Post
Published on March 27, 2026
Returning for a seventh year, the Critical Social Science Perspectives in Global Health (CPGH) Research workshop will be held on Tuesday, May 6 from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. ET. Join us to gain novel insights, discuss new research opportunities, and hear from special guest speaker Dr. Andrew Pinto (Founding and current director of the , University of Toronto) who will deliver the keynote presentation. Participants will have the opportunity to engage in discussion during the moderated Q&A following the presentation.
The 2025 seed grant recipients will also present their latest research updates in various fields of global health research in a brief 10-minute presentation.

This is an open call to 91ɫ researchers to consider presenting at this year's in-person workshop.
91ɫ faculty and researchers (with the support of a 91ɫ faculty member) are invited to deliver a brief five-minute, two-slide presentation on any current or planned research project that takes a critical social science approach to global health at the workshop. Presenters will receive valuable feedback from experts in the field in preparation for the Critical Perspectives in Global Health Seed Grant Applications (valued up to $8,000 CAD each). The seed grants support critical global health research that contributes to the three themes of the Dahdaleh Institute (planetary health, global health and humanitarianism, and global health foresighting).
The registration deadline to present a new research idea is Thursday, April 16, 2026.
Themes | Global Health & Humanitarianism, Global Health Foresighting, Planetary Health |
Status | Concluded |
Related Work | |
Updates |
N/A
|
People |
N/A
|
You may also be interested in...
Recap – Examining Civilian Protection in Contemporary Conflicts
The panel discussion on ‘The Global Future of Civilian Protection: Learning from the Gaza Genocide’, was moderated by Sarah Khan. It brought together scholars and practitioners to examine how the “Gaza Playbook” has reshaped norms around the protection of civilians and what this means in the current ...Read more about this Post
Highlighting the SWOT’s Risk-Based Approach at the 2022 Emergency Environmental Health Forum
Dahdaleh Institute member Michael DeSanti is presenting on the innovative Safe Water Optimization Tool (SWOT) at the 2022 Emergency Environmental Health Forum. He will discuss SWOT’s risk-based approach to generating chlorination guidance to ensure safe ...Read more about this Post
HWE Lab at EEHF 2026: Three Studies on Water and Health in Emergencies
The Emergency Environmental Health Forum (EEHF), a leading annual scientific meeting on environmental health in humanitarian crises, convened at the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) headquarters in Geneva from 10–12 ...Read more about this Post
