UBC This Week 6-Feb-2014

 

Recent UBC Media Releases

Feb 6 UBC experts on Citizenship Act changes
Feb 6 Beatlemania, 50 years later
Feb 6 Want brand loyalty? Scare your customers
Feb 5 UBC Innovation Strategy moves forward with appointment of Innovation Catalyst
Feb 5 How Stalin paved way for Sochi Games
Feb 4 Story ideas and experts for the Sochi Games
Feb 4 UBC affordable housing program targets top academic talent
Feb 4 Hollywood hitmaker returns to UBC
Feb 3 Small Canadian communities not ready for climate change: study
Jan 31 The LGBT struggle in Sochi
Jan 31 Researchers identify nine steps to save waterways

Upcoming Event Highlights

Jan 23-Feb 8 Theatre at UBC presents Chekhov’s The Seagull
Jan 31-Apr 20 Remnants: A Visual Survey of Human Progress
Feb 6 From Homer to the End of Heroes and Back: a two-stage model of Greek epic tradition
Feb 7 UBC Farm Symposium
Feb 7 UBC Thunderbirds Women’s Basketball vs UBCO Heat
Feb 8 Hot Topics in Cardiology and Respiratory Medicine Update
Feb 8 From Cabinets of Curiosities to the Modern Museum
Feb 9 Family Day at MOA with Rumba Calzada
Feb 9 UBC Opera Ensemble – Rota: The Florentine Straw Hat
Feb 10 China in 1900: Tales of Boxer Bandits, Foreign Invaders and a World on the Edge
Feb 11 Patrick Moore: Confessions of a Greenpeace Dropout
Feb 11 Drama, Theatre, and Performance: Practising the Discipline – Before and After Retirement
Feb 12 Vday: A memory, a monologue, a rant and a prayer
Feb 12 Sex Trafficking During the Olympics: Myth or Reality?
Feb 13 From Beefy Chiefs to Healthy Families
Feb 13 Cindy Sherman meets Dzunuk’wa: Opening Reception
Feb 13 What is happening to Canada’s international reputation?
Feb 13 Aboriginal Men’s Narratives of Health: Reclaiming our Lives
Feb 14 Faculty Pension Plan Workshop – Understanding Your Retirement Options
Feb 14 UBC Symphonic Wind Ensemble – Paris, Je T’aime
Feb 14 GSNA 2014 Graduate Student Symposium: Abstracts deadline
Feb 20 Workshop – The Policy Challenges and Health Limits of Personalized Medicine
Find out what else is happening at UBC this week. For sports events, visit the UBC Athletics site at http://www.gothunderbirds.ca/calendar.aspx.


UBC People

Statscan’s cuts have forced us to see Canada through a U.S. lens

Statscan’s cuts have forced us to see Canada through a U.S. lens

Statistics Canada needs to restart its reporting of national marriage and divorce rates, argues UBC economist Marina Adshade.

Read more…

THE DANGER OF PARALYMPIC BOOSTING

Update: Krassioukov and five UBC students will study the dangerous practice of Paralympic “boosting” at the 2012 London Games while running a health clinic for athletes

by Hilary Thomson, March 4, 2010

After years of hard work, Dr. Andrei Krassioukov has finally earned admission to the Athletes Village at the 2010 Vancouver Paralympic Games.

But Krassioukov isn’t a competitor — he’s an internationally recognized expert in spinal cord injury and leader of the only research team to be granted access to the Vancouver Athletes Village during the Games.

Krassioukov and research team members will investigate the controversial practice of “boosting.” Practiced by some individuals with spinal cord injury, boosting involves intentionally raising blood pressure to stimulate the body’s energy and endurance. Non-athletes with SCI may use boosting to feel more energetic and alert.

Paralympic athletes use boosting to win — it can improve performance by up to 15 per cent. Stressing techniques to stimulate parts of the body below the level of the spinal cord injury, and to produce a spike in blood pressure, can range from wearing pressure stockings, to compressing the testicles by sitting on a handful of ball bearings, or blocking a urinary catheter to distend the bladder.

Injury to the spinal cord disrupts control of heart and blood vessels that are normally regulated by the autonomic nervous system, part of the nervous system that provides non-voluntary control to various organs. This disruption — which varies in severity between individuals — means the body cannot properly replenish energy consumed through exercise leading to a drop in peripheral blood flow, sweating, shortness of breath and faintness . This creates significant disadvantages during competition, leading some athletes to use boosting as a drastic measure to correct functions lost through injury.

Besides creating an unfair competitive advantage, boosting is a dangerous practice. The sudden surge in blood pressure typically seen during boosting is known as autonomic dysreflexia and can lead to stroke, heart attack or death. But the International Paralympics Committee (IPC) 1994 ban on boosting has been difficult to enforce.

A physician-scientist at Vancouver Coastal Health’s GF Strong Rehabilitation Centre, Krassioukov has studied autonomic functioning in SCI patients for more than 30 years and has collected data from paralympic athletes headed for competition since 2006. During the last five years he has urged the IPC to go beyond the ban to address how differences in autonomic function affect elite athlete performance.

Krassioukov believes that adding autonomic functioning to the athlete classification system that currently measures only motor and sensory functioning will more evenly match competitors and reduce motivation to boost.

“Being allowed to conduct research in the Athletes’ Village is an exciting milestone for me,” says Krassioukov, an associate professor in UBC’s Dept. of Medicine and co-director of the International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries (ICORD), part of Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute (VCHRI). “It suggests the IPC will consider how differences in autonomic function create inequities in performance and fuel the risky practice of boosting.”

