Celebrating 100 Years of UBC at Point Grey exhibition extended until June 2026

Glass display case with archival documents, a metal jug, and an baseball hat.

Celebrating 100 Years of UBC at Point Grey, the pop-up exhibition on display at the Robert H. Lee Alumni Centre has been extended until June 2026.

The exhibition first launched on September 8, 2025, to recognize UBC’s move to its permanent campus location at Point Grey in 1925. UBC Library hosted a commemorative opening event later that week, which drew faculty, students, alumni and many other distinguished guests.

Presented by UBC Library in collaboration with the UBC Alma Mater Societythe Office of the Provostthe Museum of Anthropology, and the Robert H. Lee Alumni Centre, the exhibition showcases artifacts from every decade of UBC’s 100 years at the Point Grey campus.

Celebrating 100 Years of UBC at Point Grey aims to explore the UBC student experience at Point Grey. This immersive visual exhibit combines artifacts, photography and video interviews with alumni to show how student life and the University has changed, developed and diversified through the decades.

Learn more about this exhibition.

Library service update: Sage title retention list for 2026

A blue overlaid photo of the Chapman Learning commons with a simple illustration of a clock. Overlaid text reads: Library Service Update

UBC Library has completed negotiations with Sage to restructure our title package. You can learn more about the changes to Sage here.

In order to retain the highest number of titles, we have agreed to renew four subject collections (Sociology, Education, Psychology, Mental Health) that contain many of UBC’s most-used titles. In addition, we are subscribing to important titles that have the highest usage, are titles that UBC Authors have published with, and have a top citation impact relative to other Sage titles in their subject field. For more information on how we prioritized titles, please see our Collections Budget Changes FAQ.

As of January 1, 2026, the following titles will remain accessible through the Sage platform: Sage title retention list.

We are committed to helping you access the materials you need. UBC Library purchased all of Sage’s backfiles in order to provide library users with immediate access to all available articles in Sage titles through 2025. Articles in unsubscribed titles will continue to be available through open access (where applicable) and UBC Library’s InterLibrary Loan Service, which often provides same-day access, or access within one to two days. 

As a reminder, UBC Library’s previous agreement with Sage supported UBC authors to publish Open Access in their titles with 100% of the Article Processing Charges (APC) waived. This entitlement will end, effective December 31, 2025. We encourage all authors publishing in Sage titles to review APC costs for individual journals, and include this cost in their research budgets as necessary. 

Regarding articles currently in review, we have made arrangements with Sage and PLOS for APCs to continue to be covered for UBC authors, where possible. 

  • For Sage, articles submitted before Dec. 31, 2025 to hybrid journals will have their APCs covered as per the original agreement. However, articles submitted to Sage’s Gold Open Access journals will not be eligible for the discount. 
  • For PLOS, we have arranged a three-month extension to help support authors whose articles are still in review. This extension applies to articles submitted before our announcement of changes in September 2025. 

We understand the changes to APCs may have caused some confusion. Thank you for your patience, while we worked through negotiations.

Please share any questions or concerns through our feedback form.

Gift-wrapping with care: Highlights from our workshop “Planet-Friendly Wrapping: Folding Furoshiki for Sustainable Gift-Giving”

On November 19, the Asian Library welcomed members of the UBC and local community for a hands-on celebration of culture, creativity, and sustainability through the Japanese art of furoshiki fabric wrapping. Thanks to generous support of the UBC Inspiring Community Grant, participants received their own Japanese cotton fabric and learned how this simple square of […]

Access Issues for ProQuest databases – “This page isn’t working”

We are seeing some scattered linking access issues for when users try to access ProQuest Databases. Users may see the below “This page isn’t working” error.

EResources is working to fix as soon as possible!

