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International Trade and the Export of Emissions

This week the Centre for International Climate and Environmental Research in Oslo released a new report on how international trade skews the emissions levels reported by developed countries. Unsurprisingly, China is the largest exporter of emissions and accounts for 75 percent of the developed world’s outsourced emissions. The report also finds that while some developed countries report lower emissions levels, their overall carbon footprints are increasing when emission exports are accounted for. Read the study at: http://www.cicero.uio.no/webnews/index_e.aspx?id=11540


Upcoming LEAF Events

Leslieville-Riverdale Tree Tour
Registration Recommended
Date: Thursday May 5, 2011, 6:30pm to 8:00pm
Location: meeting place will be emailed to registrants
Tour Leader: LEAF's Amanda Gomm, Manager of Volunteer and Community Engagement
Tour Partner: Leslieville-Riverdale Tree Project
Cost: $5 suggested donation at start of tour
Over the past four years, community members have been going door-to-door encouraging their neighbours to plant trees. Join us as we explore this neighbourhood and visit some of those residents who have participated in this amazing grass-roots project!

Tree Tenders Volunteer Training
Registration required
Course One
Dates: Starts May 10, 2011
Location: Bloor/Gladstone Library, 1101 Bloor St. West, Toronto
Host: LEAF
Cost: $50 / $70 with course material (+HST)
Course Two
Dates: Starts May 31, 2011
Location: Bickford Learning Center, 777 Bloor St. West, Toronto
Host: LEAF
Cost: $50 / $70 with course material (+HST)
This 15 hour training program is designed for individuals who want to gain tree-related knowledge and skills. If you’ve ever wanted to learn more about trees, and how to properly care for them then this course for you!
Each session provides basic arboriculture training which includes a combination of indoor and outdoor instruction. The final day of the course includes a group tree planting, putting the knowledge learned to practice.

Leslie Spit Tree Tour
Registration required
Part of Toronto and Region Conservation's Bird Festival in Tommy Thompson Park
Date: Saturday May 14, 2011, 12:30pm to 2:00pm
Location: meet at front entrance of Tommy Thompson Park, Toronto
Tour Leader: LEAF's Amanda Gomm, Manager of Volunteer and Community Engagement
Cost: Free but space is limited
Tommy Thompson Park is home to a variety of native trees and shrubs that provide important habitat for birds and other wildlife. Join LEAF's Manager of Volunteers and Community Engagement to learn about the different species and the roles they play in the local ecosystem.

Exploring Toronto's Urban Forest
Date: Monday May 16, 2011, 7:00pm to 8:30pm
Location: North York Central Library, 5120 Yonge St, Toronto
Speaker: LEAF's Amanda Gomm, Manager of Volunteer and Communitiy Engagement
Cost: Free, registration not required
Join us for an interactive talk on Toronto’s urban forest. Learn how this living forest provides important services for us all, the role native and non-native plants play in the ecosystem, basic tree identification and the top ten things you can do for your tree. Hear about LEAF’s role in protecting and improving the urban forest and opportunities for individuals to become involved.

Heritage Tree Tour© 2009 Torri GERVAIS / LEAF
Registration recommended
Date: Saturday May 28, 2011, 10:30am to 12:30pm
Location: Meet at southwest corner of Bloor St and Avenue Road in Toronto (in front of the Royal Ontario Museum)
Tour Leader: Philip van Wassenaer with guest Peter Simon
Cost: $5 suggested donation at start of tour
Join us as we admire some of Toronto's most impressive heritage trees. We'll visit some awe-inspiring specimens near the Royal Ontario Museum, Philosopher's Walk (on the main campus of the University of Toronto) and Queen's Park, and learn about the incredible biodiversity value they provide as they get older. Philip will share the latest, cutting edge techniques used in the art and science of "Conservation Arboriculture", an approach that prioritizes the preservation of old trees while minimizing risk in the urban environment. Special guest Peter Simon, City of Toronto, will showcase new innovative technologies Toronto has recently implemented that are designed to help newly planted trees reach maturity and become remarkable giants themselves.

