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The IRIS speaker series presents… the York International Internship Panel

Where: York Lanes Room 305, York University

When: November 25th from 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m.

The York Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS) and the York International Internship Program (YIIP) are thrilled to announce a collaborative campus panel event which highlights international internship opportunities available for work in sustainability and the environment. YIIP offers a range of three-month placements to locations worldwide, working for a variety of initiatives. Our panel event will consist of five speakers, each of whom have participated in a unique internship. This event will provide a forum for speakers to share their experiences, and photographs as well as their insights on the program.

We welcome anyone interested in exploring the possibility of a York International Internship placement to attend this event, meet past interns and ask questions. It is expected to run for one hour, during which time light refreshments will be served. We hope to see you there!


IRIS is looking for volunteers

IRIS is looking for volunteers to join the team. There are a number of ways volunteers can become engaged.

Help us establish what the York community is concerned about through a campus-wide survey.

Bring together on-campus sustainability student groups to create collaboration for a more unified York sustainability movement.

Undertake outreach initiatives that will educate the York community on campus sustainability, such as improving behaviours and engagement in on-campus initiatives.

Engage online by participating and voicing your opinion on our Facebook discussions, and our upcoming Student Blog Space.

Volunteers will working alongside IRIS staff to plan and execute all initiatives. If interested please contact irisatyork@gmail.com

IRIS is looking for volunteers to join the team. There are a number of ways volunteers can become engaged.


Help us establish what the York community is concerned about through a campus-wide survey.

Bring together on-campus sustainability student groups to create collaboration a more unified York sustainability movement.

Undertake outreach initiatives that will educate the York community on campus
sustainability, such as improving behaviours and engagement in on-campus
initiatives.

Engage online by participating and voicing your opinion on our Facebook discussions, and our upcoming Student Blog Space.



Volunteers will working alongside IRIS staff to plan and execute all initiatives. If interested contact Alexis Esseltine at aesselti@yorku.ca


IRIS Blooms!

IRIS is pleased to announce the expansion of its team! In September, IRIS welcomed Graduate Assistants and Work/Study students, who have already begun to support the Centre's research projects and to promote campus sustainability.

The new arrivals come from a variety of backgrounds and support IRIS' goals to remain interdisciplinary and to research the social, economic and environmental facets of sustainability.

IRIS looks forward to a successful year and welcomes the York community to take part in its events and other campus sustainability activities.

For more information on the IRIS team, please visit: http://www.irisyorku.ca/our-people/junior-fellows/junior-fellows-2010-2011/


IRIS Welcomes Patricia Figueiredo!

Patricia Figueiredo is the Research Projects Coordinator for the Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS). She supports the IRIS Director in planning and coordinating sustainability-related research activities as well as promoting sustainability research on and off-campus.

Patricia manages the Centre’s research projects and is the Project Coordinator for an IDRC-funded research project titled “Strengthening the role of civil society in water sector governance towards climate change adaptation in African cities – Durban, Maputo, Nairobi.”

Patricia holds an Honours Bachelor of Arts from the University of Toronto, specializing in Professional Writing and Communication. Previously, Patricia worked as a freelance writer.


IRIS Joint Open House and Book Launch

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Where: York Lanes Room 305 for the book launch, and 349 for the open house

When: October 20, 2010. The book launch will be from 3-4:30 followed by the Open House from 4:30-6:30.

This is a space

BOOK LAUNCH ( 3:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m., York Lanes Room 305)

Climate Change -- Who's Carrying the Burden: The Chilly Climates of the Global Environmental Dilemma. A Co-Edited Collection by Anders Sandberg and Tor Sandberg.

The IRIS is pleased to announce the campus book launch which will draw on comments from the book’s contributors and provide an opportunity for the York public to speak directly with this insightful group of thinkers.

The book highlights how climate change can hide historical contexts in terms of how the carbon economy can lead to exploitation of natural resources, colonialism and capitalism. This book reveals some of the complexities behind carbon trading systems and urges us to imagine new ways of living. his is a space

OPEN HOUSE (4:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m., Common Area opposite York Lanes Room 349)

Directly following the Book Launch, IRIS will be hosting a joint Open-House with MITACS for anyone interested in learning more about what we do. Also participating in the event is Learning for a Sustainable Future (LSF) and Work in a Warming World (W3), both of which are housed by IRIS.

Drop by, say hello, learn about our upcoming events and enjoy some light refreshments on us!



