Tuesday, 30 January 2018

Gal Chuluu (Mongolia) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Rachael Haynes, Courtney Coombs, Courtney Pederson and Caitlin Franzmann in conversation with Fiona Macdonald.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJjT1mVfZbo

Monday, 29 January 2018

Ontario reopens popular immigration streams targeting international graduates

The Canadian province of Ontario has reopened its Masters Graduate Stream and PhD Graduate Stream. The Masters Graduate and PhD Graduate streams are two of the most sought-after immigration programs offered under the Ontario Immigrant Nominee Program (OINP) and are primarily geared towards retaining international graduates who studied in the province without the need of a job offer at the time of application. […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/ontario-reopens-popular-immigration-streams-targeting-international-graduates-0110141.html

Deadline for Parents and Grandparents Program’s Interest to Sponsor form is February 1

Canadian citizens and permanent residents interested in sponsoring their parents or grandparents for permanent residence have until February 1 to submit their Interest to Sponsor form. The form will be available until 12 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on February 1. The Interest to Sponsor form is not an application but completing it is the first […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/deadline-for-parents-and-grandparents-programs-interest-to-sponsor-form-is-february-1-0110138.html

Sunday, 28 January 2018

Melbourne to Silicon Valley: My Experiences as a Startup Founder

Venue: Kathleen Fitzpatrick Theatre, Arts West

Presenters: Mr Anthony Goldbloom

The University of Melbourne and the Friends of Tel Aviv University welcome Anthony Goldbloom (BCom (Hons) 2006), graduate of the Faculty of Business & Economics and Founder and CEO of San Francisco-based company Kaggle. Kaggle was acquired by Google in March 2017 and is the world's largest community of data scientists and machine learners, with almost 1.4 million members. Anthony will share his insights as an innovator, entrepreneur and expert in machine learning technology.



from
https://events.unimelb.edu.au/events/9926-melbourne-to-silicon-valley-my-experiences-as-a-startup-founder

Petra (Jordan) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Rachael Haynes, Courtney Coombs, Courtney Pederson and Caitlin Franzmann in conversation with Fiona Macdonald.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SDZvaN2zYnQ

Saturday, 27 January 2018

Ontario’s Human Capital Priorities Stream issues new invitations to Express Entry candidates

Ontario’s Human Capital Priorities Stream has issued 380 new invitations to apply for provincial nomination to immigration candidates in the federal Express Entry pool. This is the second announcement this week of new Notifications of Interests, or NOIs, issued through the Human Capital Priorities Stream, which allows Ontario to search the federal Express Entry pool […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/ontarios-human-capital-priorities-stream-issues-new-invitations-to-express-entry-candidates-0110136.html

Friday, 26 January 2018

Canadian Immigration Questions and Answers with Attorney David Cohen

Every month, Attorney David Cohen will answer a few general Canadian immigration questions submitted by our readers. These questions cover immigration programs, eligibility, processing, language requirements, investing in Canada, landing, admissibility, studying in Canada, working in Canada, and much more.  1. I have a bachelor’s degree in chemistry that I obtained in 2008 but I […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/canadian-immigration-questions-and-answers-with-attorney-david-cohen-10-0110135.html

Top 5 ways Air New Zealand punches above its weight

Every month, Attorney David Cohen will answer a few general Canadian immigration questions submitted by our readers. These questions cover immigration programs, eligibility, processing, language requirements, investing in Canada, landing, admissibility, studying in Canada, working in Canada, and much more.  1. I have a bachelor’s degree in chemistry that I obtained in 2008 but I […]

from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mv-85vTbRTg

Thursday, 25 January 2018

Archbishop Goold and the Diocese of Sydney, 1838–86

Venue: The Cardinal Knox Centre, University of Divinity, St Patrick’s Cathedral

Presenters: Associate Professor Peter Cunich

For the first 10 years of his apostolate in Australia, James Alipius Goold was a priest of the diocese of Sydney, working primarily in the parish of Campbelltown, a small rural settlement to the south-west of Sydney. Even after his elevation to the episcopate in 1847, Goold continued to reside in the Sydney diocese for more than a year until he was finally consecrated in August 1848.