Autonomic functioning varies between individuals according to the level and severity of their SCI. Currently, athletes with higher-level injury and significant autonomic function impairment compete directly with individuals with lesser impairment. Athletes have used boosting to close the gap.

During the 2010 Paralympic Winter Games, expected to draw 650 athletes from more than 40 countries, he plans to test 50 curling and sledge hockey athletes with spinal cord injury in a Cardiovascular Health Education Clinic in the Village and at ICORD. Volunteers will participate in a 90-minute assessment of autonomic functioning, complete a questionnaire and receive educational brochures about autonomic dysreflexia and risks of boosting.

Krassioukov expects it will be at least four years before his team will provide the IPC with possible guidelines on testing of autonomic functioning in paralympic athletes. Additional data from other paralympic sports must be collected and analyzed and recommendations developed and tested. He hopes research advances will ultimately eliminate the need for boosting but accepts that individuals with SCI are always looking for ways to improve their functioning.

“I am amazed by my patients’ incredible tenacity to achieve what they want to do in life — how they not only survive but fully engage in their adventure with a new body.”

Krassioukov’s work is supported by the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada; the Disability Health Research Network; the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation; and the Rick Hansen Foundation.

Tap and rope guide blind swimmer to victory

UPDATE:

Aug. 14, 2012 – Donovan Tildesley will compete in his fourth Paralympic Games in London (Aug. 29-Sept. 9).

Sep. 11, 2008 – Donovan Tildesley won bronze in 400-metre S11 swimming in Beijing.

Sep. 4, 2008 – Donovan Tildesley has been named Canada’s flag bearer for the Beijing Paralympics. Tildesley will lead Team Canada’s 143 athletes into the Opening Ceremony.

By Brian Lin, July 3, 2008 

At age 24, new UBC grad Donovan Tildesley has broken two world records, won a dozen gold medals in international swim meets and is part of Team Canada for the third time in the Paralympic Games in Beijing this summer.

The Vancouver native is also a motivational speaker and part owner of a small radio station in Whistler, B.C.

Tildesley, who was born blind, won a bronze medal in the 2000 Sydney Paralympics and two silver and one more bronze medal in Athens in 2004. He’s currently the No. 2-ranked swimmer with a disability in the world in the 400-metre freestyle.

“Competing in the Paralympics was one of the most amazing experiences in my life,” says Tildesley, who began racing at age nine with the help of his father and coach Hugh, a former competitive swimmer.

Hugh is also Donovan’s “tapper,” charged with the vital task of tapping his son on the head with a pole when he’s one stroke away from the wall.

“The questions I get asked most is how do I avoid swimming into the wall, and how I swim in a straight line,” explains Tildesley.

Using the lane rope as a guide, Tildesley must keep his arms straight and centred as to keep on course. “As I get tired, keeping my arms symmetrical becomes more difficult, but that’s part of the sport.”

Since graduating from UBC this spring with an English degree, Tildesley has been busy speaking at schools and community events on behalf of the RBC Olympians Program. “I love it as much as competing in the pool,” says Tildesley. “It’s a chance to step outside myself and tell my story. “If I can enrich, inspire or help change someone’s life, that makes me happy.”

Another thing that makes Tildesley happy involves skis and may not be everybody’s cup of tea. “There’s nothing more thrilling than being on top of Spanky’s Ladder on Blackcomb and making the 500 vertical feet drop.”

Now imagine doing that with your eyes closed.

Recap: Looking back at UBC and the 2012 Olympics

By CJ Pentland and Henry Lebard, The Ubyssey

Bronze medals, swim-offs, meeting royalty: the 2012 Summer Olympics featured much excitement for past and current UBC students.

Unsurprisingly, the swimmers had the most success in London. Led by Brent Hayden’s bronze medal in the 100m freestyle, several other T-Birds put forth strong efforts.

Alumnus Scott Dickens started the competition strong as he became the first Canadian to swim the 100m breaststroke in less than a minute, coming in at 59.85s. He made the semi-final in that event, along with the semi-final of the 200m breaststroke and the final of the 4x100m medley relay team, which also featured Hayden.

The reigning CIS male swimmer of the year, Tommy Gossland, swam in the 4x100m freestyle relay heats along with Hayden, but their time didn’t qualify them for the final.

As for the women, Martha McCabe led the way by finishing fifth overall in the 200m breaststroke after positing a time of 2:23.16 in the final. Tera van Beilen recorded a time of 1:07.48 in the 100m breaststroke semi-finals, which put her in a tie for eighth and forced a swim-off. However, she lost the two-person race and failed to make the finals.

CIS female swimmer of the year Savannah King raced in both the 400m and 800m freestyles, recording a personal best in the 800m. Heather MacLean swam in both the 4x100m and 4x200m freestyle relays, with her 4x200m team finishing fourth overall.

Back on land, a few former Thunderbirds put up good results in track and field events. Inaki Gomez finished 13th in the 20km race walk with a time of 1:20:58, setting a personal best and breaking the Canadian record time in that event.

Liz Gleadle finished 12th overall in women’s javelin, the highest-ever finish by a Canadian in that event. Curtis Moss competed in men’s javelin, but finished 22nd in qualifying and failed to make the finals.

To round out the field events, high jumper Mike Mason came eighth in men’s high jump with a best jump of 2.29m.

There were also a few alumni competing on the outdoor water. In her third Olympics, Nikola Girke finished tenth in women’s RS:X Sailing. Mike Leigh and Luke Ramsay competed in the men’s sailing 470 class, ending up in the 25th spot. And Ricardo Montemayor, who was competing for Mexico, raced in the men’s sailing Laser Class and finished 38th.

