English message follows.
[Concours de rédaction du LRIDE 2022-2023. IRLRC Essay competition 2022-2023.]
Le Laboratoire de recherche interdisciplinaire sur les droits de l'enfant<https://www.uottawa.ca/faculte-droit/droit-civil/lride> (LRIDE) lance son un concours annuel de rédaction sur les droits de l'enfant!
Concours 2022-2023 | Date limite : 15 mai à 23 h 59
Les candidats doivent être inscrits dans un programme d'études dans les institutions qui accueillent les membres du réseau CAHRI, Association canadienne des instituts sur les droits de la personne / Canadian Association of Human Rights Institutes,<https://wp.stu.ca/ahrc/association-of-canadian-human-rights-institutes/> c'est-à-dire : Université St. Thomas, Université McGill, Université du Manitoba, Université Laval, UQAM, Université de la Saskatchewan, Université de la Colombie Britannique, Université de Toronto, Université Carleton, Université McMaster, Université Concordia, Université York et Université d'Ottawa.
Le concours comprend deux catégories : Premier cycle et Études supérieures. Les candidats doivent soumettre une étude portant sur une question reliée aux droits de l'enfant. Le texte doit avoir été préparé dans le cadre d'un cours ou pour les fins de l'obtention d'un diplôme et doit comprendre toutes les citations et les notes. Les textes peuvent être rédigés en français ou en anglais. Les soumissions gagnantes dans les deux catégories, Premier cycle et Études supérieures, seront publiés dans la Revue canadienne des droits de l'enfant<https://ojs.library.carleton.ca/index.php/cjcr>.
Lisez les règles du concours sur notre site web.<https://www.uottawa.ca/faculte-droit/droit-civil/lride/concours-redaction>
Bonne chance aux participants et participantes!
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The Interdisciplinary Research Laboratory on the Rights of the Child<https://www.uottawa.ca/faculty-law/civil-law/irlrc> (IRLRC) is launching its annual essay contest on children's rights!
2022-2023 Competition | Deadline: May 15 at 11:59 pm
Applicants must be enrolled in a program of study at institutions hosting Canadian Association of Human Rights Institutes (CAHRI)<https://wp.stu.ca/ahrc/association-of-canadian-human-rights-institutes/> members, i.e.: St. Thomas University, McGill University, University of Manitoba, Université Laval, UQAM, University of Saskatchewan, University of British Columbia, University of Toronto, Carleton University, McMaster University, Concordia University, York University and University of Ottawa.
The competition has two categories: Undergraduate and Graduate. Applicants must submit a paper on an issue related to children's rights. The paper must have been prepared as part of a course or for degree requirements and must include all citations and notes. The texts can be written in French or English. The winning submissions in both categories, Undergraduate and Graduate, will be published by the Canadian Journal of Children's Rights<https://ojs.library.carleton.ca/index.php/cjcr/index>.
Read the competition rules on our website.<https://www.uottawa.ca/faculty-law/civil-law/irlrc/essay-competition>
Best of luck to the participants!
______________________________
Laboratoire de recherche interdisciplinaire sur les droits de l'enfant (LRIDE) | Interdisciplinary Research Laboratory on the Rights of the Child (IRLRC)
Université d'Ottawa | University of Ottawa
57 Louis-Pasteur, Ottawa K1N 6N5
Twitter @LRIDEuOttawa
The Centre for Human Rights Research (CHRR) at the University of Manitoba is pleased to announce its annual Critical Conversations series. This year, the three-part series will focus on Borders and Human Rights. For our first talk on Friday, February 17th at 2pm CST, CHRR is thrilled to have Harsha Walia and Dr. Alex Wilson join us to explore issues relating to borders, colonialism, sovereignty, human rights, and resistance.
Harsha Walia is a Panjabi writer and organizer based in Vancouver, Coast Salish territories and rooted in migrant justice, anti racist, feminist, abolitionist, anti-imperialist, and anticapitalist movements and communities for over two decades. She is also the author of Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism (2021) and Undoing Border Imperialism (2013), and co-author of "Never Home: Legislating Discrimination in Canadian Immigration", as well as "Red Women Rising: Indigenous Women Survivors in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside."