Night of the Forest: LEAF's Annual Celebration and Fundraiser
Night of the Forest Purchase Advance Tickets - $35 each
Date: June 2, 2011, 7:00pm to midnight
Location: Steam Whistle Brewery
Cost: $35 advance, $40 at the door; group rates also available
The NIGHT OF THE FOREST welcomes you to reflect upon LEAF's contribution to the urban forest movement over the past decade and a half and to celebrate our accomplishments and future directions
Musical Guests: Gentleman Reg, Poplar Pines and Music at the Barns
Featuring: Amazing door prize ($500 VIA Rail voucher), amazing silent auction items, free hors d'oeuvres, cash bar, indoor urban forest with LIVING trees and shrubs and more...
Download Poster

The Secret Sex Lives of Trees© 2010 ReForest London
Purchase advance tickets
Date: Tuesday June 7, 2011, 7:00 to 8:30pm
Location: Royal Ontario Museum, Level 1B, Signy & Cléophée Eaton Theatre
Speaker: Tony Fleischmann
Cost: $12 per person, $10 for ROM members
From tempting potential pollinators with alluring colours and luscious nectar, to brandishing ripe fruits and berries before eager birds, trees will go to great lengths to multiply. Join us as Tony Fleischmann, long time arborist and tree enthusiast, reveals the "seedy" side of the urban forest. Not recommended for those who blush easily!


Glendon’s Wood Residence wins Res Race to Zero 2011

Above: From left, Glendon students Guillaume Garcin, Jacklyn Volkhammer and Kelly Liu accept the first-place plaque on behalf of Wood Residence for winning the annual Res Race to Zero competition to reduce energy consumption

In their first year of eligibility, students at Glendon’s Wood Residence have won the Res Race to Zero – York’s annual competition to promote energy savings in the University’s nine student residences.

The winning team, led by Kelly Lui, residence environmental ambassador for Wood, received congratulations and a plaque from Rob Tiffin, York vice-president students. “I was quite amazed at the differences between this year’s and last year’s residence figures,” said Tiffin. “This is a very positive competition and I think this just reinforces the whole sense of sustainability and how that really has developed a strong base here at York.” The winning team also received a cheque for $2,000 to put towards future sustainability efforts.

Right: From left, Ken McRoberts, principal of Glendon, and Rob Tiffin, York's vice-president students, applaud the winners

Ken McRoberts, Glendon's principal, also offered his congratulations to Lui and fellow team members Guillaume Garcin and Jaclyn Volkhammer at the presentation ceremony, held in Glendon Manor on Friday.

Liu said her team took a “passive programming” approach to encouraging their fellow residents to save electricity. “We made doorknob signs for everyone. We wrote on the white board on each person’s room door with a message and [we] made a lot of posters trying to build up the competition between Hilliard [Residence] and Wood.”

Pavel Graymason, coordinator of residence life and project lead on the Res Race to Zero, said the Wood team might even have had a disadvantage in the competition but overcame it with enthusiasm. “They were just keener,” he said. “If anything, they are some of the older buildings and they still did really, really well.”

Graymason was also impressed with the job that all the residence teams did in helping achieve another reduction in energy use over last year’s results. “We still had an across the board drop even though this is the third year – an aggregate drop; very significant from four years ago when the program started. Compared to then, our usage is much much lower. About 30 to 40 per cent lower on average,” he said.

Since the competition measures energy reduction from year to year, Glendon’s two residence teams had to wait a year to establish their benchmark once the proper metering tools were installed.

Liu said students in her residence, even if they were reluctant first-year neophytes, were able to get excited about the competition as a way to make a difference. The Res Race to Zero website allows them to track their energy usage per capita, allowing them to see what one person can do to make a difference.

One other point that Liu noted was her team’s focus on what she called “phantom usage” – the energy used by leaving charge cords plugged in, even when the cellphone or laptop they recharge isn’t attached.

Graymason said it is champions of energy-saving habits like Liu that make the program work. “It’s that positive peer-to-peer connection that really makes the difference,” he said. “Without them it wouldn’t make a difference. You could put up all the posters you want, but without a champion to say ‘this matters’, it wouldn’t work.”


Close to 200 volunteers participate in York clean-up, includig IRIS interns

The following is from the Tuesday, April 19th edition of Yfile. We've added pictures of the IRIS Graphic Design Interns.

York’s Keele and Glendon campuses are cleaner and fresher today thanks to the efforts of volunteers who participated in the City of Toronto’s 20-Minute Makeover on Friday in celebration of the upcoming Earth Day.

