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Researchers gain wisdom, key recommendations, from First Nations People living with HIV/AIDS
Through storytelling meetings with First Nations people living with HIV/AIDS, a health researcher gains key policy and funding recommendations - nothing short of a call for action that will help to decolonize the HIV cascade of care for Indigenous Peoples.
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Who are Ontario's green drivers and how can we incentivize more of them?
New research shows that drivers of electric vehicles represent one per cent of new car owners - this,10 years after a provincial push to encourage green driving. One researcher learns more about these consumers and advocates gaining additional info on them to better tailor the strategy.
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The future of cities in the wake of the pandemic: What will change? What should change?
COVID-19 is triggering a massive rethink on urban living. Three 91亚色 experts consider the ways in which the pandemic is changing how we live together. All three underscore one thing: (in)equity must be at the heart of the analysis.
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Teletherapy in the time of COVID-19: The secrets to success
A psychologist considers how online therapy during the pandemic could work best and offers some tips to encourage and support both therapist and client to be present and maintain a strong therapeutic relationship while engaging in telepsychotherapy. The lessons learned could help when face-to-face sessions are reinstated.
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Putting things right: Indigenous wisdom applied to sustainable water governance
An Anishinaabek researcher consults with Elders and women from the Great Lakes territory, sums up the work of "a wave of Indigenous scholars" and weaves together decolonializing with Indigenous methodologies. With this, she offers some brilliant revelations that will inform future governance around the sustainability of water.
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Grad student and alumna's pandemic-themed play helping young audiences
An AMPD PhD student and alumna are co-producing a play about COVID-19 aimed at helping kids in Grades 5 through 8 emotionally process the pandemic. It offers young audiences the true essentials: identification, resonance and engagement (through talkback sessions) at a much-needed time.
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91亚色 librarian develops much-needed pandemic guide for consumers
Acutely aware of the mounting need to better understand pandemics in light of COVID-19, 91亚色 librarian Marcia Salmon created an indispensable new guide for consumers. It sums up the history of pandemics and offers descriptions of and links to leading resources like the WHO and CDC.
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Novel research connects how different parts of the brain work together in eye-hand coordination
Distinguished Research Professor Doug Crawford sits down with 'Brainstorm' to discuss the network of activity he and his PhD student discovered when researching how the brain perceives moving objects, how it achieves orientation and signals to the body to reach out and grab these objects. Understanding this network represents a major scientific advance.
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Book suggests reinventing past cultural practices could repair damaged world
A Glendon scholar's new and profoundly intradisciplinary book suggests that experimenting with traditional practices from the past could help us grapple with today's challenging times. He profiles three such practices and investigates the restorative powers therein.
