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IRIS announces fifth annual survey

Since 2006, the Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS) has conducted annual campus sustainability-related surveys.  The first IRIS survey asked students, staff and faculty what they knew about climate change and the results of this survey led to carbon neutral, environmentally friendly course kits . York University was the first Canadian postsecondary institution to introduce this as a part of a larger carbon neutral program.

Past surveys have the value of the urban forests at Keele, students’ food choices and needs, and lastly the York community’s understanding of and values regarding waste on campus.

This year we are proud to launch IRIS’s fifth annual survey which will address volunteerism and engagement on campus. During Earth Hour at York U!, an event which was co-sponsored by IRIS in March 2010, members of the York community expressed an interest in exploring volunteerism and engagement on campus. From these discussions came the idea for this year’s survey.

The goal of this survey is to establish the York community’s core values, interests, and engagement with organized groups, so that on-campus initiatives can be better catered to the priorities of the York community.

York students, staff and faculty will have an opportunity to voice their opinions in early 2011. To participate, look for IRIS survey stations across both the Keele and Glendon campuses or check back at irisyorku.ca.

Interested in getting involved? Contact us to find out how you can complete the survey or help collect survey responses across York University.


The IRIS speaker series presents… Book Launch and Talk-Back with Bob Willard

Where: York Research Tower room 519, York University

When: November 23rd at 1 p.m.

IRIS in conjunction with Learning for a Sustainable Future (LSF) will host a book launch and talk back with author Bob Willard on his latest publication, The Sustainability Champion’s Guidebook. This will be a wonderful opportunity for students and faculty to engage with this leading expert, who has spoken to audiences far and wide on the business value of corporate sustainability strategies. There will be an opportunity to purchase Willard’s books as well as meet the author during a brief signing session.

Light refreshments will be served. This event is not to be missed!


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:Native garden on Keele campus shows benefits of eco-restoration

The following appeared in the Thursday, August 19, 2010 edition of Y-File:
Environmental studies Professor Gerda Wekerle holds a wicker basket brimming with dark purple elderberries she hopes to turn into elderberry wine.

More than a potential vintage, the elderberries are also the first fruits of a tiny eco-restoration project underway at York University. Started informally by the Faculty of Environmental Studies (FES) some four years ago, the project – a native garden – is situated in front of the Health, Nursing & Environmental Studies (HNES) Building on the Keele campus.

Right: Gerda Wekerle with her harvest of elderberries

Wekerle and avid gardener Tim Haagsma, who is also the manager of grounds, fleets & waste management at York, are working with FES graduate and undergraduate students to fill the garden with plants that are native to Canada.

The eco-restoration of the garden has meant hours of work, mosquito bites and a never-ending battle with turf grass and invasive weeds, but as a delighted Wekerle points out, the fruits of the group’s labours are worth the effort.

"I have never seen elderberry fruit and I wasn’t expecting to see it for a few years, as we planted 14 elderberry plants just over four years ago," says Wekerle. "This is the first year the plants have bloomed and borne fruit. It is exciting."

"Back when this building was home to Schulich [School of Business], this was a turf area with a few trees and shrubs," says Haagsma. "There wasn’t much here. Another interesting point about this garden is that it is a green roof." The plants are located above basement classrooms in HNES.
Left: River oats, also known as sea oats

The garden is important, says Haagsma, because there are fewer and fewer places left on campus – or in many parts of Canada – where species of plants native to the country can grow and flourish.

Eco-restoration is the process of returning an area as close to its original form as possible. In this case, that means planting wild species of lobelia, Canadian columbine, grasses and fruit-bearing plants such as elderberry. The garden was designed with the help of former campus planner Andrew Wilson and has received funding from TD Canada Trust and support from Dean Barbara Rahder and FES faculty, staff and students. It has evolved to include plants that are medicinal and native to the region, reflecting the values of the Faculty of Health, which also has offices in HNES.

What distinguishes the garden from other areas of the campus is the fact that it offers a combination of woodland and prairie plants that attract the eye through most of the year. "We have flowers that bloom in the spring while students are still on campus and those are mostly woodland species. And then it has flowers that bloom mostly towards the end of July through August and September when students are back on campus. The rest of the time we thought could be quiet and restful," says Wekerle.

The garden has two kinds of grasses – switch grass and river oats – that are native to Canada. Dancing in the wind are river oats with their delicate leaves. Splashes of colour have been added over the years as Haagsma, Wekerle and students acquire native plants for the garden. Two years ago, a severe drought caused significant damage to the garden. Last year’s wet summer offered a bonus for the gardeners as it helped establish the new plants by developing the root base needed to survive future drought conditions.

Helping Wekerle and Haagsma with the project are MES student Judith Arney, third-year student Jonathan De Serres and a small group of FES undergraduate and graduate students.

Left: Judith Arney

"We've planted a lot of plants; some of the plants have been moved from a demonstration garden that was situated in front of Atkinson. We would love donations of native plants, especially if they have been grown in someone's garden because they are more robust than plants that come from a nursery," says Wekerle, adding that potential donations should be cleared with her first.

