2023 SMF Research Symposium
St. Jerome's University
- Academic Centre
Wednesday,
Apr 12, 2023 at 8:30 AM
- 5:30 PM EDT
{
"name":"2023 SMF Research Symposium",
"description": "https://ticketfi.com/event/4927/2023-smf-research-symposium\n\n\"Thank you for your interest in attending the 10th SMF Research Symposium hosted by the Department of Sexuality, Marriage, and Family Studies. We look forward to celebrating this year’s theme: From Singular to Plural: Developments and Intersections in the Study of Sexualities, Relationships, and Families. All are welcome to participate in this event!\\n\\n\\nABOUT SYMPOSIUM\\n\\nSince 2009, the SMF Symposium has offered an opportunity for students, faculty, and community members to present their research and engage in critical discussions about important issues in the relationships and sexuality fields. These critical discussions often take on a practical or applied focus – how research translates into practice in the human services fields. The Symposium team remains committed to creating a venue where we can explore and discuss theory and research in critical and accessible ways!\\n\\nWe look forward to you joining us and adding your voice to these important discussions.\\n\\n\\nAGENDA\\n \\n\\n\\n\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t8:30 to 8:55\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tRegistration\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Atrium\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tCoffee\\/Tea\\/Muffins\\/Yogurt Bar\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Atrium\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t9 to 10:30\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tWelcome and Keynote\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tAnna Balagtas\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tReproductive justice isn't just about babies: An exploration of radical and political carework\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t60 min talk + 30 min Q&A\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Room 2002\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t10:30 to 10:45\\n\\t\\t\\tHealth Break\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tCoffee\\/Tea\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Atrium\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t10:45 to 12:30\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tWorkshop Pilot\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tDr. Rhea Ashley Hoski,, Dr. Toni Serafini, Dr. Karen Blair, & Dr. Nancie Im-Bolter\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tWe are family: Challenging the roots of 2SLGBTQQIA+ family rejection through an early parenting intervention on femmephobia\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Room 2002\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t12:30 to 1:30\\n\\t\\t\\tLunch\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tServed in the SJU Servery\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tCommunity Centre\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t1:30 to 2:30\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tSMF 230 Statistics Student Presentations\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tLed by Dr. Carl Rodrigue\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Room 2002\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t2:30 to 2:45\\n\\t\\t\\tHealth Break\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tCandy Bar\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Atrium\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t2:45 to 3:45\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t3 Topic Presentations\\n\\n\\t\\t\\ta) Into the maw: Violence as discource against masculine oppression (Ren Grafton & Dr. Andrew Deman)\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tb) Vegan ecofeminism, infertility treatments, and an interspecies reproductive justice (Dr. Katy Fulfur)\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tc) "You've got your mother in a whirl, not sure if you're a boy or a girl": An exploration of nonbinary emerging adults' identity formation and coming out process (Hal Ribeiro & Dr. Denise Whitehead)\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t20 min each; approximately 15 min presentation + 5 min Q&A\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Room 2002\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t3:45 to 4\\n\\t\\t\\tHealth Break\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tBeverages & Snacks\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Atrium\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\t4 to 5:30\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tCommunity Keynote\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tCory Silverberg\\n\\n\\t\\t\\tSex is a funny word, and other things adults forget\\n\\t\\t\\t\\n\\t\\t\\tSJ2 Room 1004: Vanstone Lecture Hall\\n\\t\\t\\n\\t\\n\\n \\n\\n\\nABSTRACTS\\n\\nKeynote Speaker: Anna Balagtas (9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.)\\n\\n\\nTitle: Reproductive justice isn’t just about babies: An exploration of radical and political carework \\n\\nAbstract:\\n\\nWhen exploring the topic of Reproductive Justice, we tend to focus our conversations around the policies surrounding the reproductive experience. However, the bigger conversation of Reproductive Justice, arguably, are the intersections outside of having children.\\n\\nAs we engage with the four pillars of Reproductive Justice, we must speak on the radical and political intersections of this movement.