The 11 years that Goold spent in Sydney, representing nearly a quarter of his time in Australia, had a formative influence on his understanding of what it meant to be a missionary bishop in the colonial context. It was a period in his life when he learned much from the example of the English Benedictine bishop of Sydney, John Bede Polding (archbishop from 1842). Many of Goold’s most senior clergy in Melbourne were initially, like him, former priests of the Sydney diocese, and between 1848 and 1877, his see remained suffragan to Sydney’s metropolitan jurisdiction, so the connection between the churches of Sydney and Melbourne was formal as well as informal. Moreover, many of the political and social developments that affected the church in Sydney during this period had a similar impact on the diocese of Melbourne.

This lecture will examine the influence of Goold’s early years in Australia and his continuing connections with Sydney upon his episcopate in Melbourne, with particular reference to the example of Archbishops Polding and Vaughan in the areas of architectural, artistic and bibliophilic patronage, and similarities in their approaches to education, clergy training, and attracting religious orders to their dioceses. This comparison will suggest that, despite the obvious differences, there were many similarities between the Catholic churches of Melbourne and Sydney, and their archbishops, in the mid-nineteenth century.

Peter Cunich is Associate Professor in History at the University of Hong Kong, where he has been teaching early modern European history for 25 years.

This keynote lecture is part of an international symposium A Baroque Bishop in Colonial Australia: The Cultural Patronage of Bishop James Goold (1812–1886).

Presented by the Australian Institute of Art History, within the School of Culture and Communication, and in partnership with the University of Divinity.



from
https://events.unimelb.edu.au/events/9836-archbishop-goold-and-the-diocese-of-sydney-1838-86

Portland, Maine Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia (4K)

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Kelly Doley and Diana Smith in conversation with Lyndal Jones.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4wKm8OiEWw

Can tiny crystals help predict volcanic eruptions?



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Ule87O_1eI

Wednesday, 24 January 2018

A better way to fly – Travel Tips

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Kelly Doley and Diana Smith in conversation with Lyndal Jones.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zmgv1sMdtQg

New Express Entry draw continues record low start to 2018

The Government of Canada has invited 2,750 Express Entry candidates to apply for permanent residence in a draw that took place January 24. The Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) cut-off score for this draw was 444, a reduction of two points from the  previous Express Entry draw on January 10, which had a CRS cut-off score of […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/new-express-entry-draw-january-24-0110093.html

Canada ranked first for quality of life in 2018 Best Countries survey

A new international survey is ranking Canada the second best country in the world to live in, and the first in terms of quality of life. Conducted by the U.S. News & World Report, the poll ranked 80 countries based on a set of 65 attributes that were then distilled into nine broad categories. More […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/canada-ranked-first-for-quality-of-life-in-2018-best-countries-survey-0110124.html

Tuesday, 23 January 2018

In Search of Lost Time – What Makes a Memory?

Venue: Ian Potter Auditorium, Kenneth Myer Building

Presenters: Professor Tomás Ryan

Professor Tomás Ryan will be visiting the Florey to collaborate with several of our researchers who share his passion for memories – what are they, how are they stored and can we retrieve lost memories?

Tomás is based at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, and is interested in the fundamental question of how memory is stored as information in the brain.

Recent studies have shown that spatial memories are encoded as sparse populations of cells that are activated during learning and are necessary for the retrieval of specific memories. We refer to these cells as 'memory engram cells'. The focus of Tomás' research is to understand how engram cells are able to store specific memories as information.

During this public lecture Tomás will outline his research program and answer all your curly questions around memories, and forgetting.



from
https://events.unimelb.edu.au/events/9897-in-search-of-lost-time-what-makes-a-memory

Journey through Northern Territory with Parineeti Chopra

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Kelly Doley and Diana Smith in conversation with Lyndal Jones.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nHSdzxv_2g0

Explore Queensland with Parineeti Chopra



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYT62UDQeR0

Discover Northern Territory with Parineeti Chopra



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLcoPO1mzWQ

Parineeti Chopra in Queensland



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxYUkLPWsxg

Parineeti Chopra's Favourite Australian Experiences



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ispqlRhpjf8

Ontario’s Express Entry-aligned Human Capital Priorities Stream issues new NOIs

One of the most prominent Express Entry-aligned Provincial Nominee Program streams for immigration to Canada, Ontario’s Human Capital Priorities Stream issued new Notifications of Interest on January 22 to eligible candidates in the federal Express Entry pool. This particular round of invitations conducted by Ontario under the Human Capital Priorites (HCP) Stream is innovative for […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/ontarios-express-entry-aligned-human-capital-priorities-stream-issues-new-nois-0110112.html

