Join us for two days of presentations and activities to celebrate research at Yukon University.

Tuesday and Wednesday events are open and free to the public, students, staff and faculty.

YukonU students, faculty and staff: please join us for the internal Research day on Thursday, February 19th.

Location

C1440 (glass classroom) or join virtually on Zoom

Questions?

Contact the Research Services Office at rso@yukonu.ca

Tuesday, February 17

9:30amOpening remarks

Opening remarks and Keynote will take place in the Pit.

All other sessions in C1440.

9:45amKeynote: AI and Indigenous data-sovereignty
Dana Tizya-Tramm
10:45amCoffee break
11:00amGlacier futures in the Yukon Headwaters*
Dr. Ashley Dubnick
11:15amSingle fathers in Yukon and their social, legal, and economic experiences: A sociological study
Dr. Shawkat Shareef
11:30amClimate education needs, challenges, and successes across Yukon
Dr. Ellorie McKnight
11:45amTrilobite tales: Adventures in stratigraphic palaeontology
Dr. Chad Morgan
12:00pmLunch in the Kaff
1:00pmAnalyzing public comments in the YESAB project assessment process
Ljubica Tokic, Dr. Sara McPhee-Knowles, Aja Mason (Boreal Logic)
1:15pmYukon University Virtual Geology Project
Mary Samolczyk and Dr. Joel Cubley
1:30pmQuantifying impacts of climate change on aerial insectivorous birds in the northwest: Potential for phenological mismatch*
Dr. Tara Stehelin
1:45pmBumpy road? How thermosyphons help keep Alaska Highway Dry Creek Area stable
Cyrielle Laurent and Louis Philippe Roy
2:00pm2025 Yukon Healthy Living Study: Understanding recreation in a Northern context
Isabelle Schwarz (YSPOR) and Caroline Sparks (RPAY)
2:15pmSnacks and discussion


* Project supported by YukonU’s Scholarly Activity Grant

Wednesday, February 18

9:30amOpening remarks
9:45amNorthern tree cavity-users in a FireSmart forest*
Shyloh van Delft (Yukon University and University of Alberta), Dr. Katie Aitken
10:00amYukon experiences of type one diabetes*
Dr. Liris Smith and Marney Paradis (Yukon T1D advocacy network)
10:15amUndergraduate independent study: Atlin Lake applied lake ice modelling
Isabelle Theriault
10:30amDriving the mix: Exploring audiovisual DJ performance as site-responsive storytelling & connection to place
Jon Gelinas
10:45amCoffee break
11:00amPeak power in the Yukon
Simon Kerkhof
11:15amEvaluation as relationship: Reflections from a community-based participatory researcher
Kaitlyn Kauffeldt (YSPOR)
11:30amGlacier surges in Kluane: Insights from satellites, fieldwork, and local knowledge
Dr. Brittany Main (University of Waterloo & Yukon University)
11:45amSocial work practice in the Yukon
Dr. Susan Preston and Dana Jennejohn
12:00pmLunch in the Kaff
1:00pmResearch in collaboration
A panel discussion of YukonU researchers and their research partners
2:00pmPolaris information session with snacks and discussion

Keynote speaker: Dana Tizya-Tramm

Image
Dana Tizya-Tramm

Dana has dedicated over six years of service to the Vuntut and Gwitchin Nation (VGFN), serving as both a council and board member, four of those years as Chief. His tenure was marked by significant achievements, including the defense of the Peel Watershed Land Use Planning provisions in partnership with the Nacho Nyak Dun and Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in nations, and the successful protection of the Porcupine Caribou herd’s calving grounds in Alaska from the Trump administration in 2017.

He has represented Indigenous interests on the global stage, serving as co-chair for the Gwich’in Council International and advancing the Sustainable Development Working Group within the Arctic Council. Under his leadership, the Council of the VGFN passed the internationally recognized declaration Yeendoo Diinehdoo Ji’heezrit Nits’oo Ts’o’ Nan He’aa (After our time how will the world be?) — a first-of-its-kind climate declaration by a modern treaty First Nation in Canada.

Dana’s journey has been anything but conventional. From overcoming trauma and addiction to navigating the halls of international diplomacy, his story is rooted in both survival and resurgence. As a TIME 100 Next leader, Clean50 Emerging Leader, and Up Here Magazine’s 2019 Northerner of the Year, Dana has never lost sight of his purpose: to be of service in a good way.

Now, Dana brings this ethos into the realm of Artificial Intelligence. Guided by Indigenous ways of knowing and a lifelong pursuit of understanding, he is exploring AI not as a tool of domination, but as a potential ally in our collective story. His focus lies in aligning AI with Indigenous principles of relationship, respect, and reciprocity, while interrogating its impact on sovereignty, data ethics, and the sacred.

Whether in the land, the legislature, or the lab, Dana carries the question forward:
After our time, how will the world be?


Thursday, February 19

Open to YukonU students, staff, and faculty only

10:00amPublishing and sharing research: open options 
Aline Goncalves, Nora Hehemann, Melani Adams
A2103
12:00pmPizza lunch 
Come celebrate student involvement in research at YukonU
The Pit
1:00pmResearch security talk
Jared Hougen, Davon Callander
Lecture Hall
(A2206)
2:00pmBuilding research capacity
Davon Callander
Lecture Hall
(A2206)

 

 

Images of Research will be on display throughout

Coffee, lunch and snacks provided. Gluten free, vegetarian and vegan options will be available.