In cycling, UBC had one representative. Denise Ramsden raced in both the women’s road race and time trials, finishing 27th and 19th, respectively.

As for the indoor events, badminton player Toby Ng met the Prince of Wales before the Games started, but he and his mixed doubles partner dropped all three of their matches in the group play stage.

The Olympics are now over, but there is still one more UBC athlete left to compete. Paralympic swimmer Donavan Tildesley will be swimming in four events in London once the Paralympic Games kick off on August 29.

This article was originally published by UBC’s student newspaper, the Ubysseyon Aug. 12.

Meet UBC’s 19 Olympians and Paralympians here

Hot topics in the news

UBC experts on pipeline debates

  • Environmental issues
  • Business and trade
  • Aboriginal communities
  • Law and policy

UBC welcomes Paralympics torch

On March 11, 2010 UBC will become one of only 13 community stops on the Paralympic Torch Relay.  Just one day before the 2010 Paralympic Games begin in Vancouver, the Paralympic Torch will zig zag through UBC Point Grey campus, kick-starting the Paralympic experience.

Read more: http://www.webcommunications.ubc.ca/ubc2010/whats-on/paralympic-torch-relay/

The danger of Paralympic boosting

After years of hard work, Dr. Andrei Krassioukov has finally earned admission to the Athletes Village at the 2010 Vancouver Paralympic Games.

But Krassioukov isn’t a competitor — he’s an internationally recognized expert in spinal cord injury (SCI) and leader of the only research team to be granted access to the Vancouver Athletes Village during the Games.

Krassioukov and research team members will investigate the controversial practice of “boosting.” Practiced by some individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI), boosting involves intentionally raising blood pressure to stimulate the body’s energy and endurance. Non-athletes with SCI may use boosting to feel more energetic and alert. Paralympic athletes use boosting to win — it can improve performance by up to 15 per cent. Stressing techniques to stimulate parts of the body below the level of the spinal cord injury, and to produce a spike in blood pressure, can range from wearing pressure stockings, to compressing the testicles by sitting on a handful of ball bearings, or blocking a urinary catheter to distend the bladder.

Injury to the spinal cord disrupts control of heart and blood vessels that are normally regulated by the autonomic nervous system, part of the nervous system that provides non-voluntary control to various organs. This disruption — which varies in severity between individuals — means the body cannot properly replenish energy consumed through exercise leading to a drop in peripheral blood flow, sweating, shortness of breath and faintness . This creates significant disadvantages during competition, leading some athletes to use boosting as a drastic measure to correct functions lost through injury.

Besides creating an unfair competitive advantage, boosting is a dangerous practice. The sudden surge in blood pressure typically seen during boosting is known as autonomic dysreflexia and can lead to stroke, heart attack or death. But the International Paralympics Committee (IPC) 1994 ban on boosting has been difficult to enforce.

A physician-scientist at Vancouver Coastal Health’s GF Strong Rehabilitation Centre, Krassioukov has studied autonomic functioning in SCI patients for more than 30 years and has collected data from paralympic athletes headed for competition since 2006. During the last five years he has urged the IPC to go beyond the ban to address how differences in autonomic function affect elite athlete performance.

Krassioukov believes that adding autonomic functioning to the athlete classification system that currently measures only motor and sensory functioning will more evenly match competitors and reduce motivation to boost.

“Being allowed to conduct research in the Athletes’ Village is an exciting milestone for me,” says Krassioukov, an associate professor in UBC’s Dept. of Medicine and co-director of the International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries (ICORD), part of Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute (VCHRI). “It suggests the IPC will consider how differences in autonomic function create inequities in performance and fuel the risky practice of boosting.”

Autonomic functioning varies between individuals according to the level and severity of their SCI. Currently, athletes with higher-level injury and significant autonomic function impairment compete directly with individuals with lesser impairment. Athletes have used boosting to close the gap.

During the 2010 Paralympic Winter Games, expected to draw 650 athletes from more than 40 countries, he plans to test 50 curling and sledge hockey athletes with spinal cord injury in a Cardiovascular Health Education Clinic in the Village and at ICORD. Volunteers will participate in a 90-minute assessment of autonomic functioning, complete a questionnaire and receive educational brochures about autonomic dysreflexia and risks of boosting.

Krassioukov expects it will be at least four years before his team will provide the IPC with possible guidelines on testing of autonomic functioning in paralympic athletes. Additional data from other paralympic sports must be collected and analyzed and recommendations developed and tested. He hopes research advances will ultimately eliminate the need for boosting but accepts that individuals with SCI are always looking for ways to improve their functioning.

“I am amazed by my patients’ incredible tenacity to achieve what they want to do in life — how they not only survive but fully engage in their adventure with a new body.”

Krassioukov’s work is supported by the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada; the Disability Health Research Network; the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation; and the Rick Hansen Foundation.

VCHRI is the research body of Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, which includes BC’s largest academic and teaching health sciences centres: VGH, UBC Hospital, and GF Strong Rehabilitation Centre. In academic partnership with the University of British Columbia, VCHRI brings innovation and discovery to patient care, advancing healthier lives in healthy communities across British Columbia, Canada, and beyond. www.vchri.ca.

UBC’s sustainable sports centre

As a Paralympic competition venue, the UBC Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre will host 20 Paralympic sledge hockey games. The complex was built in the 1960s and is a fitting venue, considering its rich history. Canada’s National Hockey Program was born at the arena in 1963, in preparation for the Innsbruck 1964 Olympic Winter games in Austria.