Ryan

A Conversation with Jennifer Gagnon

A graphic with a pink background and rainbow ribbon on the left, and a photo of Jennifer Gagnon beside text that reads A Conversation with Jennifer Gagnon, EDI Scholar-in-Residence 2025/26 on the right

Dr. JENNIFER GAGNON

UBC Library EDI Scholar-in-Residence 2025/2026


Dr. Jennifer M. Gagnon is a Lecturer in the School of Journalism, Writing, and Media. She is the creator and President of UBC’s Disability Affinity Group, which works towards the goals of community care and Disability Justice, and serves on UBC’s Accessibility Committee. Her research is interdisciplinary and embraces topics in Disability Studies, political theory, classics, qualitative methods, accessible healthcare, Universal Design for Learning (UDL), feminism, and gender. As an advocate, she is involved in efforts and workshop facilitation on Disability Justice, accessibility, consent culture, and LGBTQ2SIA+ inclusion. Read Jennifer’s full bio.


Q: What have been your biggest professional challenges?

I would say the two biggest professional challenges I’ve faced are the intersections of ableism and precarious academic employment — and the two are very much connected. When we look at disability representation in  post-secondary environments, there are very few disabled faculty members overall. And when disabled faculty are present, they are often limited to precarious contract positions that deny them access to permanent, stable employment or tenure. I’m in both those groups as a disabled lecturer and former sessional instructor.

These challenges affect your credibility. Oftentimes, when people hear the word disabled, they assume it means being unable or incapable of doing something. Because of ableism, a disability is almost always understood as a lack or deficiency or something that’s broken or wrong about you. Contract faculty are also often seen as less than tenure-track faculty, despite having the same credentials and doing similar work. That combination can make it really challenging to not only distinguish yourself, but to constantly come up against those biases and forms of prejudice.

It takes ongoing work to hold space and assert that disabled faculty and contract faculty are researchers, are valuable, and are essential members of our university communities.

Q: What has been the highlight of the last year for you professionally?

Honestly, this opportunity is one of them. I’m so excited to be able to do disability justice work — and to do it in a way that’s available and open to everyone at UBC. When I think about professional highlights, I’m really proud of the progress we’ve made with the Disability Affinity Group (DAG), which is a community of care, support, and advocacy for self-identified disabled people at UBC that I created and run. I’m the president of DAG, and the fact that we’re receiving more requests for consultation and support than we can even handle is a huge professional highlight and shows how much we need to support spaces for disabled folks to build community and advance advocacy.

I’m also proud of my ability to persist at the university — to keep doing research — and to now be named the Principal Investigator of the Disabled Voices Project, which received partial funding from the StEAR Fund. This project is  by disabled folks, for disabled community, as the research team all self-identify as disabled, and our research goal to surface the experiences of disabled folks at UBC emerged out of collaborative conversations with the disabled community.

“I would say the two biggest professional challenges I’ve faced are the intersections of ableism and precarious academic employment — and the two are very much connected.”

Q: Why did you want to participate in the EDI Scholar-in-Residence program?

I think it’s incredibly important that the disabled community at UBC is both represented and celebrated. So often, ableism teaches us to see disability as a source of shame, of wrongness or brokenness. But disability is actually an identity. It’s part of who I am and part of what shapes me and has made me the person I am today. I want people to feel they can say “I’m disabled” with the same pride that I feel when I say I’m a bisexual woman. I want disability to be a positive source of identity, pride, and belonging.

Disability justice is really underrepresented at the university, and the stories, knowledge, experiences, and expertise of disabled people are often marginalized. I hope this work can contribute to changing that.

Q: How have you structured your public engagement sessions for your term as our EDI Scholar?

This opportunity — to use a book-club format to tell and share disabled stories and experiences — felt meaningful and necessary.

Being able to create an opportunity grounded in the belief that we can together dream Disability Justice into being, is why this is why this program means so much to me. It’s an opportunity to diversify our thoughts and our book shelves.

“I’m so excited to be able to do disability justice work — and to do it in a way that’s available and open to everyone at UBC.”

Q: Are there any resources at the library that you’re hoping to access during your time as an EDI Scholar-in-Residence?

