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Understanding Sexual Violence Against Men During Civil War as a Strategic Tactic

Understanding Sexual Violence Against Men During Civil War as a Strategic Tactic

When:
Monday, March 6, 2023
12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
Where:
Robert Sutherland Hall
Room: 202
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Description:

IDP Speaker Series with Dr. Jessica Auchter, Research Chair in Visual Culture in International Studies and Full Professor at Université Laval in Québec

This is a hybrid event. People may register to attend in-person or online. The event is free, but registration is required to attend.

Jessica Auchter’s talk will focus on intersections between masculinity and violence and on the strategic use of sexual violence as a tool during civil war. While women are often victims of such violence, this talk focuses on those instances when men are targeted as a mechanism of emasculation that serves particular political and strategic aims. Specifically, the talk will draw out the strategic logic of sexual violence against men in cases of civil war, such as Syria, where we see its widespread occurrence in the context of government detention centers, and in cases of ethnic violence, such as Myanmar, where the military has adopted its use as a tactic of ethnic cleansing. Though sexual violence often manifests differently for men and women in these cases, both are premised on norms of masculinity and vulnerability that structure social, political, and ethnic identities.

Contact:
CIDP Communications
cidp@queensu.ca
Cost:
Free
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

Renewing the Profession of Arms: Culture Renovation for the CAF

Renewing the Profession of Arms: Culture Renovation for the CAF

When:
Wednesday, February 15, 2023
12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
Where:
Online - via Zoom Registration
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Description:

IDP Speaker Series with H. Christian Breede, Senior Staff Officer 2 at the Canadian Defence Academy’s Professional Concepts and Leader Development team.

The CAF is facing a number of challenges and while many are related to the increasing insecurity around the world through belligerent actors, expanding threats to what constitutes security, and fiscal realities, many are also of our own making. The CAF is facing a recruitment and retention challenge. This is being driven by the fact that the CAF has been slow to evolve in its principles, values, expectations that are increasingly out of step with Canadian society. This presentation will provide a brief overview of some of the work that has been so far to realign and reinforce our principles, values, and expectations as we work to renovate the culture of the CAF to better position us to secure Canada's interests and do in a way that is also reflective of Canadian values.

Contact:
CIDP Communications
cidp@queensu.ca
Cost:
Free
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

Pre-Doctoral Fellowships Online Information Session and/or a Personalized Campus Tour and a Meet and Greet

Pre-Doctoral Fellowships Online Information Session and/or a Personalized Campus Tour and a Meet and Greet

When:
Thursday, February 9, 2023
2:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Where:
Agnes Etherington Art Centre
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Description:

The Faculty of Arts and Science is pleased to invite applications for one-year Pre-Doctoral Fellowships for Indigenous Students (3 positions) and one-year Pre-Doctoral Fellowships in Black Studies (3 positions).  

The Pre-Doctoral Fellowships are open to students enrolled in a PhD program and working on doctoral research in the creative arts, humanities, social sciences or natural and physical sciences at an accredited university other than Queen's University.

The application deadline is February 20, 2023, and the Fellowships start in July 2023.

Prospective fellows can learn more about this opportunity at an online information session and/or on a personalized tour of campus and at a Meet and Greet on February 9.

The information session includes a brief 15-minute presentation on the program, requirements, and application process followed by a 30-minute Q&A and conversation. Our Meet and Greet is also an exciting opportunity for our prospective, previous, and current pre-doctoral and post-doctoral fellows and our community to connect with each other in an informal setting.   

  • Online information session, 2:00 pm – 2:45 pm
  • Campus tour, 3:00 pm – 3:45 pm
  • In-person Meet & Greet networking event, 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Register for our events and find further information at the link below.

Contact:
Laura Fitzgerald
laura.fitzgerald@queensu.ca
Cost:
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

Department of History Summer Job Fair

Department of History Summer Job Fair

When:
Monday, February 6, 2023
5:30 PM – 6:30 PM
Where:
Mitchell Hall
Room: DDQIC Rose Event Commons
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Description:

The Department of History is hosting a Summer Job Fair and we would like to extend a warm invitation to you to attend to learn about summer employment opportunities in the Kingston area!

This job fair will bring together a variety of local organizations offering a wide range of summer job opportunities for students interested in local history and Kingston’s heritage. The goal of this event is to help students learn about the many current summer job opportunities available locally, where students can apply their rich academic skills in a professional setting. Students will have a chance to explore the various booths to ask the organizations about their available summer positions.

