Public Presentations - 2015 Archives

Winter 2015 - Public Presentations Lineup (PDF)

  • January 9, 2015: Duncan Stewart - "Northwest Results of the 2013 Adolescent Health Survey"

    In the spring of 2013, over 29,000 students in Grades 7-12 across the province completed the fifth BC Adolescent Health Survey. This presentation will share the findings for the Northwest area, including the most recent data on health indicators and risk behaviours for youth in this region. The presentation will also include a discussion of protective factors identified to promote positive health among local young people.

  • January 14, 2015: Bob Patrick - "Getting from Good to Great: Place-Making for Sustainability in Terrace, BC."

    Place-making is the art and science of creating good urbanism. The formula for place-making is rather simple yet often difficult to achieve and requires attention to four essential ingredients: intensity, connectivity, diversity and density. Whether in Toronto or Terrace the formula is unchanging. Getting the right balance of these ingredients will depend on local context, natural features and built forum. This talk will describe the art and science of place-making as well as provide some insight into place-making for good urbanism and sustainability in Terrace, BC.

  • January 28, 2015: Rosalind Barabash - Decolonization, Reconciliation and the Responsibilities of the Setter"

    For too long the burden of the Indian Residential School System has rested with Indigenous Peoples, this lecture will address the need for tangible acts of reconciliation that aim to contribute to community-building, truth-telling and personal responsibility for change.

  • February 11, 2015: Kelsey Wiebe - "A History of the Lakelse Hot Springs"

    A History of Lakelse Hot Springs will look at the tiered development of the Lakelse Hot Springs, ranging from log-cabin bathhouses in the early 1900s to a seven-tower ski hill in the 1960s to the UFO H20 waterpark purchased from Expo 86. Throughout its tumultuous history, the Lakelse Hot Springs have been frequented by residents of the northwest in pursuit of leisure, health, and entertainment. The various ambitions, economic downturns, and natural disasters reflect and inform patterns of history in northwestern British Columbia.

    Kelsey Wiebe is the Curator of Heritage Park Museum, as well as an alumna of 蹤獲扞⑹. Through her work at Heritage Park Museum, she developed a Community Memories exhibit on the history of the Lakelse Hot Springs. The material in this talk was collected for that project, which is available online at .

  • February 25, 2015: David Bowering - Citizens or Consumers? Health vs. The Economy

    Dr. David Bowering is a former General Practitioner and retired Chief Medical Health Officer with Northern Health.  "The Economy" is frequently referred to in health-related terms:  a "healthy economy," an "ailing economy," "an economy on life support," etc. Dr. Bowering has become increasingly interested in the relationship between our current obsession with the health of the economy and its effect on human health and well being. He will be discussing this from a professional perspective, as a long time resident of Northwest BC, and as a grandfather considering the prospects for both current and future generations. Rather than offer a diagnosis and a prescription Dr. Bowering hopes to help stimulate critical thinking about the economy informed by our current understanding of what makes people healthy.

  • March 25, 2015: Norma Kerby - Monitoring for Amphibians in Northwest British Columbia
    Since 2011, volunteers with the NWBC Reptile and Amphibian Monitoring Program have been monitoring amphibians from Dease Lake to Ft.St.James, and along Highway 16 to Prince Rupert and Kitimat.  Over the last five years, interesting trends in amphibian distributions have been recorded in this successful citizen science program.  Surprising aspects of the ecology of northern amphibians have important ramifications in the management of amphibian habitats.
    • YouTube & Livestream unavailable for this presentation
  • April 22, 2015: Phil Burton - Development of a Food Security Program at the University of Northern British Columbia
    There is widespread interest in local food production and sustainable agriculture in northern B.C. The extent to which young people are interested in these issues as a career is uncertain, however. Considerations in the development of a Sustainable Food Systems undergraduate program, including options for regional delivery, will be discussed. Community input is invited.

Fall 2015 - Public Presentation Lineup (PDF)

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