
The wide array of careers open to criminology graduates is the subject of a lunchtime session March 15.
The wide array of careers open to criminology graduates is the subject of a lunchtime session March 15.
A presentation November 30 will discuss the structural tensions of refugee policy across the European Union.
Giuseppe Sciortino, a professor of sociology at the Università di Trento, Italy, will deliver his lecture “The Gentle Monster” at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in room 162, Chrysler Hall South.
This event, sponsored by the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology, is free and open to the public.
Spatial movements are often associated with changes in preferences, norms, and practices — including in the most intimate spheres, says Martina Cvajner.
A faculty member in the Department of Psychology and Cognitive Sciences at the Università di Trento, Italy, she will deliver her lecture, “Migration and the Sexual Order” at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, November 28, in room 162, Chrysler Hall South.
This event, sponsored by the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology, is free and open to the public.
Renu Sharma-Persaud will sign copies of her book The Mastery of You at the Campus Bookstore on November 22. The book recently won a silver medal in the Readers' Favorite awards.
A lecture Tuesday will discuss “How NAFTA impedes Action on Climate Change.”
A competition invites students to answer the question “What do the humanities mean to you?”
Sociology PhD student Travis Reitsma has issued an appeal to help fund his research into local panhandlers.
A scholarship established in memory of the late Bert Weeks, a former Windsor mayor, will support a doctoral student in sociology.
UWindsor's Allison Gray and Ayesha Mian Akram were among the five winners of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council's Storytellers contest.
It’s time to overhaul the federal Access to Information Act, says a University of Windsor criminology professor.