Supporting research and engagement with the Asia Pacific Region.
About the David Lam Centre (DLC)
David See-Chai Lam Centre supports and facilitates research collaboration, networking and building the community of Asia-related scholars across campus and internationally. Check out our funding opportunities below.
Part of our mandate is to facilitate engagement and research between ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV and Asia. ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV faculty (including limited term lecturers) conducting Asia-related research are eligible to receive support from David Lam Centre. Funding is available to members of the DLC. We also support a Scholar-in-Residence program.
¶¡ÏãÔ°AV David Lam Centre (DLC) offers an annual graduate student essay prize for $1,200 for an outstanding paper on intercultural issues, particularly as they relate to people in or from Canada and the Asia Pacific region. Funding is also available to graduate students to support their research.
We support events that are Asia-related, especially in terms of culture and history. Such events should be free and open to the public and /or connect to faculty interest at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV. We can coordinate events by booking rooms at Harbour Centre; organizing food and drink; preparing event posters; and announcing the event to our networks.
Events
Past events
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November 02, 2024
November 02, 2024
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November 02, 2024
November 02, 2024
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November 02, 2024
November 02, 2024
News
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November 01, 2024
We are pleased to announce that Ronaldo Au-Yeung's paper, supported by the David Lam Centre through the 2022 Graduate Research Award, has been published in the Asian and Pacific Migration Journal (APMJ).
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September 17, 2024
David Zandvliet's recent paper, A Two-Eyed Seeing Teaching and Learning Framework for Science Education, with Connie Cirkony and John Kenny from the University of Tasmania outlines ways to integrate the strengths of Indigenous ways of knowing with the strengths of Western science into a pedagogy that benefits students, communities and the planet.