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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Housing Commons Research Centre
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20251216T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20251216T193000
DTSTAMP:20260512T161734
CREATED:20250610T050048Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260303T164350Z
UID:420-1765909800-1765913400@housingcommonsresearch.ca
SUMMARY:HCRC Student Circle – December 16\, 2025
DESCRIPTION:Please RSVP for our online Student Circle\, taking place from 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM EST. \n \nYou’ll receive a confirmation email with details on how to join once you register. \nAbout the Student Circle\nThe Student Circle is a low-key\, online space to exchange ideas and share what you’re working on. It’s a chance to connect with like-minded learners across disciplines. \nThe Housing Commons Research Centre Student Circle welcomes undergraduate and graduate students\, post-docs\, and lifelong learners who are curious about community-led housing. \nEach session is informal: you can share your work\, listen in\, ask questions\, or join to meet others exploring similar topics. Whether you’re deep in a project or just beginning to think about housing futures\, you’re welcome. \nLearn\, reflect\, and build community with us on the third Tuesday of each month.
URL:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/event/student-circle-dec-2025/
CATEGORIES:Student Circle
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/hcrc-student-circle.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260127T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260127T110000
DTSTAMP:20260512T161734
CREATED:20260115T171815Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260117T201312Z
UID:2295-1769506200-1769511600@housingcommonsresearch.ca
SUMMARY:Webinar - Exchanging Futures: International Perspectives on Housing Commons
DESCRIPTION:The Housing Commons Research Centre\, an initiative of the New Housing Alternatives Partnership (NHA)\, invites NHA partners and guests to a virtual webinar that brings together community-led housing movements from Canada and Uganda. \nFormat: Zoom \nRegister on Eventbrite \n\n \n \nHousing struggles are often framed as local or national crises\, but community-led housing movements around the world have long been developing collective responses grounded in care\, land stewardship\, and shared governance. \nExchanging Futures: International Perspectives on Housing Commons brings together partners from Canada and Uganda participating in an international knowledge exchange program facilitated by Rooftops Canada. Rooftops Canada is the executing agency for the Women’s Spaces Project (2022–2027)\, in partnership with the Government of Canada. The project involves significant knowledge sharing and co-learning activities with Canadian and international housing sector professionals. \nCentering the experiences of women-led housing initiatives\, this webinar explores how community-based housing practices are shaped by history\, culture\, and place\, and how international partnerships can support learning beyond Western and Eurocentric models. \nThe conversation will foreground work emerging from Uganda through the Women’s Spaces Project\, with reflections from Canadian partners engaged in reciprocal learning and collaboration. Together\, panelists will discuss: \n\nHow women-led and community-based housing movements secure land\, housing\, and livelihoods;\nWhat international knowledge exchange looks like in practice\, including its possibilities and challenges;\nHow housing commons models can support both personal and collective liberation; and\nWhy looking beyond familiar Western frameworks is necessary for building equitable housing futures.