The following organizations are currently hiring for this summer and will be attending this event:

  • The Marine Museum of the Great Lakes
  • Murney Tower Museum
  • Bellevue House National Historic Site + Thousand Islands National Park
  • Fort Henry National Historic Site
  • Museum of Health Care at Kingston
  • CFRC Radio
  • And more!

Everyone is welcome to attend. 

Contact:
Department of History
history.events@queensu.ca
Cost:
n/a
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

"Privacy vs. Precaution: Responsible Use of AI-Driven Intelligence in Armed Conflict", with Leah West

"Privacy vs. Precaution: Responsible Use of AI-Driven Intelligence in Armed Conflict", with Leah West

When:
Monday, February 6, 2023
2:30 PM – 4:30 PM
Where:
Robert Sutherland Hall
Room: 202
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Description:

The School of Policy Studies and the Department of Political Studies Present:

A Research Talk with Leah West

"Privacy vs. Precaution: Responsible Use of AI-Driven Intelligence in Armed Conflict"

Monday, February 6, 2023 | 2:30-4:30 PM

Robert Sutherland Hall Room 202

Abstract: The operational demands of modern armed conflict highlight a pressing need for AI-driven intelligence. Modern tools, like facial recognition technology, can help soldiers quickly identify enemy combatants and limit collateral damage. Yet, the widespread use of AI-enabled surveillance methods poses a serious threat to the privacy rights of non-combatants. This talk explores the tension between the quest for identity dominance promoted by international humanitarian law and the privacy rights of civilians living through an armed conflict. Dr. West will argue that despite this apparent conflict, the right to privacy and the principle of precaution apply concurrently in an armed conflict and offer a function-based approach to designing policies and procedures capable of adapting to meet the military’s evolving privacy obligations.

Biography: Leah West is an Assistant Professor of International Affairs at the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs at Carleton University. She completed her SJD at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law in 2020, where her research explored the application of criminal, constitutional and international law to state conduct in cyberspace.

Contact:
Rachel Lang | Communications and Events Assistant | Department of Political Studies
polscomms@queensu.ca
Cost:
Free!
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

Classics Presents... Colloquium Speaker Dr. Scott Gallimore

Classics Presents... Colloquium Speaker Dr. Scott Gallimore

When:
Wednesday, February 8, 2023
5:30 PM – 7:00 PM
Where:
Watson Hall
Room: 217
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Description:

Looking for Seconds: Assessing Evidence for Quality Control in Roman Pottery Production at Sikyon, Greece

While evidence for craft production across the Roman Empire is prevalent, limited attention has been granted to consideration of quality control and the decision-making behind designating products as unusable (i.e. wasters) or marketable as lower-quality wares. For pottery, lower-quality or blemished wares that go to market are often referred to as seconds. By examining recently uncovered evidence of Roman-period pottery production at Sikyon, Greece, in conjunction with data from epigraphic and papyrus texts, we will investigate the potential of gaining insight into ancient quality control methods and the potential designation of certain pottery vessels as seconds.

Contact:
Cost:
n/a
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

The Art of Felix Lembersky

The Art of Felix Lembersky

When:
Wednesday, February 8, 2023
6:00 PM – 7:30 PM
Where:
Watson Hall
Room: 517
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Description:

A talk with Yelena Lembersky, moderated by Vassili Schedrin, REES Director.

Felix Lembersky (1913-1970) was a Soviet Jewish painter, teacher, theater sets designer, and an organizer of artistic groups in Ukraine and Russia. Born in Poland, he grew up in Ukraine, and began working as an artist in Kyiv, before moving to Leningrad (Saint Petersburg), Soviet Russia. Gaining national recognition for his realist portrayal of Soviet industry, he rejected Socialist Realism, mandated by the communists, and became a vocal critic of repressive policies against arts. He is best known for his Execution: Babyn Yar canvases (ca. 1944-52) and colorful non-figurative paintings that, in the artist’s words, “express subject matter as a metaphor” and “reveal hidden spirituality in nature.”

Admission is free, all are welcome.

