UBC Library welcomes the 2023/2024 EDI Scholars-in-Residence

UBC Library and the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre (IKBLC) are excited to introduce the 2023/2024 Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) Scholars-in-Residence.

Public lectures presented through the EDI Scholar-in-Residence program will take place in the Antonio and Marissa Peña Learning and Events Room in IKBLC, with support from the Peña Fund. Register for all upcoming events on our website.

Welcome to all our 2023/2024 EDI Scholars-in-Residence!

View all upcoming program events


2023/2024 EDI Scholars

Dr. Sharanjit Kaur Sandhra (Sharn)

Dr. Sharanjit Kaur Sandhra (Sharn) (she/her) is the founder of Belonging Matters Consulting and a sessional faculty in the Department of History at UFV and UBC. Before this, Sharn worked as Coordinator at the South Asian Studies Institute at UFV for more than 12 years and as co-curator and co-manager of the Sikh Heritage Museum, National Historic Site and Gur Sikh Temple (gurdwara). Sharn’s Ph.D. looks at the affective experiences of museum visitors through a critical race theory lens with the dissertation titled “Museums as Spaces of Belonging: Racialized Power in the Margins.” Sharn is a passionate activist, building bridges between community and academia through museum and cultural work. Read Sharn’s full bio.

“Archives as Past, Present, and Future”: Film Screening and Panel Discussion with Dr. Sharanjit Kaur Sandhra

Date and time: Wed, October 25, 3:00 – 5:30 p.m. PT
Location: Peña Room (Rm 301), Irving K. Barber Learning Centre

Register now


Ky Sargeant

Ky Sargeant (she/they) is a professional EDI consultant and educator who brings an empathetic human-centred approach to all of her work, driven by an international lived experience. Having lived and worked in multiple cultures, she has developed a keen ability for compassionate communication and a critical eye toward the structural impacts felt by people of diverse identities. They believe in fostering deep connections with the people they work with and co-creating innovative solutions for inclusion. Read Ky’s full bio. 

“Finding Joy and Staying Alive: Maintaining Balance in the Push for EDI” with Ky Sargeant

Date and time: Wed, November 15, 2:00 – 3:30 p.m. PT
Location: Peña Room (Rm 301), Irving K. Barber Learning Centre

Register now


Hieu Pham-Fraser

Hieu Pham-Fraser (she/her) has worked as an educator for over 27 years. She is currently a District Principal supporting schools in the area of equity, diversity and inclusion in the Metro Vancouver area. To do anti-racism work in schools, Hieu draws from her own lived experience; her work with English language learners; and the multiple roles she has taken on as an educator in the public K-12 school system. Hieu believes that anti-racism work is an action-oriented framework and that everyone can be successful to share the responsibility to create and maintain diverse and inclusive spaces for all. Read Hieu’s full bio.

“A Closer Look at the Role of Microaggressions in Racism” with Hieu Pham-Fraser

Date and time: Wed, December 6, 2:00 – 3:30 p.m. PT
Location: Peña Room (Rm 301), Irving K. Barber Learning Centre

Register now


This project is part of UBC Library’s strategic direction to engage with communities.

Learn more about our Strategic Framework.

Search for Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus

Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus
UBC Library | Okanagan Campus
Full-time, ongoing Librarian position, five-year renewable administrative term as Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus
Anticipated Start Date: April 1, 2024

 

Opportunity

The University of British Columbia, Okanagan campus seeks a senior leader to serve as Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus. In addition to assuming overall responsibility for the Okanagan Library portfolio, the incumbent is a key member of both the UBC Library and Okanagan Campus leadership teams, instrumental in implementation of Library and campus strategic initiatives.

Established in 1908, UBC has consistently ranked among the top five per cent of universities in the world. It is a publicly supported, comprehensive university comprising 18 Faculties and several schools across two campuses. UBC sees its purpose as preparing students to become exceptional global citizens, promoting the values of a civil and sustainable society, and conducting outstanding research to serve the people of British Columbia, Canada, and the world. UBC’s strategic plan, Shaping UBC’s Next Century, guides the university. UBC’s deep commitments to equity and inclusion are reflected in the Indigenous Strategic Plan, the Inclusion Action Plan, the Anti-Racism and Inclusive Excellence Plan, and the Climate Action Plan. Links to these and other plans are found at our Strategic Equity and Anti-Racism Framework hub.  UBC’s main campuses are situated within the traditional, ancestral, unceded territory of the Syilx Okanagan Nation and their peoples and in traditional territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓ əm (Musqueam). We are grateful for the opportunity to work, teach and learn on these lands.

