[KWPeace-groups] Chic Pea (Re: Reminder about Weds Jan 15 + 24 Upcoming Events for Peace, Earth & Justice in the KW Area)

Eleanor Grant eleanor7000 at gmail.com
Wed Jan 15 16:48:24 EST 2020


Hi Tamara,

I came early to Chic Pea. Told the waiter there would be a group.

*He wants to know if we have a reservation.* I said I didn't know.

Eleanor


On Sat, 11 Jan 2020 23:29 Tamara Lorincz, <tlorincz at dal.ca> wrote:

> Hello KW Peace
>
> Please see below a list of 24 upcoming events for peace, earth and justice
> in the KW area. Please feel free to forward on.
>
> Reminder: We are going to have an organizing meeting for the rally "No War
> On Iran! Troops Out of Iraq! Peace in the Middle East, Moment of Silence
> for Flight 752" on Wednesday, January 15 from 5:00-6:30 pm at Chic Pea Pita
> &  Grill, 91 University Avenue E (corner with Weber St). It will be
> pay-your-own way for dinner or you can just have a drink. Chic Pea has
> vegetarian and vegan options: https://www.chicpeagrill.ca/  We want to
> have a space where we can get to know people better over a meal. Please let
> me know if you are going to come so I can ensure we have a big enough
> table. You can reply to: tlorincz at dal.ca
>
> In solidarity,
> Tamara Lorincz
>
> UPCOMING EVENTS
>
> (1)
> DOSED DOCUMENTARY + Q&A - ONE SHOW ONLY AT APOLLO CINEMA!
> Showtime: January 13th, Monday, Doors at 6:30pm, movie will begin at
> 7:00pm at The Apollo Cinema.
> Kitchener premiere of the award-winning psychedelic documentary DOSED
> followed by a Q&A panel discussion.
> After many years of prescription medications failed her a suicidal woman
> turns to underground healers to try and overcome her depression, anxiety,
> and opioid addiction with illegal psychedelic medicine like magic mushrooms
> and iboga.
> An evening dedicated to psychedelics, mental health, addiction,
> compassion, education, and solutions. The DOSED screening will be followed
> by a Q&A led by James Jesso, Trevor Millar of MAPS Canada, and special
> guests (TBA).
> The event is presented by The Medicinal Mushroom Dispensary and ticket
> proceeds go towards ongoing marketing of Dosed Movie with a % to MAPS
> Canada for continued research and clinical studies for the therapeutic use
> of psychedelics to treat mental health and addiction issues.
> Watch the trailer at: http://www.DOSEDMOVIE.com
> More info:
> https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/dosed-documentary-qa-one-show-only-at-apollo-cinema-tickets-82328421525
>
> (2)
> WOMEN IN POLITICS
> Tuesday Jan 14 at 6:30 PM - 8:30 PM
> 85 Queen Street N
> Kitchener Public Library
> Room D
> Kitchener, ON N2H 2H1
> WCT Waterloo Region Chapter presents a panel discussion on women in
> politics.
> Please join us on Tuesday, January 14 for networking, light refreshments,
> and a panel discussion of women in politics, featuring:
> Karen Redman, Chair, Region of Waterloo
> Laura Mae Lindo, MPP, Kitchener Centre
> Julie Garner, Prinicipal, Earnscliffe Strategy Group
> Stephanie MacKendrick, Author of IN GOOD HANDS: Remarkable Female
> Politicians from Around the World Who Showed Up, Spoke Out and Made Change
> (April, 2020)
> with moderator Dorothy McCabe, WCT Waterloo Region Board Member
> Tuesday, January 14, 6:30pm @ Kitchener Public Library, Room D (85 Queen
> Street N)
> Cost:
> $15 WCT members (+HST)
> $25 Non-Members (+HST)
> Student members $5 (+HST)
> Student non-members $15 (+HST) - please email mailto:
> wctwaterloo at wct-fct.com for student discount codes (must have proper
> student identification)
> All attendees will receive advance copies of IN GOOD HANDS: Remarkable
> Female Politicians from Around the World Who Showed Up, Spoke Out and Made
> Change by Stephanie McKendrick courtesy of Kids Can Press, a division of
> Corus Entertainment.