\\n\\nThis presentation will explore these questions:\\n\\n\\n\\tWhat does it mean to have the right to have children within a racist and fatphobic medical industrial complex?\\n\\tWhat does it mean to have the right not to have children in a corrupt colonial cisgendered white heterosexual patriarchy?\\n\\tWhat does it mean to have bodily autonomy where disabled folks are constantly left out of the conversation?\\n\\tWhat does it mean to parent in a safe and supported community when we systemically underserve Indigenous, Black and People of the Global Majority in western societies?\\n\\nWe must approach Reproductive Justice as an intersection of decolonization work and liberation for all. The liberated work is decolonial work. Decolonial work is community building. Community building is family building. Reproductive Justice is at the center of this movement.\\n\\n \\nWorkshop Pilot (10:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.)\\n \\nWe are family: Challenging the roots of 2SLGBTQQIA+ family rejection through an early parenting intervention on femmephobia - A workshop pilot\\n\\nSpeakers:\\n\\nDr. Rhea Ashley Hoskin\\n\\nDr. Toni Serafini\\n\\nDr. Karen Blair\\n\\nDr. Nancie Im-Bolter\\n\\nAbstract: \\n\\nIn 2005, Ronnie Paris Jr. killed his three-year-old son for being “too soft.” In 2011, 15-year-old Raymond Buys was tortured and murdered by Echo Wild Game Training camp members who promised his parents they could turn “effeminate boys into manly men." Both of these deaths can be attributed to femmephobia, which refers to the societal devaluation and regulation of femininity. How parents understand, conceptualize, and respond to femininity in their children (of all genders) can have significant consequences for children's safety, well-being, and mental health.\\n\\nFacilitators will take attendees through a “pilot” of a workshop in development for parents\\/caregivers with young families. The workshop aims to reduce family rejection, harm, and abuse, with a particular focus on preparing caregivers to support their children’s health and well-being across relational interactions (e.g., reducing intimate partner and gender-based violence). Workshop topics include gender socialization in families, assumptions about the gender binary and sexual orientation, assumptions about femininity, identifying unspoken rules concerning gender and femininity, debunking femininity myths, identifying and challenging femmephobia, and revaluing femininity. We focus on how femmephobic prejudices are socialized within families and impact children’s relational interactions across the lifespan. Attendees will be invited to participate in a number of interactive and self-reflection activities designed to inform and support parents\\/caregivers with young families. Attendees will also be asked to provide feedback on the content and process of the workshop to help further its development as an intervention offered directly to parents\\/caregivers as well as professionals working with parents.\\n\\n \\nSMF 230 Statistics Presentations with Professor Carl Rodrigue (1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.)\\n \\nDr. Carl Rodrigue’s statistics class will share short quantitative presentations on various topics related to sexuality, relationships, and families.\\n \\n3 Topic Presentations (2:45 p.m. to 3:45 p.m.)\\n \\nOral presentation #1 (20 mins)\\n \\nTitle: Into the maw: Violence as discourse against masculine oppression\\n\\nSpeakers: Ren Grafton & Dr. J. Andrew Deman\\n\\nAbstract:\\n\\nIn her 1990 treatise, Sexual Personae, Camille Paglia argues that “In the beginning was nature. The background from which and against which our ideas of God were formed, nature remains the supreme moral problem. We cannot hope to understand sex and gender until we clarify our attitude toward nature.” For Paglia, Western society is built around a complex, misogynistic culture that enforces a double standard in which violence against women is tolerated while resistance to such violence is unnaturally repressed to such an extent that it takes nothing less than pagan gods and violent resistance to emancipate women. And this, perhaps not by coincidence, is exactly what author and advocate Jude Ellison S. Doyle portrays in their 2022 graphic novel, “Maw.” In the story that unfolds, a nature-based feminist cult in service to a pagan god offer a measured and righteous response to the casual violence against women in Western society by summoning, effectively, a world-ending deity. Steeped in the mythology of pagan women and presented through a series of juxtaposed characters of differing worldviews, Doyle’s story explores the consequences of non-violence and the simmering hatred that drives women in a patriarchal society to solicit the wrath of nature. The message that emerges warns that complacency is not an option because it will get women killed; that men will always choose to see monsters and victims instead of people; that the only way to prevent victimization is to victimize oppressors - either take up a blade and join the battle or get out of the way. This team-delivered talk will present the thesis of Maw as a prompt by which students of sexuality and gender studies can initiate productive conversations about the role of non-violence in preserving social divides in Western culture.