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Am Johal interviews co-authors Matt Hern and Selena Couture.
Author: Hern, Matt, Author: Couture, Selena, Author: Johal, Am
Date created: 2019-07-08
Records of the university have specific characteristics that other documents do not have. This tool describes four criteria to use to determine if you are working with records of the university. This training resource includes three related files: an audio file (5 min 45), a written script of the audio, and a visual graphic. Music rights are different from recording rights, but the music being performed by the pipe band during convocation is in the public domain.
Author: Rowe, Joy
Date created: 2015-10-01
Records management is all about how long to keep records, who keeps them, and what happens to them at the end of their "life". All of this information can be found in the university's retention schedules (aka "RRSDAs"). Retention schedules have several parts, and it might take some practice to learn how to read and apply them. This training resource includes several related files: two audio file, including a long version (12.5 minutes) and a shorter version (7.5 minutes), a written transcript of each audio, and a link to an interactive document stored on ThingLink. The purpose is to give staff multiple ways to interact with the key records management question, "How do I read a retention schedule?". Music rights are different from recording rights, but the music being performed by the pipe band during convocation is in the public domain.
Author: Rowe, Joy
Date created: 2015-06-01
In this podcast episode, we look at the basics of naming conventions. We discuss what should be put in every file title, and what to NEVER put in a file title. This training resource includes several related files: an audio file (7 min), a written transcript of the audio, a graphic titled "Document Naming conventions" and a link to the audio file on SoundCloud. The purpose is to give staff multiple ways to interact with the key records management question, "How do I name digital records?". Music rights are different from recording rights, but the music being performed by the pipe band during convocation is in the public domain.
Author: Rowe, Joy
Date created: 2015-10-01
This training resource includes related files: a PDF and docx version of the graphic for easier reuse and remixing.
Author: Rowe, Joy
Date created: 2016-02-23
This poster was presented at the annual conference for ARMA Canada on June 14th, 2016. The poster includes several Creative Commons licensed resources, including graphics. The poster is licensed under Creative Commons under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. Items include a graphic of the poster in PDF format, an audio description of the poster, and a script of the audio to increase accessibility to the work.
Author: Rowe, Joy
Date created: 2016-06-14
The minimum metadata data is described in a document with text and graphics and an audio file (to be added later).
Author: Rowe, Joy
Date created: 2016-05-25
This version of the article has been approved by the publisher for deposit in the institutional repository. Please see the Journal of the South African Society of Archivists for the published version.
Author: Rowe, Joy
Date created: 2016
This is the rehearsal presentation for a 2016 panel at the Association of Canadian Archivists in Montreal. This item includes a video with closed captioning and a transcript. The actual panel presentation was given on June 2nd, 2016.
Author: Rowe, Joy
Date created: 2016-06
Can art challenge us to shift our economy to one that embraces sustainability, equality, and justice? Can we create local and global economies that are not only resilient and thriving but inclusive of everyone?The Artist Round Table (A.RT) on New Economies brought together a diverse group of panellists who have provocative ideas about art, economy, and transformative change. Set within a staged 1983 corporate boardroom, the A.RT kickoff with a presentation by artist Marilou Lemmens about her collaborative, multidisciplinary practice with Richard Ibghy. Lemmens presented artistic projects that explore the ways in which the economic system pervades nearly every facet of our daily lives. In response, panellists from various fields engaged in a lively discussion, digging deeply into the issues at the heart of the duo’s practice. The panelists draw on their experiences in the realms of art and culture, activism and citizenship, and sustainability and radical urbanism as they tell stories, debate ideas, and challenge each other and the audience with thought-provoking questions. The audience was invited into a discourse on the emergence of a new economy and how art can be a driving force for social change.FEATURING:Marilou Lemmens is a visual artist based in Durham-Sud and Montreal, Quebec where she works in collaboration with Richard Ibghy. Spanning various media, including video, performance, and installation, their work explores the material, affective, and sensory dimensions of experience that cannot be fully translated into signs or systems. For several years, they have examined the rationale upon which economic actions are described and represented, and how the logic of economy has come to infiltrate the most intimate aspects of life. Their work has been shown nationally and internationally, including at La Biennale de Montréal (Montreal, 2014), 27th Images Festival (Toronto, 2014), La Filature, Scène Nationale (Mulhouse, France, 2013-14), Centre for Contemporary Arts (Glasgow, 2012), and the 10th Sharjah Biennial (Sharjah, UAE, 2011), among others.WITH PANELISTS:Community organizer, writer, and activist Matt Hern teaches at UBC and is known for his work in radical urbanism, community development, and alternative forms of education. He is founder of the Purple Thistle Centre, Car-Free Vancouver Day, and Groundswell: Grassroots Economic Alternatives.Cédric Jamet is a Project Manager at the Montreal Urban Ecology Centre and a Curator at Cities for People. His work explores the relationship between the urban imaginary, active citizenship, and the co-creation of sustainable cities.Artist and cultural producer Todd Lester has dedicated his career to supporting and enabling socially engaged artists around the world. He is a senior fellow at the World Policy Institute and founder of both freeDimensional and Lanchonete.org.
Author: SFU's Vancity Office of Community Engagement, Author: Lemmens, Marilou, Author: Hern, Matt, Author: Jamet, Cedric, Author: Lester, Todd
Date created: 2015-05-29
Video recording talk and panel discussion of The Human Right to Housing and the Vancouver Situation.
Author: Kothari, Miloon, Author: Young, Margot, Author: Swanson, Jean, Author: Hern, Matt, Author: Seigl, sχ?emt?na:t, St’agid Jaad, Audrey, Author: Johal, Am
Date created: 2017-06-05
Panelists:Mary Clare Zak, Managing Director, Social Policy & Project Division, City of VancouverMatt Hern, instructor in SFU Urban Studies and author of Common Ground in a Liquid City: Essays in Defense of an Urban Future, Co-founder/Director of 2+10 IndustriesPaul Taylor, Executive Director of Gordon Neighborhood House in the West End, and formerly Executive Director of the DTES Neighborhood HouseViveca Ellis, Single Mothers AllianceMargot Young, law professor at UBC Bill Beauregarde, Community Coordinator, Aboriginal Front Door Society Moderated by Charlie Smith, editor of the Georgia Straight.
Author: SFU's Vancity Office of Community Engagement, Author: Zak, Mary Clare, Author: Hern, Matt, Author: Taylor, Paul, Author: Ellis, Viveca, Author: Young, Margot, Author: Beauregarde, Bill
Date created: 2015-11-02
Author: SFU's Vancity Office of Community Engagement, Author: Hern, Matt, Author: Johal, Am, Author: Coulthard, Glen , Author: Bates, Lisa , Author: Al-Zobaidi, Sobhi , Author: Anthony, Josiane
Date created: 2016-10-27