The arena was redeveloped from 2006 to 2008 to rejuvenate and expand the facility in time for the Olympics, and to reflect the shared environmental, social and economic sustainability goals. Instead of demolishing the whole building, UBC and VANOC kept one ice rink that was still in good shape and upgraded its outdated mechanical and electrical systems.

The new centre has a highly-efficient floor plan inside, and the building site takes advantage of existing road and pedestrian networks and is situated close to public transportation. The centre’s designers used the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED®) green building rating system as a framework to address sustainability across all environmental performance categories. The facility achieved a LEED Silver performance standard, meeting VANOC’s progressive requirements for sustainability.

In addition to hockey and ice skating programs, the centre accommodates more than 40,000 users monthly through public programs, leagues, special events, concerts and fitness-related programs, to make the most of the facility.

Sports facilities require a significant amount of energy to operate, especially ice rinks and pools. UBC and VANOC found ways to convert the centre into a world-class winter sports facility and meet the building’s ice maintenance, ventilation, de-humidification and lighting needs in sustainable ways.

“Typically those are challenges, but we took them as positives, because we felt there was a lot of opportunity to improve the standards and also be leaders in the development of some of these facilities,” says Kavie Toor, Associate Director of Facilities and Business Development for UBC Athletics and Recreation.

One of the highlights of the redeveloped arena is the ECO CHILL® energy system. This new technology recycles all the energy used to maintain the ice surface back into the arena’s heating system, making use of waste energy that would normally be flushed out of the building.

The arena also uses electric ice resurfacers, which keep energy use to a minimum and don’t impact air quality. Often referred to as a Zamboni®, an ice resurfacer is typically fuelled by propane. “Not only is there energy wasted when they’re running sometimes three times an hour if you’re running multiple rinks, but there’s also a considerable amount of emissions that go into the playing area and into the stands,” Toor says.

To remove moist air from the building and dressing rooms, the arena uses an efficient de-humidifying system that runs about eight to 10 hours a day, compared to the centre’s old system that ran 24 hours a day. The building also uses energy-efficient lighting with sensors and control systems that turn lights off when a space is unoccupied.

Games inspire new research centre for sport

The interplay of sport and sustainability is being put under the microscope at the University of British Columbia, where a new, one-of-a-kind research centre is analyzing the opportunities and effects created by sport and mega sporting events.

The UBC Centre for Sports and Sustainability tackles questions about the environmental impacts of Olympic Games, society’s perception of Paralympic athletes and how to give youth opportunities to learn through sport, among other topics.

“There’s a growing need to better understand how sport transforms people, communities and cultures to deliver lasting economic, social and health benefits,” says UBC President Stephen Toope.

“As a UBC legacy project from the 2010 Winter Olympic Games, the centre will fill an important niche as an international hub for knowledge on this very specialized area of research.”

The centre already exists — virtually. Through a joint project between UBC and the Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC), the university is formalizing an existing network of researchers who are engaged in sport and sustainability research and instruction.

Researchers are considering how a large-scale sport event or infrastructure project can spur innovation in urban design, and what factors influence national pride, social cohesion and the inclusion in sport of groups such as new immigrants, indigenous populations and the economically disadvantaged.

“This is about more than sport itself,” says Robert Sparks, director of the UBC School of Human Kinetics. “This is sport as it links to economic sustainability, environmental sustainability and social development in communities.”

“How do you ‘green’ sports facilities and how do you use sport programs to foster community development and healthy lifestyles?”

Part of the centre’s mandate will be to ensure this new knowledge is made available to local, national and international event organizers and host cities so they might optimize their planning and provide an enduring legacy. Already underway is the Paralympic Games Impact Survey, which looks at how the Paralympic Games impact the social perceptions of persons with a disability. A post-Paralympic Games survey will study changes in these perceptions.

”The overall idea is to look at how society might change its views of people with disabilities upon watching the quality performances of Paralympic athletes,” says Rob VanWynsberghe, lecturer in Human Kinetics and Educational Studies and UBC lead for the project.

Researchers are also looking around the country to find programs that teach others how to coach athletes with a disability, Vanwynsberghe says. “We suspect that many Paralympic coaches are experts in a sport for athletes without disabilities. They’ll draw on these skills to teach Paralympic athletes, but the cross-over isn’t easy; sledge hockey and hockey, for example, are two very different things,” he says.

“We want to make sure there are enough programs in place to train coaches and athletes for the Paralympics, and from a research perspective, consider the social perceptions that follow.” This is baseline work for the Olympic Games Impact study, which is also being conducted at UBC and led by VanWynsberghe. The massive study was developed by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to introduce a standardized cross-Games method of monitoring, measuring and reporting on the economic, social and environmental impact of hosting the Olympic Games.

UBC and VANOC will also present a three-part think-tank series to analyze lessons learned from the 2010 Games, new precedents for large scale sport event sustainability, and the use of sustainability indicators in planning future Olympic bids.

“We want to capitalize on our research with the Olympics and Paralympics to become a knowledge hub capable of helping groups down the road who want to take on similar projects,” Sparks says.

Another project under the centre’s umbrella — the nascent Coaching Sustainability Initiative —has a local connection in Vancouver. By creating community service learning placements in the Downtown Eastside, this UBC legacy project supports leadership development and physical activity among secondary school students in Vancouver.

For more information, visit
ubc.ca/2010

UBC In The News

Radically inclusive new nightlife scenes emerge from ashes of closed gay bars

LGBTQ+ bars have undergone a startling decline globally over the past 20 years. More than half of London’s LGBTQ+ venues closed between 2006 and 2016, and the in the U.S. an average of 15 gay bars closed every year from 2008 to 2021.

