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    A dike keeps the water from flowing onto the grassy farmland.

    A carbon sink flooded with drought: Agriculture tackling climate change

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    Student commuter stress

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    Students keep eating from the Ackee Tree

    Parlor Jazz in Harlem

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    A dike keeps the water from flowing onto the grassy farmland.

    A carbon sink flooded with drought: Agriculture tackling climate change

    How one musician made the most of 2020, despite challenges

    How social media is changing social activism

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    1 in 5 – PSA

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    Emerge Conference 2017

    Emerge Media Awards 2017

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    How did this candy shop stay open during a pandemic?

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    A year online and inside; second year students arrival on campus

    The Butcher Bros: Long Road Ahead

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    Pandemic racism: The front-line war

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    Immigrating to Canada: then and now

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Emerge Conference 2017

  • August 9, 2017
  • Marc Tavares
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Land Acknowledgement

The University of Guelph-Humber and Humber College are located within the traditional and treaty lands of the Mississaugas of the Credit. Known as Adoobiigok, the “Place of the Black Alders” in the Mississauga language, the region is uniquely situated along Humber River Watershed, which historically provided an integral connection for Anishinaabe, Haudenosaunee, and Wendat peoples between the Ontario Lakeshore and the Lake Simcoe/Georgian Bay regions. Now home to people of numerous nations, Adoobiigok continues to provide a vital source of interconnection for all. We acknowledge and honour the land we are walking on, the moccasin tracks of our ancestors and the footprints of the future generations to come.

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