\\n\\n \\nOral presentation #2 (20 mins)\\n \\nTitle: Vegan ecofeminism, infertility treatments, and an interspecies reproductive justice\\n\\nSpeaker: Dr. Katy Fulfer\\n\\nAbstract:\\n\\nVegans (i.e., people who strive to do as little harm as possible to nonhuman animals) often experience a feeling of tension or anxiety when confronting the use of animals and animal products in medicine. However, such anxieties have not been expressed around infertility treatments and reproductive technologies, areas of medicine which involve animal products and animal testing. This presentation is a first step in exploring how vegan commitments might interact with a feminist analysis of infertility treatments. I outline a framework I refer to as vegan ecofeminism. In extending reproductive justice to include nonhuman animals, Greta Gaard (2010) argues that infertility treatments and industrial animal agriculture are both sites of patriarchal coercion and commodification. First, I build on Gaard’s argument by highlighting how infertility treatments were developed with animal experimentation and in tandem with animal biotechnology. In light of these historic and on-going connections, I argue that using reproductive technologies will always entail a moral residue that points to a structural injustice done to animals. Second, I highlight ways in which these industries intertwine to support eugenic and White supremacist rhetoric about whose reproduction is deemed valuable. Most of my analysis raises systemic issues, yet in the third part of my presentation, I offer some tentative suggestions for how people who use reproductive technologies in their family-making endeavors might do so in a way that challenges the normalization of animal use. Namely, I borrow from C. Lou Hamilton’s (2019) queer politics of mourning to suggest the adoption of a contextual moral vegan practice.\\n\\n \\nOral presentation #3 (20 mins)\\n \\nTitle: “You’ve got your mother in a whirl, not sure if you’re a boy or a girl”: An exploration of nonbinary emerging adults’ identity formation and coming out process\\n\\nSpeakers: Hal Ribeiro & Dr. Denise Whitehead\\n\\nAbstract:\\n\\nThere is a growing awareness of nonbinary people in Canada, with over 41,000 people identifying as nonbinary on the 2021 census. The academic research in this area is severely lacking. This research explored through three main questions: 1) At what age do people recognise that they are not cisgender and what led them to this discovery? 2) How long after they recognised they were not cisgender did they start to identify as nonbinary? And 3) What were their coming-out experiences? This qualitative research explored these questions using semi-structured interviews with six participants between the ages of 20 and 26 who identified as nonbinary or under the nonbinary umbrella. Preliminary analysis found that all participants discovered the term nonbinary in later adolescence, typically in high school or in university. Similarly, most individuals recalled instances where they recognised that they were not cisgender, even if they did not have the words for it, as early as junior kindergarten. These results give us a glimpse of understanding the topic of nonbinary identity formation and coming out experiences.\\n\\n \\nCommunity Keynote Speaker: Cory Silverberg (4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.)\\n \\nTopic: Sex is a funny word, and other things adults forget\\n\\nCory is the co-author of four books including The Ultimate Guide to Sex and Disability (with Fran Odette and Miriam Kaufman), What Makes a Baby, Sex Is a Funny Word, and most recently You Know, Sex, all with Fiona Smyth.\\n\\nSince 1997 Cory has developed and facilitated workshops for hundreds of agencies and organizations serving both youth and adults across North America on a range of topics including gender expression and identity, sexuality and disability, sexual pleasure, sexual communication, technology, and access + inclusion. Their work encourages us to think and talk about sex, gender, and disability in more expansive ways, and to talk about sexuality and reproduction in a way that includes all kinds of families.\\n\\n\\nREGISTRATION\\nThe SMF Research Symposium encourages student attendance. To make that possible ALL current full-time students may register for free. Presenters, thank you for your contributions to the event – please register as our guests. All others are asked to pay a nominal fee of $25. Your registration includes all events, lunch, and snacks throughout the day.\\n \\nIf you are ONLY attending the complimentary Cory Silverberg talk at 4:00 p.m.-5:30 p.m., please register so that we can prepare for your participation.\\n\\n\\nLOCATION\\nThe SMF Symposium will take place on the St. Jerome's University campus, in the SJ2\\/Academic Centre building. Guests are welcome to park in Lots A or B for this event. For more information about the SJU campus, please use the following link to the Locations and Maps page of the university's website.\\n\\n\\nNOTABLES\\nTo make this event as inclusive as possible we kindly request that people avoid wearing strong scents. Additionally, as a way of showing care for others, we are asking attendees to mask.\\n\\n\\n \\nFor further details and information, please visit https:\\/\\/www.sju.ca\\/2023-smf-research-symposium or email carl.rodrigue@uwaterloo.ca.\\n \\n\"",
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Event Details
Thank you for your interest in attending the 10th SMF Research Symposium hosted by the Department of Sexuality, Marriage, and Family Studies. We look forward to celebrating this year’s theme: From Singular to Plural: Developments and Intersections in the Study of Sexualities, Relationships, and Families. All are welcome to participate in this event!