Dr. Amin Ghaziani

Dr. Amin Ghaziani

“Save your tears, because queer nightlife is alive and well,” writes the New York Times in its review of UBC sociologist Dr. Amin Ghaziani’s new book, Long Live Queer Nightlife: How the Closing of Gay Bars Sparked a Revolution. “In fact, it’s even better than ever, having evolved into a more progressive, sophisticated form.”

We spoke with Dr. Ghaziani (he/him) about a burgeoning underground scene of radically inclusive parties called “club nights” that are filling the vacuum and defying traditional nightlife norms.

What inspired you to explore the transformation of queer nightlife?

I was on sabbatical in London in 2018 with no particular research plan in mind. My journey into the heart of the capital’s nightlife scene arose from a pub conversation that turned into an invitation to a unique party. I was told it would be perfect for a queer South Asian person like myself.

This led me to Hungama—a club night that blended Bollywood beats with queer cultures. It was electrifying, and felt like another world, far away from the gloomy predictions about the demise of queer nightlife that dominate mainstream public discussions.

I discovered that queer nightlife isn’t fading away, it’s transforming into a dynamic, event-driven landscape of episodic parties, many of which are being organized by people who for too long have felt left out of gay bars.

What drives the appeal and success of these popup events?

When I spoke with people about club nights, they used exuberant words like euphoria, ecstasy, freedom, sanctuary, romance and utopia. Their sense of joy was unmistakable.

A lot of researchers focus on the challenges faced by marginalized groups. It’s no wonder that themes of suffering and social problems, bigotry and bias, and discrimination are so prevalent. My research motivated me to prioritize joy—its capacity to sustain and invigorate us amidst the very real challenges of bar closures in capitalist cities. Joy is a vital, collective experience that binds us. It is life-enhancing and deeply political.

How do these new spaces manage to address and celebrate diversity more effectively than traditional gay bars?

Many organizers see their work as part of an effort to celebrate the creativity of individuals who identify as queer, trans, Black, Indigenous, or as people of colour—QTBIPOC for short. These groups are reclaiming and redefining nightlife to focus on radical inclusivity and an intersectional queerness. They are redefining what nightlife looks like.

Research shows that 80 per cent of Black, 79 per cent of Asian, and 75 per cent of South Asian individuals have encountered racial bias from within LGBTQ+ spaces. Club nights are a kind of sanctuary within a sanctuary, offering a more deliberately inclusive and intersectional environment compared to their predecessors.

How is this trend playing out in smaller cities than London?

Club nights are part of a broader, global movement. Toronto has its biannual Jerk party, which celebrates Caribbean influences in club culture. Vancouver has Ricecake, which provides a platform for the beautiful range of queer Asian representations and identities. These events are crucial in providing spaces for those who have traditionally felt excluded from gay bars—especially QTBIPOC groups. We see similar developments in New York, L.A., Miami, and many other cities. The revolution through evolution that club nights represent speaks truth to the fact that queer people are now, and will always be, resilient.

UBC In The News

How art can help us talk about the green transition

Elders, researchers and musicians are using art to get people talking about the challenges and opportunities of a transition to renewable energy.

The Heavy Metal Suite concert premieres on Earth Day, featuring individual musical movements inspired by the critical elements needed for the green transition, such as copper, zinc and silicon—the essential ingredient in computer chips. In fact, the silicon movement was partially composed by AI, meaning that a computer wrote music about its own innards.

A companion free ebook of essays by international experts examines the different aspects of mineral exploration and mining for a sustainable future.

In this Q&A, authors Elder Allen Edzerza of the Tahltan Nation and Dr. Philippe Tortell, professor in the UBC department of earth, ocean, and atmospheric sciences, discuss why talking about minerals can help in the fight for our planet.

How does art help us talk about the green transition?  

PT: We’re trying to ignite a conversation about, and a deeper connection to, the critical minerals required to move away from fossil-fuel derived energy. We walk around with these metals in our pockets and on or sometimes in our bodies, like the gold in our dental fillings. But despite our close relationship with these metals, we don’t know where they come from or go to when we’re finished with them. We need these minerals, and lots of them, for sustainable energies, but mining has a long, problematic history. We can’t mine our way out of climate change by using methods and approaches from the past. The concert and book aim to help people understand the long chain of events that occurs from the ground to their devices, while also providing a deeper appreciation of the issues and solutions at hand. There’s reason for optimism, but we’ll need a lot of people pulling together.

What do you hope people will take away from the book and concert?

AE: Our Elders tell us the Great Spirit is speaking to us: we’re seeing more violent storms, rivers are getting lower, waters are getting warmer. It’s up to us to stop and listen, and act to make a difference. Indigenous people understand that metals are an important part of our everyday lives: in communications, in transportation, in the vitamins we take, in the brass instruments that play the Heavy Metal Suite.

As we say in the book, the mining industry in Canada now sits at a critical juncture. We must hurry up, but we must also slow down. We need to act, but the way mining is done currently needs to be modernized. Aboriginal title and rights must be recognized and respected, the land and resources must be managed more responsibly, environmental protection is essential, and our communities must benefit from these resources. Most of the land in British Columbia is unceded. Recognizing Aboriginal rights and title and securing their support creates certainty for their mining projects as they seek financing and make their decision to invest in the development of their mining projects.

What is the path forward?

AE: We need to see a shift towards partnership, collaboration and mutual respect between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people. That means shared decision-making, shared benefits and revenues, and shared management between First Nations and provincial and federal governments. There are two important parts to this initiative: Mining needs to occur in a more sustainable and environmentally friendly way, and fostering respectful Indigenous relationships.

