Date & time
4 p.m. – 5 p.m.
Mitchell McLarnon
This event is free and open to the public in person and online
J.W. McConnell Building
1400 De Maisonneuve Blvd. W.
4TH SPACE
Yes - See details
Drawing on several years of community-based research, this talk traces from people’s experiential knowledge of attempting to use gardens for social, environmental and educational purposes– into local policies that shape garden possibilities in urban contexts. Starting in the actual material sites where gardening takes place (a university campus, schools, community organizations, greenspaces, local neighbourhoods, and so on), my findings on the educational, environmental, historical, geographic and political-economic relations suggest that while gardens and garden programming have the potential for community-based learning, increased wellbeing, and ecological awareness, their employment needs to be highly contextualized within critical discussions related to settler-colonialism, neoliberalism, the history and politics of land and water use, and (green) gentrification.
Mitchell McLarnon is a member of the Loyola Sustainability Research Centre and Assistant Professor in the Department of Education at Concordia, where his current research focuses on environmental and climate education, community development, gentrification, food security, institutional ethnography, urban political ecology, and participatory visual methods.
This event is brought to you by the Loyola College for Diversity and Sustainability and the Loyola Sustainability Research Centre in collaboration with 4TH SPACE, with the support of the Office of the Vice-President, Research and Graduate Studies; the School of Community and Public Affairs and First Peoples Studies; the Science College; and the Departments of Biology; Communication Studies; Geography, Planning and Environment; and Political Science at Concordia University.
This event will contribute to the Sustainability in Research section of Concordia's Sustainability Action Plan by increasing the visibility of sustainability research at Concordia.
Hope and agency in uncertain times
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