Iguazu (Argentina/Brazil) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Kelly Doley and Diana Smith in conversation with Lyndal Jones.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jZcI6a9pesw

Indigenous Economic Reconciliation



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15cPyONnYCQ

New information hub a must for foreign tech workers with AI experience

Candidates for Canadian immigration with Information and Communications Technology experience will want to take note of Canada.ai, a new information hub showcasing developments and research in Canada’s burgeoning Artificial Intelligence industry. The platform was recently unveiled in Toronto, Ontario, at TechTO, one of the largest gatherings of Canada’s technology sector. Canada.ai was built primarily by […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/new-information-hub-a-must-for-foreign-tech-workers-with-ai-experience-0110109.html

Monday, 22 January 2018

Air New Zealand is increasing its capacity out of Canada – Travel Industry News

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Kelly Doley and Diana Smith in conversation with Lyndal Jones.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=flzYr0Kk1wY

Sunday, 21 January 2018

Lukang (Taiwan) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Kelly Doley and Diana Smith in conversation with Lyndal Jones.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SntuyCd5BmQ

Friday, 19 January 2018

Three Rules for Effective Customer Problem Solving

Venue: The Prest Theatre, Faculty of Business and Economics

Presenters: Professor Jagdip Singh

Despite significant research and substantial corporate investment, resolving problems reported by customers remains a challenge for service organisations. Efforts made by organisations persistently lag customer expectations, and the rise of social media has given customers a powerful platform to amplify their frustration with ineffective problem solving.

A 2017 US study revealed almost 20 per cent of customers who reported a service problem required more than seven contacts before it was resolved; 80 per cent of customers who experienced a problem remained unhappy even after resolution efforts. In the US alone, the cost of not solving customer problems effectively is estimated at US$313 billion in future sales. Companies lacking effective problem resolution are, therefore, placing bottom-line outcomes at risk, with service organizations especially vulnerable.

Why is it so hard, and what can service organisations do to get ahead?

In this free public lecture, Professor Jagdip Singh will discuss the myths around frontline problem solving, identify which practices don’t work, and provide fresh insights for service organizations interested in stemming losses from ineffective customer problem solving.



from
https://events.unimelb.edu.au/events/9900-three-rules-for-effective-customer-problem-solving

Appraising the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse – Religious Institutions

Venue: Laby Theatre, Physics

Presenters: Professor Desmond Cahill OAM

The University of Melbourne Chaplaincy and Religions for Peace Victoria invite you to a public lecture on the Appraising the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse – Religious Institutions. Our speaker is Desmond Cahill, Professor of Intercultural Studies at RMIT University, who was a consultant to the Royal Commission from 2015–2017.



from
https://events.unimelb.edu.au/events/9841-appraising-the-royal-commission-into-institutional-responses-to-child-sexual

Packing Tips and Tricks for a Snow & Ski Getaway | Expedia

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Kelly Doley and Diana Smith in conversation with Lyndal Jones.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3Xmb10L9NU

Meet the Canadian immigrant doctor whose test was used on Donald Trump

Canadian doctor Ziad Nasreddine’s phone has been ringing off the hook since it emerged this week that a test he pioneered was used to screen U.S. President Donald Trump for cognitive issues. Much of the coverage has focused on the irony that a test devised by an immigrant was used to screen Trump, whose administration […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/meet-the-canadian-immigrant-doctor-whose-test-was-used-on-donald-trump-0110106.html

Wednesday, 17 January 2018

What to expect when you arrive for your wedding with Melia Cuba

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Renae Coles and Anna Dunhill in conversation with Jill Orr.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ugk1xXcdIbs

Monday, 15 January 2018

Kapadokya (Turkey) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Renae Coles and Anna Dunhill in conversation with Jill Orr.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Un0oPWeJUCc

Pity, Empathy and Fear: Human Rights Strategies in Anti-Torture Campaigns, 1960–1980

Venue: Theatre B, Ground Floor, Old Arts

Presenters: Dr Victor Fernández Soriano

This public lecture examines how human rights advocates such as Amnesty International, international lawyers and government officials developed emotion-based strategies in their campaigns to generate opposition to state-sponsored use of torture.