PT: It’s a difficult road ahead, but there are a lot of potential solutions that could change the industry and make it an increasingly positive contributor to societies, while provisioning these much-needed resources. Innovation is key, from developing microbial tools to find mineral deposits and responsibly manage mine waste and tailings, to a more distributed economic landscape that benefits the community and small-scale players, to better e-waste recycling to recapture minerals.

Interview language(s): English (Edzerza, Tortell)

Heavy Metal: Earth’s Minerals and the Future of Sustainable Societies is available free. The Heavy Metal Suite will be held on April 22nd. Composer and UBC professor Dr. Patrick Carrabré is available to discuss composing the Water suite.

UBC In The News

Walking for Joy at UBC: Half a billion steps for health and community

Annual walking challenge boosts community wellbeing in honour of the late Dr. Joy Butler  

In 2005, the late Dr. Joy Butler of UBC’s faculty of education created a fun walking challenge called the Walkabout to motivate her colleagues to stay active in winter.

By the time she passed away in 2019, Dr. Butler’s challenge had grown bigger than ever. Last year, participants collectively walked 466,419,312 steps over nine weeks. This year’s event will wrap up on April 17 with a closing ceremony where the winning team will be crowned and participants will receive prizes.

The late Dr. Joy Butler

The late Dr. Joy Butler

“Joy was very passionate about physical activity—she exercised every day up until the day she died,” said Dr. Claire Robson, Dr. Butler’s widow and adjunct faculty at Simon Fraser University. “Her lifelong goal was to make physical education accessible and inclusive for everyone. She created the Walkabout to empower people of all backgrounds to live a healthy lifestyle.”

Dr. Butler’s first Walkabout challenge was held within the faculty of education with 100 participants. Since then, the annual challenge has grown to include about 150 teams with more than 1,000 team members—10 times more than the first year.

Participants form teams and record their daily steps for nine weeks. Other forms of physical activity are accepted through a physical activity equivalence chart, which converts the minutes spent doing another activity—such as cycling, swimming, dancing, or moving a wheelchair—to steps.

Dr. Butler, who was diagnosed with breast cancer, led the Walkabout until she died in 2019. The event was later renamed Walk for Joy in her memory.

“One of Joy’s hopes was for the Walkabout to expand outside of the faculty of education to other parts of the university and beyond,” said John Yamamoto, director of UBC’s teacher education office, who has helped to run the program since its inception. “For the past 18 years, we have worked hard with community members to grow the program.”

For Alyssa Reyes, physical activity manager at UBC Recreation and a member of the program committee, the annual event is an opportunity to bring together teams and departments across the university.

“Walk for Joy not only helps build social connection, but it also fosters a healthy dose of competition,” said Ms. Reyes. “Participants look forward to the program every year, with many teams returning year after year.” 

The event also encourages participants to donate to a different not-for-profit organization each year. In 2023, they donated about $3,000 to Abreast in a boat, a paddling group for women with breast cancer of which Dr. Butler was a member. 

This year, participants are raising funds for Rainbow Bridge, a local charity that supports a family of seven who escaped persecution in Afghanistan. The family arrived in B.C. in late March and will need assistance with rent, food, trauma counselling, education and more.  

Dr. Robson suggested the charity because she felt it would resonate with Dr. Butler’s values.  

“The Walkabout is about empowering people to live healthy lifestyles, so raising money for people to live a better life in Canada,” said Dr. Robson, “I think Joy would approve of that.” 

More information about the Walk for Joy is available here: https://walkforjoy.educ.ubc.ca/  

UBC experts on 2024 federal budget

The federal government is to present its 2024 budget on Tuesday. UBC experts are available to comment on related topics. 

Dr. Jennifer Black
Assistant professor, Faculty of Land and Food Systems
Email: j.black@ubc.ca 
Interview language(s): English 

  • School food, food insecurity

*available 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. PT

Dr. Wei Cui
Professor, Peter A. Allard School of Law
Email: wei.cui@ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English

  • Tax policy, especially international tax and tax credits for the green transition

Dr. Tom Davidoff
Associate Professor, UBC Sauder School of Business
Email: thomas.davidoff@sauder.ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English  

  • Housing, household finance

Dr. Antje Ellermann (she/they)
Professor, Department of Political Science
Tel: 778-551-4989
Email: antje.ellermann@ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English 

  • Immigration funding 

*available Tuesday 1-3 p.m. PT, Wednesday 2-4 p.m. PT, Friday 9-11:30 a.m. PT 

Dr. Alexandra Flynn
Associate Professor, Peter A. Allard School of Law and Director, Housing Research Collaborative
Tel: 647-801-9810
Email: flynn@allard.ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English 

  • Housing need, housing affordability, homelessness, public housing, property and real estate, urban and municipal law, rentals and evictions

Dr. John Graham (he/him)
Professor, UBCO School of Social Work 
Email: john.graham@ubc.ca
Cell: 250-864-7118
Interview language(s): English 

  • Homelessness prevention

Dr. Penny Gurstein
Professor Emeritus, School of Community and Regional Planning
Email: penny.gurstein@ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English 

  • Affordable housing 

*available Tuesday afternoon

Dr. Ross Hickey
Associate Professor, UBCO Department of Economics, Philosophy and Political Science
Email: ross.hickey@ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English 

  • Charitable donation and gifts, campaign contributions 

*unavailable Monday 8 a.m.-12:30 p.m. PT, Tuesday 11 a.m.-2 p.m. PT, Thursday 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m. PT

Dr. Craig Jones
Associate Director, Housing Research Collaborative and Housing Assessment Resource Tools
Tel: 604-818-0493
Email: craig.jones@ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English 

  • Affordable housing, housing data, transit-riented development, gentrification, rental housing, core housing need, evictions 

