Webinar “Indigenous Data: A few perspectives”

IASSIST Professional Development Webinar

Indigenous Data: A few perspectives

Thursday, May 16, 2024
12-1:30pm EDT/5-6:30pm BST

Register here: https://bit.ly/3QqtEi3

This webinar includes two presentations reflecting on issues Indigenous communities are currently facing, the first one presented by Dr. Diana Lewis and the second one presented by Dr Stacy Allison-Cassin and Camille Callison. Indigenous communities experience detrimental health impacts living near industrial development. Dr. Lewis develops Indigenous-led approaches to environmental health risk assessment, governance and data management. Currently Dr. Lewis is working on examining the health impacts of living near oil and gas extraction (Chipewyan, Cree and Métis) and a landfill site (Haudenosaunee), working with Athabasca Chipewyan and Mikisew Cree First Nations, Fort Chipewyan Métis Nation, and Oneida Nation of the Thames to co-develop environmental health frameworks to show how community-led, locally relevant and culturally safe governance frameworks and cultural protocols ensure the highest ethical standards are followed and promote community health decisions that respect Indigenous values and traditions and the OCAP principles for data management. The Respectful Terminology Platform Project (RTPP), an Indigenous-led initiative under the NIKLA-ANCLA umbrella, is led by RTPP Co-Principal Investigators Camille Callison (Tāłtān Nation, University of the Fraser Valley) and Dr. Stacy Allison-Cassin (Métis Nation of Ontario, Dalhousie University). The project is dedicated to advancing the development of a dynamic, multilingual platform for Indigenous terminology that can be used in libraries, archives, museums, and data systems worldwide.

Speakers:
Diana Lewis is an Assistant Professor and Canada Research Chair (Tier II) in Indigenous Environmental Health Governance in the Department of Geography, Environment, and Geomatics at the University of Guelph. She is Mi’kmaw, and a member of the Sipekne’katik First Nation in Mi’kma’ki (the Atlantic Provinces of Canada). Dr. Lewis will work with researchers and students to develop and disseminate leading edge and adaptive Indigenous models of health risk assessment that reflect the needs, interests, and worldviews of Indigenous peoples. In a relational worldview, human health is intricately tied to the health of the land, water, animals, and plants of a shared environment. Her approach provides a transformative opportunity to advance research within Indigenous epistemologies. Diana is committed to the recruitment, development, and promotion of both Indigenous and non-Indigenous trainees in an environment that fosters collaborative engagement with communities, that respects Indigenous autonomy over decisions that affect their lives, and the right for communities to have control over the data that belongs to them.
Stacy Allison-Cassin is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Information Science at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada, Stacy engages in research related to linked data, and metadata and issues related to equity and justice. Stacy is the co-lead of the Respectful Terminology Platform Project and is currently the chair for the Teaching and Learning community and a member of council of the National Indigenous Knowledge and Language Association, and Indigenous-led association centered in Canada and sits several advisory bodies. A Citizen of the Métis Nation of Ontario, Stacy has with kinship connections to the Georgian Bay Métis community.
Camille Callison, Tāłtān Nation member, is the University Librarian at the University of the Fraser Valley (UFV) and a passionate cultural activist pursuing a PhD in Anthropology at the University of Manitoba. She is committed to creating meaningful change related to equity, diversity, and inclusivity in the library, archival, and cultural memory professions. She is the founding Chair of the National Indigenous Knowledge and Language Alliance (NIKLA-ANCLA) and co-Lead of the Respectful Terminology Platform Project (RTPP). Camille is a member of the International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA) Indigenous Matters Section, North American Regional Division, & the Advisory Committee on Cultural Heritage, and IEEE P2890™ Recommended Practice for Provenance of Indigenous Peoples’ Data. She serves on the Board of Directors for the Canadian Research Knowledge Network (CRKN) Board of Directors, the BC ELN Steering Committee, the Arca Advisory Committee, the Council of Pacific & Prairie University Libraries (COPPUL), and the Council of Post-Secondary Library Directors of BC (CPSLD) as Secretary/President-Elect.

Western Libraries May 2024 Research Skills Workshops

Western Libraries offers Research Skills Workshops. From data collection to publishing, get expert help at all stages of the research cycle with free workshops.

May 8 – Organizing Research with Reference Management Tools (online)

May 16 – Finding Statistical Data Resources (online)

May 21 – Basic Data Handling in Excel (online)

May 23 – Introduction to Qualitative Analysis with NVivo (online)

May 28 – Literature Searching: Finding & Evaluating Scholarly Sources (online)

May 29 – Literature Searching: Finding & Evaluating Scholarly Sources (in-person)

To find more upcoming Western Library events and workshops visit the Western Libraries Events page.  If you have questions about workshops, please email rsclib@uwo.ca.

Centre for International Governance Innovation – Digital Policy Hub

The Digital Policy Hub at the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) is a collaborative space for emerging scholars and innovative thinkers from the social, natural and applied sciences. It provides opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students and post-doctoral and visiting fellows to share and develop research on the rapid evolution and governance of transformative technologies.

