Post
Published on December 22, 2021

The Dahdaleh Institute is showcasing the current work of PhD and master's students associated with the Institute at this year’s second Graduate Student Symposium. Graduate students detailed their research journey and the progress they have made so far. For this year's symposium, featured three graduate students presenting on the following topics:
- Nilanjana Ganguli - Investigating Gender Aspects of the Health Impacts of Climate Change in the Lake Chilwa Basin, Malawi ()
- Dixon Lai - Responsibility and Reparations of Disasters – Reimagining Regulatory Frameworks ()
- Isaac Weldon - Planetary Antimicrobial Resistance Regimes and Collective Action ()



Reminder - We are seeking applications from exceptional incoming and continuing domestic and international graduate students who wish to contribute to 91ɫ’s growing global health research community. Specifically, we invite applications from students aiming to conduct research and related scholarly and creative activities in line with the three themes of the Institute: planetary health, global health and humanitarianism, and global health foresighting. Read more here: yorku.ca/dighr/scholarship/
Themes | Global Health & Humanitarianism, Global Health Foresighting, Planetary Health |
Status | Active |
Related Work |
N/A
|
Updates |
N/A
|
People |
Nilanjana Ganguli, Dahdaleh Global Health Graduate Scholar, Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change - Active
Isaac Weldon, Research Fellow, AMR - Alum Dixon Lai, LLM Graduate Student Fellow - Alum |
You may also be interested in...
Recap — Addressing the Structural Drivers of Tuberculosis to #EndTB
In celebration of World Tuberculosis (TB) Day 2023: Yes! We Can #End TB! Faculty fellow and founder of the Social Science and Health Innovation for Tuberculosis Centre (SSHIFTB), Amrita Daftary, facilitated a seminar discussing how ...Read more about this Post
Hot Off The Press — Using a Board Game as Critical Design for Relational Communication in Dementia Care
This programme of research advances relational approaches to communication in dementia care through an interdisciplinary, community-engaged framework that brings together global health, design, and digital media. A defining feature of the work is the collaborative ...Read more about this Post
A Basic Income for Nature and Climate? Reimagining Conservation and Climate Futures at the AAG, 2025
This year, the American Association of Geographers (AAG) held their annual conference in Detroit around the theme “Making Spaces of Possibility,” encouraging participants to reflect on how geographers can contribute to making spaces of possibility, ...Read more about this Post