> Email: mailto:wctwaterloo at wct-fct.com
> More info: https://www.facebook.com/events/445335069493252/
>
> (3)
> DUTY TO DISSENT: HENRI BOURASSA AND THE FIRST WORLD WAR, WITH GEOFF KEELAN
> January 15 @ 7:00 pm
> LCMSDS
> 232 King Street
> Waterloo, Canada
> Laurier Military History Speaker Series
> Henri Bourassa was at once the loudest and most eloquent voice against the
> First World War in Canada. From cautious acceptance to outright rejection,
> Bourassa's perspective provides valuable insight into the underlying
> political turmoil of the war and the impact of a world war on Canadians as
> they began to understand their role on the world stage.
> Geoff Keelan received a doctorate from the University of Waterloo, was a
> SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow at Western University, and currently works at
> Library and Archives Canada as an access archivist.
> More info:
> https://canadianmilitaryhistory.ca/event/duty-to-dissent-henri-bourassa-and-the-first-world-war-with-geoff-keelan/
>
> (4)
> DIFFERENTIAL INCLUSION, SOFT DOMINATION AND GOOD INTENTIONS: A REFLEXIVE
> EXAMINATION OF REFUGEE SPONSORING RELATIONSHIPS
> January 16 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm Free
> Room 142, Balsillie School of International Affairs, 67 Erb St.
> In this consideration of the idea and social reality of social inclusion
> for newcomers, Luann Good Gingrich applies Bourdieu's "epistemic
> reflexivity" to the analysis of the institutional and interpersonal
> relationships in the Private Sponsorship of Refugees (PSR) program.
> Reporting on a community-based qualitative study with Mennonite Central
> Committee (MCC) Ontario, Dr Good Gingrich examines the tensions and
> contradictions of sponsor-newcomer relationships and associated positions
> and dispositions (or habitus) that are produced, at the institutional and
> interpersonal scales. Her analysis draws on focus groups and interviews
> with MCC sponsors and corresponding sponsored refugee newcomers arriving in
> Ontario between 2007 to 2015.
>
> (5)
> MLK: A CALL TO CONSCIENCE FILM SCREENING & DISCUSSION
> Monday, Jan. 20 from 7-8:30 pm
> Room 142, Balsillie School of International Affairs, 67 Erb St.
> This free public screening is to mark Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. day. The
> documentary, "A Call to Conscience,"gives greater insight into Dr. King's
> civil rights and anti-war views and deconstructs his most important but
> least known speech "Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break the Silence". This
> powerful film puts Dr. King's legacy into a contemporary context,
> particularly in light of the new Poor People's Campaign, the Black Lives
> Matter movement and the ongoing wars in the Middle East. The film includes
> rare archival footage and interviews with pre-eminent King scholar Dr.
> Clayborne Carson, academic Dr. Cornel West, African-American historian Dr.
> Vincent Harding, & Institute for Policy Studies fellow Phyllis Bennis. The
> screening will be followed by a discussion, led by Tamara Lorincz, about
> nonviolent resistance, social justice and peace activism in this current
> era of the climate emergency and the Trump presidency. Copies of Dr. King's
> speech will be made available.
> Co-hosted by the BSIA Conflict & Security Research Cluster, PACS-CAN and
> KW Peace.
> More info:
> https://www.balsillieschool.ca/event/film-screening-mlk-a-call-to-conscience/
>
> (6)
> MOVING BEYOND 'SLAVERY SCANDALS': REFLECTING ON GLOBAL FISH WORK
> January 21 @ 11:30 am - 1:00 pm Free
> Balsillie School of International Affairs . Room 1-42
> 67 Erb Street West
> Since 2014 governance initiatives in fisheries have been forced to respond
> to the outbreak of 'slavery scandals' concerning working conditions on
> fishing vessels, particularly in Thailand. These scandals are framed
> through a simplified narrative that invokes slavery, human trafficking and
> fisheries crime, dramatic narratives being successful in making the often
> extremely dangerous and difficult working conditions found in off-shore
> fishing visible. However, these slavery narratives do not fit well with the
> grounded and often ambiguous legalities and illegalities found in
> industrial fishing, and provide poor guidance towards improving these
> working conditions. Our research flags how little is understood about
> migrant labour on the high seas, and how poor working conditions persist
> far beyond mainland Southeast Asia. In this talk we take up these issues
> drawing on fisheries research based in Thailand and Taiwan, both of which
> rely almost entirely on migrant workers from Southeast Asia as their
> workforce.
