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Denise Cloutier
Indigenous youth shape new graphic novel
The Ring
A visual storytelling project unites the voices of urban Indigenous youth in care, Knowledge Keepers, and Indigenous and non-Indigenous allies in Becoming Wolf, a graphic novel about coming of age.
PhD grad collaborates with Indigenous youth
The Ring
Social dimensions of health PhD grad, Andrea Mellor, was drawn to an interdisciplinary program knowing there was a missing link between her work as a hydrogeologist and the health-related issues occurring in Indigenous communities.
2019 Provost's Engaged Scholars
The Ring
Over the course of their careers, health geographer Denise Cloutier and business professor Brent Mainprize have been deeply engaged with communities—creating better lives for older adults and Indigenous youth across British Columbia. As the 2019 recipients of the Provost’s Engaged Scholar Award, Cloutier and Mainprize’s commitment to healthy aging and Indigenous peoples will be celebrated during Ideafest.
Feeling like home
knowlEDGE
Research starts in the brain but works its way to the heart, says a University of Victoria health geographer whose studies of dementia and care across the lifespan have made her a passionate advocate for quality of life as people age.
Research On Aging
Media release
Researchers Margaret Penning and Denise Cloutier, of UVic’s Centre on Aging, received more than $330,000 for a project on aging and older adults.
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