CSAHS News

Using conversations and storytelling to create understanding of environmental issues in Indigenous communities
Dr. Tad McIlwraith is a cultural anthropologist who uses storytelling as the medium for his research. Much like the ebbs and flows of a story told through the generations, McIlwraith’s current research project is about things that flow – water, wind, and air.

Settler Colonialism and Genocides Against Indigenous Peoples: Considerations from Canada, Australia, and Aotearoa New Zealand
David MacDonald is a professor in the Political Science Department, where he has been since 2007. He is of Indo-Trinidadian and Scottish origin, descended from Indian girmitiya (indentured labourers) from three sugar plantations in Trinidad. He is spending his sabbatical as an honorary academic in Politics and International Relations at Waipapa Taumata Rau / University of Auckland. He is also a fellow at the Aotearoa Centre for Indigenous Peoples and the Law, and this article was written while he was a visiting fellow at Auckland Law School.
SSHRC Partnership Development Grants Awarded!
Partnership Development Grants ignite collaboration! These grants are awarded to teams led by project directors to recognize their efforts in advancing research and related activities within the social sciences and humanities. But they are more than just accolades; they're catalysts for innovation. They pave the way for groundbreaking partnerships.
Dr. Tad McIlwraith among Researchers Awarded $250,000 to track biting flies in the Arctic
Dr. Tad McIlwraith, a member of the Anthropology department within the College of Social and Applied Human Sciences, along with Dr. Sarah Adamowicz and Dr. Joey Bernhardt from Integrative Biology, have secured $250,000 over two years through the New Frontiers in Research Fund Exploration competition. Their focus is on tracking the northward migration of biting flies into Arctic regions due to climate change and examining the resulting impacts on wildlife and human health.