Tag Archives: Webinar

Webinar: Lloyd Axworthy and Olivia R. Fernandes on the Ottawa Treaty

These webinars, which are offered in partnership with Dominion Command, may be of interest to some members.  And note that the session described at the top is scheduled for tomorrow.


“The Ottawa Treaty Today” In Partnership with the Canadian Landmine Foundation
View this email in your browser
Lloyd Axworthy and Olivia R. Fernandes

The Ottawa Treaty Today

November 17th, 7:30 PM ET

The webinar is FREE on Zoom.

Registration is required, but you do not need a Zoom account to watch.

Register HERE 

It has been almost twenty four years since the signing of The Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on the Destruction—popularly known as the Ottawa Treaty.

However, significant challenges remain, and there has been back-tracking. The USA, Russia, China, India, Pakistan, Iran and some others continue to decline or reject adding their signatures, and in some cases are believed to have continued to make use of these weapons in conflict; and landmines have continued to maim or kill refugees and internally displaced people seeking to return to their homes.

Hosted and moderated by Canadian Landmine Foundation chairman Alistair Edgar, this event will begin with a short ten-minute documentary on the origins of the Ottawa Treaty and Canada’s instrumental role in its creation. Our speakers, Lloyd Axworthy and Olivia R. Fernandes, will then discuss the achievements of the treaty, the threats that landmines continue to pose to innocent civilian populations, and the practical and policy challenges that remain to be addressed.

UPCOMING WEBINARS

1 December | Speaker Series
Alistair Edgar
“Give War a Chance: Are Peace-Building and Stabilization a Bust after Afghanistan?”
Click HERE to Register

Presented by:
Click here to listen to the latest episode of On War & SocietyOh What A Visual War with Beatriz Pichel.

On War & Society features authors discussing their research, the challenges associated with doing history, and life ‘behind the book.’

Copyright © 2021 LCMSDS, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
LCMSDS
75 University Ave W
Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5

Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies · 75 University Ave W · Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3C5 · Canada

Webinar: Lloyd Axworthy and Olivia R. Fernandes on the Ottawa Treaty

These webinars, which are offered in partnership with Dominion Command, may be of interest to some members.


“The Ottawa Treaty Today” In Partnership with the Canadian Landmine Foundation
View this email in your browser
Lloyd Axworthy and Olivia R. Fernandes

“The Ottawa Treaty Today” In Partnership with the Canadian Landmine Foundation 

November 17th, 7:30 PM ET

The webinar is FREE on Zoom.

Registration is required, but you do not need a Zoom account to watch.

Register HERE 

It has been almost twenty four years since the signing of The Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on the Destruction—popularly known as the Ottawa Treaty.

However, significant challenges remain, and there has been back-tracking. The USA, Russia, China, India, Pakistan, Iran and some others continue to decline or reject adding their signatures, and in some cases are believed to have continued to make use of these weapons in conflict; and landmines have continued to maim or kill refugees and internally displaced people seeking to return to their homes.

Hosted and moderated by Canadian Landmine Foundation chairman Alistair Edgar, this event will begin with a short ten-minute documentary on the origins of the Ottawa Treaty and Canada’s instrumental role in its creation. Our speakers, Lloyd Axworthy and Olivia R. Fernandes, will then discuss the achievements of the treaty, the threats that landmines continue to pose to innocent civilian populations, and the practical and policy challenges that remain to be addressed.

UPCOMING WEBINARS

10 November | Laurier Alumni
Keeping the Peace: Canada’s Past and Future Role in International Conflict
Kevin Spooner and Ann Fitz-Gerald
Click HERE to Register

1 December | Speaker Series
Alistair Edgar
“Give War a Chance: Are Peace-Building and Stabilization a Bust after Afghanistan?”
Click HERE to Register

Presented by:
Click here to listen to the latest episode of On War & SocietyOh What A Visual War with Beatriz Pichel.

On War & Society features authors discussing their research, the challenges associated with doing history, and life ‘behind the book.’

Copyright © 2021 LCMSDS, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
LCMSDS
75 University Ave W
Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5

Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies · 75 University Ave W · Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3C5 · Canada

Webinar: Carla-Jean Stokes on Canadian First World War Photography

These webinars, which are offered in partnership with Dominion Command, may be of interest to some members.  Note that the next one is tomorrow.


“We Must See Our Men”: Canada’s Official First World War Photographs
View this email in your browser
CARLA-JEAN STOKES

“We Must See Our Men”: Canada’s Official First World War Photographs 

November 3rd, 7:30 PM ET

The webinar is FREE on Zoom.

Registration is required, but you do not need a Zoom account to watch.

Register HERE

This talk will explore the history of Canada’s official First World War photography program from its inception in 1916 to its conclusion in 1919. We will meet each of Canada’s war photographers and examine their individual styles through viewing digitized vintage prints from the war. This investigation of original photographs will allow us to learn more about the materiality and complex lives of printed objects.