UBC’s Okanagan campus is an innovative hub for learning and research founded in partnership with local Indigenous peoples.  Established in 2005, UBC’s Okanagan campus is one of the most rapidly expanding campuses in Canada, with a thriving community of nearly 12,000 undergraduate and graduate students, 688 faculty members, 1,275 staff, and nine Faculties and Schools. At UBC Okanagan, students and faculty gain all the benefits of a globally respected university within a close-knit, student-focused learning community. UBC Okanagan researchers work collaboratively across disciplines and in conjunction with our network of regional, national and international partners to generate knowledge that has positive impacts within our region and across the globe. With nearly $45 million in research funding in 2022/2023, our experts are pursuing groundbreaking investigative work in areas from climate change and sustainability to homelessness and urban indigenous wellbeing. UBC Okanagan has a bold vision for its future, Outlook 2040. Faculty activities extend beyond the main campus to the community, including presence at the Okanagan Regional Library, the Innovation UBC Hub at the Okanagan Innovation Centre, the Woodhaven Eco Culture Centre and the Rotary Centre for the Arts. The UBCO Downtown building will bring a bold and dynamic presence in the heart of Kelowna, strategically positioned close to partners from across the community.

The University of British Columbia Library is one of the largest academic libraries in Canada and consistently ranks among the top university research libraries in North America. UBC Library has ten branches across two campuses, including an off-site hospital library; a multi-purpose teaching and learning facility, the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre; and the X̱wi7x̱wa Library, and a centre for academic and community Indigenous scholarship. Almost 300 knowledgeable employees – librarians, management and professional staff, support staff and student staff – provide users with the excellent resources and services that they need to further their research, teaching and learning. The UBC Library participates in the broader research library community as a member of both the Canadian Association of Research Libraries and the Association of Research Libraries. The Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus works with other UBC Okanagan and UBC Vancouver leaders to appropriately balance work and relationships particular to individual campuses and across both campuses. The UBC Okanagan and UBC Vancouver Libraries work collaboratively to implement the visions set out in the UBC Okanagan Library Strategic Framework, Report to UBC Okanagan senate, UBC Vancouver Library Strategic Framework, Report to UBC Vancouver Senate, and the UBC Library’s Commitments to Equity, Diversity and Inclusion.

The UBC Okanagan Library is a vibrant and active part of the UBC Library system. Nimble and campus-oriented, the Library has strategic directions that respond directly to Outlook 2040, the UBC Okanagan vision for the future, while remaining heavily engaged with inter-campus initiatives. With 46 FTE, including 12 librarians, 27 professional and support staff, and over 30 student employees, the dynamic team within the Okanagan Library takes an enterprising, entrepreneurial approach to developing programming and services that reflect shared aspirational values, and boasts strong relationships with campus and community partners. Current activities include working with external partners such as British Columbia Regional Digitized History. Internally, the UBC Okanagan Library collaborates with units such as the Centre for Scholarly Communication, Constellation, and Makerspace.  The UBC Okanagan Library is also heavily involved with community outreach in partnership with the Okanagan Regional Library.

 

Position Overview

Reporting jointly to the Provost and Vice-President Academic, Okanagan and University Librarian, the Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus is a key member of both the UBC Library Executive and Okanagan Campus Deans’ Council. Working collaboratively with colleagues in the Library, at the Deans’ table, and across the University community on both campuses, the incumbent provides leadership in implementation of the UBC Okanagan Library’s strategic framework. The Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus works with other UBC Okanagan and UBC Vancouver leaders to appropriately balance work and relationships particular to individual campuses and across both campuses.

This position supports the Provost and Vice-President Academic, Okanagan and the University Librarian in the administration of the Library including development of services, spaces, technology, and collections, budget management and allocation of resources, and assessment of librarianship/teaching, research, and service activities of the Library.

The Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus will assume overall responsibility for the Okanagan Library portfolio, including budget and physical infrastructure, information systems and services, direction and development of staff resources, vision and planning of future Okanagan Library services and the Okanagan Library’s participation in campus, regional, and national efforts. This position collaborates widely and provides leadership for projects and other initiatives supporting the overall strategic direction of the UBC Library and Okanagan campus. General flexibility will be required in taking on new responsibilities in a changing environment.

