and are still used as a way to stay healthy and connected to a person’s community. Six Nations traditional games are used to enhance individual and team skills, as well as create sportsmanship, connection and laughter.
This event is part of the “ADE for Game Communities: Enculturing Anti-Racism, Decolonization, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (ADE) in Games Research and Creation” series from the ADE Committee of the Games Institute, University of Waterloo, and is supported in part by funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.
The National Conference on Diversity in Engineering 2023 aims to develop knowledge and have conversations surrounding the variety of individuals, cultures and perspectives found within engineering communities. This conference is one of conversation, reflection, and inspiration, aiming to instill a notion of positivity and togetherness in creating spaces that value the diversity within groups of engineering students and professionals. This year's conference will be hosted by the University of Waterloo from November 17-20th, 2023 with over 140 engineering students from 39 universities across Canada.