It is sponsored by the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies and the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions.



from
https://events.unimelb.edu.au/events/9838-pity-empathy-and-fear-human-rights-strategies-in-anti-torture-campaigns

Archbishop Goold and the Diocese of Sydney, 1838–86

Venue: The Cardinal Knox Centre, University of Divinity, St Patrick’s Cathedral

Presenters: Associate Professor Peter Cunich

For the first 10 years of his apostolate in Australia, James Alipius Goold was a priest of the diocese of Sydney, working primarily in the parish of Campbelltown, a small rural settlement to the south-west of Sydney. Even after his elevation to the episcopate in 1847, Goold continued to reside in the Sydney diocese for more than a year until he was finally consecrated in August 1848.

The 11 years that Goold spent in Sydney, representing nearly a quarter of his time in Australia, had a formative influence on his understanding of what it meant to be a missionary bishop in the colonial context. It was a period in his life when he learned much from the example of the English Benedictine bishop of Sydney, John Bede Polding (archbishop from 1842). Many of Goold’s most senior clergy in Melbourne were initially, like him, former priests of the Sydney diocese, and between 1848 and 1877, his see remained suffragan to Sydney’s metropolitan jurisdiction, so the connection between the churches of Sydney and Melbourne was formal as well as informal. Moreover, many of the political and social developments that affected the church in Sydney during this period had a similar impact on the diocese of Melbourne.

This lecture will examine the influence of Goold’s early years in Australia and his continuing connections with Sydney upon his episcopate in Melbourne, with particular reference to the example of Archbishops Polding and Vaughan in the areas of architectural, artistic and bibliophilic patronage, and similarities in their approaches to education, clergy training, and attracting religious orders to their dioceses. This comparison will suggest that, despite the obvious differences, there were many similarities between the Catholic churches of Melbourne and Sydney, and their archbishops, in the mid-nineteenth century.

Peter Cunich is Associate Professor in History at the University of Hong Kong, where he has been teaching early modern European history for 25 years.

This keynote lecture is part of an international symposium A Baroque Bishop in Colonial Australia: The Cultural Patronage of Bishop James Goold (1812–1886).

Presented by the Australian Institute of Art History, within the School of Culture and Communication, and in partnership with the University of Divinity.



from
https://events.unimelb.edu.au/events/9836-archbishop-goold-and-the-diocese-of-sydney-1838-86

Sunday, 14 January 2018

Stone Town (Zanzibar) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Renae Coles and Anna Dunhill in conversation with Jill Orr.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aq4dIVqiirs

Friday, 12 January 2018

Manitoba’s new Express Entry pathway invites its first candidates

Manitoba’s new Express Entry-aligned pathway has invited 155 candidates to apply for a provincial nomination in its first-ever draw. Conducted on Thursday, January 11, the draw saw the Manitoba Provincial Nominee Program (MPNP) issue 155 Letters of Advice to Apply, or LAAs, to eligible candidates through the Manitoba Express Entry Pathway. In order to receive an […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/manitobas-new-express-entry-pathway-invites-its-first-candidates-0110089.html

Vancouver (Canada) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Renae Coles and Anna Dunhill in conversation with Jill Orr.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ka9xD1seG3Q

Thursday, 11 January 2018

Canadian job vacancies in third quarter of 2017 up 15% over previous year

The number of job vacancies reported by Canadian employers in the third quarter of 2017 was up 15 per cent over the same quarter in 2016, Statistics Canada reports. Canadian businesses reported 468,000 job vacancies in the third quarter of 2017, an increase of 62,000 over the third quarter of 2016. A previous report by […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/canadian-job-vacancies-in-third-quarter-of-2017-up-15-over-previous-year-0110085.html

Wednesday, 10 January 2018

IRCC starts 2018 with record low cut-off score for a first draw of the year

Canada has invited 2,750 Express Entry candidates to apply for Canadian permanent residence in a draw that took place January 10, 2018. The cut-off Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) score for this draw was 446. Today’s score of 446 is the same cut-off CRS score as the previous draw that took place on December 20. It […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/new-express-entry-draw-january-10-0110011.html

Settlement funds can make or break your application for permanent residence

Candidates in all three Express Entry economic immigration classes should take special note of recently announced revisions to the amount of settlement funds required by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC). A 1.42 per cent increase was implemented January 5, 2018, that raised the minimum amounts required as follows:   Number of family members 2017 […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/settlement-funds-can-make-or-break-your-application-for-permanent-residence-0110065.html

Tuesday, 9 January 2018

Narratives of Memory, Migration, and Xenophobia: A Brief Overview

Venue: David P. Derham Lecture Theatre, Level 1 , Law

Presenters: Professor Theresia Degener

Professor Theresia Degener, Chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and Professor of Law and Disability Studies (Protestant University of Applied Sciences, RWL, Germany), will discuss the challenges and the opportunities the CRPD Committee has faced in its 10 years of treaty body work.

