Giving Day retrospective - The Bridge

Giving Day retrospective – The Bridge

On April 8, the School of Social Work had its first opportunity to participate in the UBC-wide event of Giving Day—a day meant to celebrate philanthropy and showcase the programs and initiatives across the university that need this support. Our proposal was selected and we were thrilled to be part of this event—which also turned out to be quite a time demand—especially given that it was happening less than two weeks after our opening event!

Nonetheless, the School community pitched in and we raised more than $15,000 with donations from across 127 gifts!which was the most donors to a new Giving Day fund among all participating UBC departments and schools. We are so grateful to all those who gave to our new School of Social Work Community Learning Fund. Thank you, donors! And thank you to the staff and faculty who really pitched in to make this a success. A legacy gift from the estate of former School Director Elaine Stolar enabled us to offer some challenges to support donor momentum. This magnified the value of this generous gift.

The Fund has already provided bursaries to prospective students wanting to take our Continuing Education courses who face financial barriers and Indigenous learners. This is an important step in our goal of creating new pathways for learners to UBC and to the School of Social Work. We continue to welcome your support if you missed the Giving Day opportunity. Find ways to donate here: https://socialwork.ubc.ca/about/donate/

— Lea Caragata

2026 Dr. Richard Splane Lecture in Social Policy – The Bridge

This year marked the 25th year of the UN Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security. This year’s annual Dr. Richard Splane lecture featured four prominent leaders whose work influences peace and security worldwide. The lecture centered women’s perspectives on conflict, resilience, and human security, emphasizing approaches that advance more equitable futures.

On Jan 22, 2026 the UBC School of Social Work was honoured to be joined by Katrina Leclerc, Megan MacKenzie, and Ellen Woodsworth for the Dr. Richard B. Splane Lecture in Social Policy 2026.

Watch the full lecture below

Social Work Equity Committee 2025 Events – The Bridge

Movie night: Lowdown Tracks (2015)

Social Work Equity Committee

On November 21, the Equity Committee hosted a successful community screening of Lowdown Tracks (2015), a documentary exploring music, storytelling, and resilience among those living on the margins. The event brought together faculty, staff, and BSW, MSW, and PhD students for refreshments and a reflective discussion that fostered connection across the School. Organized by the Equity Committee (Dr. Baines, Amir Kashanipour, Ernest Gleeson, Julia Hall, Rikita Nandwani, Fendi Boateng, Hyesoo Sohn, and Karin Ishida), this gathering marks the first of many upcoming initiatives.

 

Welcome Back Event

Social Work Equity Committee welcome event

To celebrate the School of Social Work’s return to the newly renovated Jack Bell Building, the Equity Committee hosted a community welcome event that brought together faculty, staff, and students from the BSW, MSW, and PhD programs.

The event featured a shared pizza lunch, opportunities for social connection, and interactive activities designed to build community across roles and programs. Participants took part in Human Bingo and a Kahoot game that sparked friendly competition while engaging attendees in learning about the School of Social Work’s history and broader social work themes. Prize winners added to the festive and welcoming atmosphere.

ON HOLD Winter 2026-2027 term appointments for Adjunct Professors or Sessional Lecturers

 

Thank you for your interest in our Adjunct and Sessional Lecturer positions for Winter 2026-2027. Postings have been put on hold temporarily and will be reposted in May 2026. If you have already submitted an application, we have it on file and there will be no need to submit another application.

Please reach out to Alissa Kinnis, Administrator, if you have any questions.

The power of memory and the urgency of now: Why Pride still matters

September 24, 2025

The power of memory and the urgency of now: Why Pride still matters

By Kristi Pinderi

It’s May 2012. A small group of us – just nine friends on bikes – are on the Boulevard of Martyrs in Tirana, Albania. The same boulevard where, every May, the communist regime once staged grand military parades under the watchful eye of dictator Enver Hoxha, who had sealed the country off from the rest of the world. That day, we had decided to hold the first Pride event in Albania, which we called Tirana (P)Ride.

