Community Gardening as Climate Action (2nd event)
Join the Climate Institute and Waterloo's North Campus Community Garden (NCCG) for the event "Community Gardening as Climate Action".
Join the Climate Institute and Waterloo's North Campus Community Garden (NCCG) for the event "Community Gardening as Climate Action".
Waterloo students, staff and faculty are invited to enjoy an afternoon of gardening, meet new people, and learn about community gardening as an action for climate justice.
Join experts from academia, government and industry as they share the latest insights and innovations driving sustainability in aeronautics. In addition to talks, exhibits and panel discussions, Summit attendees can take advantage of product demonstrations with corporate partners and visit a new student career fair with our next generation of talent.
The field of quantum computing offers a unique opportunity to proactively address many of the inequities that have plagued AI and computer science. However, radical technologies demand innovative solutions. In this talk, the speaker challenges the use of the leaky pipeline metaphor as a framework for devising policy interventions aimed at addressing inequality in STEM field.
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.
Where are we at with nuclear weapons and non-proliferation 60 years on? Cesar Jaramillo, Executive Director at Project Ploughshares, will engage these important questions. Cesar’s research areas include nuclear disarmament, the protection of civilians in armed conflict, emerging military technologies and conventional weapons controls.
Join the Library and Print + Retail Solutions for the next Anti-Racism Reads discussion at Dana Porter Library on Thursday October 5. As part of Library Week, Jessica Hutchison will facilitate a conversation on Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the revolution of reciprocal care
Learn about what happens to plastic in the environment, the latest research on microplastics, and efforts by members of Six Nations to protect the Tract and the Grand River. Discuss what actions are needed to hold settler governments accountable to end plastic pollution.
The Tri-University Graduate Student Association is pleased to announce the upcoming Researching Gender in History graduate student research panel. It includes four graduate students from across the Tri-University Graduate Program (Laurier, Guelph, and Waterloo).
Join Nobel Laureate Donna Strickland for a talk on the importance of trust in science and technology.