> About the speakers
> Melissa Marschke is an Associate Professor at the School of International
> Development and Global Studies at the University of Ottawa. She is
> currently involved in research projects examining (a) work across the
> seafood sector, and (b) sand livelihoods, with a geographical focus on
> Southeast Asia (but more recently she has become interested in seafood in
> Canada and the Caribbean).
> Peter Vandergeest is Professor of Geography at York University. His
> current research is concerns working conditions and labour relations in the
> commercial fishing industry, focussing on migrant workers and state
> jurisdiction across ocean spaces. Geographically his research is oriented
> to Taiwan and Southeast Asia, and he also maintains research on forest
> conservation in the latter region.
> More info:
> https://www.balsillieschool.ca/event/moving-beyond-slavery-scandals-reflecting-on-global-fish-work/
>
> (7)
> CINEMA SERIES: "ANTHROPOCENE: THE HUMAN EPOCH"
> Tuesday, January 21, 2020 7:00 PM - 8:30 PM
> CIGI Campus Auditorium, 67 Erb Street West, Waterloo, Canada
> Public Event: Cinema Series
> More info:
> https://www.cigionline.org/events/cinema-series-anthropocene-human-epoch
>
> (8)
> THE JOURNEY OF RECONCILIATION: LOCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR SETTLER CANADIANS
> with Kelly Laurila
> Tuesday, January 21
> 7:00pm to 8:30pm
> Waterloo Main Library
> Since the release of the 2015 Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation
> Commission, many Settler Canadians are engaging in discussions of
> reconciliation. There is often, however, an angst of not knowing what to
> do, fear of saying or doing the wrong thing or feeling guilt or shame about
> the injustices done to Indigenous peoples, so that denial or avoidance may
> be chosen instead of engagement. Kelly Laurila, who is Indigenous Sáami and
> Settler, will share what she has learned about reconciliation and how one
> can find a place within this journey.
> More info and RSVP:
> https://www.wpl.ca/renison-university-college-lecture-series
>
> (9)
> ALARM | Responding to Our Climate Emergency Exhibition Opening
> January 23 @ 10:45 pm - January 24 @ 1:00 am
> ALARM | Reflecting on Our Climate Emergency
> Join us as we open this important series of immersive exhibitions, events,
> and dialogues to highlight the risks and possible solutions. Thursday,
> January 23, 20205:45pm Doors 6:30pm Introduction7:15pm Exhibitions Open.
> The warning signs, both big and small, are all around us. Please join us as
> THEMUSEUM weighs in on our Climate Emergency. Four Exhibitions, One Planet-
> Agents for Change | Facing the Anthropocene- MELTING ICE- EXTINCTION-
> SPECTRUM | The Climate Emergency Experience, Opening February 2020 Tickets:
> https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/alarm-responding-to-our-climate-emergency-exhibition-opening-tickets-86603396089?mc_cid=c0e5c87db7&mc_eid=48291d4301
> More info:
> http://wrenvironetwork.ca/event/alarm-responding-to-our-climate-emergency-exhibition-opening/
>
> (10)
> GEOTHERMAL TECHNOLOGIES IN CANADA: FUTURE PATHWAYSEXPORT THIS EVENT TO
> CALENDAR
> Thursday, January 23, 2020, 9:00 Am
> FED - Federation Hall
> 200 University Avenue West
> Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1
> Canada
>
> https://uwaterloo.ca/events/events/geothermal-technologies-canada-future-pathways-0
>
> (11)
> GLOBAL DAY OF PROTEST "NO WAR ON IRAN! TROOPS OUT OF IRAQ! PEACE IN THE
> MIDDLE EAST" & VIGIL TO MOURN FOR FLIGHT 752
> Saturday, January 25
> 2:00-3:00 pm
> Waterloo Public Square, 75 King St.