She will focus in particular on the latest draft General Comment on Equality and Non-Discrimination which seeks to establish a new model of equality – called inclusive equality – in international human rights law.

  • Please note that due to public demand, this event has been moved to the David P. Derham Lecture Theatre


from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wxzBeUIWmiU

Alberta announces higher nomination intake for 2018

Alberta has announced that its maximum Provincial Nominee Program allotment for 2018 is 5,600 nominations. The 2018 maximum represents an increase of 100 nominations over the Alberta Immigrant Nominee Program (AINP)’s 2017 allotment of 5,500. Alberta was expected to receive a slightly higher allotment in 2018 as a result of the federal government’s multi-year immigration […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/alberta-announces-a-higher-nomination-intake-for-2018-0110061.html

UVic researcher develops fentanyl detector

Alberta has announced that its maximum Provincial Nominee Program allotment for 2018 is 5,600 nominations. The 2018 maximum represents an increase of 100 nominations over the Alberta Immigrant Nominee Program (AINP)’s 2017 allotment of 5,500. Alberta was expected to receive a slightly higher allotment in 2018 as a result of the federal government’s multi-year immigration […]

from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZMzp7y4epPo

Torres Del Paine (Chile) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: David P. Derham Lecture Theatre, Level 1 , Law

Presenters: Professor Theresia Degener

Professor Theresia Degener, Chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and Professor of Law and Disability Studies (Protestant University of Applied Sciences, RWL, Germany), will discuss the challenges and the opportunities the CRPD Committee has faced in its 10 years of treaty body work.

She will focus in particular on the latest draft General Comment on Equality and Non-Discrimination which seeks to establish a new model of equality – called inclusive equality – in international human rights law.

  • Please note that due to public demand, this event has been moved to the David P. Derham Lecture Theatre


from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SuWJJPJBkY

About health informatics at UVic



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qaJ7di9nO1I

Monday, 8 January 2018

Nova Scotia nominates record number of immigrants in 2017

Nova Scotia says its Provincial Nominee Program nominated a record number of immigrants in 2017. The Atlantic Canada province nominated more than 1,400 people through the Nova Scotia Nominee Program (NSNP), which accepts applications under five immigration streams. Those five streams are: Nova Scotia Demand: Express Entry Nova Scotia Experience: Express Entry Skilled Worker Entrepreneur […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/nova-scotia-nominates-record-number-of-immigrants-in-2017-0110056.html

Malaysia & Singapore Trip 2018

Nova Scotia says its Provincial Nominee Program nominated a record number of immigrants in 2017. The Atlantic Canada province nominated more than 1,400 people through the Nova Scotia Nominee Program (NSNP), which accepts applications under five immigration streams. Those five streams are: Nova Scotia Demand: Express Entry Nova Scotia Experience: Express Entry Skilled Worker Entrepreneur […]

from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRIIZVQB-kg

Welcome to UQ

Venue: David P. Derham Lecture Theatre, Level 1 , Law

Presenters: Professor Theresia Degener

Professor Theresia Degener, Chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and Professor of Law and Disability Studies (Protestant University of Applied Sciences, RWL, Germany), will discuss the challenges and the opportunities the CRPD Committee has faced in its 10 years of treaty body work.

She will focus in particular on the latest draft General Comment on Equality and Non-Discrimination which seeks to establish a new model of equality – called inclusive equality – in international human rights law.

  • Please note that due to public demand, this event has been moved to the David P. Derham Lecture Theatre


from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kdKtWM3SuSI

Sunday, 7 January 2018

Quito (Ecuador) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: David P. Derham Lecture Theatre, Level 1 , Law

Presenters: Professor Theresia Degener

Professor Theresia Degener, Chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and Professor of Law and Disability Studies (Protestant University of Applied Sciences, RWL, Germany), will discuss the challenges and the opportunities the CRPD Committee has faced in its 10 years of treaty body work.

She will focus in particular on the latest draft General Comment on Equality and Non-Discrimination which seeks to establish a new model of equality – called inclusive equality – in international human rights law.

