Try refreshing your browser. A human response to Laurentianâs inhuman insolvency process Back to video
In the spring of 2013, I accepted an offer to complete my PhD at Laurentian University in the Human Studies program. Having completed two degrees in Toronto, and having accumulated some debt, I was looking for a more affordable option for my degree.
I knew of LUâs reputation as a small, student-oriented university with big ambitions. At the time of my entrance, LU was a bustling intellectual community that had a lot to offer. The cool thing about my program and many programs like it was how it brought together professors from across the campuses to teach in graduate studies.
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Restructuring overlooks important environmental legacy: critics Laurentian is cutting environmental science, environmental studies, ecology and restoration biology programs as it works to balance its books
Author of the article: Hugh Kruzel For The Sudbury Star
Publishing date: Apr 29, 2021 • 5 hours ago • 5 minute read • Professors Peter Beckett (left) and Graham Speirs from Laurentian University are pioneers within Sudbury s regreening efforts. With the Superstack in the background, they presented to a Canadian Ecology Centre s mining teachers tour in September of last year. Photo by Bill Steer
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Sudbury has garnered a reputation around the world as a community that knows how to recover an environment degraded by mining and smelting operations.
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