This year’s Indigenous Research Collaboration Day incorporated the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals in highlighting the important of collaboration in research with Indigenous communities.
As the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland moves into its second week, some environmental experts at Queen’s University are watching the negotiations closely, with hopes that significant agreements can be reached.
Queen’s researchers aim to create guidelines for the development of augmentative and alternative communication technologies to increase participation in gainful employment for persons with disabilities.
Process will engage Indigenous community on how to ensure hiring and other internal policies and procedures are more clear, equitable, and reflect key aspects of verification of Indigeneity.
The Conversation: It’s been 80 years since the last undisputed sighting of the striking black-and-white bird. The U.S. government believes the ivory-billed woodpecker is extinct — but many will keep searching for it.
The Conversation: Peatlands play an outsized role in filtering water and mitigating floods, drought and wildfire — and they store twice as much carbon as all the world’s forests.
Collaboration between the Centre for Business Venturing (CBV) at Smith and Spalyan Education Group is bringing business, entrepreneurship, and management training to six Indigenous communities in British Columbia.
Alumnus David Card is the co-recipient of this year's Nobel Prize in economics. Two Queen’s experts in economics discuss natural experiments, labour markets, and what you can learn from watching Dr. Card in action.