 

Qualifications

  • A Masters-level degree from an accredited library, or information science program, or equivalent internationally accredited program, or Masters-level degree with a specialization or concentration in archival science.
  • A successful record of leadership, planning, developing, and managing library programs and services.
  • Proven administrative, public relations, and managerial skills, with (preferred) 10 years of experience in library management positions or proven growth working in complex environments.
  • Experience with organizational change and change management best practices. Ability to develop and implement strategic change enablement plans.
  • Creative yet practical in finding new solutions, developing processes, reconfiguring services.
  • Proven planning, budgeting, and project management skills.
  • Experience with refresh, renewal, and renovation of library spaces.
  • Success with donor relations, and experience in fundraising.
  • Knowledge of the Tri-agency programs, administration and processes.
  • Strong interpersonal skills and the ability to function effectively as a member of a senior leadership team working within a collegial environment; experience in building and managing relationships at all levels of the organization.
  • Excellent oral and written communication and presentation skills, and proven research abilities.
  • Demonstrated familiarity with developments in higher education and the issues facing research libraries, especially in North America, and an understanding of academic and scholarly processes.
  • A proven commitment to service excellence and a vision of research library services in the 21st century and the skills to advocate for and communicate that vision.
  • Ability to exercise a high level of diplomacy, tact and discretion when working with information of a confidential and/or sensitive nature and in dealing with various levels of senior administration and external agencies.
  • Demonstrates a commitment to enhancing one’s own awareness, knowledge, and skills to actively pursue the goals of decolonization, indigenization, and reconciliation in alignment with UBC’s Indigenous Strategic Plan.
  • Dedicated to cultivating an inclusive environment that recognizes barriers faced by people and encourages and incorporates contributions from diverse groups and individuals.
  • Demonstrates a commitment to enhancing one’s own awareness, knowledge and skills related to equity, diversity, and inclusion.
  • Willingness to respect diverse perspectives, including those in conflict with personally held perspectives or beliefs.
  • Contributes to the Library’s sense of community and achievement of common goals through cooperation across units/groups and encouragement of equitable and balanced involvement in decision making.
  • Promotes and fosters a supportive environment built on appreciation, recognition, learning and professional growth.
  • Supports a team environment built on positive working relationships; and provides guidance and resources to teams while trusting them to excel.
  • Creates a supportive and open environment where everyone is able to listen, contribute and engage with colleagues and ideas and provide and receive timely, constructive feedback.
  • Creates an environment that embraces curiosity, ideas, creativity, and innovation and provides opportunities and flexibility to explore new initiatives.

 

Working Relationships

Works under the general direction of both the Provost and Vice President Academic, Okanagan, and the University Librarian, and in collaboration with other members of the Library Executive Team, unit heads and managers, and other staff and faculty colleagues at UBC Okanagan. 

             

Duties

  • Working closely with the Provost and Vice President, Academic, Okanagan, the University Librarian, and other senior leaders, the Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus collaborates with the Library Executive Team and Heads on the implementation of the Okanagan Library strategic framework. This position also provides strategic leadership and stewardship to the realization of the vision of the Library and portfolio goals.
  • In consultation with the University Librarian and in close collaboration with the Library Executive Team, including the Deputy University Librarian, Vancouver Campus, the Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus will participate in the development of strategic recommendations and system-wide policies related to resource sharing and the operation and development of the Library and its services.
  • Provides the leadership necessary to develop Okanagan Library programs. Keeps Library colleagues informed of policies, plans, and priorities, and fosters understanding of and support for these. Keeps the Provost and Vice-President Academic, Okanagan, University Librarian, Okanagan Campus leadership, and Library Executive Team informed of developments in the portfolio.
  • In consultation with the Provost and Vice-President Academic, Okanagan and University Librarian oversees management of the Okanagan Library budget. With input from Okanagan Library senior leadership team, and relevant Associate University Librarian colleagues, prepares budget requests and allocates/monitors resources to ensure Library priorities are met. Ensures that expenditures are managed and controlled, and works with Library colleagues to assess, review, and identify funding sources for new services, new programs, and changes in the delivery of existing services to the Library’s communities of users. 
  • Supports Development and Alumni Engagement (DAE) and Library colleagues to secure grants, foundation support, industry partnerships, and philanthropy. Participates actively in Library and campus fundraising and donor stewardship activities.
  • Ensures that the needs of library users and opportunities for new programs, systems and services are assessed regularly through consultation with Library and campus colleagues, and through them with students, staff, faculty, and other stakeholders. Ensures that curriculum changes and program developments affecting the portfolio are reviewed.
  • Strategic leadership in the effective use of the physical facility and all related operational and administrative matters. Works with Infrastructure Development and Facilities Management to ensure that the university provides appropriate space for Library needs and, in consultation with Okanagan Library senior leadership team, ensures that the spaces are appropriate for an evolving service model.
  • In consultation with Okanagan Library senior leadership team and Library Executive Team, determines the skills needed within the Library and plans for staff development and training. Works to enable a highly supportive work environment.
  • Leads and participates in projects, working groups and committees related to areas of responsibility. Represents the Okanagan Library as required or requested on relevant committees, working groups, etc.
  • Maintains good working relationships with Deans, Associate Deans, senior UBC administrators, community groups, and others to support the work of the Library and portfolio. Participates in departmental, faculty, and other meetings, as necessary.
  • Represents the University Librarian, at their request and in their absence in the capacity of Acting University Librarian
  • Represents the University Librarian in meetings with representatives of the Faculty Association, on Senate committees, and on other university committees as required.
  • Maintains a comprehensive understanding of developments affecting academic librarianship