Book Release: Climate Change- Who’s Carrying the Burden? The chilly climates of the global environmental dilemma

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Last month, the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives published Climate Change— Who’s Carrying the Burden? The chilly climates of the global environmental dilemma (Ottawa: Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, 2010), edited by Professor L. Anders Sandberg and Tor Sandberg. This timely publication draws attention to the disparity between climate change and social justice concerns. Its contributors confound, confuse and extend what constitutes the meaning of climate change. Moreover, they juxtapose and make connections between climate change and the chilly climates that exclude and marginalize groups and individuals who live and imagine different ways of interacting that are more respectful of social and environmental relationships.

As the introduction succinctly notes, the devastating impacts of climate change are clear. But there are disturbing revelations about how global elites are tackling the issue. Al Gore—on one hand — promotes carbon emissions trading and green technologies as a solution, and—on the other—profits handsomely from his timely investments in those same initiatives. Infamous climate change skeptic Bjørn Lomborg recommends free market solutions to fight global poverty and disease. And it’s these solutions that almost exclusively receive the attention of world leaders, so-called experts and media pundits.  This publication rallies the call of climate justice advocates and activists concerned with ‘system change not climate change’. This call demands control of local resources, the restitution of past wrongs, and the willingness to conceive and accept different modes of living and seeing.

The book is dedicated to those that suffer the most from climate change yet are the least responsible for it.  The authors focus on the distributional impact and visions of climate change and the connection of climate change to wider systemic forces. The contributors present a view of climate change that is critical of markets, new technologies, and international agreements as solutions to the climate change dilemma and also explore the origins of climate change and the places where its impacts are felt the most. The collection makes a significant contribution to understanding climate change itself as an oppressive force in not only hiding the historical connections of the carbon economy to colonialism, capitalism, and a rampant and exploitative resource extraction, but also the resiliencies, possibilities and alternatives articulated by groups who fight and stand outside the carbon economy. It argues that there are chilly climates that surround the discussions on climate change that erase, exclude and marginalize alternative views and possibilities.

To purchase a copy visit the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. See Climate Change— Who’s Carrying the Burden? The chilly climates of the global environmental dilemma

Contents

  • Introduction: Climate change — who’s carrying the burden? -- L . ANDERS SANDBERG and TOR SANDBERG

PART I:  CLIMATE CHANGE AND CLIMATE JUSTICE

  • The Health Impact of Global Climate Change -- STEPHEN LEWIS
  • From Climate Change to Climate Justice in Copenhagen -- L . ANDERS SANDBERG and TOR SANDBERG
  • Paying Our Climate Debt -- NAOMI KLEIN
  • Vandana Shiva Talks About Climate Change -- AN INTERVIEW BY TOR SANDBERG
  • The Path from Cochabamba -- SONJA KILLORAN- MCKIBBIN
  • COP15 in an Uneven World -- Contradiction and crisis at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change -- JACQUELINE MEDALYE
  • Climate Change, Compelled Migration, and Global Social Justice -- AARON SAAD

PART II: CHILLY CLIMATES

  • Framing Problems, Finding Solutions -- STEPHANIE RUTHERFORD and JOCELYN THORPE
  • Penguin Family Values: The nature of planetary environmental reproductive justice -- NOËL STURGEON
  • ‘Walking on Thin Ice’ The Ice Bear Project, the Inuit and climate change -- JELENA VESIC
  • Operation Climate Change: Between community resource control and carbon capitalism in the Niger Delta -- ISAAC OSUOKA
  • Broken Pieces, Shattered Lives: The lasting legacy of Hurricane Katrina -- TANYA GULLIVER
  • Unearthing Silence: Subjugated narratives for environmental engagement -- JAY PITTER

PART III: BEYOND CLIMATE CHANGE AND CHILLY CLIMATES

  • A Practical Environmental Education:Shrinking ecological footprints, expanding political ones - ELIZABETH MAY
  • “Keep the fire burning brightly” Aboriginal youth using hip hop to decolonize a chilly climate -- ALILAKHANI, VANESSA OLIVER, JESSICA YEE , RANDY JACKSON & SARAH FLICKER
  • Forty Years of System Change: Lessons from the free city of Christiania -- ANDERS LUND HANSEN
  • Marginal Medleys: How Transition Towns and Climate Camps are relocalizing the global climate crisis -- ADRINA BARDEKJIAN AMBROSII
  • Dig Where You Stand! Food research/education rooted in place, politics, passion, and praxis -- DEBORAH BARNDT

Yfile:York symposium focuses on education and climate change

The following appeared in the Thursday, July 15, 2010 edition of Y-File:
The shared experiences of those working in education and climate change is the central theme of a one-day symposium taking place today at York University. Organized by the Faculty of Education, the Institute for Research & Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS) and the United Nations Educational, Scientific & Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Chair for Reorienting Teacher Education Towards Sustainability, the Leadership for Sustainable Communities Symposium will focus on learning, leadership and climate change.