*available Tuesday after 3 p.m. PT, Thursday 12-3 pm PT

Dr. Kuni Kamizaki (he/his)
Assistant Professor, School of Community and Regional Planning
Email: kuni.kamizaki@ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English

  • Community land trusts and affordable housing

* available for email inquiries after April 16 

Dr. Paul Kershaw
Associate Professor, School of Population and Public Health
Tel: 604-761-4583
Email: paul.kershaw@ubc.ca 
Interview language(s): English 

  • Implications for Canadians in their 20s, 30s, 40s and their children, generational equity, including policy related to housing, families and medical care, taxation, debts 

Oludolapo Makinde
PhD candidate, Peter A. Allard School of Law
Email: omakinde@mail.ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English 

  • AI governance and policy, AI as an anti-corruption tool, AI risk management 

*available 8 a.m.-12 p.m. PT

Temitope Onifade (he/him)
PhD candidate, Peter A. Allard School of Law
Email: temitope@onifade.org
Interview language(s): English, Yoruba, English-based pidgin 

  • Low-carbon energy and other climate action (adaptation and loss and damage) incentives 

*available 7-9 a.m. PT 

Dr. Janis Sarra
Professor Emerita, Peter A. Allard School of Law
Email: sarra@allard.ubc.ca 
Interview language(s): English 

  • Climate-related disclosure, governance, sustainable finance

*available Wednesday-Friday after 11 a.m. PT  

Dr. Tsur Somerville
Associate Professor, Sauder School of Business
Tel: 604-329-4585
Interview language(s): English 

  • Housing, housing finance 

Dr. U. Rashid Sumaila (he/him)
University Killam Professor, Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs
Tel: 604-351-7406
Email: r.sumaila@oceans.ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English, Hausa, Norwegian 

  • Blue economy, sustainable and just ocean systems, fisheries economics 

Dr. Carlos Teixeira
Professor, UBCO Department of Community, Culture and Global Studies
Tel: 250-807-9313
Cell: 250-762-6389
Email: carlos.teixeira@ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English, French and Portuguese 

  • Housing and immigration 

Dr. Kristen Thomasen (she/her)
Assistant Professor, Peter A. Allard School of Law
Email: thomasen@allard.ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English 

  • AI and robotics law and policy, calls for regulation 

*unavailable Tuesday before 10.30 a.m. PT or from 12-1 p.m. PT, Thursday after 11 a.m. PT 

Dr. Allan Tupper
Professor Emeritus, Department of Political Science
Tel: 604-827-3387
Email: allan.tupper@ubc.ca
Interview language(s): English 

  • Canadian politics, Canadian federalism, public management (program delivery), political ethics 

UBC adding 778 student spaces across technology and life sciences programs thanks to provincial investment

Expanded enrolment will increase opportunities for students and help drive B.C.’s innovation economy  

The University of British Columbia is adding 778 new spaces over six years in technology-related programs on its campuses thanks to additional funding from the B.C. government.  

B.C.’s Minister of Jobs, Economic Development and Innovation, the Honourable Brenda Bailey, was on site at UBC’s Vancouver campus on Friday to celebrate the expansion of technology-related learning spaces as part of the provincial government’s long-term plan to meet growing demand for talent in B.C.’s tech sector. 

“The students who will be filling these hundreds of seats at UBC will help increase the supply of talent into the province’s rapidly expanding tech sector,” says Bailey. “These graduates will be rewarded with well-paying careers while helping to advance health care and research to improve life for British Columbians, and build our clean, innovative economy of the future.” 

The funding will add new student spaces to existing programs in the faculties of applied science, medicine, pharmaceutical sciences, and science on both the Vancouver and Okanagan campuses. These spaces will be added over six years, including an investment of $5.4 million in capital funding to equip and renovate labs and classrooms, and a total of $17.7 million in start-up and on-going operating funding over the first three years of the planned expansion. 

“We are grateful to the B.C. government for this generous investment, which will further enhance UBC’s position as a global leader in technology learning and innovation,” says UBC President and Vice-Chancellor, Dr. Benoit-Antoine Bacon. “This investment not only provides our students with exciting new education and career opportunities, but it also helps meet the demand for talent in B.C.’s rapidly growing tech and life sciences industry. With these new spaces, UBC is preparing even more students to become the engineers, scientists, product developers, and technology leaders that will help propel our society and economy forward.”

The investment will also be used to establish two new programs, a Bachelor of Data Science on the Vancouver campus, and a Master of Science in Biotechnology on the Okanagan campus.  

“There’s growing demand for talent as workplaces and the economy are transforming and we have more job openings in growing and in-demand fields than we have the skilled workers ready to fill them,” says B.C.’s Minister of Post-Secondary Education and Future Skills, Lisa Beare. “People with technological skills and knowledge are in high demand and that’s why we are excited to add tech-relevant spaces for people to learn, grow and thrive in these in-demand careers.”

“At UBC Okanagan, we are especially thrilled to be launching a Master of Science in Biotechnology program,” says Dr. Lesley Cormack, principal and deputy vice-chancellor of UBC Okanagan. “With biotechnology’s potential to address local and global challenges in agriculture, health, biomedicine and the environment, this program will empower students to harness cutting-edge technologies for a brighter future for B.C. and the communities we serve. 

UBC Vancouver will see 578 additional spaces added, including 120 spaces in the undergraduate data science program, 160 spaces in the undergraduate microbiology and immunology program, 60 spaces in undergraduate pharmaceutical sciences, 180 spaces in undergraduate chemical, computer and integrated engineering program streams, and 58 spaces in biomedical engineering graduate programs.  

