A Guide for Small Businesses: Navigating Canada’s Public Procurement Opportunities

A Guide for Small Businesses: Navigating Canada's Public Procurement Opportunities Linda

New Books at the Law Library – 26/01/20

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE1485 .W66 2025
R.J. Wood, Bankruptcy and Insolvency Law, 3rd ed (Irwin Law, an imprint of University of Toronto Press, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KF3989 .S676 2023
P.C. Weiler, et al, Sports and the Law: Text, Cases, and Problems (West Academic Publishing, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KZ3110.C37 A36 2025
R.J. Currie et al, Kindred's International Law, Chiefly as Interpreted and Applied in Canada (Emond Montgomery Publications, 2025).

UBC Library welcomes urban forestry students into the archives

"UBC Library welcomes urban forestry students into the archives" with compass and tree illustrations.

How do you get a group of urban forestry students excited about historical archives? You start with a map.

When Claire Malek first joined UBC Library’s Rare Books and Special Collections (RBSC) as an archivist, working with UBC Library’s extensive forest history collections, she wanted to see more forestry students using the materials. The breakthrough came at a President’s Breakfast for new faculty, where she met Dr. Susan Day, Adjunct Professor in the Faculty of Forestry.

“When Dr. Day shared that she was in urban forestry, and that she was interested in soils and soil history, my ears perked up,” says Malek.

That conversation sparked a long-running collaboration. Students in Day’s urban forestry course were invited to RBSC for a hands-on class to explore archival materials and how they can inform research on urban ecology, forest systems, greenspace planning, sustainability, and more.

At the same time, Helen L. Brown, Reference Librarian at Woodward Library and liaison to the Faculty of Forestry, was working on ways to incorporate a greater variety of resources from different time periods and sources into environmental science classes. Knowing that a huge amount of relevant research and data are available in archives, government repositories, grey literature, and other sources, Brown wanted to help students use a broader range of materials to understand the places they were studying and expand the timescale of the data they used.

Malek and Brown teamed up to guide students through unique historical sources—from flood photographs and city planning documents to student theses. Years later, the partnership between UBC Library and UBC’s Urban Forestry program continues to thrive.

“Susan taught me a lot about what would be meaningful for urban forestry students to learn using our materials. That’s an education that continues to happen for me as I learn about their discipline and what skills students need, both for their assignments and their research,” says Malek.

Today, the course is taught by Dr. Matthew Mitchell, Assistant Professor in the Department of Forest Resources Management, UBC Faculty of Forestry.

“The greatest benefit to students is understanding where they might find historical data on cities and urban ecosystems,” says Dr. Matthew Mitchell. “Understanding urban ecosystems, why different plants or wildlife are present in a certain area, and how to manage or restore those ecosystems, requires an understanding of the historical legacies and past patterns in cities. Archival materials can provide a unique perspective on these legacies and information that can’t be found anywhere else. Knowing how and where to find and access this data will be useful to students in their studies and potential future careers.”

Historical fire insurance maps are one example. “They’re an easy way for students to examine how a specific area of Vancouver has changed over time,” explains Brown. “Knowing what used to be in a space is essential if you’re making decisions about that space today.”

Another favourite resource is the Vancouver’s Old Streams map by Sharon Proctor, showing the city’s long-buried waterways. “The water is still there,” Brown notes. “Where is it going now? It’s important to consider the legacy of these past decisions and how they continue to impact the environment over time.”

False Creek offers a particularly striking case: once extending further inland before being filled in, the area now experiences significant heat impacts due to the lack of green infrastructure and faces heightened risk from sea-level rise.

Last year, Malek and Brown transformed their class session into a deep dive on a single site: xʷməm̓qʷe:m (Camosun Bog) in Pacific Spirit Park. Using a wide range of archival sources, they demonstrated how different types of historical resources can be used in research.

Through these classes, students are introduced to resources that can help them understand the land better, with data on water flow and soil history as well as the human and cultural impacts. The approach of focusing on a specific place encourages finding local solutions for local issues, Malek and Brown note, and an opportunity to engage in better decision-making.

Learn more about UBC Library’s forestry resources.

Inside cIRcle: What is it & how can we help?

Photo shows two sets of hands on top of papers showing various charts and graphs. One person holds a pencil, ready to make notes on one of the graphs.

Photo by UX Indonesia on Unsplash

 

Are you interested in making your research openly accessible online, but aren’t sure where to start? cIRcle is here to help! Read on to find out more about cIRcle and how UBC’s institutional repository can help you share your research with the world.