Leading experts from Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom will gather at York’s Keele campus for the symposium. They will convey their experiences and expertise in the area of climate change with students enrolled in summer courses that address issues of sustainability. The focus of the symposium will be a shared dialogue to examine the intersections between education, leadership and climate change.

York Faculty of Education Professor Charles Hopkins (right) will open the conference. As the UNESCO Chair for Reorienting Teacher Education Towards Sustainability , Hopkins has developed and continues to coordinate an international network of institutions from 38 countries working on the reorientation of teacher education towards the issues inherent in sustainable development. Hopkins is also an adviser to both UNESCO and the United Nations University regarding the United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable Development, which began in 2005 and continues until 2014. A major contributor at previous UN summits on sustainability in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1992 and in Johannesburg, South Africa in 2002, he authored Chapter 36 of Agenda 21 of the Rio Earth Summit Action Plan on Education, Public Awareness & Training. Previously, Hopkins was a superintendent with the Toronto Board of Education.

Following Hopkins' opening comments, David Greenwood (left), a professor in the Department of Teaching & Learning at Washington State University, will deliver the keynote address, titled “Nature, Empire, and Paradox in Environmental and Sustainability Education”. Greenwood conducts research on the relationship between environment, culture, and education; environmental, place-based and sustainability education; and alternative education. He has published widely in journals such as: Harvard Educational Review, Educational Researcher, American Educational Research Journal, Curriculum Inquiry, Educational Administration Quarterly, Environmental Education Research, Canadian Journal of Environmental Education and a host of other publications. Greenwood is working on his second book, which will examine place and education.

After Greenwood's address, a panel of scholars from IRIS, the Faculty of Environmental Studies and Osgoode Hall Law School will present their work as it relates to climate change.

Particpating in the panel are:

Dawn Bazely (left) is a professor of biology in York's Faculty of Science & Engineering, an ecologist and the director of IRIS. Bazely has conducted field research in many ecosystems, including arctic tundra, sub-arctic and temperate salt-marshes, deciduous forests, temperate managed grasslands and prairies, and her research findings on white-tailed deer and lesser snow geese have informed wildlife and conservation management in Canada. In 2003, she published a book on the ecology and control of invasive plants with Professor Judy Myers of the University of British Columbia. She is currently leading an interdisciplinary project based in Canada, Norway and Russia on human security in the Arctic, specifically the impact of oil and gas development on people and ecosystems.

Patricia (Ellie) Perkins (right) is a professor and program coordinator for the Faculty of Environmental Studies at York University. An economist who is concerned with the relationship between international trade, the environment and local economies, Perkins is interested in globalization and how local economies may grow as an antidote to international trade. She also looks at international means of controlling air pollution in the Arctic and at the metals and minerals resource industries. Perkins is the primary investigator of a Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) funded research project titled "Collaborative Research for Equitable Public Participation in Watershed Governance: Canada, Brazil, Mozambique, South Africa, Kenya". In 2008, she was awarded the York University Knowledge Mobilization Course Release for Community Engagement Award. Currently, she is editing a book on feminist ecological economics.

Professor Stepan Wood (left) is director of Osgoode Hall Law School’s Mooting Program as well as its LLB/MES Program. He is actively involved in the work of the Standards Council of Canada and the International Organization for Standardization in the field of environmental management standards. He has published on numerous topics related to environmental and international affairs, including the ISO 14000 environmental management standards, global environmental governance, sustainability, regulatory reform, corporate social responsibility, Canadian forest law, international relations theory and international fisheries regulation. His current research focuses on the role of voluntary standards for environmental management and corporate social responsibility in the governance of corporate conduct.

In the afternoon, York film Professor Brenda Longfellow, award-winning filmmaker, writer and theorist, will screen her 2008 feature-length documentary Weather Report to symposium participants.

As the world reels from a series of unprecedented weather events, it is clear that climate change is forcing a fundamental re-evaluation of our most basic assumptions about energy, progress and values. Produced with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the National Film Board of Canada, Weather Report looks at the dramatically evolving impacts and social implications of climate change. Travelling through North America, the Canadian Arctic, India and China, the film explores how the battle against climate change is implicated in the larger movement for sustainability and global justice.