Dr. Alex Wilson (Opaskwayak Cree Nation) is professor in the Department of Educational Foundations at the University of Saskatchewan. Her scholarship has greatly contributed to building and sharing knowledge about land-based education; Two-Spirit People; Indigenous research methodologies; and anti-oppressive education. Her research and "coming in" theory has led to classroom and community practices that honour the contributions and lives of Two-Spirit People. As an Idle No More organizer and as coordinator of an Indigenous land-based Master's program, she focuses on the prevention of violence in the lives of Indigenous peoples and the protection of land and water.
Register now and submit your questions for the panelists: https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Y2J3QT1hSZ6wY7_b-fDU0g
Please share widely with your networks!
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Centre for Human Rights Research <chrr.info>
442 Robson Hall
University of Manitoba
Winnipeg, MB Canada R3T 2N2
Treaty 1 territory and the homeland of the Métis Nation
[cid:image001.png@01D9355C.A47A6B90]<https://www.facebook.com/CHRRManitoba/>[cid:image002.png@01D9355C.A47A6B90]<https://www.instagram.com/chrr.manitoba/?hl=en> [cid:image003.png@01D9355C.A47A6B90] <https://twitter.com/CHRRmanitoba>
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Hello,
The Centre for Human Rights Research (CHRR) is pleased to announce its annual Critical Conversations series, this year focusing on the Centre's latest research theme Borders and Human Rights<https://chrr.info/chrr-themes/borders/>.
Please see below/attached for information on the three-part series, including our featured speakers and registration links. All events are free and will take place online via Zoom.
Our first event on 'Borders, Colonialism, Resistance, and Human Rights' will take place on Friday, February 17th at 2pm, and feature Harsha Walia and Dr. Alex Wilson. You can register for the event and submit questions for the speakers at: https://bit.ly/3kIkcJU
Please circulate widely with your networks. If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to be in touch.
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Pauline Tennent
Centre for Human Rights Research
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English follows.
[Cours d'été en droit international humanitaire du 28 mai au 2 juin 2023 à uOttawa. Inscription à partir du 1er mars. | Summer school in international humanitarian law from May 28 to June 2, 2023 at uOttawa. Photo/Picture: Anmar Qusay, Comité International de la Croix-Rouge/International Committee of the Red Cross]
L’Université d’Ottawa, le Centre de recherche et d’enseignement sur les droits de la personne et la Croix-Rouge canadienne sont fiers de vous présenter la 15e édition du Cours d’été en Droit international humanitaire (DIH)<https://www.uottawa.ca/recherche-innovation/credp/enseignement-formation/DR…> qui se tiendra du 28 mai au 2 juin 2023.
Les objectifs du cours sont d’enseigner les principes fondamentaux du DIH aux étudiant.es et aux professionnel.les, ainsi que de fournir un milieu permettant d’appliquer ces connaissances à des études de cas réalistes pendant une journée complète dédiée à des exercices de simulations.
Les candidatures d’étudiant.es universitaires, d’employé.es du gouvernement, d’organisations non gouvernementales, de journalistes et d’entreprises œuvrant dans le secteur du commerce international sont les bienvenues. La priorité sera accordée aux participant.es possédant des connaissances pratiques et/ou théoriques dans les domaines du droit international humanitaire, du droit international des droits de la personne et à celles et ceux travaillant dans l’humanitaire. Les cours sont donnés par des universitaires de renommée internationale provenant du Canada et de l’étranger ainsi que par des praticien.nes provenant de la fonction publique (Ministère de la défense nationale et Justice Canada).
Veuillez noter que les formulaires d'inscription pour la 15e édition du cours d'été en DIH seront disponibles le 1er mars 2023. Si vous avez des questions, n’hésitez surtout pas à communiquer avec nous à l’adresse dih-ihl(a)uOttawa.ca<mailto:dih-ihl@uottawa.ca>.
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The University of Ottawa, the Human Rights Research and Education Centre, and the Canadian Red Cross are pleased to invite you to the 15th edition of the Summer School on International Humanitarian Law (IHL)<https://www.uottawa.ca/research-innovation/hrrec/teaching-training/DRC4521> that will be held from May 28th to June 2nd, 2023.
The goal of this course is to offer students and professionals the fundamentals of IHL and the opportunity to apply this knowledge through realistic case studies and a full simulation day.
Applications from students, academics, government employees, NGO and IO staff, journalists and those with an interest in learning about IHL are welcome. Preference will be given to participants with exposure to the application or the theory of international humanitarian law, international human rights law or humanitarian work. internationally renowned academics from Canada and abroad as well as practitioners from the public service (Department of National Defence and Justice Canada).