Yelena Lembersky is an author, an architect, and a project director at the Uniterra Foundation, promoting art and mutual understanding around the world. She has curated exhibitions and edited catalogues of her grandfather Felix Lembersky’s art. Her writing appeared in World Literature Today, Cardinal Points, and The Forward, and she was interviewed on National Public Radio, Radio Boston, and BBC.

Sponsored by the Russian and Eastern European Studies Network (REES), Jewish Studies Program, Hillel, and Jewski Club at Queen's University.

Contact:
Department of History
history.events@queensu.ca
Cost:
n/a
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

Like a Drop of Ink in a Downpour: Memories of Soviet Russia

Like a Drop of Ink in a Downpour: Memories of Soviet Russia

When:
Tuesday, February 7, 2023
4:00 PM – 5:30 PM
Where:
Watson Hall
Room: 217
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Description:

A public lecture with author Yelena Lembersky sponsored by the Russian and Eastern European Studies Network (REES). Admission is free, all are welcome. Copies of Like a Drop of Ink in a Downpour will be available for purchase. 

How to write about a home that you left as a child? To reach for the memories you have willed yourself to forget? Lembersky’s recent, highly acclaimed mother-and-daughter memoir traces the lives of her family as they try to leave the Soviet Union in the years preceding its collapse.

Told in the dual points of view of both Yelena and Galina (Yelena’s mother), Like a Drop of Ink in a Downpour is a clear-eyed look at the reality of life under Communist rule, giving us an insider’s perspective on the roots of contemporary Russia. It is also a coming-of-age story, heartfelt, moving, and funny, a testament to the unbreakable bond between mothers and daughters, and the healing power of art.

Yelena Lembersky is an author, an architect, and a project director at the Uniterra Foundation, promoting art and mutual understanding around the world. She has curated exhibitions and edited catalogues of her grandfather Felix Lembersky’s art. Her writing appeared in World Literature Today, Cardinal Points, and The Forward, and she was interviewed on National Public Radio, Radio Boston, and BBC.

Contact:
Department of History
history.events@queensu.ca
Cost:
n/a
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

R4R@Q - The Value of Academic Awards

R4R@Q - The Value of Academic Awards

When:
Wednesday, February 22, 2023
12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
Where:
Hybrid (Session offered in-person and virtually)
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Description:

For most academic researchers, the “bread and butter” comes from a successful application for research funding. However, academic awards (along with other forms of promotion) represent a marketing exercise that can effectively launch an academic reputation. Many early career researchers focus solely on publishing and grant applications, without understanding the impact that an award can make. More experienced researchers may not think a “prize” can have downstream positive impact, and most are unaware of the impact it can have on institutional reputation.

The Vice Principal Research Portfolio puts a high priority on supporting our faculty in building up their award portfolios. Based on her past experience in working within the research sphere in conjunction with her current role in coordinating academic/research prizes and awards, Mona Rahman (Research Awards Officer), will outline the value of the award nomination process, and offer suggestions on how to best position oneself for success.

Contact:
Andrea Hiltz
ahiltz@queensu.ca
Cost:
n/a
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

The Fast Radio Cosmos - Victoria Kaspi (Ewan Lecture)

The Fast Radio Cosmos - Victoria Kaspi (Ewan Lecture)

When:
Thursday, March 23, 2023
7:00 PM – 8:30 PM
Where:
Grant Hall
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Description:

In 2007, astronomers discovered a new mysterious cosmic phenomenon: Fast Radio Bursts. These events consist of short, intense blasts of radio waves arriving from far outside our Milky Way galaxy. Their origin is unknown, however Fast Radio Bursts appear ubiquitous in our Universe, with roughly 1000 arriving every day over the full sky. I will describe the Fast Radio Burst mystery and what is presently known about it, and present a revolutionary new radio telescope recently built in Canada that is enabling astronomers to make major progress in our understanding of the Fast Radio Burst puzzle.

Dr. Victoria Kaspi is the Principal Investigator of the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment fast radio burst (CHIME/FRB) team. She is a professor of physics at McGill University.

The George and Maureen Ewan Lecture series was endowed by Queen’s Physics Professor George Ewan and his wife Maureen in 2018 to support seminar and lecture programs designed to increase scientific discourse and culture within the Particle Astrophysics community at Queen’s University and the broader Kingston community.

This mask-friendly event is free and for all ages.

Contact:
Cost:
Free
Moderation:
  • If this event listing appears to have errors or inaccuracies, please notify the event's Contact (see above).

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