Looking Within: Anti-Black Racism and the Gender-Based Violence Sector in Canada

The Learning Network invites you to the Virtual Forum, Looking Within: Anti-Black Racism and the Gender-Based Violence (GBV) Sector in  Canada. This Forum brings together the voices and insights of Black activists, advocates, academics, artists, and service providers from across Canada for a series of dialogues about complicity and accountability in the GBV sector on issues of anti-Black racism.   

Through a series of virtual panel discussions, participants will be invited to “look within” the systems, organizational practices, and ideologies they take part in.  Each session explores various dimensions of anti-Black racism, with discussions aimed at informing transformative, strengths-based, practical changes within the GBV sector.

  • Monday, Jan. 18, 1-3 p.m. ET
  • Tuesday, Jan. 19, 1-3 p.m. ET
  • Wednesday, Jan. 20, 1-3 p.m. ET

Registration and details available at http://www.vawlearningnetwork.ca/knowledge-exchanges/ke10/index.html

Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash

Research Western’s Knowledge Exchange School 2020

Photo by Diego PH on Unsplash

Academic and research partners are encouraged to attend Western Research’s Knowledge Exchange School, held virtually, with sessions on December 2, 9, and 16.

Attendees will learn about knowledge exchange, developing innovative and robust knowledge exchange plans for grants, writing a compelling background section, engaging policy-makers in research, measuring scholarly impact and sharing research using GIS and The Conversation.

Full session descriptions: https://www.uwo.ca/research/services/kex/KEx-School-2020-Overview.pdf

Registration (per session): https://www.uwo.ca/research/services/kex/knowledge_exchange_school.html

COVID 19 – It’s More Than A Virus When It Comes to Black Lives

In this addition to the Voices from the Margins of a Crisis series, Dobijoki Emanuela reflects on the intersection of COVID-19, white supremacy, and anti-black racism.

“I wasn’t so paranoid and anxious about the potential of never seeing my family members again. It wasn’t until the events that were perpetuated onto my community – the Black community – during this pandemic made me weary and afraid of the varied angles that our lives can simply be taken from us.”

Dobijoki Emanuela, COVID 19 – It’s More Than A Virus When It Comes to Black Lives

Debbie Laliberte Rudman delivers the 2020 Muriel Driver Lecture

In this video, Debbie Laliberte Rudman delivers the Muriel Driver Lecture 2020: Mobilizing occupation for social transformation: Radical resistance, disruption and reconfiguration. Debbie is a Professor and Associate Director at the School of Occupational Therapy at Western University. She is also a member of CRHESI’s governance committee.

Each year, the Canadian Association of Occupational Therapists honours a member of the association “who has made an outstanding contribution to the profession through research, education and the practice of occupational therapy by presenting the individual with the Muriel Driver Memorial Lectureship Award.”

Debbie also presented at the September 16, 2019 City Symposium on Work and Employment.

Western’s Power and Global Health Day 2020

Join Western faculty, staff and students for a day of virtual workshops, discussions, video presentations and more on Thursday, November 19, 2020. The keynote, The Secondary Psychological and Social Impact of COVID-19, will be delivered by Samuel Y.S. Wong (Director of the School of Public Health and Primary Care and Head of the Division of Family Medicine and Primary Healthcare at the Chinese University of Hong Kong).