> We will have a peace rally in solidarity with the Global Day of Protest
> "No War On Iran!" on Saturday, January 25 from 2:00-3:00 p.m.  at the
> Waterloo Public Square. We do not want another war in the Middle East. We
> say "No War On Iran." We want US-NATO-Canadian soldiers and special forces
> out of Iraq. We need de-escalation and diplomacy. The Canadian government
> should urge the US to rejoin the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and end
> its crippling sanctions against Iran. We want peace with Iran and peace
> throughout the Middle East. We will also observe a moment of silence to
> mourn the victims of Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 that was
> accidentally hit by an Iranian missile on January 8 killing 176 passengers
> including 82 Iranians, 57-63 Canadians and 11 Ukrainians among other
> foreign nationals. The Waterloo action is organized by KW Peace, WR
> Nonviolence and the Canadian Voice of Women for Peace. Co-sponsored by
> LSPIRG. Rallies are taking place at the same time across the country and
> around the world. Find out more about the Global Day of Protest here:
> https://www.answercoalition.org/iran-jan-25
> Waterloo Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/469771517017056/
>
> (12)
> "RAT PARK' FREE! FILM SCREENING AND DISCUSSION AT KPL
> Tuesday, January 28, 2020 - 6:30pm to 9:30pm
> Kitchener Public Library 85 Queen St. N. Kitchener, ON N2H 2H1
> Could the secret to solving the world's drug crisis lie in a forgotten
> Canadian psychology experiment from the 1970's involving rats and heroin?
> Following three stories on opposite ends of the world, Vice Studios' Rat
> Park, a new Crave Original Documentary from director Shawney Cohen,
> examines the complex issue of drug laws and addiction, exploring why the
> problem may not be about the drugs themselves, but the environments we live
> in.
> The film draws on the conclusions of Alexander's experiment by exploring
> how we ended up in the worst overdose crisis in history, and how it's
> perpetuated by ineffective drug policies around the world. Drawing on
> original footage from Portugal, USA, Philippines, and Canada, Cohen says
> "The radical difference between these places and their drug policies shows
> how the Rat Park experiment plays out in real life. You can't deal with
> drug crises independently of people's environments and their socioeconomic
> situations."
> More info: https://www.theworkingcentre.org/event/22092
>
> (13)
> FOOD & FAITH: MENNONITES FARMING LOCALLY AND GLOBALLY | FILM SCREENING:
> SEVEN POINTS ON EARTH
> Public Lecture | January 31 at 7:30 PM | Conrad Grebel University College
> | Great Hall |
> Mennonite sociologist Winfield Fretz called farming the 'sacred vocation.'
> Even though fewer and fewer Mennonites are involved in it, we are all
> dependent on, if not blessed by it. We used to talk together about farming
> and faith a lot more when more of us were farmers. Maybe it's time to talk
> again. "Seven Points on Earth: Film and discussion with Paul Plett"
> Filmmaker Paul Plett captured the lives of seven Mennonites farming in
> Manitoba, Iowa, Bolivia, Netherlands, Zimbabwe, Siberia and Indonesia. His
> film offers an unprecedented look at Mennonite farming and faith around the
> world. Come view the film and engage in discussion with Paul.
> This event is free. Please register to reserve your space.
> Reception to follow.
> More info:
> https://uwaterloo.ca/events/events/food-faith-mennonites-farming-locally-and-globally-film
>
> (14)
> BECHTEL LECTURE IN ANABAPTIST-MENNONITE STUDIES: BREAKFAST "FOOD & FAITH:
> MENNONITES FARMING LOCALLY AND GLOBALLY"
> Saturday, February 1, 2020 - 9:00 Am
> Conrad Grebel University College
> Mennonite sociologist Winfield Fretz called farming the 'sacred
> vocation.'  Even though fewer and fewer Mennonites are involved in it, we
> are all dependent on, if not blessed by it.  We used to talk together about
> farming and faith a lot more when more of us were farmers.  Maybe it's time
> to talk again.
> "Farmers Breakfast Panel: Breakfast and discussion with Ontario Mennonites
> in Agriculture"
> Breakfast and Discussion | February 1 at 9:00 AM | Conrad Grebel
> University College
> This breakfast event is a panel discussion of the way farming, food,
> family and faith come together in our various lives.  Whether you make your
> living feeding others or have your life because of their work, you are
> welcome to join this breakfast roundtable. The panel includes Angie Koch of
> Fertile Ground Farm, Chris Mullet Koop of Elmwood Farms, and Sarah
> Martin-Mills of Growing Hope Farm.
> This event is free. Please register.
> Breakfast provided.