\n\nIntroductory remarks contextualizing Rooftops Canada and the Women’s Spaces Project will be offered by Genevieve Drouin and Efemena Ozouga\, followed by a panel discussion featuring Dorothy Baziwe\, Dr. Peter Kasaija\, and Alia Abaya. \nThis webinar is part of the Housing Commons Research Centre (HCRC) Webinar Series\, which brings researchers\, practitioners\, organizers\, and students into conversation around community-led housing strategies across contexts. \nSpeaker Bios\nGenevieve Drouin (Rooftops Canada)\nAs CEO of Rooftops Canada\, Genevieve brings experience in cooperative housing\, sustainable cities\, and inclusive human settlements across Africa\, Latin America\, the Caribbean\, and Canada. Rooftops Canada is the executing agency for the Women’s Spaces Project (2022–2027)\, which supports gender-responsive land rights and community-led housing in Angola\, Kenya\, South Africa\, and Uganda. \nEfemena Ozouga (Rooftops Canada)\nEfemena is a leader with over a decade of experience advancing human rights\, gender equity\, inclusive governance\, and housing justice. A lawyer by training\, she bridges legal frameworks\, strategic partnerships\, and community-driven approaches to foster transformative and equitable systems. She is currently Program Manager at Rooftops Canada\, with a focus on land and housing rights and feminist programming. \nDorothy Baziwe (Shelter and Settlements Alternative\, Uganda)\nDorothy is Executive Director of Shelter and Settlements Alternative (SSA). A social worker by profession\, she has worked in Uganda’s human settlements sector since 2012\, engaging in housing development\, advocacy\, policy engagement\, research\, and collaboration to improve service delivery for vulnerable households. \nDr. Peter Kasaija (Urban Action Lab\, Makerere University\, Kampala)\nPeter has more than 15 years of teaching and research experience in urban development and environmental change. His research interests include urban informality\, housing\, inequality\, poverty\, climate change adaptation\, and inclusive governance and planning. He has engaged in numerous international academic and research partnerships. \nAlia Abaya (Circle Community Land Trust\, Toronto)\nAlia is CEO of Circle Community Land Trust\, where she is building a city-wide nonprofit housing provider. Her work integrates community development\, social finance\, sustainability\, and cross-sector partnerships\, including stewardship of over 600 family homes and a $72M capital repair program to protect affordability in perpetuity.
URL:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/event/exchanging-futures-housing-webinar/
CATEGORIES:Webinars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/exchanging-futures-housing-commongs-jan-2026.webp
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260217T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260217T183000
DTSTAMP:20260512T161734
CREATED:20251209T150830Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251215T223823Z
UID:2138-1771353000-1771353000@housingcommonsresearch.ca
SUMMARY:HCRC Student Circle – February 2026
DESCRIPTION:Save the date! Reserve a spot here when announced. \nAbout the Student Circle\nThe Student Circle is a low-key\, online space to exchange ideas and share what you’re working on. It’s a chance to connect with like-minded learners across disciplines. \nThe Housing Commons Research Centre Student Circle welcomes undergraduate and graduate students\, post-docs\, and lifelong learners who are curious about community-led housing. \nEach session is informal: you can share your work\, listen in\, ask questions\, or join to meet others exploring similar topics. Whether you’re deep in a project or just beginning to think about housing futures\, you’re welcome. \nLearn\, reflect\, and build community with us on the third Tuesday of each month.
URL:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/event/student-circle-feb-2026/
CATEGORIES:Student Circle
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/hcrc-student-circle.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260226T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260226T133000
DTSTAMP:20260512T161734
CREATED:20260212T184452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260304T084455Z
UID:2414-1772107200-1772112600@housingcommonsresearch.ca