Terms of Appointment and Salary

This position will be filled as a full-time, ongoing Librarian position with a five-year renewable administrative term as Deputy University Librarian, Okanagan Campus. If eligible and qualified, the successful applicant may be appointed with a confirmed appointment. Otherwise, there will be an initial three-year probationary appointment. Normally, such an appointment is reviewed by the end of the second year of the appointment, and a recommendation is made at that time to grant or not to grant a confirmed appointment. 

Salary will be commensurate with experience and academic/professional qualifications, with an anticipated range of $140,000-$160,000 annually.

Access issue with CCH Answer Connect

We are seeing ongoing issues with CCH Answer Connect – https://resources.library.ubc.ca/page.php?details=cch-answerconnect&id=2412 not working for some users.

Some users will see a login screen prompting them for an email login which does not provide access.

There are no workaround currently, we are working on getting this issue fixed as soon as we can!

UBC Library at the Word Vancouver Reading & Writing Festival 2023

This year's festival features programming by Rare Books and Special Collections (RBSC) and the Asian Library, both on September 16.

New Books at the Law Library – 23/09/05

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE444 .F35 2023
John Fairlie, Introduction to Law in Canada, 3rd ed. (Toronto: Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE1485 .B32 2019
Stephanie Ben-Ishai & Thomas G.W. Telfer, ed., Bankruptcy and Insolvency Law in Canada: Cases, Materials, and Problems (Toronto: Irwin Law, 2019).
Online access: https://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=12726110

LAW LIBRARY level 3: K2390 .S87 2023
Lawrence Susskind, William Tilleman & Nicolás Parra-Herrera, Judicial Dispute Resolution: New Roles for Judges in Ensuring Justice (London: Anthem Press, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE2550 .J62 2023
Dean Jobb, Media Law in Canada, 4th ed. (Toronto: Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2023). ©2023

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE2700 .S25 2023
Bryan Salte, The Law of Professional Regulation, 2nd ed. (Toronto: LexisNexis Canada, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE3109 .C36
CCH Canadian Limited, Canadian Master Labour Guide: A Guide to Canadian Labour Law, 38th ed. (Toronto: LexixNexis, 2023).-

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE3663.I5 R69 2023
Leanne Evelyn Tran, The Canadian Law of Consent to Treatment, 4th ed. (Toronto: LexisNexis Canada Inc., 2023).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE8440 .D64 2022
Michael P. Doherty, The Portable Guide to Evidence, 6th ed. (Toronto: Carswell, a division of Thomson Reuters Canada Limited, 2022).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE8422 .V57 2023
ean Petrou, Akiva Stern, eds., Virtual Advocacy: Litigating from a Distance (Toronto: LexisNexis Canada Inc., 2023).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE8440 .G85 2023
Michael Gulycz & Mary Ann Kelly, Rules of Evidence: A Practical Approach, 3rd ed. (Toronto: Emond Montgomery Publications Limited, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE9440 .R63 2023
Kent Roach, Wrongfully Convicted: Guilty Pleas, Imagined Crimes, and What Canada Must Do to Safeguard Justice (Toronto: Simon & Schuster Canada, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KF1419 .S85 2023
Mandatory Human Rights Due Diligence: From Legal Custom to Lawful Concern, Mandatory Human Rights Due Diligence: From Legal Custom to Lawful Concern (Toronto: LexisNexis, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KF974 .B388 2021
Michael S. Barr, Howell E. Jackson, Margaret E. Tahyar, Financial Regulation: Law and Policy, 3rd ed. (St. Paul: Foundation Press, 2021).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KF1544 .R58 2016
Mark J. Roe, Frederick Tung, Bankruptcy and Corporate Reorganization: Legal and Financial Materials, 4th ed. (St. Paul: Foundation Press, 2016).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KPA440 .K557 2023
Kim Ch'ang-nok, Singminji Chosŏn kwa pŏp sasang 식민지 조선 과 법 사상 / 김 창록. (Sŏul : Minsogwŏn, 2023). (서울 : 민속원, 2023).