ABOUT SYMPOSIUM
Since 2009, the SMF Symposium has offered an opportunity for students, faculty, and community members to present their research and engage in critical discussions about important issues in the relationships and sexuality fields. These critical discussions often take on a practical or applied focus – how research translates into practice in the human services fields. The Symposium team remains committed to creating a venue where we can explore and discuss theory and research in critical and accessible ways!
We look forward to you joining us and adding your voice to these important discussions.
AGENDA
8:30 to 8:55 |
Registration SJ2 Atrium |
Coffee/Tea/Muffins/Yogurt Bar SJ2 Atrium |
9 to 10:30 |
Welcome and Keynote Anna Balagtas Reproductive justice isn't just about babies: An exploration of radical and political carework |
60 min talk + 30 min Q&A SJ2 Room 2002 |
10:30 to 10:45 | Health Break |
Coffee/Tea SJ2 Atrium |
10:45 to 12:30 |
Workshop Pilot Dr. Rhea Ashley Hoski,, Dr. Toni Serafini, Dr. Karen Blair, & Dr. Nancie Im-Bolter We are family: Challenging the roots of 2SLGBTQQIA+ family rejection through an early parenting intervention on femmephobia |
SJ2 Room 2002 |
12:30 to 1:30 | Lunch |
Served in the SJU Servery Community Centre |
1:30 to 2:30 |
SMF 230 Statistics Student Presentations Led by Dr. Carl Rodrigue |
SJ2 Room 2002 |
2:30 to 2:45 | Health Break |
Candy Bar SJ2 Atrium |
2:45 to 3:45 |
3 Topic Presentations a) Into the maw: Violence as discource against masculine oppression (Ren Grafton & Dr. Andrew Deman) b) Vegan ecofeminism, infertility treatments, and an interspecies reproductive justice (Dr. Katy Fulfur) c) "You've got your mother in a whirl, not sure if you're a boy or a girl": An exploration of nonbinary emerging adults' identity formation and coming out process (Hal Ribeiro & Dr. Denise Whitehead) |
20 min each; approximately 15 min presentation + 5 min Q&A SJ2 Room 2002 |
3:45 to 4 | Health Break |
Beverages & Snacks SJ2 Atrium |
4 to 5:30 |
Community Keynote Cory Silverberg Sex is a funny word, and other things adults forget |
SJ2 Room 1004: Vanstone Lecture Hall |
ABSTRACTS
Keynote Speaker: Anna Balagtas (9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.)
Title: Reproductive justice isn’t just about babies: An exploration of radical and political carework
Abstract:
When exploring the topic of Reproductive Justice, we tend to focus our conversations around the policies surrounding the reproductive experience. However, the bigger conversation of Reproductive Justice, arguably, are the intersections outside of having children.
As we engage with the four pillars of Reproductive Justice, we must speak on the radical and political intersections of this movement.
This presentation will explore these questions:
- What does it mean to have the right to have children within a racist and fatphobic medical industrial complex?
- What does it mean to have the right not to have children in a corrupt colonial cisgendered white heterosexual patriarchy?
- What does it mean to have bodily autonomy where disabled folks are constantly left out of the conversation?