> MENU:
> Hash-brown casserole, breakfast sausage, hard boiled eggs
> Muffins, coffee cake, bagels, (butter, jam, honey)
> Yogurt, granola, fresh fruit salad (including bananas, kiwi, apples)
> Juices - orange, apple, cranberry
> Coffee, tea, water
> PANELISTS:
> Sarah Martin-Mills: Growing Hope Farm, farming for 3 years, mostly
> livestock, a non-profit operation for learning and giving to others.
> Lloyd & Shirley Frey: Goldenview Holsteins/Frey Farms, 3rd generation
> farmers, 90 cow dairy with feed and some cash crop.
> Angie Koch: Fertile Ground Farm, farming for 13 years, vegetables, organic
> market garden selling through CSA (Community Shared Agriculture).
> Chris Mullet Koop: Elmwood Farms, 5th generation and 21 years, commercial
> egg and grape grower.
> Mark Reusser: farm near New Dundee, not sure how many years, broilers and
> cash crop, VP of Ontario Federation of Agriculture
> More info:
> https://uwaterloo.ca/grebel/bechtel-lecture-breakfast-roundtable
>
> (15)
> DOCUMENTARY FANTASTIC FUNGI
> Showings from Feb. 7-13
> Princess Original, Waterloo
> "His evangelical eco-doc even has a superhero-friendly title - Fantastic
> Fungi - and a message about saving the planet that stars mushrooms as
> capped crusaders, and mycelium as the hidden power that helps create life
> and natural harmony all over the world.
> "At the heart of Fantastic Fungi is the central scientific reality that
> what fungi have been doing for billions of years is creating the
> nutrient-rich soil that led to plants and, well, us. Mushrooms are the
> visible, edible result of the rejuvenation constantly at work in forests
> wherever dead things lie, but underneath, the masses of wispy tendrils
> known as mycelium are nature's internet: connecting trees and swapping
> nutrients in a vast network that regulates itself for the betterment of all
> living things." - Los Angeles Times
> More info: https://www.princesscinemas.com/movie/fantastic-fungi
>
> (16)
> MANDELA: STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM
> On exhibit February 7 to August 3, 2020
> Ken Seiling Waterloo Regional Museum
> The exhibition for everyone who refuses to see the world in black and
> white. Mandela: Struggle for Freedom is a rich sensory experience of
> imagery, soundscape, digital media, and objects used to explore the
> earthshaking fight for justice and human dignity in South Africa - and its
> relevance to issues of today. Among its many dramatic visual features and
> original artifacts, the exhibition replicates Mandela's eight-foot by
> seven-foot prison cell. When entered, the cell becomes a digital theatre
> whose walls tell a story of repression and resilience.
> More info: https://www.waterlooregionmuseum.ca/en/exhibits/mandela.aspx
>
> (16)
> NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC LIVE!
> with Bertie Gregory
> Main Theatre, Centre in the Square
> TUES,FEB. 11, 2020
> @ 7:30PM
> Photographer Bertie Gregory specializes in intimate shots of animals in
> their natural environment, whether that's a frigid Vancouver beach or the
> streets of London. In fact, it's in those spaces where nature and humanity
> coexist that he thrives-a result, no doubt of his teenage years chasing
> urban swans and pike with his camera. From up-close footage of a leopard
> stalking through Mumbai to evocative portraits of Vancouver's elusive
> coastal wolf, he has mastered the art of capturing what binds animal and
> human together.
> More info: https://centreinthesquare.com/event/national-geographic-live-2/
>
> (18)
> BOOK LAUNCH | ADVOCATING FOR PEACE
> Thursday, February 13, 2020 - 7:00 PM
> Schlegel Community Education Room
> Conrad Grebel University College, Waterloo
> Advocating for Peace: Stories from the Ottawa Office of Mennonite Central
> Committee, 1975-2008
> Join us on Thursday, February 13 at 7:00 p.m. for a program with the book
> author William Janzen, including selected readings and a Q&A. Hosted by the
> Institute of Anabaptist Mennonite Studies.
