On October 3rd, 2022, the University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Social Sciences, and the School of Social Work celebrated the inauguration of Anishinaabeg artwork, Kinistòtàdimin, which was created by three Anishinaabeg artists from Rapid Lake/Barrier Lake: Grace Ratt, Tina Nottaway, and Shannon Chief. The artwork reflects the artists’ Anishinaabe culture, the decolonization work undertaken by the Sch...
On October 3rd, 2022, the University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Social Sciences, and the School of Social Work celebrated the inauguration of Anishinaabeg artwork, Kinistòtàdimin, which was created by three Anishinaabeg artists from Rapid Lake/Barrier Lake: Grace Ratt, Tina Nottaway, and Shannon Chief. ...
It is with great sadness that we learned of the death of our former colleague and friend, Nérée St-Amand, on September 22. All our sympathies to his children François and Julie, as well as to his grandchildren, his brother, his sisters, his ex-wife and all the other people who were part of his network of family and friends.
It is with great sadness that we learned of the death of our former colleague and friend, Nérée St-Amand, on September 22. All our sympathies to his children François and Julie, as well as to his grandchildren, his brother, his sisters, his ex-wife and all the other people who were part of his netwo...
Precision agriculture is so-called because people believe that farmers’ management decisions will be optimized and made more precise if they are informed by the results of self-learning algorithms which mine large volumes of data (or big data). It is now indisputably known that industrial, chemical-intensive farming contributes significant greenhouse gas emissions, agricultural chemicals have know...
Precision agriculture is so-called because people believe that farmers’ management decisions will be optimized and made more precise if they are informed by the results of self-learning algorithms which mine large volumes of data (or big data). It is now indisputably known that industrial, chemical-...