SUMMARY:Held Together: Research on Community Land Trusts Around the World | Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Watch Recording \nAround the world\, communities are pushing back against housing systems that treat homes as financial assets rather than places to live. From Canada to the UK and Brazil\, Community Land Trusts are emerging as strategies for care\, resistance\, and possibility. \nHeld Together: Research Perspectives on Community Land Trusts Around the World brings together researchers and practitioners from Canada\, the UK\, and Brazil to explore how Community Land Trusts (CLTs) are helping keep housing affordable\, land protected\, and communities intact. \nThis 90-minute conversation asks a simple but powerful question: what changes when housing is something we hold together\, rather than something to be bought\, sold\, and exploited? \nAs global housing markets grow increasingly speculative\, the impacts are felt close to home: rising rents\, displacement\, and the slow erosion of community life. Yet across different regions and political contexts\, communities are organizing collective responses that put long-term care\, stewardship\, and belonging at the centre. \nThis webinar brings together perspectives from: \n\nIndigenous-led planning on the west coast of Canada\nBlack-led community housing movements in the UK\nCLT initiatives from Brazil responding to financialized urban development\n\nTogether\, our speakers will explore how Community Land Trusts function not just as policy tools\, but as living infrastructure: models that protect land from speculation and support housing as a shared social good. \nDesigned for researchers\, students\, housing practitioners\, organizers\, and policymakers\, this conversation balances critical research with grounded\, real-world experience. Expect a thoughtful\, accessible discussion that looks beyond Western silos and invites learning across borders. \nJoin us on February 26. Register today on Eventbrite. \nReserve Your Spot \n  \nSpeakers\nMaggie Low is an Assistant Professor in the School of Community and Regional Planning at the University of British Columbia and Co-Chair of the Indigenous Community Planning concentration. Of mixed European and Indigenous ancestry and a status member of Wikwemikoong Unceded Territory\, she is a community-engaged scholar whose work advances Indigenous sovereignty at the nation and community level\, particularly through planning and negotiated agreements. Her research and teaching focus on Indigenous planning\, Indigenous community land trusts\, Indigenous-state relations\, and reconciliation in Canadian cities. \nTarcyla Fidalgo is a lawyer and urban planner with a PhD in Urban Planning. She leads the CLT Global South Initiative at the International Center for Community Land Trusts (ICCLT) and coordinates the Favela CLT Project in Brazil\, and is a researcher at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. Her work centres on land rights\, housing justice\, and community-led responses to financialized urban development. \nClaude Hendrickson is a housing advocate and founding member of the Community Self-Build Agency (CSBA)\, a non-profit established in 2000 to promote self-build housing for people in housing need\, including those on low incomes and young people priced out of the market. A long-standing champion of BME community-led housing\, he served as CSBA’s Northern Development Director and was commissioned by Leeds City Council in 2016 to 2017 to develop a 10-year strategy on self-build\, custom build\, and community-led housing. That work directly led to the creation of Leeds Community Homes\, an enabling hub supporting community-led housebuilding across the city.
URL:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/event/held-together-clts-around-the-world/
CATEGORIES:Webinars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/hcrc-event-feb26-heldtogether-cltinternational.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260317T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260317T193000
DTSTAMP:20260512T161734
CREATED:20251209T150835Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260225T160923Z
UID:2139-1773770400-1773775800@housingcommonsresearch.ca
SUMMARY:HCRC Student Circle – March 2026
DESCRIPTION:The Student Circle is a low-key\, online space to exchange ideas and share what you’re working on. It’s a chance to connect with like-minded learners across disciplines. \nThe Housing Commons Research Centre Student Circle welcomes undergraduate and graduate students\, post-docs\, and lifelong learners who are curious about community-led housing. \nEach session is informal: you can share your work\, listen in\, ask questions\, or join to meet others exploring similar topics. Whether you’re deep in a project or just beginning to think about housing futures\, you’re welcome. \nLearn\, reflect\, and build community with us on the third Tuesday of each month. \nSave the date! Reserve a spot here when announced.