What is cIRcle, and how can it help me?

cIRcle is UBC’s institutional repository, where the published and unpublished research outputs from the UBC community are brought together and are preserved for future generations. Institutions like UBC have repositories similar to cIRcle to enhance the global reach of UBC’s research by making digital research materials openly accessible, ensuring they can be seen, explored, and engaged with by anyone, anywhere. Find out more about cIRcle’s mission and service offerings on our About cIRcle page.

For UBC’s faculty, staff, and students, cIRcle offers a pathway to making a range of research materials, including unpublished works, widely available and permanently citable. cIRcle’s long-term preservation efforts mean that research outputs will remain accessible into the future and can be reliably referenced using a DOI.

What types of materials does cIRcle accept?

cIRcle accepts a wide variety of research and teaching materials, including study protocols, podcasts, infographics, and more. Read through our Content Guidelines to find out if your project or research output is the right fit for cIRcle, and give our File Format Guidelines a browse to make sure the files you are creating align with our recommendations for digital preservation and accessibility. Don’t see your output listed? Contact the cIRcle Office to discuss your specific project.

Curious to see how different content types are presented and engaged with in cIRcle? Our Alternative Research Outputs in cIRcle blog post highlights some unique research types and how to find them in Open Collections, cIRcle’s discovery interface.

Who can submit to cIRcle, and how?

cIRcle serves the UBC community and its partners, and anyone from the UBC community can submit their work to cIRcle for review. Different types of material may be handled differently, based on authorship and academic requirements, if relevant.

Faculty and staff can submit articles, open education resources, research project materials, and much more to cIRcle directly from our Faculty & Staff Work page. Anyone interested in depositing grant-funded publications to cIRcle should familiarize themselves with copyright, publisher permissions, and green open access publishing options.

Graduate students publishing their UBC thesis or dissertation must follow the submission requirements as set out by Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (UBC Vancouver) and the College of Graduate Studies (UBC Okanagan). Students interested in learning more about making their thesis or dissertation openly accessible under a Creative Commons license can read our UBC Theses and Dissertations: Open Access and Embargo Considerations guide.

Current UBC students who want to share their course outputs and research projects with the wider research community can submit graduate-level non-thesis work and undergraduate-level coursework to cIRcle. Student submissions to cIRcle can be done as part of a class-wide submission, coordinated by your instructor, or can be done as a single, student-initiated submission. All student submissions require approval from your faculty supervisor or instructor. Graduate students can follow the instructions on our Graduate Work (Non-thesis) page to deposit their work directly to cIRcle, and undergraduate students can follow the 5-step submission instructions on our Undergraduate Work page to submit their work to cIRcle.

Curious to know more?

Are you interested in knowing more about cIRcle, our behind-the-scenes projects, and how we manage, maintain, and share new content? Our 2024-2025 Impact & Activity Report shares what’s been keeping us busy this past year, and the cIRcle FAQ offers a deep-dive into some of our most frequent questions, and might answer the question you’re asking.

Keep an eye on our cIRcle Blog for regular updates about what we’re working on, new content in cIRcle, and more!

A Legacy of Ink 墨韻傳承

Date: Thursday, January 29, 2026           Time: 1:30-3:30 PMLocation: UBC Asian Centre Auditorium (1871 West Mall, Vancouver)Admission: Free Join us for an inspiring exploration of the legacy of Chinese calligraphy—a tradition that spans centuries and continues to shape Chinese cultural identity today. This event will delve into its historical significance, aesthetic principles, and modern interpretations as […]

New Books at the Law Library – 26/01/06

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE416.H363 A3 2025
S. Handman, Madam Justice: An Inside Look (Irwin Law, an imprint of University of Toronto Press, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE3646 .H3933 2025
R. Shoucri & J. Stone., eds, Health-Harming Legal Needs: A Guide for Canadian Primary Health Care Clinicians (University of Toronto Press, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE3805 .D44 2022
J.G. Delaney, Education Law for Teachers and School Administrators, 2nd ed (Brush Education, 2022).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE3950 .P37 2025
J.E. Parente, Ethics on Trial: Protecting Humans in Canada's Broken Research System (Dundurn Press, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE4381.5 .S25 2025
C. Salvino, The Notwithstanding Clause in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (Irwin Law, an imprint of University of Toronto Press, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE7709 .I823 2024
T. Isaac, Aboriginal Law, 6th ed (Thomson Reuters, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KF250 .O18 2025
L.C. Oates et al, The Legal Writing Handbook: Analysis, Research, and Writing, 9th ed (Aspen Publishing, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KJE5170 .B37 2025
C. Barnard, The Substantive Law of the EU: The Four Freedoms, 8th ed (Oxford University Press, 2025).

