}
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About Emerge

Emerge is an online publication featuring work created by Media & Communication Studies students at the University of Guelph-Humber.

April 3, 2025

Go One More: Running for Mental Health at the Humber 5K

by Elayna Medeiros

Jade DeLisle wearing a Team DeLisle sweatshirt, standing in front of treadmills at the Humber gym.

April 3, 2025

Go One More: Running for Mental Health at the Humber 5K

by Elayna Medeiros

Jade DeLisle wearing a Team DeLisle sweatshirt, standing in front of treadmills at the Humber gym.

April 2, 2025

Healthy Body, Healthy Mind

by Khalia Henry

Man doing excercise inside a room

March 30, 2025

Humber Student Housing: Is Residence or Off-Campus Living the Better Deal?

by Aidan Corbett

March 26, 2025

A Quiet Exit: What Happened to Consent Education at Humber and Guelph-Humber?

by Elayna Medeiros

Hoodie and water bottle displaying the Consent Peer Education name and logo.

March 21, 2025

Empowering Women On and Off the Field

by Khalia Henry

March 8, 2025

Students Navigate the Aftershocks of a Post-Pandemic World

by Daisy Charlie

March 6, 2025

Why students should care about the provincial election

by Mateya Steblaj-Wood

March 5, 2025

Breaking the Ice: Humber’s Outdoor Hockey Game Promote Women’s Sports

by Aidan Corbett

March 5, 2025

Finding Comfort in Community

by Elayna Medeiros

February 7, 2025

Building a Safe Environment: How Justice Policies Shape Our University Community

by Joseph Ventresca

mannequins protesting assault

February 7, 2025

Stone Cold Precision: The Humber Women’s Curling Team’s Championship Pursuit

by Khalia Henry

February 5, 2025

Starving for Solutions: North Etobicoke’s Urgent Need for Food Security

by Elayna Medeiros

Land Acknowledgement

The University of Guelph-Humber and Humber College are located within the traditional and treaty lands of the Mississaugas of the Credit. Known as Adoobiigok, the “Place of the Black Alders” in the Mississauga language, the region is uniquely situated along Humber River Watershed, which historically provided an integral connection for Anishinaabe, Haudenosaunee, and Wendat peoples between the Ontario Lakeshore and the Lake Simcoe/Georgian Bay regions. Now home to people of numerous nations, Adoobiigok continues to provide a vital source of interconnection for all. We acknowledge and honour the land we are walking on, the moccasin tracks of our ancestors and the footprints of the future generations to come.

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