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UID:20260417T084938EDT-4251bBiK7a@132.216.98.100
DTSTAMP:20260417T124938Z
DESCRIPTION:Register here\n\nThis substantive session invites a diverse pan
 el of speakers to discuss structural injustices and their compounding impa
 ct when they intersect.\n\nAgenda\n\n12:00-12:05 PM Welcome & Introduction
 s\n	12:05-12:45 PM Lecture\n	12:45-12:55 PM Moderated Q&A\n	12:55-1:00 PM Clo
 sing and upcoming sessions\n\n\nPanelists\n\n\n	\n		\n			\n				\n			\n			\n				 \n\n				Dr. Tyson 
 Brown is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Duke University\, where he
  is the inaugural Presidential Fellow (2021-2022) and directs the Center o
 n Health & Society. His program of research examines the who\, when\, and 
 how questions regarding ethnoracial inequalities in health and wealth. Bro
 wn is currently working on several projects that investigate macro-level f
 actors and psychosocial mechanisms that underlie social inequalities in he
 alth.\n			\n		\n		\n			\n				 \n\n				\n			\n			\n				 \n\n				 \n\n				Dr. Bethany Everett is an Associate Pr
 ofessor of Sociology and an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and 
 Gynecology at the University of Utah.\n\n				 \n			\n		\n		\n			\n				 \n\n				\n			\n			\n				 \n\n				 \n\n				D
 r. Patricia Homan is an Assistant Professor of Sociology and the Associate
  Director of the Public Health Program at Florida State University. She is
  also an Associate at FSU’s Pepper Institute on Aging and Public Policy an
 d The Center for Demography and Population Health. Her research explores h
 ow gender\, socioeconomic\, and racial inequalities in American society sh
 ape the health and well-being of the population and individuals as they ag
 e.\n\n				 \n			\n		\n		\n			\n				 \n\n				\n			\n			\n				 \n\n				 \n\n				Dr. Morgan Philbin is a social and b
 ehavioral scientist whose work integrates community-based and social deter
 minants of health frameworks to examine how public policies and clinical p
 ractices shape inclusion and health equity for racial/ethnic and sexual an
 d gender minority (SGM) young people. Her current research\, a NIDA-funded
  K01\, integrates national-level data and qualitative methods to examine h
 ow public policies affect health equity for minoritized youth and young ad
 ults with a focus on immigration\, sexual health and substance use\n\n				 \n			
 \n		\n	\n\n\nLunch&Learn\n\nThis is the third Lunch&Learn session of the 2021
 -22 Training Year. The Lunch&Learn series is designed to introduce our Fel
 lows\, team members\, and partners to emerging research in topics of popul
 ation dynamics and population aging. These modules will cover the Four CAn
 D3 Population Aging Axes: (1) family and social inclusion\; (2) education\
 , labour and inequality\; (3) migration and ethnicity\; and (4) wellbeing 
 and autonomy. \n\nCAnD3 Newsletters\n\nSign up for our newsletter to keep 
 up to date with CAnD3 events.\n\n \n
DTSTART:20220209T170000Z
DTEND:20220209T180000Z
LOCATION:CA\, Webinar
SUMMARY:Understanding Structural Injustice: The effects of structural racis
 m\, sexism\, heterosexism\, and their intersections
URL:https://www.mcgill.ca/cand3/channels/event/understanding-structural-inj
 ustice-effects-structural-racism-sexism-heterosexism-and-their-336042
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