Session Overview - All times EDTLogin to access full session information. |
| ||||
8:30am - 10:00am |
2.1.1 Development actors in their own right? Canadian CSOs and their relationship with the Canadian government Location: DS-1520 Presentations of the Symposium N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A |
2.1.2: Health and Wellbeing Location: DS-1525 Turning the First Stone: Analyzing Human Resource Shortages and Herb Scarcity with Health Systems Models in Two System African States Brandon University, Canada Exploring factors contributing to poor maternal health outcome in women presenting from conflict affected areas SPHMMC, Ethiopia Exploring a reconceptualization of adaptive preferences as a tool for understanding survivors of sexual violence. University of Guelph, Canada Examining intersectoral collaboration among community health workers to address maternal and child health in resource-constrained settings in the Philippines: A qualitative study 1: University of Waterloo, Canada; 2: International Care Ministries, Philippines; 3: University of Toronto, Canada |
2.1.3: Environmental, Health, and Economic Perspectives on Climate Change Action Location: DS-1540 Chair: Lina Aburas Awadalla A search for ecological justice in the climate crisis University of Ottawa, Canada The politics of health and social equity in Nationally Determined Contribution Reports to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change The Australian National University, Australia A messy mash-up of shadow governance and locally-led urban adaptation in informal settlements: perspectives from Panorama, Colombia Université de Montréal, Canada Uncovering the impacts of women-centric lending programs on women’s empowerment in the Bolivian Aquaculture Sector 1: Royal Roads University; 2: University of Victoria |
2.1.4: Why Peace Professionalism Matters in Uncertain Conflict and Development Contexts Location: DS-1545 Why Peace Professionalism Matters in Uncertain Conflict and Development Contexts 1: Saint Paul University, Canada; 2: Conrad Grebel University College (University of Waterloo), Canada; 3: Civilian Peace Service Canada; 4: Alliance for Peacebuilding, USA; 5: PEGASUS Institute, Canada; 6: University of Nairobi, Kenya; 7: Peace Academy Foundation, Bosnia-Herzegovina; 8: BSocial, Colombia; 9: Canadian Mennonite University, Canada; 10: MDR Associates Conflict Resolution Inc.; 11: Universidad Pedagógica y Tecnológica de Colombia (UPTC), Colombia |
10:00am - 10:30am |
Break 1 Day 2 |
|||
10:30am - 12:00pm |
2.2.1: Overlapping crises in Sub-Saharan Africa Location: DS-1520 Chair: Lina Aburas Awadalla Building resilient food security in response to overlapping crises in Sub-Saharan Africa using a nexus approach 1: Canadian Foodgrains Bank, Canada; 2: Zimbabwe Council of Churches, Zimbabwe Insecurity and care amidst climate change and conflict: a focus on the Lake Chad region University of Northern British Columbia, Canada From farmer-herder conflict to banditry crisis: A study of north-central Nigeria University of Jos, Nigeria Including young people in dialogues in times of crisis: An agentic way to look at Mali’s conflict differently. 1: PREAM project; 2: McGill University |
2.2.2: Childcare, the Pandemic, and policy advocacy Location: DS-1525 Childcare Amidst Crisis: Reshaping Neoliberal Discourses of Care in the Non-Profit Space Queen's University, Canada Children’s Rights Education - A Grounding Orientation for Children within an Insecure Worldies 1: Royal Roads University, Canada; 2: Royal Roads University, Canada “Does government funding constrain policy advocacy by charities? Examination of CRA data on ‘political activities’, 2003-2018” 1: Dalhousie University, Canada; 2: Memorial University; 3: Acadia University |