We’re actually hoping to create new resources for the library. One of the reasons I wanted to structure this project as a book club is that it gives us the opportunity to develop a disability justice book-club kit — something that can continue to exist long after this EDI Scholar-in-Residence term ends. The idea is to create a set of resources and a clear structure for a disability justice book club that individual units or community members can access and use on their own.

Another key piece of my work is modelling accessibility. Disability justice is about access and transformation, and I wanted the structure and delivery of the book club to demonstrate best practices for making events as accessible and inclusive as possible. We’ve done that in several creative ways — blending in-person and online participation, ensuring all books and texts are available in multiple formats at no cost, and providing accessible versions such as ebooks, audiobooks when possible, large-print formats, and materials compatible with screen readers and other adaptive technologies.

We’re also creating resource guides to help participants access the materials easily. Rather than placing the burden of securing access on the person facing the barrier, we’re trying to model what it looks like to build accessibility in proactively. In doing so, we hope to help establish expectations and best practices that can be applied to all meetings and events at the university. And along the way, I hope people discover that assistive technologies and alternate formats can benefit everyone.


The Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) Scholars-in-Residence program is open to scholars who hold degrees in any discipline. Residency at UBC’s Irving K. Barber Learning Centre allows Scholars to participate in collaborative and interdisciplinary public programming with a clear impact on equity, diversity, and inclusion. For more information, visit the program website. This program is made possible with support from the Peña Fund.

Upcoming reading room closure

Rare Books and Special Collections and University Archives Reading Room closed from December 15 until early 2026

Construction of Main Library. UBC 1.1/1874

The Rare Books and Special Collections and University Archives reading room will be temporarily closed from December 15, 2025 until early 2026 for upgrades.

During this period, RBSC and UA will still be able to provide some reproduction services, but instructional support for classes will be unavailable until construction is complete.

Please contact Rare Book and Special Collections or University Archives for more information on available remote research support. You can also contact specific members of the RBSC team.

Thank you so much for your patience and support during these necessary upgrades. We’re looking forward to reopening RBSC and UA’s public spaces in 2026 and welcoming back UBC faculty, staff and students, visiting scholars, researchers and the wider community. Stay tuned for more updates in the new year!

Use the OpenAthens Bookmarklet to login via UBC Library to Publisher Websites

The below hyperlink – ‘UBC OpenAthens Login’ – can be added to your browser favourites and then clicked when visiting Publisher/Vendor websites to login for Library access. You can also edit and rename the bookmarklet.

UBC OpenAthens Login

For Chrome and Safari Users

  • To install the OpenAthens Bookmarklet in Chrome, drag the button to your Bookmarks Bar.

For Firefox Users

  • To install the OpenAthens Bookmarklet in Firefox, right click on the button and select “Bookmark This Link” to add it to your bookmarks or drag the link to your Bookmarks Toolbar

For Internet Explorer Users

  • To install the OpenAthens Bookmarklet in Internet Explorer, right click on the button and select “Add to Favorites…” from the menu.
  • If a dialogue box asks you if you’d like to continue, click ‘Yes.’ In the ‘Add a Favorite’ options, choose the ‘Create In’ drop-down menu and select ‘Favorites Toolbar.’

For iPad Users

  • To install the OpenAthens Bookmarklet on an iPad, in Safari save this page as a bookmark, then edit the bookmark to rename it to something more descriptive about it being a bookmarklet for OpenAthens, and paste the following JavaScript into the URL field:
    • javascript:void(location.href=’https://go.openathens.net/redirector/ubc.ca?url=’+location.href);

Asian Library Board Games – New Additions to the Collection

Asian Library’s board games are the perfect way to keep warm and dry while having fun with friends and family. Come check out our recently-acquired board games, including traditional Asian games as well as newer games with Asian themes. The Asian Library is working towards making these board game available for circulation. Check out the […]

Asian Library Team Picks: Holiday Reads

Enjoy the holidays with some recommended reads from the Asian Library Team. Asian Library staff, librarians and student employees have chosen some of their favourite titles available to take out for the winter break. More selections to come!

New Books at the Asian Library (November 2025)