URL:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/event/student-circle-mar-2026/
CATEGORIES:Student Circle
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/hcrc-student-circle.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260326T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260326T133000
DTSTAMP:20260512T161734
CREATED:20260311T175820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260311T182404Z
UID:2748-1774526400-1774531800@housingcommonsresearch.ca
SUMMARY:Loyal to the Soil: Eco-villages and Eco-communities in Canada
DESCRIPTION:A conversation with practitioners exploring collective land-based living\, climate resilience\, and the barriers facing eco-villages in Canada. \nRSVP on Eventbrite \nThis conversation looks beyond idealism to examine the legal\, cultural\, and structural barriers to climate-conscious collective living. \nCommunities across the country are searching for ways to address housing affordability and climate change together. Loyal to the Soil brings together practitioners from ecovillages and ecocommunities representing different regions to explore how collective\, land-based living can support both climate resilience and social equity\, and why these models remain the exception rather than the norm. \nWhat We’ll Explore\n• Housing affordability and climate resilience\n• Collective land stewardship and ecovillages\n• Rural\, agricultural\, and urban contexts across Canada\n• Structural barriers to land-based living\n• Governance\, intentional community\, and shared housing models \nJoin the Conversation\nThis HCRC webinar invites planners\, researchers\, organizers\, and community members into a grounded conversation about housing\, climate resilience\, and collective land stewardship in Canada. \nRSVP on Eventbrite \nSpeakers\nKillick Ecovillage Co-operative — Wendy Reid Fairhurst\nWendy Reid Fairhurst is a founding member of Killick Ecovillage Co-operative\, a 57-acre regenerative farm and planned 51-unit mixed-income cohousing community near St. John’s\, Newfoundland and Labrador. The project is adapting the Mutual Home Ownership Society (MHOS) model to make rural ecovillage living more accessible. She also helps lead Reclaim Community CDO\, sharing tools and lessons from the project to support community-led housing initiatives across Canada. \nBiblioterre — Rob Cole\nRob Cole is chair of the agroecological co-op Biblioterre and treasurer of Habitation Biblioterre\, a housing co-operative near Wakefield\, Québec on the unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishnabeg. His work connects affordable housing\, agroecology\, and collective land stewardship through farming\, reforestation\, and community projects. Outside the co-op\, he works locally as an arborist. \nJunction Village Community Land Trust — Mary-Kate Craig\nMary-Kate Craig (she/her) is a community catalyst\, researcher\, and co-founder of Junction Village Community Land Trust in Guelph\, Ontario. Her work focuses on housing transformation\, land stewardship\, and regenerative futures. Through Junction Village\, she is helping to develop an urban intentional community grounded in shared spaces\, collective governance\, and long-term land stewardship.
URL:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/event/loyal-to-the-soil-collective-land-living/
CATEGORIES:Webinars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/loyal-to-the-soil-march-webinar.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260416T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260416T130000
DTSTAMP:20260512T161734
CREATED:20260406T160615Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260427T184055Z
UID:2781-1776340800-1776344400@housingcommonsresearch.ca
SUMMARY:On Bricks Bonds and Belonging: Material and Relational Theories of the Commons
DESCRIPTION:Update: View Webinar Recording \nDive into the connections that build our communities\, from the homes we live in to the bonds we share. \nReserve Your Spot \nWhat does it mean to build the commons\, literally and figuratively\, within a housing system founded on principles of private property\, financialization\, and individual ownership? \nThis session brings together urban scholar Susannah Bunce and architect and housing researcher Karen Kubey for a focused conversation on how the commons operates across scales: from built form and design decisions to governance structures\, land use policy\, and everyday practices of care and collective life. \nMoving beyond the commons as an abstract ideal\, the discussion will explore: \n\nhow collectivity is (or isn’t) embedded in housing design\nhow planning\, regulation\, and property systems constrain or enable shared living\nhow the commons is sustained through relationships\, labour\, and social infrastructure\n\nThis session will feature short presentations from each speaker\, followed by a moderated dialogue and audience Q&A. \nSusannah Bunce – Dept of Geography & Planning U of T\nDr. Susannah Bunce’s research centres on the geographies and planning of urban communities and neighbourhoods and sustainable community building. She engages with critical theories of urban commons and alternities\, gentrification\, environmental justice\, urban political ecology\, and more-than-human geographies to examine localized issues and politics of land use and community-based socio-environmental identifications with local spaces. She is also interested in contestations caused by gentrification and other housing/land-based struggles. Her research also focuses on insurgent responses and more hopeful\, future-oriented community-engaged practices\, particularly those related to affordable and equitable land stewardship such as urban community land trusts and urban eco-villages. \nKaren Kubey – Daniels Faculty of Architecture U of T\nKaren Kubey is a New York- and Toronto-based urbanist specializing in housing design and spatial justice. She is the editor of Housing as Intervention: Architecture towards Social Equity (Architectural Design\, 2018) and served as the first executive director of the Institute for Public Architecture. