Nick HarneyNick Harney is the new head of UWindsor’s Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology.

Welcoming Windsor attracts immigration expert

Anthropologist Nick Harney has spent 14 years studying the ramifications of immigration on various regions of the world and recently returned to his native Canada as the new head of UWindsor’s Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology department—a move he says will give him a chance to study immigration in a place immigrants see as a desirable destination.

Dr. Harney looked at migration issues around the globe while based at the University of Western Australia, and as a visiting fellow at University of Naples, Federico II and, more recently, at the University of Trento. He made the move to Windsor at the start of 2016 in part, he says, because of the University’s progressive attitude.

“UWindsor has a great reputation, for this department in particular,” he says. “I’m intrigued because it’s an interdisciplinary social science department, so people are going to have different ideas and approaches. I think it’s really productive to be challenged on assumptions.”

The anthropologist grew up in Toronto and moved to Perth, Australia, in 2001 to take a position teaching and researching migration studies. He says Australia’s immigration system can be punitive for asylum seekers and there is a strong anti-immigration movement that centres on protecting borders, instead of welcoming migrants.

Harney’s research then took him to Italy, where he studied the more transitory migrant community, one that struggles to survive in an informal economy where many have no legal documentation.

“I wanted to understand how they negotiated the politics, economic precarity, the police and the neighbourhoods, to create a world for themselves where they could survive for three to four months before they’d move on to other parts of Europe.”

One aspect of his research in Naples had him study a transit company’s pilot project, which sought to cope with tensions between locals and migrants using bus services.

Transit management borrowed from new public management theory and its legacies to train its workforce in social responsibility. They hired intercultural migrant mediators to ride the bus routes and help to ‘integrate’ migrants. Harney says that after a few months the project seemed to work and tensions lessened, however because of the area’s migrant turnover, the project needed to start all over again.

Although the project was intended to resolve tensions on the transit system associated with petty crime, vandalism and fare evasion, it ended up offering migrants a way to discuss settlement issues.

Ironically, in the end transit officials found it was often local Italian transit riders who did not have tickets, while migrants did.

“I was very interested in the tensions involved for Neapolitans with European integration as a backdrop for questions about migrant integration in Italy,” says Harney. “Thinking about integration as a ritual process and the challenges of the ritualization of welcoming, or ‘hospitality’ in that kind of context.”

Having recently arrived in one of the most ethnically diverse cities in Canada, Harney says it will be interesting to think about migration in Windsor, especially with the arrival of a recent wave of Syrian refugees.

For more information on the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology, visit: http://www1.uwindsor.ca/sociology/.

“Colour Your Plate” graphic -- plate with fruits and vegetablesThe “Colour Your Plate” challenge encourages employees to eat more fruits and vegetables.

Campaign aimed at expanding food palette for optimal health

A project of the Workplace Wellness Committee and the Department of Human Resources encourages UWindsor employees to eat a variety of colourful fruits and vegetables for better health.

The “Colour Your Plate Every Day” campaign highlights the health benefits associated with incorporating a spectrum of fruits and vegetables into meals and features a 20-day challenge to encourage employees to eat a more colourful diet.

Nursing professor Debbie Kane, associate dean of graduate studies and a member of the Workplace Wellness Committee, points to the benefits of increased fruit and vegetable consumption.

“Canada’s food guide recommends that we eat five to eight servings of fruits and vegetables a day. This daily intake of fruits and vegetables helps to maintain a healthy weight, decreases heart disease and high blood pressure, reduces the risk of certain cancers, and boosts our immune system,” says Dr. Kane. “At this time of year, fresh fruits and vegetables can be costly, but we now know that canned and frozen fruits and vegetables can be as healthy as fresh. Just select those stored in water and low or no sodium.”

The challenge period runs from February 29 to March 25; participants log fruits and vegetables they eat and can submit their results to enter a prize draw.

Find more information about the health benefits of a colourful diet, suggestions for adding more fruits and vegetables into your day, and the challenge online registration and log sheets, on the campaign website.

Rape Aggression Defence trainingThe Rape Aggression Defence System teaches women realistic self-defence tactics.

Self-defence course free to campus women

Campus Community Police is offering a free self-defence course to female students and employees at the University of Windsor over two consecutive Saturdays, February 27 and March 5.

