International Women’s Day: #ChooseToChallenge

Fine Arts, Humanities, Science, Engineering, Social Sciences, Education, Human and Social Development, Medical Sciences, Graduate Studies, Peter B. Gustavson School of Business

- University of Victoria

Members of UVic's leadership team raise their hands in support and solidarity of the 2021 International Women’s Day #ChooseToChallenge campaign

A challenged world is an alert world and from challenge comes change. So let's all choose to challenge.  

On March 8, 2021, UVic joins the world to celebrate International Women's Day, a global day recognizing the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women. The day also marks a call to action for accelerating gender parity. We come together to celebrate women's achievements and rally for women's equality.

At UVic, more than 55 per cent of our students, faculty, and staff are women. Across campus, our faculty are using their voice to make change.


Kate Moran, Ocean Networks Canada

Kate Moran in kayak
Kate Moran, president and CEO of Ocean Networks Canada, a UVic initiative. Credit: UVic Photo Services

Long-standing gender stereotypes are pushing women and girls away from science-related fields, and there is still work to be done to achieve full and equal access to and participation in the sciences. At Ocean Networks Canada, we celebrate and empower women and girls who are leading scientific innovation and we call for action to remove the barriers that hold them back.
Moran

Kate Moran, president and CEO of UVic's Ocean Networks Canada, explains why Canada is well-positioned for success and leadership with a growing blue economy—the next great wave of economic innovation.

Read the Q&A in UVic News


Marie-Ève Tremblay, Division of Medical Sciences

Marie-Ève Tremblay
Marie-Ève Tremblay. Credit: UVic Photo Services

Marie-Ève Tremblay, associate professor in UVic’s Division of Medical Sciences, is on the leading edge of understanding exactly what causes our brain's immune cells to change so drastically and how this affects our cognitive function.

Read the story in UVic News


Sarah Hunt, School of Environmental Studies

Sarah Hunt
Hunt. Credit: UVic Photo Services

I work closely with Indigenous grad students to support them in designing graduate research that addresses the needs of their own communities. I’m also committed to supporting Indigenous student leadership and believe in the power of student resistance movements in transforming colonial institutions—much of my own activism started here when I was an undergrad involved with the Native Students Union.
Hunt/Tłaliłila’ogwa

Sarah Hunt/Tłaliłila’ogwa, Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Political Ecology, discusses her research, her return home, and what it’s like to be a role model for Indigenous students.

Read the Q&A and in UVic News


Cecilia Benoit, Sociology

Cecilia Benoit
Benoit. Credit: UVic Photo Services

Gender is a fundamental factor because it mediates access to key resources: knowledge, money, power, prestige and social connections. My research places gender on equal footing with other important factors determining health outcomes, including Indigeneity, race and socioeconomic status.
Benoit

Cecilia Benoit, a scientist with the Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research and professor emerita with the Department of Sociology, was awarded the 2020 Killam Prize in Social Sciences from the Canada Council for the Arts.

Read the story in UVic News 


Basma Majerbi, Business

Basma Majerbi
Majerbi.

The Peter B. Gustavson School of Business is one of the only business schools in the world to be carbon neutral. Associate Professor Basma Majerbi talks about her work in carbon footprint tracking at UVic and her other current projects.

Read the story in the Peter B. Gustavson School of Business blog


Theone Paterson and Brianna Turner, Psychology

Paterson and Turner
Paterson (left) and Turner. Credit: UVic Photo Services

Depression and anxiety have been on the rise in Canada since start of pandemic. UVic researchers Brianna Turner, assistant professor and clinical psychologist, and Theone Paterson, assistant professor and clinical neuropsychologist, are working with a global team of scientists to understand the different impacts and improve the mental well-being of communities in Canada.

Read the story in UVic News


Elizabeth Vibert, Humanities

UVic historian and writer Elizabeth Vibert, who studies colonial histories and has a special interest in South Africa, has closely examined how a women’s farm in a village in N'wamitwa can serve as an exceptional example of social resiliency and viable alternatives to export-oriented agriculture. A documentary, The Thinking Garden, gives Canadian audiences a chance to think about how women in this small South African village have faced the challenges of climate change and poverty and gained a measure of control over their lives through a unique farming collective.

Watch a short video about Vibert's work on Youtube


Rachel Cleves, History

Rachael Cleves
Cleves. Credit: UVic Photo Services

A lot of my work is dedicated to promoting diversity and equity.
Cleves

Rachel Cleves, an internationally recognized cultural historian, focuses on histories of gender, childhood, emotion, food, sexuality and violence in 18th to 20th century America and Europe. She is the first UVic humanities scholar admitted as a new Royal Society of Canada college member.

Read the story in UVic News


Charlotte Loppie, School of Public Health and Social Policy

Charlotte Loppie
Loppie.

Named as one of Victoria's most inspiring changemakers for 2020, Charlotte Loppie, a Mi’kmaq/French Acadian scholar, was recognized by Leadership Victoria in 2020 for making lasting positive change in health and wellness as an internationally recognized Indigenous health researcher. Loppie is a professor with UVic’s School of Public Health and Social Policy. Her research interests include Indigenous health inequities, HIV/AIDS, barriers to accessing the social determinants of health, racism and cultural safety.