Working on the garden has been tremendously satisfying, says De Serres. He has planted common witch hazel, cardinal plant and a pagoda dogwood. "Everything is coming up magnificently," he says. "Today, it has come so far. Over time, we have been adding plants and rescuing plants from other parts of the city and from the demonstration garden. It is becoming more and more colourful every week. There's a lot of work still to be done, but the garden is flourishing and very worthwhile. Some of the flowers we've added have really taken to the site."

Right: Jonathan De Serres with a cardinal plant that he donated to the garden

Arney, who is doing her master's thesis in eco-restoration, brings to York a wealth of knowledge from her work in the same area at the University of Victoria. A student in traditional plants, she has been at the site for most of the summer. "I started a blog for the garden," she says. "My field is ecological restoration and ethno-botany. What interests me about this garden are some of its traditional uses; there are many interesting medicinal uses as well.

"Restoration never ends. I was in a class and we had an opportunity to do any kind of presentation we wanted. I brought the students out to the garden and we planted flowers for the presentation. What surprised me was that a number of people in the class had never planted seeds before. It connected the space with the healing nature of gardening," says Arney. "We have to build the capacity to make ecological restoration a part of people's lives.

"Witch hazel has been used as a medicinal plant. Early settlers used the boughs as divining rods. There are many interesting links and layers to this garden that are still being explored," says Arney. "These layers give us a deeper appreciation of our own lives and how important each plant is to our shared history. We can see how much the native plants, including a number of different species such as prairie dock, are all out competing with the turf grass and invasive weeds."
Left: Cup plant, one of the many native plants thriving in the FES garden

Arney laughs as she allows that turf grass often creeps into her dreams. "Eventually, with stewardship, these native plants will out-compete and grow stronger than the invasive plants and this is very important," she says. "We have our own pollinators. There is a ground nest of Agapostemon bees. That's an important piece of the ecological puzzle."
The garden is also a demonstration site that instructors and students can use. Arney is placing permanent markers in front of the native plants and this part of the educational component of the garden will be completed in the next few weeks.
"They will see plants that they normally would not see in downtown Toronto," says Wekerle. "The plants in this garden are native to this area. Students also learn how to collect plants and propagate them. Students planted prairie smoke seeds last year and the plants have flourished. It is the kind of garden that is not flashy – you have to look closely to see the treasures."

In a few years, Wekerle hopes it will be a riot of colour. She welcomes cash donations to help support the garden. Interested individuals can contribute to the garden through the Faculty of Environmental Studies Office or contact Wekerle at gwekerle@yorku.ca.

To view Arney's blog on the garden, including her recent post about the discovery of the Agapostemon bees, visit hnesnativeplantgarden.wordpress.com.


Yfile:Community good food market opens this Thursday near Keele campus

The following appeared in the Monday, August 16, 2010 edition of Y-File:
A new Good Food Market serving the York University and Black Creek communities opens Thursday, Aug. 19 at the Shoreham Public School, 31 Shoreham Dr. in North York.

The market, which runs 4 to 7pm every Thursday, will offer plenty of fresh, affordable and healthy food for sale. There will also be local vendors, artists and activities for children.

"Food for sale at the market is purchased from farmers through FoodShare, a non-profit food security organization in Toronto," says Sue Levesque, executive director of the York University-TD Community Engagment Centre, one of the organizers of the market. "The food is from local sources whenever possible. FoodShare is providing logistical support and guidance until the project is completely locally sustainable."

Proceeds from fresh food sales are used to purchase the next week's food. It is a non-profit venture. Local vendors will also be on site and will keep their own proceeds.
The market is open to the entire community, including York University students, faculty and staff. "Come out to shop for groceries and learn about food," says Levesque. "It is also a wonderful way to meet members of the community."

The good food market was established to bring healthy, affordable and culturally appropriate food within walking distance of the University and Black Creek communities.

It is the result of a collaboration between York University students, faculty and staff alongside residents, community agencies and City of Toronto Councillor Anthony Peruzza's office, who are involved with the Black Creek Food Justice Action Network and the York University-TD Community Engagement Centre. The Black Creek Food Justice Action Network is a working group of individuals from York University, the Black Creek community and local community organizations. The network meets regularly throughout the year at the York University-TD Community Engagement Centre.

The market received start-up support from the York University Faculty Association's Community Projects Committee.

Even though markets are popping up around the city, many communities do not have easy access to fresh, healthy food. FoodShare works in partnership with community organizations to run Good Food Markets.

More about Good Food Markets

These markets are small, sometimes no more than a single stand. But they sell high-quality, affordable fruits and vegetables and create public space.The markets feature seasonal, local produce that FoodShare purchases from local farmers and from the Ontario Food Terminal Board. It’s delivered to local community organizations who run the markets.

To learn more, visit the FoodShare Web site.


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