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Winner of the Sundance Channel's Green Award and the Bronze Remi Award at the 2008 WorldFest-Houston Independent International Film Festival, Longfellow's film has earned high praise from climatologists, educators and others in the field.

Left: Brenda Longfellow

"Weather Report masterfully accomplishes something scientists have not been very good at – putting a real, human face on the consequences of global warming and the resulting climate change," said Cindy Parker, co-director of the Program on Global Sustainability & Health in the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Following the screening, there will be an informal round-table discussion on climate change and education with a focus on translating knowledge into action. The discussion will feature contributions from:

Professor Tony Shallcross is a visiting scholar from Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU). Shallcross is teaching ecology, ethics and education in the Graduate Program in Education Summer Institute at York University. He has more than 20 years of experience working in schools and is a former deputy head and head of department. Before taking up his post at MMU, he was a lecturer in environmental studies at the University of Edinburgh.

Steve Alsop is a professor in York's Faculty of Education where he coordinates the York/Seneca Institute for Mathematics, Science & Technology Education and the Graduate Diploma in Environmental/Sustainability Education. Alsop has taught in primary and secondary schools in inner-city London and coordinated the Centre for Learning & Research in Science Education at the Roehampton Institute at the University of Surrey. He has published widely in science and technology education and his recent books include Beyond Cartesian Dualism: Encountering Affect in Science Education (Kluwer Press) and Analysing Exemplary Science Teaching: Theoretical Lenses and a Spectrum of Possibilities for Practice (Open University Press) [co-edited with Larry Bencze and Erminia Pedretti]. He holds affiliated scholarly positions at the Universidad Autonoma de Baja California, Mexico; the Roehampton Institute; and the Centre for Science, Mathematics &Technology Education at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto. He is associated with a number of activist organizations including The Project for Altruistic Science and Technology Education.

Soni Craik is the acting executive director of EcoSource and has worked for the organization for over four years to extend its educational programming. Craik links her academic background with her interest in education for sustainability through child rights. She has worked for the International Institute for Child Rights & Development and the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade in South Africa as a facilitator of a participatory programs evaluation, specializing in working with elementary-aged children. Craik has also worked as an environmental education consultant for the Packard Foundation in Ethiopia and for the Child Welfare League of Canada in Cuba on a joint study of Havana’s social systems.

Rebecca Houwer is a doctoral candidate in the Faculty of Education at York University. Prior to returning to university, she worked for several years with community-based organizations committed to educating youth. Her academic interests include: ethics and critical place-based education in urban contexts; participatory action research as praxis; ethical community-university relations; ecology without nature; and, collaborative place-making and place-recovery with, and by, forced migrants. She is a research assistant for the $1-million Community-University Research Alliance (CURA) grant by SSHRC led by York social work Professor Uzo Anucha in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies.

The symposium will conclude with a wrap-up and pledge that will be delivered by Hopkins.

For more information, visit the Sustainable Communities Symposium Web site.


Work in a Warming World (W3)

Adapting Canadian Employment and Work to the Challenges of Climate Change
2010-2015

Funded by: Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada
Lead Investigator: Carla Lipsig-Mummé

Work in a Warming World (W3) is a CURA that addresses the challenge of climate change and response to climate change, for Canadian employment and work. Given the present and potential role of employment and work in the struggle to slow global warming, what changes can be undertaken in policy, training and work itself, so that the work world adapts effectively to Canada’s transition to a low-emission economy?

The purpose of this CURA is two-fold:

1. To better understand the present and potential role of employment and work organisation in Canada’s transition to a low-carbon economy

2. To develop and deploy practical strategies and tools for adapting employment and work to the warming world.

This is a new research area in Canada. Adapting work organisation and employment patterns can contribute powerfully to Canada’s efforts to slow global warming. But greening the work world requires public policy that is not employment-blind, widespread environmental literacy, retraining for continuing jobs as well as training for new jobs, and the active engagement of labour market organisations, environmental groups and their members. Our goal in this CURA is to produce new research that informs widely and brings to its partner organisations practical, creative tools to adapt their practice. This is the time to craft tools and strategies for that contribution.

Work in a Warming World (W3) is a collaborative research initiative, which bridges two traditional solitudes: between environmental, policy and labour market organisations; and between academic and practitioner research. It brings together 43 organisations and researchers in 10 universities and 3 countries.

For more information please refer to the attached flyer, or visit their website.


YFile: More bins, better labels can improve waste diversion at York

The following appeared in the Wednesday, March 31, 2010 edition of Y-File:

What should York do to reduce waste on campus? Lots of things, but students, staff and faculty surveyed last December say the University should focus on three diversion measures – placing more composters closer to dining areas, introducing electronic course kits and other paperless practices, and encouraging food vendors to use recyclable dishes and cutlery.

