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- The Boat People Art Installation
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- Knowledge Translation Re-imagining: Healthcare in the DTES
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- News & stories
- Thirteen student-led teams launch impactful community partnerships.
- Your personal connection is your greatest strength
- Making your project a passion
- Cooking up a breakfast program with love
- Fourteen student-led teams win funding to realize community impact!
- Leaders & Learners
- These 18 teams are springing into action with community
- Develop your capacity as a changemaker – and have fun!
- Embracing the complexity: pivoting as a practice.
- You know what’s not scary? $3,000 to fund your awesome project.
- ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV student creates youth-led overdose education and naloxone training during B.C.’s overdose crisis
- ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV student-community partnership creates local impact in Surrey
- ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Students Exemplify the Spirit of Innovation and Community Engagement at the Annual President’s Gala
- Co-creation is difficult. And it's worth it.
- Hands-on for impact
- Congratulations to this year’s winners!
- On power and engagement – an interview with Aslam Bulbulia (excerpted)
- Herbert’s story: how one shopping cart made a difference.
- Don't wait for perfection – jump in
- Congratulations to our 2017-18 finalists and winners
- Discover what’s possible when university students and communities work together
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Burnaby Mountain Festival
Team members: Olivia Lohan (¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Community Capacity Building Program), Regina Martinez (¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Sociology and Indigenous Studies), Kayah George (¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Indigeous Language program)
Burnaby Mountain Festival coordinators, leaders, students volunteers and community partners will come together virtually (and hopefully, ultimately physically) to listen to each other, co-create, develop and plan a one-day festival of Indigenous land acknowledgement on Burnaby Mountain. The festival will include culturally specific music and dance performances, storytelling, and workshops.
The rationale for this project is to take the words of Indigenous land acknowledgement and put them into meaningful action. It is an opportunity to put our words into practice by actively honouring and celebrating the stewards of the land upon which Burnaby campus resides. Also, it is our opportunity to ensure that Indigenous People’s territorial protocols are respected, and that local communities are engaged in planning and participating in events that support the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's .
Although the festival itself is part of the project, the process of co-creating the festival is a key component. The project is the process. We are seeking to build relationships between the Tsleil-Waututh community, Burnaby residents, students, and ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV, and to facilitate the collaboration that leads to a land acknowledgement festival (online or outside with vaccination, mask and distancing adherence.) The process of coming together to co-create the festival is our strategy towards community building and strengthening Indigenous and Settler relationships.
Additionally, the project is our opportunity to decolonize the way in which we organize events. Rather than unilaterally and preemptively deciding how we will shape the festival and what the festival will look like, we intend to consult with Tsleil-Waututh Elders for guidance and we will facilitate a series of planning meetings designed to develop partnership in the Burnaby area.
Community Partners:
Members of ,
DO YOU HAVE AN IDEA FOR CHANGE?
Up to $30,000* is available to fund ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV students who want to work with community partners to drive meaningful, lasting impact.
Maybe you’re working on an existing idea for a class you’re taking, through a student club or another organization, or maybe you just have an amazing idea that keeps you up at night.... Whatever it is, we want to hear from you!
Start the process now by registering today and then submitting your idea before November 22 – all you need is your passion and an idea.
* Award amounts subject to change.