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  • Stories of partnership: How Community Veterinary Outreach and UBC are leveraging the bond between people and their pets to improve health access in the DTES
    2025/11/25

    In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside (DTES), Community Veterinary Outreach, a national charity, is working with UBC researchers and students to reduce barriers to health care by allowing people to access support for themselves alongside their trusted animal companions.

    Research shows that pets offer profound physical, emotional and mental health benefits, especially for people facing marginalization. For many, the well-being of their animal takes priority over their own.

    CVO's model leverages that bond, providing veterinary care alongside human health services in the same space by creating a setting where people come to care for their animals. The model also opens the door to preventative care, health advocacy, and social support that clients may not otherwise pursue for themselves.

    To learn more about this project, we spoke with Kyla Townsend and Kelsi Jasmine from Community Veterinary Outreach (note: Kelsi has since moved on from CVO), as well as members of UBC's animal welfare program: Alex Boo, veterinarian and adjunct professor, and graduate student Alexis Ly.

    We discuss how their project got started, the unique way CVO approaches its work, and the good that has come from bringing veterinary and human health services together.

    This initiative was supported by the Community University Engagement Support Fund.



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    28 分
  • Stories of Partnership: How the Nuxalk Nation Is Working with UBC's Museum of Anthropology to Host the First-Ever Exhibit of Their People
    2025/11/20

    In partnership with the Nuxalk Nation, the Museum of Anthropology (MOA) at the University of British Columbia is presenting Nuxalk Strong: Dancing Down the Eyelashes of the Sun—the world's first dedicated exhibition of the Nuxalk. The exhibit features over 60 historic treasures from MOA's collections, as well as other museums, private holders, and Nuxalk families. Visitors are invited to connect with belongings made by Nuxalk Ancestors and contemporary Nuxalk artists, and to witness how the Nation is reclaiming and practicing their ways of being.


    This exhibition represents a transformative shift in how the Nuxalk Nation engages with museums—not as extractive institutions, but as platforms to share their belief systems, worldviews, and identity with the larger world. To learn more about this groundbreaking collaboration, we spoke with the curators of Nuxalk Strong about the exhibit and the evolving relationship between the Nuxalk Nation and the Museum of Anthropology.


    Our guests are Snxakila–Clyde Tallio of the Nuxalk Nation, Jennifer Kramer, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Curator at MOA, and Emily Jene Leischner, Postdoctoral Fellow at the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia and a UBC alumna.


    Learn more: https://communityengagement.ubc.ca/news/how-the-nuxalk-nation-is-working-with-ubcs-museum-of-anthropology-to-host-the-first-ever-exhibit-of-their-people/

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    1 時間 30 分
  • UBC Okanagan Students and a Peachland Conservation Group are Using Bats and Bugs to Build Community Conservation
    2025/11/12

    In Peachland British Columbia, a local conservation group is turning the night sky into a classroom, inviting students and community members to study bats, insects, and the vital ecosystems they share.

    Peachland’s Bat Education and Ecological Protection Society, better known as BEEPS, leads the Nocturnal Bat and Insect Survey Project, a hands-on learning opportunity that’s using the magic of the nighttime world to spark curiosity, research and education.

    To learn more about this project, we spoke with collaborators Emma Gaudreau, president of BEEPS and Lily Liang, a UBC Okanagan student majoring in ecology, evolution and conservation in biology (Irving K. Barber Faculty of Science) and who also serves as the director of BEEPS.

    Visit our website here to learn more about the project and read the episode transcript: https://communityengagement.ubc.ca/news/ubc-okanagan-peachland-beeps-bat-survey-project/

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    22 分
  • UBC Partnering in Research Conference: Community-Engaged Research Ask Me Anything
    2025/07/30

    What does community-engaged research look like in practice, and how can researchers navigate the complexities that arise from community involvement? In this special "Ask Me Anything" session, recorded live at the 2025 UBC Partnering in Research Conference, our speakers tackle these questions and more, sharing insights and practical strategies for effective community engagement.

    Featured speakers include Katherine Cheng (Downtown Eastside SRO Collaborative), Dr. Michelle Stack (UBC Department of Educational Studies), and Bruce Moghtader (UBC Centre for Community Engaged Learning). As an interactive event, the episode also features reflections and questions from audience members.

    Together, they explore what it means for research to be truly community-led, the importance of equitable funding practices, and the need for flexible, renegotiable agreements that reflect community timelines over academic pressures. The discussion also surfaces institutional barriers that continue to challenge community-university collaboration, including tenure and promotion systems that undervalue engagement.

    Listeners will also gain strategies for approaching trauma-informed topics, navigating internal community dynamics, and ensuring accessibility across all stages of partnered research.


    This episode is part of “Challenges in Partnered Research,” a Q&A series by Partnering in Research that highlights individuals transforming policies, practices, and communities through collaborative research. This is one of three sessions recorded live at the UBC Partnering in Research Conference at UBC Robson Square on June 12th, 2025.