  • Please note that due to public demand, this event has been moved to the David P. Derham Lecture Theatre


from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2BxgwRTtO4k

Thursday, 4 January 2018

Barcelona (Spain) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: David P. Derham Lecture Theatre, Level 1 , Law

Presenters: Professor Theresia Degener

Professor Theresia Degener, Chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and Professor of Law and Disability Studies (Protestant University of Applied Sciences, RWL, Germany), will discuss the challenges and the opportunities the CRPD Committee has faced in its 10 years of treaty body work.

She will focus in particular on the latest draft General Comment on Equality and Non-Discrimination which seeks to establish a new model of equality – called inclusive equality – in international human rights law.

  • Please note that due to public demand, this event has been moved to the David P. Derham Lecture Theatre


from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p8XL1_LfYFA

No job offer? No problem, new Express Entry report confirms

New statistics released by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) reveal that Express Entry candidates without a Canadian job offer have been the big beneficiaries of targeted improvements to the way candidates are ranked. According to IRCC, 90 per cent of Express Entry candidates who received an Invitation to Apply (ITA) for permanent residence in […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/no-job-offer-no-problem-new-express-entry-report-confirms-0110038.html

CanadaVisa News Briefs | Early January 2018

The following is a summary of Canadian immigration and citizenship news events that happened over the past of week. Our Canadian immigration news briefs bring you the latest news as it unfolds. When published, these articles are posted across all our social media channels, including Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Google+ and LinkedIn. Follow us on our […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/canadavisa-news-briefs-early-january-2018-0110021.html

CanadaVisa Social | Wishing our followers a Happy New Year!

As we prepare for a busy new year, we realize the value our followers add to CanadaVisa. Thanks to your amazing social engagement in 2017, we expect 2018 to be an even bigger year for CanadaVisa’s online community. This year is expected to be an important one for Canadian immigration, and the CanadaVisa team will […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/canadavisa-social-wishing-our-followers-a-happy-new-year-0110013.html

Wednesday, 3 January 2018

The CanadaVisa Study Hub: Education as a pathway to permanent residence

Last week CanadaVisa launched the latest version of the Study Hub, a free online resource designed to help prospective students, current international students and recent graduates on a post-graduation work permit easily navigate Canada’s immigration system. “We wanted to create a community of the brightest, most talented individuals who are dedicated to maximizing their chances […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/the-canadavisa-study-hub-education-as-a-pathway-to-permanent-immigration-0110026.html

Tuesday, 2 January 2018

UVic Law

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Pip Stafford and Julia Drouhin in conversation with Norie Neumark.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yB_lrirNcFI

Parents and Grandparents Program now open to interested sponsors

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has now reopened its Parents and Grandparents Program to Canadian citizens and permanent residents who wish to sponsor their parents and grandparents in 2018. The Interest to Sponsor online form went live around 12 p.m. on January 2. All interested sponsors must first fill out this form, which will be available until […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/parents-and-grandparents-program-now-open-to-interested-sponsors-0110008.html

A busy final quarter of 2017 for Canada’s Provincial Nominee Programs

Canada’s Provincial Nominee Programs continued to prove over the past few weeks why they are becoming an increasingly popular pathway to Canadian permanent residence. These programs, which allow provinces and territories to nominate individuals for Canadian permanent residence based on labour market needs, have been especially active in Ontario, British Columbia and Manitoba since CIC […]

from
https://www.cicnews.com/2018/01/a-busy-final-quarter-of-2017-for-canadas-provincial-nominee-programs-0110006.html

Akakus (Libya) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Venue: Norma Redpath Studio, Norma Redpath Studio

Art Talk brought to you by the Doing Feminism / Sharing the World Residency

Pip Stafford and Julia Drouhin in conversation with Norie Neumark.

Art Talk is a series of conversation sessions designed to engage the public in discussions about the artists and their work. A mentor who has worked with the group facilitates the sessions. The discussions will be recorded and an archive will be made available online.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World explores participatory art practice and collective collaborations in a three-month program of artist residencies, artists' talks and a symposium. Its focus is on collaboration and participatory and public projects informed by a feminist ethics that addresses ‘sharing the world’.

Doing Feminism / Sharing the World is generously supported by the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne, the Australian Research Council, the Australia Council for the Arts, Creative Victoria and the City of Melbourne.

Image credit: 'Cold Calling a Revolution' by Kelly Doley (2014–15).



from
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6vIMMupo9c