IRIS Graphic Design Interns Daniel & Anita by the Pond

Some 188 volunteers scoured the Assiniboine and Passy Gardens Sportsfield, the Arboretum, the Boyer Woodlot, the Danby Woods and the Boynton Woods on the Keele campus, as well as all around Glendon campus.

“This was a fantastic turn-out, more than double from last year,” says Nicole Arsenault, manager of Transportation & Student Services. “Sports & Recreation had a large turn-out. They had about 50 people and it was great to see their team spirit as many of them even had their York attire on.”

Above: A slide show of some of the 188 volunteers who came out last Friday to clean up Keele and Glendon campuses

What volunteers found sometimes surprised them. One found a disintegrating 1,000-dollar bill amid the garbage. Another found an intact 20-dollar bill. Someone else came across a road sign in their clean-up travels.

Niko, the 3rd Intern, all of which are from the York University/Sheridan College Joint Program in Design

As an added incentive this year, Food Services sponsored the event, giving out $2 YU cards good at several of the on-campus retailers to many of this year’s participants.

The event was organized by Campus Services & Business Operations.

For more information, visit the City of Toronto's 20-Minute Makeover website. For further earth-friendly initiatives, visit the Yorkwise website.

 


FES prof and PhD student to lead Jane’s Walk on campus

The following is from the Tuesday, April 19th edition of YFile.

What's the inside story about York University’s woodlots, ponds, gardens and buildings? To find out more, take a walk with Professor Anders Sandberg and PhD student Michael Classens from the Faculty of Environmental Studies (FES) as they lead one of the upcoming Jane’s Walks.

The walk will take place Saturday, May 7, at 1pm, starting at the water fountain in the Harry W. Arthurs Common, opposite Vari Hall, on the Keele campus. The free event will take one-and-a-half hours, and is accessible to those with physical challenges. Click here for a map of where to meet.

Right: Ross Building

The walk will give an insider's tour of York, opening up dialogue and engaged discussion amongst interested participants, says Sandberg. The guides will introduce Jane walkers to a vigorous debate about the official and unofficial stories of natural and built forms on York’s Keele campus. They will also be invited to take part in debates over policy options and development visions of the campus landscape.

Jane’s Walk celebrates the ideas and legacy of urbanist Jane Jacobs by getting people out exploring their neighbourhoods and meeting their neighbours. It is also a way to create a space for residents to talk about what matters to them in the places they live and work. Last year, 424 walks were held in 68 cities in nine countries. This is the fifth anniversary of Jane’s Walk, which is billed as a hybrid walking tour and urban exploration neighbourhood festival.

The five stops on the tour at York will consist of two buildings (Vari Hall and Ross Building), Stong Pond, the Health Nursing & Environmental Studies Native Garden and the Michael Boyer Woodlot. Walkers will have the chance to discuss a range of topics, including public access, free speech and security, storm water treatment, native and invasive species, pesticides and health concerns, environmental impacts and popular versus expert knowledge in the context of the various stops.

Left: Anders Sandberg

The histories of the sites provide a basis from which to enter broader debates in reference to environmental sustainability, social justice and civic engagement, says Sandberg.

Sandberg says the walk will raise questions about the University, not only as a place where people study, but also a place that can be studied. The tour will invoke different images of the campus and provide walkers with deeper insights about culture and nature that they can take into their everyday lives.

For more information, visit the Jane’s Walk website or click here for more information about the Jane’s Walk led by Sandberg and Classens. Jane’s Walks will be happening across the province May 7 and 8.


Green Party platform analysis – Edited Transcript of Interview with Global News

This blog was originally published on Professor Mark Winfield's blog.

Mark Winfield’s take

Q: Who are the Greens targeting in their platform and why?

They are playing to their core constituencies, although there are things here as well that are broader.

The Greens’ base is relatively young, in terms of their demographic relative to the other parties. They share the same basic, post-materialist positioning as the Liberals, the Bloc and the NDP supporters
Conservatives supporters are what political scientists tend to refer to as materialists – a very bread and butter, crime, law and order — exactly the sort of stuff the Conservatives are pitching on.

Green voters are more post-materialist and the environment is part of that – so is a higher concern for social issues. You see some of that reflected here as well. It is a relatively broad platform that is more than just environment, although environmental issues are very central to it. It is very clearly positioning the party in the post-materialist, centre-progressive part of the Canadian political universe.

Q: The Green party is best known for its focus on the environment. Does the platform do enough to address other policy areas?

