
UWindsor grad students Erin Dufour and Sydney Chapados will be honoured at a luncheon November 2 by the Chamber of Commerce.
UWindsor grad students Erin Dufour and Sydney Chapados will be honoured at a luncheon November 2 by the Chamber of Commerce.
The residence lounge promises casual buffet dining in Vanier Hall.
A University of Windsor criminology professor will be giving a keynote address in Ireland later this month on the seminal Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Professor Holly Johnson of the University of Ottawa will explore “Mandatory Charging and Women’s Empowerment,” in a free public lecture Thursday.
Applications are now open for a course on methods of effecting change.
“Soz: A Ballad of Maladies” showcases the transformation of the Kashmiri cultural scene from traditional poetry and Sufiyana into hip-hop.
“Home” is a noun while “homing” is a verb. Sociology professor Paolo Boccagni of the University of Trento heads an interdisciplinary team investigating the home experience and its determinants as affected, constrained, and redefined by international migration.
The wide array of careers open to criminology graduates is the subject of a lunchtime session March 15.
A presentation November 30 will discuss the structural tensions of refugee policy across the European Union.
Giuseppe Sciortino, a professor of sociology at the Università di Trento, Italy, will deliver his lecture “The Gentle Monster” at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in room 162, Chrysler Hall South.
This event, sponsored by the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology, is free and open to the public.
Spatial movements are often associated with changes in preferences, norms, and practices — including in the most intimate spheres, says Martina Cvajner.
A faculty member in the Department of Psychology and Cognitive Sciences at the Università di Trento, Italy, she will deliver her lecture, “Migration and the Sexual Order” at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, November 28, in room 162, Chrysler Hall South.
This event, sponsored by the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology, is free and open to the public.