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    48 分
  • UBC Partnering in Research Conference + Stories of Partnership: Be The Change Earth Alliance, False Creek Friends and UBC Sustainability Hub
    2025/07/21

    How can community-university partnerships sustain meaningful work amid funding shortages, organizational transitions, or shifting priorities? Recorded live at the 2025 UBC Partnering in Research Conference, find out in this joint instalment of Challenges in Partnered Research and Stories of Partnership—a series that highlights reciprocal collaborations, centers community voices, and promotes continuous learning in engagement practice.

    Featured speakers include Zaida Schneider (False Creek Friends), Caroline Beninger (Be the Change Earth Alliance), and Kshamta Hunter, Akuzike Limbanga, and Mutuma Caelan (UBC Sustainability Hub).

    Together, they share how their partnerships have navigated challenges and embraced resilience to achieve shared goals in projects like the Youth Climate Ambassadors initiative and efforts to protect False Creek’s marine environment.

    The discussion examines the role of care, communication, and non-hierarchical relationships, and highlights the essential contributions of all partners, including students. Speakers also reflect on how community-university partnerships can advance climate justice and empower the next generation of changemakers.


    This episode is part of “Challenges in Partnered Research,” a Q&A series by Partnering in Research that highlights individuals transforming policies, practices, and communities through collaborative research. This is the second of three sessions recorded live at the UBC Partnering in Research Conference at UBC Robson Square on June 12th, 2025.

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    49 分
  • UBC Partnering in Research Conference: Reciprocal Storytelling in Community-Based and Indigenous-Led Research
    2025/07/21

    Storytelling is powerful—but in research involving Indigenous and other historically, persistently, and systemically marginalized communities, it carries profound ethical responsibilities. Recorded live at the 2025 UBC Partnering in Research Conference, this episode explores storytelling in community-based and Indigenous-led research. Speakers examine the ethical dimensions and practical applications of storytelling that is reciprocal, respectful, and restorative.

    Featured speakers include Derek Thompson (Director of Indigenous Engagement, UBC Faculty of Medicine), Julie Gordon (Principal, Julie Gordon & Associates), and Oliver Mann (Senior Communications Strategist, UBC Office of Community Engagement).

    Together, they consider critical questions:

    • How can institutions move beyond transactional storytelling toward meaningful relationships?
    • What are the risks and responsibilities when sharing stories from communities with histories of trauma and misrepresentation?
    • How can storytelling support truth and reconciliation efforts and address intergenerational impacts, such as those stemming from residential schools?


    This episode is part of “Challenges in Partnered Research,” a Q&A series by Partnering in Research that highlights individuals transforming policies, practices, and communities through collaborative research. This is the third of three sessions recorded live at the UBC Partnering in Research Conference at UBC Robson Square on June 12th, 2025.

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    58 分
  • Stories of Partnership: Central Okanagan Food Bank and UBC Okanagan's Faculty of Management
    2025/04/15

    We are excited to share the fourth episode of our Stories of Partnership podcast series, produced in collaboration between UBC Okanagan's and UBC Vancouver's offices of Community Engagement. This session was recorded virtually in November 2024, as part of the UBC Community Engagement Network.

    Our guests, Trevor Moss, CEO of the Central Okanagan Food Bank, and Dr. Eric Li and Dhorea Ramanula from UBC’s Faculty of Management, sat down with UBC Okanagan’s Community Engagement Strategist, Angela Han, to talk about how their partnership began and has evolved, and share key practices that have helped them sustain their work over time. They also deeply explore the important role of research for nonprofits, as well as mutual benefits and ripple effects for universities, and speak about how flexibility and frank, proactive communication are a bedrock for healthy, reciprocal partnership.


    “Stories of Partnership” is a Q&A series by the Community Engagement Network (CEN) that is dedicated to shining a light on examples of reciprocal community-university partnerships. These Q&As are meant to centre the experiences of community partners and foster a culture of continuous learning within community engagement and community engagement practices.

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    57 分
  • Achieving Sustainability in Engaged Research
    2025/03/31

    From navigating logistical hurdles to addressing ethical considerations and maintaining strong, reciprocal partnerships, how can community-university collaborations balance the desire to serve communities with the need to sustain ongoing research activities?


    In this episode, we speak with Dr. Henry Yu, Professor in the UBC Department of History and Co-Director of the UBC Centre for Asian Canadian Research and Engagement, and Dr. Vicky Bungay, Professor in the UBC School of Nursing and Director of Capacity: The Centre for Research in Community Engagement and Gender Equity.

    This episode is part of our “Challenges in Partnered Research” Q&A series. This series highlights individuals transforming policies, practices, and communities through collaborative research. Each installment features 1-3 researchers from diverse disciplines discussing some of the most common challenges faced in partnered research and their innovative solutions.

    Learn more: https://communityengagement.ubc.ca/news/pir-achieving-sustainability-in-engaged-research/

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    30 分