For about 50 per cent of Green voters the environment is the vote-determining issue. They do have to have a strong component there, but I think it is noteworthy that they are presenting a fairly comprehensive platform. Environment is quite central to it, but it is not just an environmental platform. I think that was notable in the previous election as well. It is a fairly comprehensive platform that covers off all of the major points in terms of foreign policy, governance, social issues. All of the major components are there. It’s not that different from what you are seeing from the other parties in that sense. Clearly there is an emphasis on the environment and an emphasis on the relationship between environment and economic development, but that’s not terribly surprising.

Q: What’s in there for the environment? Are these policies sound?

What they are proposing on the environment front reflects pretty mainstream thinking about where we need go in terms of environmental policy. They are making some very strong connections between economic strategy, environmental protection, greening the economy, and not seeing environmental protection and economic development as being at odds with each other.

If you look at the Conservatives and some of their statements and they have really kind of gone with the language of balance and competition between economic development and environmental protection. They see it as being a zero-sum game, where one can’t win without the other losing. The Greens, consistent with present thinking about these things, are envisioning some degree of integration between environmental policy and economic policy.

That makes sense and a number of observers have argued that one way or another in the long-term there will be movement on the climate change issue on the global level and that we want to be positioning ourselves to supply the goods and services that support that kind of economy.

They talk about a carbon pricing architecture and 33 billion dollars of revenue coming from that. Clearly that is pretty central. They’ve actually got both a cap-and-trade and a carbon tax. Exactly how the two would interact is not clear.

Clearly they are moving in the direction of carbon pricing, but that again is entirely consistent with what anybody who studies climate change policy will tell you. Indeed, even the National Roundtable on Environment and Economy, which is now dominated by Conservative appointees, said exactly the same thing a few months ago. So this is pretty mainstream stuff. A lot of this wouldn’t look terribly out of place in a Liberal or NDP platform.

Q:Did anything from the Green platform surprise you?

Not really, given that they have kind of signalled some of this stuff before. It’s largely consistent with fairly mainstream thinking in environmental policy in Canada these days. It’s not a terribly radical platform from that perspective.

There’s obviously a pitch around moving towards some form of proportional representation, but given the nature of how the Greens performed in the last election, that’s hardly surprising. They got nearly a million votes and elected zero MPs, whereas the Bloc Quebecois got not that many more votes and elected 55 MPs. It’s not a radical notion that the current electoral system is rewarding parties that have a strong geographic concentration of their vote and penalizing parties that have a relatively even geographic distribution of their votes, which is very much the case with the Green party. It’s geographic distribution is remarkably even and the electoral system doesn’t reward that, which is a problem from a national unity perspective as well because it produce parties that play to a particular region – the Bloc Quebecois being the poster-child of this – instead of to the country.

Q: What do you think about the cost of this platform and how the Green is proposing to pay for it?

Clearly there’s not a lot of detail other than the budget detail page. The centerpiece is to adopt some kind of carbon pricing and to have offsetting reductions is EI and CPP contributions – what they are calling a carbon tax holiday. In effect there is a tax shifting onto carbon, which in theory is activities we want to discourage, and we want to reduce taxes on employment, which is effectively what the EI and CPP contributions are. In theory that again is consistent with what most people who have looked at these things have suggested in terms of the political strategy you would need to pursue to introduce carbon pricing.

The scale of it in terms of moving to relatively quickly to a $33-billion carbon tax within the next fiscal year is ambitious to put it mildly. This would be a fairly massive shift in the federal government’s revenue base, so from that perspective, it is interesting. It is daring. How much acceptance of that shift would actually be, I don’t know, but it is a very clear signal in terms of moving in a direction. In principle it is very consistent with what the basic policy discussions around this have suggested need to happen.

Q: Will this platform help or hurt the Green party?

It’s an interesting question. It’s helpful in the sense that it puts more substantial policy content into the conversation, which has been missing so far from the campaign. And it adds an environmental policy dimension.

It’s an interesting question as to whether it helps them or not. Their support has shrunk back a bit relative to where it has been in pre-election polling. It’s not clear where they are bleeding that support given that no other parties have, at this stage, presented a particularly bold or interesting environmental platform. It will certainly appeal to their base of environmentally-concerned voters and the younger cohort of voters within that. Whether it helps them pull voters back from the Liberals, the Bloc and the NDP, it’s hard to say.