We began pedaling in the rain – soaked, determined – followed by a handful of journalists and a heavy police presence. I still remember the adrenaline, the raw pulse of freedom, the kind of excitement I had never felt before. When a group of young men threw homemade tube bombs at us (the 49th second in that video), I was so charged by the moment I barely registered what was happening. Thick smoke filled the air, but we were unhurt. We kept riding, rain pouring down, all the way to the end.

That excitement came from something deeper: in our minds, our struggle as trans, queer, and LGBTQ+ people was connected to so many other struggles around the world, throughout history. For generations, 2S/LGBTQ+ people have been villainized, erased, suppressed, criminalized, surveilled, blackmailed, arrested, and killed. We’ve been depicted as ‘deviants’ and ‘predators,’ castrated, institutionalized, lobotomized, traumatized, imprisoned, tortured, executed, publicly shamed, excommunicated, fired, denied housing and medical care, disowned by families, excluded from school curricula, pushed toward suicide, harassed online, and threatened in our basic freedoms.

Pride Month – and other days of remembrance – aren’t just for 2S/LGBTQ+ people. They’re for everyone who has lived through and inherited a common past, shaped by a false story – one that excluded some of us simply because of our gender identity, expression, or sexual orientation.

Pride is not just an event. It’s a meeting point between our shared past and our collective future. It begins in the violence of personal isolation – a quiet, everyday violence that keeps many queer and trans people intimidated, lonely, and afraid. That isolation eventually explodes in the form of public protest. That’s why Pride, more than a march or a parade, is a spirit – a force that lives on not through numbers in the street, but in our capacity to recreate and reimagine what it means to exist.

Whether we’ve been directly affected, supportive allies, or simply unaware, there’s something healing about coming together to talk, learn, and celebrate. When we agree that we can no longer accept the conditions of the past, Pride becomes a meeting ground for anyone willing to work toward a better, more inclusive future.

So, understanding that Pride is a healing process – what can we do?

I would say: start by raising your flag. For me, flying the rainbow flag has always felt like an act of self-liberation. It’s a way of saying: I can no longer accept that people in my community are isolated, violated, intimidated, and excluded for who they are and for who they love. By raising the flag, I’m choosing to be part of the collective solution – and to take an active role in it.

Here are four simple ways to symbolically “raise your flag”:

  1. Change your profile picture on social media to include 2S/LGBTQ+ colors or symbols. Some people may ask about it – an invitation to start a conversation. Not everyone will agree, but some will understand.
  2. Join a public event dedicated to the 2S/LGBTQ+ community – and share the link with friends! If someone asks why, that’s your golden chance to talk.
  3. Read a book about 2S/LGBTQ+ experiences or history – and talk about it. This is a collective process of learning more about the people who may already be part of your family, workplace, or neighborhood.
  4. Display a small sticker on your laptop, your car, or anywhere visible. It may look like just a sticker, but to someone else, it can be a symbol of safety – an invitation to speak, to be seen, and to be heard.

The Pride event I co-founded in Tirana has grown into a powerful space of healing for Albania’s queer, trans, and non-binary community. It grows larger every year. Since 2017, I’ve lived in Canada with my partner. I’ve returned to school, become a social worker, and now serve families and children while also doing research at the intersection of queer studies and child welfare. I’ve attended many Pride events and lived through many Pride Months. But I will never forget that first time in 2012.

One of the journalists – Benet Koleka, reporting for Reuters – pedaled alongside me and asked how I was feeling. I told him: “We made it.” Those three words have stayed with me ever since. We made it wasn’t just about surviving fear or overcoming shame. It was about something bigger: our collective act of re-storying an injustice. It is about resistance and resilience.

Happy Pride.

Let’s keep making it – together. Every day.

Enter to Win Tickets to Anti-Indigenous Racism Workshop, Sept 26

 

Click here for more info!

Continuing Education and Certificate Programs

Enhance your professional development journey through the Continuing Education and Certificate Programs (CECP) at the UBC School of Social Work. 

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