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Journalism
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  2. Archive by Category "Journalism"

Dreamspeakers Festival

April 9, 2025

by Ari Sooriya


Eveline Mitchell standing in front of a hospital bed and equipment in the Humber Nursing simulation labs.

Ready to Respond: One Student’s Act of courage

April 7, 2025

by Elayna Medeiros


Newspapers, notebook, and orange book on top of a table.

The Creation of Story: Decolonizing Journalism

April 19, 2024

by Kate Carveth


7 women dressed in alternative style pose for the camera. On the left is a woman wearing white lace with black groves covering her “sexualized” areas, next to her is a woman in a loose white dress with black ribbons. She also wears a white and black clown mask as she wraps her arm around a woman wearing a black and white gingham dress with a black ski mask juxtaposed with white ribbons. Beside her is a woman with a long black lace dress on as she smiles while wrapping her arms around the women next to her. The woman on the right of her is wearing a maroon leather shirt and a black eye mask. In front of her is a woman wearing black and white fabric scraps with red gloves. Finally, the woman on the right is half in the screen showing her black crop top and face that is embellished with silver makeup.

Women Taking Up Space

April 18, 2024

by Priya Verma


Harmonic Revolution: Uncovering The Power Of A.I. Music

April 3, 2024

by Aidan Rossi


AI in journalism

April 3, 2024

by Anjali Mistry


Media Accessibility: A Handbook for the Media Student

March 25, 2024

by Madison Marier


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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