Meanwhile, UBC Okanagan will add 200 additional spaces, including 60 in the undergraduate data science program, and 100 in the undergraduate engineering program. The new Master of Biotechnology program will have 40 spaces. 

UBC In The News

Event: Tech spaces get a boost at UBC thanks to new funding

Brenda Bailey, Minister of Jobs, Economic Development and Innovation will visit the University of British Columbia’s Vancouver campus on Friday to announce new student spaces in expanded technology-related programs.

The expansion over six years will create two new programs and boost the number of tech spaces for students at UBC Vancouver and UBC Okanagan.

Minister Bailey will be joined by UBC Vancouver President and Vice-Chancellor Benoit-Antoine Bacon.

Date/Time: Friday, April 12 at 9 a.m. PDT

Location:  2nd Floor, Michael Smith Laboratories, 2185 E Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4 (Directions)

Interviews:

  • Hon. Brenda Bailey, Minister of Jobs, Economic Development and Innovation
  • Dr. Mark MacLachlan, Dean pro tem, Faculty of Science

Parking:

  • University Boulevard Lot, 6163 University Blvd, V6T 1Z1 (Directions)
  • Health Science Parkade, 2250 Health Science Mall, V6T 1Z3 (Directions)
  • North Parkade, 6115 Student Union Boulevard, V6T 1Z1 (Directions)

UBC People


UBC People

Music professor nominated for Juno

Stephen Chatman, chair of the Composition Division in UBC School of Music, has received a Juno nomination for Classical Composition of the Year for his work “Magnificat: Songs of Reflection.”

Recorded at the Chan Centre in December 2012, the work was performed by soprano soloist Bahareh Poureslami (BMus 2013), the University Singers and UBC Symphony Orchestra, and conducted by Jonathan Girard, director of orchestras at the School of Music.

View the list of Juno nominees here. For more on the recording, click here.

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Applied Science announces new leadership roles; increases focus on professional development and industry partnerships

UBC Applied Science Dean Marc Parlange recently created two new senior leadership roles and appointed Prof. Elizabeth Croft as Associate Dean for Education and Professional Development, and Prof. James Olson as Associate Dean for Research and Industrial Partnerships.

“These two new roles mark our steadfast commitment to providing the best education and research possible in serving our students — future engineers, nurses, architects, landscape architects and planners — and society,” says Parlange. For more information, click here.

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UBC professor listed among 20th century Canadians “who changed the world”

Michael Hayden, University Killam Professor in the Department of Medical Genetics, has been featured in Ken McGoogan’s recent book, 50 Canadians Who Changed the World (Harper Collins).

The book features activists, humanitarians, scientists and inventors who have had a global impact, and recounts Hayden’s early life and career, his arrival at UBC, and his significant achievements as a researcher in medical genetics, an entrepreneur in biotechnology, and a leader in his field. For more information, click here.

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Computer Science professor receives Steacie Fellowship

Computer Science professor Kevin Leyton-Brown is the recipient of the Steacie Memorial Fellowship, which recognizes outstanding young researchers with a promising career in science research. Each fellow receives a research grant of $250,000 and is relieved of teaching and administrative duties for two years. Only six fellowships are awarded across Canada every year. Click here for more information.

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Computer engineer among UBC’s research stars

Computer and Electrical Engineering associate professor Purang Abolmaesumi has been selected to receive a UBC Killam Research Prize in recognition of his distinguished research and scholarly contributions. For more information, click here.

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Special Olympics BC charity free-throw contest at T-birds game

During half-time of this season’s final game, when the UBC women’s basketball team takes on the University of Victoria Vikes at home, 10 Special Olympics B.C. (SOBC) basketball players will attempt to sink as many free-throws as possible to raise money for two Special Olympic organizations.

Special Olympics is the world’s largest sports organization for people with intellectual disabilities. UBC is hosting the Special Olympics Canada 2014 Summer Games this July.

Date:  Feb. 15
Time:  5 p.m. (game begins)
Place: UBC War Memorial Gym, 6081 University Blvd
Info: Click here

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Help shape UBC’s 20-year Sustainability Strategy

Join the conversation and help shape the long-term vision for sustainability at UBC and be part of an ongoing consultation process with faculty, staff, students and community members.

UBC is currently seeking feedback on the draft vision – share your thoughts and enter to win an iPad Mini (limited to faculty, staff and students). Complete the short eight-minute survey by Feb. 14.

Click here for more information or contact Marko Pajalic, Engagement Specialist, UBC Sustainability Initiative.

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Embracing ComplexCity – SCARP Student Symposium

The School of Community and Regional Planning (SCARP) Planning Students’ Association will hold its sixth annual SCARP Student Symposium titled “Embracing ComplexCity.” The panel sessions will explore ways to respond to environmental, social and economic challenges and, improve the resilience of cities and regions in the face of uncertainty and complexity.

Date: Feb. 7
Time: 8 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.
Place: Graduate Student Society, 6371 Crescent Road
Info: Click here for registration, fees and schedule

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Vancouver Campus Student Development Awards invites nominations

The Office of the Vice President, Students recognizes exceptional contributions or significant improvements to the student experience and learning environment at UBC. It is inviting nominations from students, faculty, staff and alumni for the 2013/14 UBC Vancouver Student Development Awards.

Refer to the VP Students website for the categories of awards and the list of winners for the past three years. Nominations should include a written statement from the nominator and two supporting letters outlining the exceptional contributions or improvements. Nominations are to be submitted to the Office of the Vice President, Students at vpsassist@mail.ubc.ca by March 7, 2014. Award winners will be announced late March and honoured at a special ceremony.

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