Thursday, July 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

Well-known climate activists join UBC faculty

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jun, 2021 01:02 PM
  • Well-known climate activists join UBC faculty

The University of British Columbia says climate activists and journalists Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis are joining its faculty in the department of geography.

A statement from the university says Klein has been named the inaugural Faculty of Arts Chair in Climate Justice and starts her new role in September.

The statement says Klein, the author of eight books focused on issues of climate justice and globalized capitalism, will also have a leading role in creating the university's new Centre for Climate Justice.

It says the centre will bring together activists, policy-makers, elders, scholars and communities to work toward environmental justice.

Lewis, a documentary filmmaker, joins the faculty of geography next month and will teach courses examining social and political change, communication and documentary filmmaking.

The university declared a climate emergency in December 2019 and both Klein and Lewis say the declaration highlights the urgency needed to fight the crisis and the demand for solutions for a more sustainable and just society.

Dr. Gage Averill, dean of UBC’s faculty of arts, says both Klein and Lewis will advance social, political and economic changes needed to combat climate change.

“This is a critical moment for the future of our planet and we are committed to highlighting climate justice in all of our priorities," Averill says in the statement.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Determined Search By Officers In Delta, B.C. Saves Teen Unconscious In Bog

Determined Search By Officers In Delta, B.C. Saves Teen Unconscious In Bog
Some high-tech aid, coupled with old-fashioned, dogged determination helped a group of police officers in British Columbia save the life of a missing teenager.

Determined Search By Officers In Delta, B.C. Saves Teen Unconscious In Bog

Vancouver Home Sales Up In December And 2019, Prices Down From Year Earlier

Vancouver Home Sales Up In December And 2019, Prices Down From Year Earlier
The Vancouver area's real estate board says the number of home sales last year was up from 2018, but remained below the region's 10-year average, despite a moderation in prices.

Vancouver Home Sales Up In December And 2019, Prices Down From Year Earlier

B.C. Government Sets A Lower Home Value For Those Claiming A Tax Grant

The threshold is being lowered for homeowners who qualify for a grant to help offset property taxes in British Columbia.

B.C. Government Sets A Lower Home Value For Those Claiming A Tax Grant

Operation Red Nose Volunteers Hit By Possible Drunk Driver Near Kamloops, B.C.

A volunteer organization that offers free rides to drivers who may have been drinking says some of its members working near Kamloops, B.C., on New Year's Eve were involved in a crash with a suspected impaired driver.

Operation Red Nose Volunteers Hit By Possible Drunk Driver Near Kamloops, B.C.

House Values Drop 11 Per Cent In Vancouver, Stabilize Or Rise Elsewhere In B.C.

House Values Drop 11 Per Cent In Vancouver, Stabilize Or Rise Elsewhere In B.C.
Housing assessments in British Columbia show the real estate market continues to see signs of moderation in the Lower Mainland while stabilizing on Vancouver Island and other parts of the province.

House Values Drop 11 Per Cent In Vancouver, Stabilize Or Rise Elsewhere In B.C.

Man Faces Two Dozen Charges After Crime Wave In Penticton, B.C.

PENTICTON, B.C. - A man who police say was responsible for a car-jacking crime spree in Penticton, B.C., faces more than a dozen new charges to go with 11 additional allegations laid after his arrest in September.

Man Faces Two Dozen Charges After Crime Wave In Penticton, B.C.