- What does it mean to parent in a safe and supported community when we systemically underserve Indigenous, Black and People of the Global Majority in western societies?
Workshop Pilot (10:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.)
We are family: Challenging the roots of 2SLGBTQQIA+ family rejection through an early parenting intervention on femmephobia - A workshop pilot
Speakers:
Dr. Rhea Ashley Hoskin
Dr. Toni Serafini
Dr. Karen Blair
Dr. Nancie Im-Bolter
Abstract:
In 2005, Ronnie Paris Jr. killed his three-year-old son for being “too soft.” In 2011, 15-year-old Raymond Buys was tortured and murdered by Echo Wild Game Training camp members who promised his parents they could turn “effeminate boys into manly men." Both of these deaths can be attributed to femmephobia, which refers to the societal devaluation and regulation of femininity. How parents understand, conceptualize, and respond to femininity in their children (of all genders) can have significant consequences for children's safety, well-being, and mental health.
Facilitators will take attendees through a “pilot” of a workshop in development for parents/caregivers with young families. The workshop aims to reduce family rejection, harm, and abuse, with a particular focus on preparing caregivers to support their children’s health and well-being across relational interactions (e.g., reducing intimate partner and gender-based violence). Workshop topics include gender socialization in families, assumptions about the gender binary and sexual orientation, assumptions about femininity, identifying unspoken rules concerning gender and femininity, debunking femininity myths, identifying and challenging femmephobia, and revaluing femininity. We focus on how femmephobic prejudices are socialized within families and impact children’s relational interactions across the lifespan. Attendees will be invited to participate in a number of interactive and self-reflection activities designed to inform and support parents/caregivers with young families. Attendees will also be asked to provide feedback on the content and process of the workshop to help further its development as an intervention offered directly to parents/caregivers as well as professionals working with parents.
SMF 230 Statistics Presentations with Professor Carl Rodrigue (1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.)
Dr. Carl Rodrigue’s statistics class will share short quantitative presentations on various topics related to sexuality, relationships, and families.
Oral presentation #1 (20 mins)
Title: Into the maw: Violence as discourse against masculine oppression
Speakers: Ren Grafton & Dr. J. Andrew Deman
Abstract:
In her 1990 treatise, Sexual Personae, Camille Paglia argues that “In the beginning was nature. The background from which and against which our ideas of God were formed, nature remains the supreme moral problem. We cannot hope to understand sex and gender until we clarify our attitude toward nature.” For Paglia, Western society is built around a complex, misogynistic culture that enforces a double standard in which violence against women is tolerated while resistance to such violence is unnaturally repressed to such an extent that it takes nothing less than pagan gods and violent resistance to emancipate women. And this, perhaps not by coincidence, is exactly what author and advocate Jude Ellison S. Doyle portrays in their 2022 graphic novel, “Maw.” In the story that unfolds, a nature-based feminist cult in service to a pagan god offer a measured and righteous response to the casual violence against women in Western society by summoning, effectively, a world-ending deity. Steeped in the mythology of pagan women and presented through a series of juxtaposed characters of differing worldviews, Doyle’s story explores the consequences of non-violence and the simmering hatred that drives women in a patriarchal society to solicit the wrath of nature. The message that emerges warns that complacency is not an option because it will get women killed; that men will always choose to see monsters and victims instead of people; that the only way to prevent victimization is to victimize oppressors - either take up a blade and join the battle or get out of the way. This team-delivered talk will present the thesis of Maw as a prompt by which students of sexuality and gender studies can initiate productive conversations about the role of non-violence in preserving social divides in Western culture.
