Indigenous art meets technology
UWinnipeg welcomes a new Indigenous creative and research space on campus that will provide opportunities for technology-based skills training and development for Indigenous youth.
UWinnipeg's Canada Research Chairs are world-class scientists and scholars from diverse backgrounds who are working on new discoveries and innovations that help our environment, health, communities and economy thrive. Meet our current chairholders.
UWinnipeg welcomes a new Indigenous creative and research space on campus that will provide opportunities for technology-based skills training and development for Indigenous youth.
Dr. Christopher Wiebe was thrilled when he learned that a research project that has spanned a decade and involved over 21 undergraduate students, graduate students, postdocs, principal investigators, and instrument scientists from over 16 research institutions worldwide, was accepted for publication in the journal Quantum Materials.
UWinnipeg chemist Dr. Chris Wiebe and physicist Dr. Blair Jamieson received Research Manitoba 2020 CFI Innovation Fund Matching Program grants in early March, supporting Manitoba's vital contribution to multi-institutional, world-class innovation.
The University of Winnipeg has appointed Dr. Jaime Cidro to the role of Associate Vice-President, Research and Innovation. The new position will support the continuing...
A project led by Dr. Mary Jane McCallum and Dr. Erin Millions is one of two University of Winnipeg research projects to be awarded funding from...
Dr. Jaime Cidro is one of two University of Winnipeg researchers to be awarded funding from the Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR) as part of...
Dr. Julie Nagam is this year's inaugural artistic director who will have the challenge to take North America's largest public art exhibition online.
UWinnipeg's Centre for Research in Cultural Studies (CRiCS) offers a series, COVID-19 and Cultural Studies: Articulating the Pandemic.
When COVID-19 began turning her world upside down, the first thing UWinnipeg historian, Dr. Mary Jane McCallum did was look back at her own family’s history of diseases. “I had to find a personal connection to what was happening, to look to the past – because I just didn’t know what to do,” she said.
In recognition of International Women's Day, The University of Winnipeg is highlighting the work of five women leaders, researchers, and community builders whose work is making a significant contribution to Canada's environment, health, communities, and economy.