There is the question of strategic voting tied up in all of this as well. If those four parties are all competing for the same chunk of the vote and that constitutes somewhere in the range of 65 per cent of the electorate, I suspect a lot of people are thinking about strategic voting.

Q: Why launch the party platform as one big document and what do you think of the timing?

The timing is as good as any. The Liberals already have a platform out on the environment and the Greens have to get something out there too, particularly given that in the last couple of elections the biggest source of Green voters has been ex-Liberals. They need to draw them into the Green party and that means they have to come up with something that is more ambitious and more interesting than what the Liberals are offering, which is pretty vague at this stage of the game.

Q: It’s clear that May’s strategy has been to work her riding so far during this campaign. She’s released the platform in Toronto, should she be out selling it on the campaign trail?

That’s a complex question that goes to whether the Green’s interest is winning a seat in parliament for their leader or in maximizing the Green vote overall. There are interests both ways. Clearly the issue of the debate has reinforced that they need parliamentary representation of some sort. On the other hand, their numbers are going down quite dramatically from where they were in pre-election polling and where they are relative to their electoral performance last time. That suggests that if they want to maximize the vote, she has to get out of her own riding and generate some interest and activity.
It’s a bit of dilemma. You can see the argument both ways. Maximizing their overall vote in some ways increases the leverage and influence of environmental concerns in the other parties’ platforms because it demonstrates that a chunk of voters out there are prepared to vote on the issue of the environment. Maximizing the vote also increases their financial return because we finance parties now on a per-vote basis.

Q: Does the debate hurt Elizabeth May’s ability to sell her platform?

There’s no question that it does.

Q: What do you think is a more important factor for people in deciding who they vote for – party platform or the personality of the leader?

Both is the short answer. The platform is in theory what you are actually giving the government a mandate to do. A platform is an expression of what the leader and the party stand for and it’s what they would be held to. The platform articulates the choice for voters; in that sense it needs to be quite central. Part of what you are judging about the leader is their ability to follow through on the platform.


Invitation to COP 17 in Durban, South Africa

York University's Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS: http://www.irisyorku.ca/) would like to invite proposals for presentations from researchers in the Canadian North and South (especially students/youth) to be part of our application to host a COP 17 Side Event. The main objectives of the workshop/side event would be to provide researchers from the Canadian North/South a chance to share their experiences and understanding of climate change whether in their daily lives or through their research. The focus is on climate change and health research; however, the goal is to 'share experiences' broadly related to the impacts people are facing everyday.

Why York University?

York University currently has observer status for COP 17 (Durban, South Africa - Nov 2011) and would like to send a delegation of students from York and from across the Arctic. IRIS representatives have attended both COP15 (Copenhagen, Denmark) and COP16 (Cancun, Mexico). Delegates' previous experiences and involvement have included: presentations at Klimaforum, COP Side Events and other academic seminars; published media and journal articles; and, the formation of international research partnerships.

What About the Cost?

A proposal is being prepared to send to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) to request money to host a workshop as a side event at the COP 17 meeting. The main theme of the proposed workshop will be: "'Our Actions Have Consequences': Student Perspectives on Climate Change and Health from the North."

Highlights...

As part of the proposals to SSHRC and for a COP Side Event, IRIS has been granted permission to include a screening of the film "Qapirangajuq: Inuit Knowledge and Climate Change," co-directed by acclaimed Inuk filmmaker Zacharias Kunuk and Dr. Ian Mauro.

For more information about the film please see this link: http://www.isuma.tv/hi/en/inuit-knowledge-and-climate-change

The Process

The timeline for securing funding and then to submit a full Side Event application will be:

  1. April 25: Deadline to send title/abstract (150 words) to Rachel Hirsch (rhirsch@yorku.ca) indicating interest in presenting at the proposed workshop/side event
  2. May 2: Final deadline for application to SSHRC for workshop funding
  3. August 16-19: Application window for COP 17 Side Events

Contact:
Rachel Hirsch, PhD
Postdoctoral Fellow
Faculty of Environmental Studies
HNES 276, York University
4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M3J 1P3
Mobile: 647-385-1811
Office: 416 736 2100 ex. 20147
Fax: 416-736-5679
Email: rhirsch@yorku.ca

Executive Board Member of IRIS, York University


A Final Thought: My Hope for York University

As my final days at York approach, I find myself thinking about the campus and the projects that I am proud to have seen flourish as well as those that have stagnated while I have been here. I hope projects like these continue, so that that upon a return visit in the next decade it does not look like a previous front page of the YU Free Press.