Oral presentation #2 (20 mins)
Title: Vegan ecofeminism, infertility treatments, and an interspecies reproductive justice
Speaker: Dr. Katy Fulfer
Abstract:
Vegans (i.e., people who strive to do as little harm as possible to nonhuman animals) often experience a feeling of tension or anxiety when confronting the use of animals and animal products in medicine. However, such anxieties have not been expressed around infertility treatments and reproductive technologies, areas of medicine which involve animal products and animal testing. This presentation is a first step in exploring how vegan commitments might interact with a feminist analysis of infertility treatments. I outline a framework I refer to as vegan ecofeminism. In extending reproductive justice to include nonhuman animals, Greta Gaard (2010) argues that infertility treatments and industrial animal agriculture are both sites of patriarchal coercion and commodification. First, I build on Gaard’s argument by highlighting how infertility treatments were developed with animal experimentation and in tandem with animal biotechnology. In light of these historic and on-going connections, I argue that using reproductive technologies will always entail a moral residue that points to a structural injustice done to animals. Second, I highlight ways in which these industries intertwine to support eugenic and White supremacist rhetoric about whose reproduction is deemed valuable. Most of my analysis raises systemic issues, yet in the third part of my presentation, I offer some tentative suggestions for how people who use reproductive technologies in their family-making endeavors might do so in a way that challenges the normalization of animal use. Namely, I borrow from C. Lou Hamilton’s (2019) queer politics of mourning to suggest the adoption of a contextual moral vegan practice.
Oral presentation #3 (20 mins)
Title: “You’ve got your mother in a whirl, not sure if you’re a boy or a girl”: An exploration of nonbinary emerging adults’ identity formation and coming out process
Speakers: Hal Ribeiro & Dr. Denise Whitehead
Abstract:
There is a growing awareness of nonbinary people in Canada, with over 41,000 people identifying as nonbinary on the 2021 census. The academic research in this area is severely lacking. This research explored through three main questions: 1) At what age do people recognise that they are not cisgender and what led them to this discovery? 2) How long after they recognised they were not cisgender did they start to identify as nonbinary? And 3) What were their coming-out experiences? This qualitative research explored these questions using semi-structured interviews with six participants between the ages of 20 and 26 who identified as nonbinary or under the nonbinary umbrella. Preliminary analysis found that all participants discovered the term nonbinary in later adolescence, typically in high school or in university. Similarly, most individuals recalled instances where they recognised that they were not cisgender, even if they did not have the words for it, as early as junior kindergarten. These results give us a glimpse of understanding the topic of nonbinary identity formation and coming out experiences.
Community Keynote Speaker: Cory Silverberg (4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.)
Topic: Sex is a funny word, and other things adults forget
Cory is the co-author of four books including The Ultimate Guide to Sex and Disability (with Fran Odette and Miriam Kaufman), What Makes a Baby, Sex Is a Funny Word, and most recently You Know, Sex, all with Fiona Smyth.
Since 1997 Cory has developed and facilitated workshops for hundreds of agencies and organizations serving both youth and adults across North America on a range of topics including gender expression and identity, sexuality and disability, sexual pleasure, sexual communication, technology, and access + inclusion. Their work encourages us to think and talk about sex, gender, and disability in more expansive ways, and to talk about sexuality and reproduction in a way that includes all kinds of families.
REGISTRATION
The SMF Research Symposium encourages student attendance. To make that possible ALL current full-time students may register for free. Presenters, thank you for your contributions to the event – please register as our guests. All others are asked to pay a nominal fee of $25. Your registration includes all events, lunch, and snacks throughout the day.
If you are ONLY attending the complimentary Cory Silverberg talk at 4:00 p.m.-5:30 p.m., please register so that we can prepare for your participation.
LOCATION
The SMF Symposium will take place on the St. Jerome's University campus, in the SJ2/Academic Centre building. Guests are welcome to park in Lots A or B for this event. For more information about the SJU campus, please use the following link to the Locations and Maps page of the university's website.
NOTABLES
To make this event as inclusive as possible we kindly request that people avoid wearing strong scents. Additionally, as a way of showing care for others, we are asking attendees to mask.
For further details and information, please visit https://www.sju.ca/2023-smf-research-symposium or email carl.rodrigue@uwaterloo.ca.
Speakers
Location
St. Jerome's University - Academic Centre
290 Westmount Road North Waterloo, ON N2L 3G5 CA
Tickets
Type |
Price |
---|---|
Full-time Student |
Free |
Community Member/Non-Student |
$25.00 |
Presenter |
Free |
Silverberg Lecture ONLY |
Free |
Organizer Details
St. Jerome's University
Federated with the University of Waterloo