About 70 per cent of the 569 who completed the survey also admitted they are confused about what is recyclable at York.

“York does manage its own waste, so what is recyclable at York isn’t necessarily recyclable at home,” said Alexis Esseltine, the environmental studies graduate student who conducted the survey, at an Earth Hour Symposium at Keele campus last Wednesday. “This may be causing confusion.”

Right: Marlee Kohn (left) and Alexis Esseltine demonstrate proper garbage disposal

A recycling contest in Vari Hall last week underlined that fact. Participants were timed for how fast they could empty 40 items from a bag into the correct recycling and garbage bins. Many mistakenly placed aluminum foil in with bottles and cans, and didn’t know batteries could be recycled in drop-offs around campus, said Marlee Kohn, an environmental studies master's student who led the educational Waste Challenge.

The solution? Those surveyed suggested more bins and clearer labels on bins, so people can figure out quickly where to dispose of their waste. They also suggested York should  provide feedback on how well it is reducing and diverting waste, simplify its recycling system and post reminders on how to recycle.

Esseltine oversaw the survey for the Strategic Waste Elimination Education Project (SWEEP), an initiative of York’s Institute for Research & Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS). Every year, IRIS's graduate assistants do a campus survey on a sustainability theme. The first, in 2006, asked students what they knew about climate change and resulted in more environmentally friendly course kits, now a Yorkwise initiative (see YFile, April 2, 2008); the second, assessed the value of urban forest on Keele campus; and the third surveyed students about their food choices and needs.

The goal of the waste survey was to determine the York community’s attitudes, behaviours, and knowledge surrounding waste. The results will be shared with Campus Services & Business Operations (CSBO) and the President’s Sustainability Council.

Conducted over two weeks late last fall, the survey solicited responses online, through listservs and on Facebook, and for four days on laptops set up at tables in Vari Hall.

More than 60 per cent of the respondents were students, 20 per cent staff and 12 per cent faculty. Almost 90 per cent of all respondents live off campus.

A majority use reusable mugs (60 per cent) and reusable water bottles (70 per cent) and bring their own meals and snacks in reusable containers with cutlery (70 per cent). Most (80 per cent) turn off lights when leaving a room.

Just over half said they were aware of the black outdoor composters on campus. Of those who were, only 35 per cent used them. The other 64 per cent said they never or rarely used them because the composters were not conveniently located or were dirty, or because the respondents weren’t aware the composters were meant for community use. Some respondents said they take their garbage home. “No one thought that they weren’t important,” said Esseltine.

York currently diverts 59 per cent of its waste from landfill. On April 22, CSBO plans to launch Zero Waste, an awareness program to reduce waste and improve the recycling stream, to raise that diversion rate to 65 per cent by May 2013.

Visit the CSBO Web site for more information about York’s recycling program.

By Martha Tancock, YFile contributing writer


Earth Hour at York U!

Earth Hour at York U

Earth Hour at York U

Please join us as we celebrate Earth Hour 2010 at York U! IRIS and the Ecologically Conscious Organization (ECO) are launching the first annual Earth Hour Symposium on March 24th.

Event Schedule - March 24th

305 York Lanes

Noon-1:00 pm Environmental Discounting: James MacLellan, Adjunct Professor, Faculty of Environmental Studies
1:00-2:00 pm Post-COP15 Debrief: Ellie Perkins, Associate Professor, Faculty of Environmental Studies
& Jacqueline Medalye, PhD student, Department of Political Science, Faculty LA&PS

519 York Research Tower (same as new Archives building)

3:00-3:30 pm Climate Change & Sustainability at York U: YorkWISE: Energy Projects - presented by CSBO
3:30-4:00 pm IRIS Waste Survey Results: Alexis Esseltine, IRIS GA, and the Waste Team
4:00-5:30 pm Brainstorm on Campus Sustainability: Hazel Sutton, IRIS GA, and Coreen Jones, MES Student
ALL STUDENTS & FACULTY WELCOME!
5:30-6:30 pm Lantern Making: Melanie Skene, MES Student
6:30-8:00 pm De-Lighting Ceremony & Parade with Regenesis

Note - in order to be environmentally friendly, we ask that you bring your own travel mug and reusable containers.

Registration

No registration required, however, we'd love to know you are coming, and you can RSVP on our Earth Hour at York U Facebook event page.

Poster

Click here to download the Symposium Poster.


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