Read the story in Douglas Magazine or  led by Mark Crocker, executive director of Leadership Victoria.

 


Edōsdi—Judy Thompson, Indigenous Education

Judy Thompson
Thompson. Credit: UNBC

For more than 25 years as a student, educator and researcher, Edōsdi—Judy Thompson has built relationships with Indigenous communities, developed courses and programs to indigenize curriculum, decolonize teaching and provide supports for Indigenous learners. Edōsdi, whose name means “someone who is a teacher” in the Tahltan language, was named a 3M National Teaching Fellow in 2020.

Read the story in UVic News


Katherine Elvira, Chemistry

Katherine Elvira in lab
UVic chemist Katherine Elvira holds one of her “lab on a chip” technologies for making artificial cells. Credit: UVic Photo Services.

Elvira’s “lab on a chip” research creates miniaturized laboratories the size of a postage stamp that could one day transform how scientists test potential drug treatments and diagnose disease. When combined with Elvira’s bespoke creation of artificial cells for use in those miniaturized labs, the UVic assistant professor is in search of new discoveries in how new materials and techniques can be applied to health sciences—which led to her selection in 2017 as Canada Research Chair in the area. Elvira is a mentor to  students and health sciences companies.

Read the story in UVic News


Kelly Richardson, Visual Arts

Richardson with UVic student Jordan Hill
Richardson, right, UVic student Jordan Hill of the T’Sou-ke Nation, pictured in Avatar Grove / T’l’oqwxwat. Credit: Paul Walde

From Emily Carr’s paintings to the materials used by Indigenous artists for centuries, Vancouver Island’s old-growth forests have a long history of artistic representation. Recently, they have been getting a 21st-century treatment through the digital media creations of Kelly Richardson, associate professor in visual arts. Beyond creating art reflecting our changing world, Richardson is raising awareness around the plight to protect these ancient ecosystems.

Read the story in UVic News


Suzanne Snizek, Music

Suzanne Snizek
Snizek. Credit: UVic Photo Services

Music scholar Suzanne Snizek’s listening ear is attuned to the underrepresentation of women composers in music history. Female composers across the ages—including in our own time—have faced significant barriers and challenges. Snizek’s concern is that classical music has been notoriously slow to address many issues related to equity. “Gender, yes, but also ethnicity, race and so many other identities. We have a long way to go to fully address these social aspects.” Her 2020 Ideafest session on the topic attracted a standing-room-only audience. “I got the strong sense that people are hungry for change.”

Read the UVic Fine Arts blog


Stephanie Willerth, Engineering

Stephanie Willerth
Biomedical Engineering Program Director Stephanie Willerth models a medical grade face shield created in a new UVic initiative. Credit: UVic Photo Services

UVic biomedical engineer Stephanie Willerth is an innovation leader, best known for pathbreaking methods of 3D printing human tissue in lab settings—an innovation that could radically streamline many areas of medical research. As Director of the UVic Centre for Biomedical Research, she also knows how to bring industry, community and the university together to solve big problems. In 2018, the centre joined with Island Health and local technology businesses including Starfish Medical to host a health hackathon, finding solutions to problems that confront vulnerable people in the health care system. And in the spring of 2020, she helped coordinate a university-alumni-community response to print, sanitize and deliver PPE to front-line medical staff in Victoria.

Read the story about face shields in UVic News


Leigh Joseph, Environmental Studies

Leigh Joseph
Joseph. Credit: Priscilla Cannon

Leigh Joseph understands her environment’s ability to invite personal reflection, and sees how plants offer her children a connection to the land and traditional knowledge. Her desire to continue to learn from hands-on experiences with plants—creating teas, tinctures and salves—led to her small business, a skincare line named Sḵwálwen Botanicals. Working on her doctoral research by day and business in the evenings makes for some extremely busy days, but Joseph says the business is another expression of how connecting with the land can sustain us physically, spiritually and emotionally.

Read the story in UVic News


Sowmya Somanath, Computer Science

To me, International Women's Day is about celebrating women role models and remembering the experiences that had an impact on us, so that we are rejuvenated in our efforts to create an equitable society.
Somanath

Sowmya Somanath, an assistant professor in UVic’s Department of Computer Science, is always looking for engaging ways to teach students online.

Read more about Somanath on the Faculty of Engineering website

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In this story

Keywords: community, gender, administrative, student life, Ocean Networks Canada, environmental studies, sociology, psychology, history, health, Indigenous, chemistry, visual arts, music, computer science

People: Kate Moran, Marie-Ève Tremblay, Sarah Hunt, Cecilia Benoit, Basma Majerbi, Theone Paterson, Brianna Turner, Elizabeth Vibert, Rachel Cleves, Charlotte Loppie, Edōsdi Judy Thompson, Katherine Elvira, Kelly Richardson, Suzanne Snizek, Stephanie Willerth, Leigh Joseph, Sowmya Somanath


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