The program hosts fellows for time periods ranging from four to 12 months in residence at the state-of-the-art CIGI Campus and working remotely, linking to CIGI’s existing network of more than 100 fellows from around the world. Participants join common seminars and other innovative activities that cut across research, analysis and policy, while advancing their career development.

Core research areas include:

  • data, economy and society;
  • artificial intelligence;
  • outer space;
  • digitalization, security and democracy; and
  • the environment and natural resources.

Applications for the Digital Policy Hub 2024–2025 academic year cohort are now open.

Deadline: March 1, 2024.

More information: Register for an information session or visit the Digital Policy Hub website.

Western Libraries – Upcoming Research Skills Workshops

You are invited to join Western Libraries for the upcoming Research Skills Workshops. From data collection to publishing, get expert help at all stages of the research cycle with free workshops.

Feb. 14 – Navigating Collections of Art Images
Feb. 14 – Getting Starting Analyzing Data in SPSS
Feb. 21 – Exploring and Citing Music Sources
Feb. 21 – Sharing and Archiving Data with Borealis
Feb. 29 – Creating and Publishing E-books with Pressbooks (in-person)
Mar. 6 – Creating and Publishing E-books with Pressbooks

All workshops listed above are online via Zoom unless otherwise indicated

To find more upcoming Western Library events and workshops visit the Western Libraries Events page.  If you have questions about workshops, please email rsclib@uwo.ca.

Parliamentary Internship Programme

University and college graduates from all disciplines, who are Canadian citizens or permanent residents and available to work full-time in Ottawa from September 2024 to June 2025, are invited to apply to the non-partisan, paid work-study Parliamentary Internship Programme

Deadline: January 31, 2024

Interns do placements with both a government and opposition member of Parliament, attend weekly academic seminars, produce an original research paper, and tour to other legislatures in Canada and abroad.

More information and how to apply…

Research Skills Workshops at Western Libraries – January-February 2024

You are invited to the upcoming Research Skills Workshops, hosted by Western Libraries. From data collection to publishing, get expert help at all stages of the research cycle with free workshops.

Jan. 31 – Finding Statistical Data Resources
Jan. 31 – Diversifying Citations (and Perspectives)
Feb. 1 – Basic Data Handling in Excel
Feb. 7 – Locating and Analyzing News Sources
Feb. 8 – Introduction to Qualitative Analysis with Nvivo
Feb. 8 – Data Sources at Western Libraries
Feb 14 – Getting started Analyzing Data in SPSS
Feb 21 – Sharing and Archiving Data with Borealis

All workshops will be held online via Zoom

To find more upcoming Western Library events and workshops visit the Western Libraries Events page.  If you have questions about workshops, please email rsclib@uwo.ca.

2024 Canadian Japanese Mennonite Scholarship – Human Rights

The Mennonite Central Committee Canada, in partnership with the National Association of Japanese Canadians, offers the Canadian Japanese Mennonite scholarship to a student enrolled in a graduate degree program that is engaged in research concerning human rights in Canada. The scholarship funds research on the protection of minority and human rights in Canada in order to reduce the potential for abuse of cultural minorities.

Amount: $3,000

Deadline: April 1, 2024

More information and application form at this website.

Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Days 2023 – November 13-16

GIS Days offer you the chance to learn more about geography, mapping and real-world applications of GIS that impact our communities and can be used for research. Drop in and out depending on what presentations pique your interest and listen to presenters from around the world.

The virtual event runs from Monday, Nov. 13 to Thursday, Nov. 16 and is free to attend. It will include presentations, tutorials, demos, and virtual social events. All presentation times are in Eastern Standard Time (EST).

Presentations will be offered by a variety of speakers ranging from geospatial professionals to GIS newbies. Short lightning talks (7-min) offer you a quick taste of a topic, while longer demonstrations (20-min) provide a deeper dive into a GIS project.

Register to attend.

See the full schedule

Western’s GIS Days Open House (in-person), Wednesday, November 15, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm

Workshop: Unlocking the Power of ORCID iD

Unlocking the Power of ORCID iD: Empowering Researchers and Enhancing Scholarly Impact

by

Joanne Paterson
Research and Scholarly Communication Librarian
Western Libraries

Thursday, November 16, 2023
via Zoom*

ORCID provides a persistent digital identifier (an ORCID iD) that you own and control, and that distinguishes you from every other researcher.
In this presentation, researchers will learn the important role of ORCID iD in modern academia. We’ll explore how ORCID iD simplifies research identity management and once set up, streamlines adding professional information — affiliations, grants, publications, peer review, and more — to your profile. Researchers will learn how to create and maintain their ORCID profile, and delve into practical applications, including how to export BibTeX citations to use in the Canadian Common CV, or adding a trusted administrator (like a RA). Join us to harness the full potential of ORCID iD to simplify the management of your research outputs.

*Zoom Registration

All are welcome.