The Rape Aggression Defence System is a program of realistic self-defence tactics and techniques for women. The RAD System is a comprehensive, women-only course that begins with awareness, prevention, risk reduction and risk avoidance, while progressing on to the basics of hands-on defence training.

The 12-hour course runs noon to 6 p.m. both days. Find more information on the program website; visit uwindsor.fluidsurveys.com/s/RADregister to register.

Celebration to honour undergrad research achievements

UWindsor president Alan Wildeman and the Humanities Research Group (HRG) will honour 16 undergraduate students for their work in the field of humanities, Wednesday from 4 to 6 p.m. in Vanier Hall’s Katzman Lounge, during the Celebration of Student Research and Engagement.

The students represent a range of humanities disciplines, including music, English, drama, sociology, anthropology and criminology, history, psychology, and women’s and gender studies. Their work links with several important campus initiatives, including the Bystander Initiative: http://www1.uwindsor.ca/bystander/; and the Tikkun Project: http://www.uwindsor.ca/education/244/tikkun-olam-youth-project.

“This is a chance to single out some Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences students so we can remind them of how important their work is to faculty and staff, and encourage a stronger research ethos among students,” says HRG director Erica Stevens Abbitt.

“I see this as a very important part of HRG’s mandate connected to the Humanities Week activities… and an expansion of all our HRG lectures and events to include students, as well as faculty, staff and members of the public.”

A reception with light refreshments will follow the formal program.

For more information on the Celebration of Student Research and Engagement and all HRG activities visit: http://www1.uwindsor.ca/hrg/.

Kirstine StewartTwitter VP Kirstine Stewart’s memoir “Our Turn” is reduced at the Campus Bookstore as its book of the week.

Business exec memoir offers career advice

The Campus Bookstore has selected Our Turn by Kirstine Stewart, Canadian-born vice-president of media relations for Twitter, as its book of the week. Regularly priced at $29.95, it will sell for only $26.65 at the Campus Bookstore until February 28.

Canadian Business named Stewart one of the magazine’s “Power 50” because she “helps women discover their leadership potential”—and that is the theme of her book.

graduation rings

Bookstore ringing up feature item

The Campus Bookstore is featuring graduation rings this week, with Baron Insignias joining its cross-campus tour to show off its selection.

Salespeople will be on hand in a pop-up shop in the lobbies of three buildings:

  • Tuesday, February 23, in the Centre for Engineering Innovation
  • Wednesday, February 24, in the Toldo Health Education Centre
  • Thursday, February 25, in the Human Kinetics Building

from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. each day.

Candidates for associate VP to make public presentations

Short-listed candidates for the position of Associate Vice-President, Student Experience, will appear in town hall sessions during visits to campus over the next two weeks.

Members of the campus community are invited to meet them, review their curricula vitae, and submit written comments on their suitability for the position.

All three sessions will take place in the Freed-Orman Commons, Assumption Hall:

  • Edward Whipple, adjunct associate professor of higher education and student affairs and former vice-president for student affairs at Bowling Green State University, 1 p.m. Tuesday, February 23;
  • Ryan Flannagan, director of student affairs at Carleton University, 11 a.m. Tuesday, March 1;
  • Denise O’Neil Green, assistant vice-president/vice-provost, equity, diversity and inclusion, at Ryerson University, 11 a.m. Thursday, March 3.

Candidate CVs are available for viewing on http://www1.uwindsor.ca/provost/associate-vice-president-student-experience-search. Note: the search process page is password-protected and can be accessed only with a UWin ID and password.

The search committee invites written comments, submitted in confidence to Iva Gentcheva, ivag@uwindsor.ca, by Thursday, March 10.

glasses of whiskyScotch 101 will provide a tasting and food pairing of several classic whiskies, March 2 at the Wiser’s Reception Centre.

Scotch tasting tickets still attainable

There are still tickets available for “Scotch 101,” a tasting and food pairing of single malt whiskies, on Wednesday, March 2.

UWindsor grad Marc Bondy (BFA 2000) will lead participants through a guided nosing and tasting of three of Scotland’s finest: Deanston Highland, Ledaig, and Glenfiddich 15-year-old.

The Alumni Association is sponsoring the event and the $50 admission price includes a three-course meal; register online.

It will run 6 to 8:30 p.m. at the Windsor Club, located in the Wiser’s Reception Centre at 2072 Riverside Drive East, adjacent to the Hiram Walker distillery.