New Books at the Asian Library (December 2025)

Title Words in Allard School of Law Faculty Research Outputs in 2025

See Allard School of Law Research Outputs

Intrepid Sisters on the Move II

Many thanks to guest blogger, Barbara Towell, for contributing the below post! Barbara is E-Records Manager with Digital Programs & Services at UBC Library and an avid cyclist.


This blog is part two of Kitty and Clara Wilson – Intrepid Sisters on the Move. If you have not read part one, please find it here. In this part I plan on comparing spots Kitty and Clara saw on their ride with those same or similar spots today.

The Rides in Context

Kitty and Clara were already local Vancouver celebrities when they began their cycling tour up the coast of Vancouver Island to Campbell River. In 1936, eighteen months before the first of their Vancouver Island trips, they achieved what every penny-pinching backpacker dreams of: they talked their way onto the British Steam Ship Harmatris, a merchant tanker headed for Australia, securing unpaid employment (in return for passage) as deckhands. They did jobs such as cleaning and painting. This was the first of many merchant tankers on which they sought, and received, passage to their next destination. Their first port-of-call was Melbourne, then on to Tasmania, Australia; Durban, South Africa; Dublin, Ireland; then finally, London England where they planned a cycling trip around the United Kingdom.

In London, they bought second-hand bikes, probably Rastus and Ginger and tried to teach themselves to ride them. Imagine planning a cross-country cycling trip without knowing how to ride a bike? After a few failed attempts and bloodied body parts they agreed, “we will try to learn to ride these just once more and if we crash this time we will sell the bicycles and walk around England” (Vancouver Sun, Dec. 12, 1936). Finally their bikes stayed upright and they embarked on their first cycling tour around the England and Scotland. In 1938 they returned to Vancouver via Panama. Once back in Vancouver, Clara gave talks to women’s groups and interviews to newspapers about their unique and, economical way of seeing the world. Clara always emphasized the thrift of this around the world adventure.

Their cycling travels continued in BC over the next decade. They rode each summer and documented their trips in the photo albums held at Rare Books and Special Collections. What I discovered on our recreation of their trip is that very little of what Kitty and Clara documented in the album and letters home survives – maybe just the road and the ocean, but joy endured, across time, across cyclists.

Nanaimo

Business section of Nanaimo, B.C. The Plaza Hotel is shown

 

Qualicum

Image of Kitty Wilson examining her bike.

 

Parksville

 

Campbell River

Image of Kitty Wilson and an unidentified man having lunch together.

 

Campbell River

Image of Clara Wilson with an unidentified man and woman.

 

Elk Falls

Image of Clara Wilson standing with her bike.

 

Holiday Closure Notice

Close up photo showing a round paper ornament that says 'Oh What Fun' hanging on a tree decorated with garland, lights, and other ornaments.

Photo courtesy Jamil Rhajiak / UBC Brand & Marketing

 

With the upcoming holiday season, the cIRcle Office will be closed from Friday, December 19, 2025 to Monday, January 5, 2026. During this period, submission processing and responses from our team will be limited.

If you want to finish the year strong by sharing your work openly, read on to find various resources to help guide you through the process!

UBC Faculty Research Articles

Find out more about how cIRcle can help you meet grant-funding agency open access requirements by reading our blog post, Publishing grant-funded research articles in cIRcle: The Green Open Access Route.

Once you’re ready to deposit, review the process and submit your work through our Faculty and Staff Work page.

UBC Graduate Thesis and Dissertation Submissions

Learn more about the graduate thesis submission process and relevant deadlines:

cIRcle:

Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (UBC Vancouver): Dissertation and Thesis Submission

College of Graduate Studies (UBC Okanagan): Post-Defence Submission

Non-Thesis Student Works

Graduate students can upload their non-thesis works in cIRcle at any time. Our graduate non-thesis deposit blog post will get you started.

If you are an undergraduate student or a faculty member wanting to sponsor an undergraduate student submission, all the details are available on our Undergraduate Submissions page.

Everything Else

Does your work fall into a different category? Review our cIRcle Submissions page to find out more about how to submit your work to cIRcle.

If you have questions, check our cIRcle FAQ for answers to some of our most common questions.

If you’re still looking for more information or have a question not answered by our website, you can Contact Us and we’ll be in touch in the New Year.