> More info: https://uwaterloo.ca/grebel/events/book-launch-advocating-peace
>
> (19)
> FILM "THROUGH A LENS DARKLY: BLACK PHOTOGRAPHERS AND THE EMERGENCE OF A
> PEOPLE"
> Tuesday, February 25, 2020 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
> CIGI Campus Auditorium, 67 Erb Street West, Waterloo, Canada
> Public Event: Cinema Series
> More info:
> https://www.cigionline.org/events/cinema-series-through-lens-darkly-black-photographers-and-emergence-people
>
> (20)
> FREE DOCUMENTARY THE IVORY GAME
> February 25
> 7:00 PM-8:30 PM
> Waterloo Main Library, 35 Albert St.
> Location: James J. Brown Auditorium
> The Ivory Game is an epic documentary feature that goes undercover into
> the dark and sinister underbelly of ivory trafficking. Join a team of
> intelligence operatives, undercover activists, passionate front-line
> rangers and tough-as-nails conservationists as they try to infiltrate the
> corrupt global network of ivory trafficking. Drop-in.
> More info: http://calendar.wpl.ca/eventcalendar.asp
>
> (21)
> FREEDOM TO READ WEEK - WHY ARE BOOKS BANNED?
> February 27, 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
> Kitchener Central Library Meeting Room A
> This is Freedom to Read Week in Canada! Come out for this fascinating
> discussion of why books are banned.
> In North America, most banned books contain controversial depictions of
> moral or religious content. But how do other parts of the world deal with
> such books? Looking back at a history of banned books in the world, this
> talk will discuss the reasoning behind restricting readers from specific
> texts and their impact on society.
> Join Dr. Lamees Al Ethari from the English Language and Literature
> Department of the University of Waterloo for this timely talk about
> censorship and freedom to read.
> More info: http://kplca.evanced.info/signup/Calendar
>
> (22)
> PETER MANSBRIDGE TO MODERATE PANEL ON CLIMATE CRISIS
> Earth Day, April 22, 2020 at Bingeman's Marshall Hall
> Kitchener, ON - THEMUSEUM is pleased to be hosting a discussion on Climate
> Crisis in conjunction with its exhibition ALARM | The Climate Crisis
> Exhibition. The event will be held Earth Day, April 22, 2020 at Bingeman's
> Marshall Hall. Partnering with The Walrus magazine and Centre for
> International Governance Innovation (CIGI) the panel will include
> representation from national columnists and local research fellows on the
> climate crisis and the environment.
> Tickets are $50 per person for general seating. Also available is a $150
> VIP package which includes seating in the front rows, an after-event
> reception with the panel and Peter Mansbridge, tax receipt and one
> admission to see ALARM | The Climate Crisis Exhibition. Members of
> THEMUSEUM will receive discounted admission. Tickets are available at
> THEMUSEUM.ca.
>
> (23)
> THE DELISLE AFFAIR
> Guelph Military Lecture Series
> Wesley Wark | March 12 | 7:00pm
> Guelph Civic Museum
> 52 Norfolk Street,Guelph
> Wesley Wark is currently an adjunct professor at the University of Ottawa
> and an instructor at the Centre on Public Management and Policy. between
> 1998-2002. His most recent book is an edited volume: Secret Intelligence: A
> Reader (second edition 2019).  He served as co-director of a research team
> at the University of Ottawa engaged on a study of the impact of national
> security and counter-terrorism policies on Canadians since 9/11, funded by
> Public Safety's Kanishka Project. He recently completed a commissioned
> history of the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP on
> its 30th anniversary.  He is currently working on a book on major espionage
> plots in Canada since 1945. He serves on the editorial advisory board of
> the journal, Intelligence and National Security, and is a former editor of
> the journal.
> More info:
> https://canadianmilitaryhistory.ca/event/the-delisle-affair-with-wesley-wark/
>
> (24)
> PEGASUS: PEACE, GLOBAL HEALTH AND SUSTAINABILITY AT THE BALSILLIE SCHOOL
> OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
> April 24-26, 2020
> Balsillie School of International Affairs, Waterloo
> PEGASUS is a three-day conference that aims to advance awareness and
> understanding of Peace, Global Health and Sustainability. The 2020
> conference will engage the next generation of leaders by bringing together
> health professionals, including: physicians, nurses and trainees,
> policymakers, academics, researchers, students, health-related
> organizations, community members, and an array of speakers to share ideas
> and strategies about Global Health.
> More info: https://www.pegasusconference.ca/about-2#about-1
>
>
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