 

CARLA-JEAN STOKES is a writer, lecturer, and curator of war photographs. She has an MA in history from Wilfrid Laurier University, as well as an MA in Photographic Preservation and Collections Management. In 2015, she won the Photographic Historical Society of Canada thesis prize for work, “British Official First World War Photographs, 1916-1918: Arranging and Contextualizing a Collection of Prints at the Art Gallery of Ontario.” She also received the 2019 Elaine Ling Fellowship from the Ryerson Image Centre for her project: “‘Somewhere in France:’ Contextualizing the Ryerson Image Centre’s Collection of Canadian First World War Photographs.”

UPCOMING WEBINARS

10 November | Laurier Alumni
Keeping the Peace: Canada’s Past and Future Role in International Conflict
Kevin Spooner and Ann Fitz-Gerald
Click HERE to Register

17 November
Dr. Lloyd Axworthy and Olivia Fernandes
“The Ottawa Treaty Today”
In Partnership with the Canadian Land Mine Foundation
Click HERE to Register

1 December | Speaker Series
Alistair Edgar
“Give War a Chance: Are Peace-Building and Stabilization a Bust after Afghanistan?”
Click HERE to Register

Presented by:
Click here to listen to the latest episode of On War & SocietyOh What A Visual War with Beatriz Pichel.

On War & Society features authors discussing their research, the challenges associated with doing history, and life ‘behind the book.’

Copyright © 2021 LCMSDS, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
LCMSDS
75 University Ave W
Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5

Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies · 75 University Ave W · Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3C5 · Canada

[FINAL REMINDER] Webinar: 150 Years Before Touro – The Navy’s Hospitals On Mare Island, 1856 To 1957

In one week a webinar, which includes some local military history, that may be of interest to our membership.


WEBINAR: 150 YEARS BEFORE TOURO – THE NAVY’S HOSPITALS ON MARE ISLAND, 1856 TO 1957

Being the story of the hallowed ground upon which you walk every day

Nov 4, 2021 12:00 PM Pacific Time

Link to join: https://zoom.us/j/94264305868?pwd=QkkzUjU3TDNSaldvTVh3cGNVdDhRUT09 (registration not required)

Thomas L Snyder, MD

Tom Snyder is a retired urologist and naval officer. In retirement, he has combined
his naval and medical interests to work on a history of the first Navy’s first west coast hospital, on Mare Island. He’s the founding executive director of the Society for the History of Navy Medicine, which sponsors academic panels, offers graduate student travel and research grants, and awards a biennial Harold D Langley Book Prize for Excellence in the History of Maritime Medicine. Tom is a Companion in the Naval Order of the United States, America’s oldest naval history organization. At Albany Medical College, Tom founded and coordinates the Albany Base Hospital No 33 Society, an alumni military affinity group. At home in Vallejo, he frequently lectures to local groups on the history of maritime and military medicine and writes a blog, Of Ships and Surgeons – Notes on Maritime Medicine, Past and Present. He has published several articles on maritime medical history.

 

Flyer: tuc-historic-webinar.pdf

Webinar: Carla-Jean Stokes on Canadian First World War Photography

These webinars, which are offered in partnership with Dominion Command, may be of interest to some members.


“We Must See Our Men”: Canada’s Official First World War Photographs
View this email in your browser
CARLA-JEAN STOKES

“We Must See Our Men”: Canada’s Official First World War Photographs 

November 3rd, 7:30 PM ET

The webinar is FREE on Zoom.

Registration is required, but you do not need a Zoom account to watch.

Register HERE

This talk will explore the history of Canada’s official First World War photography program from its inception in 1916 to its conclusion in 1919. We will meet each of Canada’s war photographers and examine their individual styles through viewing digitized vintage prints from the war. This investigation of original photographs will allow us to learn more about the materiality and complex lives of printed objects.

 

CARLA-JEAN STOKES is a writer, lecturer, and curator of war photographs. She has an MA in history from Wilfrid Laurier University, as well as an MA in Photographic Preservation and Collections Management. In 2015, she won the Photographic Historical Society of Canada thesis prize for work, “British Official First World War Photographs, 1916-1918: Arranging and Contextualizing a Collection of Prints at the Art Gallery of Ontario.” She also received the 2019 Elaine Ling Fellowship from the Ryerson Image Centre for her project: “‘Somewhere in France:’ Contextualizing the Ryerson Image Centre’s Collection of Canadian First World War Photographs.”

UPCOMING WEBINARS

17 November
Dr. Lloyd Axworthy and Olivia Fernandes
“The Ottawa Treaty Today”
In Partnership with the Canadian Land Mine Foundation
Click HERE to Register

1 December | Speaker Series
Alistair Edgar
“Give War a Chance: Are Peace-Building and Stabilization a Bust after Afghanistan?”
Click HERE to Register

Presented by:
Click here to listen to the latest episode of On War & SocietyOh What A Visual War with Beatriz Pichel.

On War & Society features authors discussing their research, the challenges associated with doing history, and life ‘behind the book.’

Copyright © 2021 LCMSDS, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
LCMSDS
75 University Ave W
Waterloo, ON N2L 3C5

Laurier Centre for Military Strategic and Disarmament Studies · 75 University Ave W · Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3C5 · Canada