Please note that the registration forms for the 15th edition of the Summer School on IHL will be available on March 1, 2023. If you have questions about the summer school, do not hesitate to contact us at dih-ihl(a)uOttawa.ca<mailto:dih-ihl@uottawa.ca>.
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Croix-Rouge canadienne<https://www.croixrouge.ca/?lang=fr-CA&_ga=> | Canadian Red Cross<https://www.redcross.ca/> &
Centre de recherche et d’enseignement sur les droits de la personne | Human Rights Research and Education Centre
Université d’Ottawa | University of Ottawa
CREDP a célébré ses 40 ans (1981-2021)<https://www2.uottawa.ca/recherche-innovation/credp/a-propos/CREDP40HRREC> | HRREC celebrated its 40 years (1981-2021)<https://www2.uottawa.ca/research-innovation/hrrec/about/CREDP40HRREC>
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TOPIC: Data Colonialism Revisited: The Violent Side of the Politics of Information
Despite producing inequalities and posing risks to democracy and fundamental rights, the contemporary politics of information is usually seen as non-violent. We often consider current surveillance practices in post-panoptic terms and the emerging new power regime, in contrast to the totalitarianism of the early 20th century, as a soft power, that is, a supposedly harmless, efficient, and simple politics that does not touch, does not force, and is based on data, acting in real-time. I believe that this has been the dimension emphasized by a large part of the thinkers of our time (for example, Shoshana Zuboff when dealing with instrumentarian power, David Lyon when analyzing the surveillance culture, Bernard Harcourt when describing the new expository society, Thomas Berns when reflecting on the new government of relations, Byung-Chul Han when presenting psychopolitics, or Nick Couldry and Ulises Mejias when addressing the new data colonialism). In short, it is argued that power tends to function in contemporary times in a non-imposing way, without the need to say no, without explicit prohibitions, employing a more insidious governing strategy, which shapes environments and directs our behaviors in ways we are unable to perceive or resist. I believe it is essential to look more closely at the overtly repressive or negative dimension of the contemporary mode of power operation. I would like to direct my attention to the marginal experiences, on the other side of data colonialism. So I understand that an authoritarian drift is strongly felt in the Global South, where a colonial logic is reactivated, dehumanizing those who are deviant or unproductive.
Register here: https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_fv_BFz1xR3mhEe7p3qSu5Q
Marco Antônio Sousa Alves is an Assistant Professor of Theory and Philosophy of Law at The Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG), in Belo Horizonte, Brazil. He got his PhD in Philosophy at UFMG, with a research stage at École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), in Paris, France. He is the organizer of the books "Life-death: biopolitics in perspective" (Vidamorte: biopolíticas em perspectiva, 2021) and "The information Society in question: law, power and the subject in contemporaneity" (A sociedade da informação em questão: o direito, o poder e o sujeito na contemporaneidade, 2019). Furthermore, he is the coordinator of the Information Society and Algorithmic Government Research Group (Grupo SIGA) and the Study Group on Philosophy, Law, and Power (GFDP), based at the UFMG Law School. He was a visiting scholar at the Surveillance Studies Centre, at Queen's University, in Kingston, Canada, between 2021 and 2022.
Dear all,
In the context of our Centre’s engagement in the Coalition for Academic Freedom in the Americas (CAFA), we are pleased to share with you an invitation to participate in a webinar to mark the first anniversary of the launch of the Inter-American Principles on Academic Freedom and University Autonomy issued by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. The event will be in English and Spanish and feature our partners in the Commission as well as representatives from CAFA founding members. We hope you can join us to learn more about the work we are doing, the role of the principles in the current context and what can be done to support their implementation. Feel free to share this invitation broadly.
Very best wishes,
Viviana
Viviana A. Fernandez
Directrice adjointe / Assistant Director
Centre de recherche et d’enseignement sur les droits de la personne /
Human Rights Research and Education Centre
Université d’Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Twitter: @vafi1217
Le CREDP a célébré ces 40 ans (1981 – 2021)<https://www2.uottawa.ca/recherche-innovation/credp> / HRREC celebrated its 40 years (1981 – 2021)<https://www2.uottawa.ca/research-innovation/hrrec>
Vous pouvez aussi communiquer avec moi via Teams (uOttawa). | You can also contact me via Teams (uOttawa).