The relationship between southwestern Ontario communities and temporary foreign workers is the subject of a panel discussion Thursday.
The relationship between southwestern Ontario communities and temporary foreign workers is the subject of a panel discussion Thursday.
Humanities Week promises events every day, March 25 to 29.
Anthropologist Kathy M’Closkey will discuss insights from her book “Why the Navajo blanket became a rug,” March 19 on the UWindsor campus.
The Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology invites its undergraduate students to discuss “What you can do with your degree,” during lunch Wednesday, March 13.
The event will feature presentations by:
Sociology student Jane McArthur published an article on environmental contributors to breast cancer in the online publication The Conversation.
A symposium on campus November 8 will consider and discuss different aspects of the nature of trust.
Kathy M’Closkey, an adjunct professor of anthropology, received an award for “Excellence in Diné Studies.”
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