Â鶹ɫÇ鯬

Event

SOLD OUT - Climate Change andÌýYOU Workshops: Climate change globally and politically

Wednesday, September 18, 2019 12:00to13:30
McTavish 3610 Room 430 in the Environmental Health and Safety Building (on the corner of avenue Wilder Penfield), 3610 rue McTavish, Montreal, QC, H3A 1Y2, CA
Price: 
FREE with advance registration before September 15

New Series this Fall for the Â鶹ɫÇ鯬 Community: Alumni, Faculty, Staff and Students!Ìý

Participatory workshops for the Â鶹ɫÇ鯬 community to understand the implications of climate change now and for the future. Each day will feature presentations and explorations facilitated by Â鶹ɫÇéÆ¬â€™s climate change specialists such as Catherine Potvin, Ali Rivers, Nicolas Kosoy, Katie Griffiths and Blane Harvey. These intensive proactive workshops will create awareness of climate change from its basics to its global and political effects.

These lunch hour workshops include catered vegetarian locally-sourced food.Ìý

Wednesday September 18: Climate change globally and politically.ÌýFacilitated by Shaun Turney and Blane Harvey (Dept. Integrated Studies in Education, Â鶹ɫÇ鯬 School of Environment).

In English.ÌýWhere: Room 430 in the Environmental Health and Safety Building, 3610 McTavish, corner of avenue Wilder Penfield.

All the workshops are FREE. Space is limited and all registration must be received in advanceÌýby SeptemberÌý15.

Please registerÌýhere.

IMAGE: World Wildlife Fund. With generous support from SPF – Tiny Stream.

Land Acknowledgement

Â鶹ɫÇ鯬 is on land which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg nations. We acknowledge and thank the diverse Indigenous peoples whose presence marks this territory on which peoples of the world now gather.


Rematriation, Repatriation and Restitution Statement

We acknowledge that the return and restitution of cultural and natural heritage to communities of origin is an essential part of reconciliation and of recognizing the fundamental rights of Indigenous Peoples. As part of wider efforts to activate the standards presented in the Canadian Museums Association Report Moved to Action: Activating UNDRIP in Canadian Museums (2022), the Redpath is working towards pro-active restitution practices. As per our Collections Management Policy (2024), repatriation requests will be received by the Redpath Museum Director and will be treated on a case-by-case basis.

Ìý

Accessibility

Please note that the Redpath Museum is not accessible to individuals using wheelchairs. There are no access ramps or elevators, and access to the upper floors is only possible via a central staircase. The exterior entrance, interior spaces, exhibition rooms, and restrooms are not adapted to meet universal accessibility standards. Additionally, the building is not air-conditioned. For more information, please refer to the .Ìý

Back to top