2.2.3: Critical reflections on financing for security, solidarity spaces in fighting climate change, and volunteering Location: DS-1540 Un profil de compétences pour les coopérants volontaires du Québec : Première perspective d’experts 1: Université de Sherbrooke; 2: Association québécoise des organismes de coopération internationale Le financement, nerf de la guerre des solutions africaines aux problèmes sécuritaires africains Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada Naviguer les paradoxes par l’organisation d’espaces de solidarité internationale pour lutter contre la crise climatique : le cas de l’AQOCI à la COP28 1: Université Laval; 2: Association québécoise des organismes de coopération internationale; 3: Université Laval; 4: Université de Sherbrooke; 5: Professionnelle en environnement; 6: Professionnelle en environnement; 7: Peoples’s Coalition on Food Sovereignty; 8: Jeunes volontaires pour l’environnement Sénégal; 9: COICA; 10: CBCS-Network; 11: LATINDADD |
2.2.4: Feminist Policy Impact and Activism Location: DS-1545 Chair: Laura Parisi The conflation of abortion, LGBTI+ rights, and sexual and reproductive health and rights in Zambia University of Ottawa, Canada Women's Activism in Bangladesh: Affective Communities and Spaces of Social Reproduction York University, Canada In Search of Transformative Horizons: A Feminist Institutionalist Analysis of Canada and Transitional Justice in Colombia University of Ottawa, Canada Transformative organizational and programmatic change? Civil society responses to the Canadian Feminist International Assistance Policy (FIAP) 1: Concordia University; 2: Humanity and Inclusion |
12:00pm - 1:30pm |
Lunch Day 2 |
|||
1:30pm - 3:00pm |
2.3.1: Economic perspectives, financial assistance, and financial injustices Location: DS-1520 Chair: Sean Irwin Economic Challenges in Mid- and Low-Income Countries: A Comprehensive Analysis of Economic Insecurity, Sovereign Debt Crisis, Unemployment, and Inflation Nexia Debrah & Co., Ghana Industrial Pollution and Health Issues among Rural Citizens: Does Injustice in Financial Assistance Matter? University of Pardubice, Czech Republic THE EFFECTIVENESS OF MONITORING AND EVALUATION PRACTICES IN PROMOTING SUSTAINABLE VILLAGE SAVINGS AND LOANS ASSOCIATION (VSLA) IN NORTHERN GHANA. 1: University for Development Studies, Ghana; 2: University of Pardubice, Czech Republic Home Grown Solutions for Sustaining Shared Futures: Narratives from Rwanda Centre for Rural Management (CRM), Kottayam, Kerala, India |
2.3.2: (Neo)Extractivism and mining Location: DS-1525 Chair: Lina Aburas Awadalla Varieties of (Neo)Extractivism in the ‘Lithium Triangle’: a Multiscalar IPE Analysis McMaster University, Canada Transformations in IFI-State Relationships and the Consequences to (Neo)Extractivisms in Brazil and Ecuador McMaster University, Canada Mapping the Critical Zone: A New Era of Research in Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining Queen's University, Canada Innovative Finance and Urban Dispossession: 'A Plan for Everyone for a Better Life' in Honduras University of Ottawa, Canada |
2.3.3 Positionnalités, épistémologies et méthodologies féministes pour questionner les rapports de pouvoir en coopération internationale | Feminist positionalities, epistemologies and methodologies for questioning power relations in international cooperation Location: DS-1540 Presentations of the Symposium Réflexions sur les rapports de pouvoir dans les processus de (re)production, de diffusion et de valorisation des connaissances et savoirs en coopération internationale Embracing diverse knowledge forms and redefining expertise through anti-capitalist, feminist, and decolonial principles Injustices épistémiques et expertise en genre. Comment surmonter l’ignorance épistémique pour contribuer aux luttes féministes transnationales? Doing Repair |
2.3.4 Teaching International Development Studies: Why and How to Integrate a Decolonial Lens Location: DS-1545 Presentations of the Symposium A Review of IDS Syllabi and Strategies to Integrate a Decolonial Lens Reflections on a New Course on Decolonizing Development Reflections on a New Course on Racism and Development Reflections on Teaching Gender and Intersectionality in International Development |
3:00pm - 3:30pm |
Break 2 Day 2 |
|||
3:30pm - 5:00pm |
CASID AGM Location: DS-R520 - Plenary Day 2 |
|||
7:00pm - 10:00pm |
CASID Social |