Welcome New & Returning Students!

Lessons from the Archives Collective

Content warning: The following blog post discusses homophobic attitudes and laws in a historical context.

Many thanks to guest blogger Matthew White for contributing the below post! Matthew is a graduate student at the UBC School of Information and has completed both a Co-op position and a Graduate Academic Assistant (GAA) position with RBSC.

This is part of an ongoing series of blog posts that gives students and RBSC team members a chance to show off some of the intriguing materials they encounter serendipitously through their work at RBSC.


As a queer man, it was with a great deal of excitement that I was asked to finalize the processing of the Archives Collective collection at Rare Books and Special Collections. The Archives Collective, a predecessor of both ArQuives (formerly Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives, and Canadian Gay Archives) as well as the BC Gay and Lesbian Archives, collected widely over their short tenure, much of it related to the deeply political lives of gay men and women in the 70s and 80s.

This collection was at times gut-wrenching in the displays of homophobia, at times brought me to tears because of the solidarity between marginalized communities. There were some consistent themes throughout the collection that I would like to share, particularly as they relate to queer lives in the world today.

The first thing I want to stress is that the RCMP and the Canadian legal system have never been friends to queer people, not to mention working people, women, First Nations, and immigrants. They will uphold whatever laws are in the books – if these laws discriminate against gays, so be it. The number of times that the RCMP overstepped by entrapping gay men having sex in their own homes, by keeping files on notable queer activists as potential enemies of the state, not to mention NDP leaders, prominent feminists or Indigenous activists, by physically accosting queers in the streets was staggering.

Obviously, queers did not go down without a fight – a fight that we are still fighting to this day. Gay militancy spread rapidly, with groups like the Lavender Panthers prowling streets to protect queer people. Protests were staged rapidly, and long running education or legal campaigns were effective in bringing these issues into the public eye.

It was not difficult, though, to see how these kinds of attitudes were maintained for so long. One pamphlet by the League Against Homosexuals (LAH) said, “Queers exist to seduce and pervert our children. Queers are sexually depraved vampires. If queers are allowed to have “equal rights” then they MUST be allowed to seduce your child.” I am still confused as to why equality necessitates molestation, but this was perhaps only the most glaring example. The Toronto Star and the Vancouver Sun often refused to advertise for gay magazines, leading to a legal battle by the Vancouver Sun in the mid-70s that they won in the Supreme Court of Canada. It was noted that it might offend readership, so it did not have to be included.

An article in an unknown newspaper by McKenzie Porter notes “Many homosexuals are no longer satisfied with acceptance, sympathy and freedom from prosecution. They now seek approval acclaim and authority. The propaganda of homophile associations both female and male, reveals undisguised aspirations to political leadership.” Porter goes on to say that gay men and women are unfit for politics because of “a neurotic or psychotic state of paranoia associated, for reasons unknown, with a childhood history of anal eroticism.”

The Star, after being accused of homophobia, made the following statement: “… we stop short of encouraging the spread of homosexuality. We have no wish to aid the aggressive recruitment propaganda in which certain homosexual groups are engaged, and we strongly oppose those who seek to justify and legitimize homosexual relations between adults and children.” Like current legal oppression against trans people, children were often the basis of homophobic attacks. Other examples include a well-documented campaign by Anita Bryant to halt the gay liberation movement, by using children’s safety and wellbeing as the basis of her homophobia.

It was this kind of push back that brought gay people back onto the street, time and time again. It was a dynamic period, full of fundraising dances, highly publicized legal battles, and periodicals that discussed gay issues – anything from criticism of Marxist attitudes towards homosexuality to letters of support by brothers and mothers to their trans daughters, from rallies against racial discrimination experienced by taxi drivers, to graphics protesting the treatment of Indigenous peoples across North America.

You’ll also note the absence of trans people in my descriptions of the archive – they are, unfortunately, notably absent. Then, as now, often trans people found difficulty finding welcoming environments, and focus on liberation was often focused exclusively on sexuality without engaging critically with transgender or transsexual issues.

For myself, as an aspiring archivist and as a gay man, this was an incredibly enlightening experience. Many queer people have noted the generational absences that exist in our communities due to AIDS and other issues, including suicide and the return to the closet that can occur as queer people age. Being able to access so much of the knowledge and experience of queer people through the archive feels so important. These were people who knew what needed to be done to enact change, and all of that information is still at our fingertips. If we can’t talk to our queer ancestors, then maybe we can learn from what they left behind.

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