MPPGA Policy Salon



Policy Salon
Join us for our annual Policy Salon to welcome new and returning MPPGA students and explore pressing issues of local, national and global concern. Students, Faculty, Senior Administrators, staff, community leaders, partners and employers from government, the corporate sector, and non-governmental organizations are invited to attend.

September 8th, 2016
12:30 PM – 2:00 PM
Liu Institute for Global Issues – Multipurpose Room

Please RSVP. Light refreshments will be served.

The Salon will open with a traditional Musqueam welcome. Policy Speakers include:

  • George Hoberg, Professor, Environmental and Natural Resource Policy, Liu Institute for Global Issues, UBC
  • Eva Busza, Vice-President, Research and Programs, Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada
  • Paul Kershaw, Associate Professor, School of Population and Public Health, UBC
  • Stephanie Chang, Professor, School of Community and Regional Planning & the Institute for Resources, Environment, and Sustainability, UBC
  • Moderated by MPPGA Director Moura Quayle

Following the Salon, stay to mingle with students, UBC faculty, and policy practitioners over light refreshments to learn more about the MPPGA program and the creation of the UBC Policy School.

Salon Speaker Bios:

Professor George Hoberg specializes in environmental and natural resource policy and governance. He received a BS from UC Berkeley, and his PhD in political science from MIT. Before joining the Liu Institute, Dr. Hoberg taught public policy and American politics in the Department of Political Science for 13 years, and forest and energy policy in the Faculty of Forestry from 2001 to 2016. His research interests include environmental policy, energy policy, forest policy, and more generally the design of policies and institutions to promote sustainability. His current research focuses on the clean energy transformation. He is writing a book on the resistance to oil sands pipelines and the challenges and opportunities of the clean energy transformation.

Dr. Eva Busza is Vice-President, Research and Programs, at the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada. Prior to joining the foundation, she was Director of Policy and Strategic Planning for UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. Previous appointments also include Team Leader for Asia Pacific in the UN’s Development Programme’s Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery and Senior Advisor at the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs. Ms. Busza holds a Ph.D. from Stanford University and a Master’s degree from UBC.

Dr. Paul Kershaw is a University of BC professor, public speaker, volunteer, and regular media contributor. Kershaw is one of Canada’s top thinkers about generational equity with Canadian Family magazine describing him as “the ‘Generation Squeeze’ guru.” The Confederation of University Faculty Associations of BC awarded Kershaw its prize for Academic of the Year in 2016, based on his research and knowledge mobilization about Generation Squeeze.  Twice the Canadian Political Science Association has also awarded Kershaw national prizes for his research. “Armed with a laptop and a raft of statistics,” The Vancouver Province describes Kershaw as “a one-man road show trying to change BC one talk at a time.” Since Kershaw knows a one-man show will never be enough, he’s suiting up and spreading out with tens of thousands across the country to ensure Canada works for all generations. At the University of BC, Kershaw is a policy professor in the School of Population and Public Health and faculty member of the Human Early Learning Partnership.

Professor Stephanie E. Chang joined UBC in January 2004 and has a joint appointment in the School of Community and Regional Planning (SCARP) and the Institute for Resources, Environment, and Sustainability (IRES). She held a Canada Research Chair (Tier 2) in Disaster Management and Urban Sustainability from 2004 to 2013. Much of Dr. Chang’s work aims to bridge the gap between engineering, natural sciences, and social sciences in addressing the complex issues of natural disasters. Dr. Chang is particularly interested in issues of disaster recovery and resilience, urban infrastructure systems, and cities of the Pacific Rim.

Professor Moura Quayle is Director of the Liu Institute for Global Issues and UBC’s Master of Public Policy and Global Affairs program. Moura’s interests lie in rethinking, refining and rebuilding collaborative spaces at the intersections of academia, government, business and civil society. Her recent focus has been the Sauder d.studio, a research and teaching studio that helps students and organizations learn to use design processes and tools to co-create innovative solutions to complex problems.

For further information, please contact lindsay.marsh@ubc.ca



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