I used to have a difficult time justifying engaging in on-campus groups because I felt it would not have an impact on the issues I had with our society. What I have come to understand throughout my undergraduate degree is that universities all over the country are microcosms. The university is a space of change, where changes here can and do have an effect on our communities. To me, this means that our university should be a place where we can be proud of a few cornerstones.

The first is a free press. It is important for the university to have an active journalist community that can publish articles that support or denounce mainstream values and institutions. We currently have this at York; the YU Free Press publishes and supports critiques and alternative viewpoints that may have otherwise been excluded. These projects are becoming increasingly important as this becomes a frightening reality with Harper proposing a government controlled media center.

The second is a campus environment that supports student run businesses. Just as it is important to support local, family run businesses in our communities, it is important to have businesses that students can have control over on their campuses. I have participated in two IRIS surveys; one on Sustainable Foods and the other on Volunteerism and Engagement. One of the themes that was exceptionally clear in both surveys was that students are unhappy with the types of foods offered on campus. They have also noted that they could increase their engagement if incentives were offered, like learning a skill for the workplace or monetary compensation. I am excited to report that there are projects that account for all of these factors currently underway. For anyone who is interested in beginning a student run business and potentially work on a business model that would offer alternative, healthy food options on campus, there just happens to be a group meeting next Monday, April 18th. You can visit this event posting, or e-mail the group (yorkustudentbusiness@gmail.com) for more information on this initiative.

Lastly, I would love to know a York campus that is safe and takes a strong stance against those who attack members of our community, instead of participating in a system of re-victimization. Gendered violence is rampant at York, and I am tired of hearing York officials and those invited to speak on our campus blame the individuals hurt rather than the attacker. Apparently, others feel the same way and demonstrated their frustration at Slut Walk Toronto a couple of weeks ago. In my opinion, one of the greatest goals this university could strive to achieve is making its students feel safe and supported. This may be idealistic, but perhaps if we could achieve this here it could act as a step to bringing down a culture that breeds a need for power and that generates fear.

My York experience would not be the same if I had not become involved in groups, struggles, and campaigns on campus. If students do not get involved, I am sad to say that our campus could one day look like the one presented by the YU Free Press. Upon return, I hope to see innovative campaigns and projects that I could have not envisioned for our campus, reflecting York’s motto: Alia Tentanda Via Est - the way must be tried.


GreenXChange Project – Pizza Lunch

Interested in climate change adaptation and local greening in the York U. neighbourhood?    Looking for a field experience, course project, or volunteer opportunity?  Have skills to practice or share related to environmental education, community organizing, green entrepreneurship, or grassroots participatory planning?   Want to join a dynamic, award-winning local organization?   (See  www.greenxchange.ca/general/green-change-project-notes and    http://yorkwestadvocate.wordpress.com/2010/05/13/jane-finchs-green-change-project-wins-toronto-green-award/).

THE GREENXCHANGE PROJECT WANTS YOU!

Come to a Pizza Lunch on Tuesday, April 19, 12:30 - 2 p.m. in HNES 140 to learn more about the GreenXChange Project and how you can contribute to Phase II of the Green Change Agents training program -- creating jobs in Jane/Finch while addressing climate change.

ALL ARE WELCOME.


The Coady Institute Offers International Youth Internship Opportunities

Apply Now for the 2011 cohort!

The Coady International Institute is currently recruiting dynamic community-minded Canadians between 19 and 30 years of age to participate in its Youth In Partnership international internship program. The program aims to provide recent Canadian university/college graduates experience working with the Coady's partners in development practice.  The program will begin in August
with a three week orientation at the Coady Institute; a six-month in-country work placement; and a two week re-entry and debrief program in Canada.

Coady Youth In Partnership associates are:
*   university/college graduate by the time the program begins in August
*   currently unemployed or under-employed
*   between 19 and 30 years of age
*   Canadian citizens or permanent residents eligible to work in Canada
*   first time participants in the Government of Canada's Youth Employment Strategy (YES)

For more information please visit http://www.coady.stfx.ca/youth/.

Application deadline is April 25, 2011.


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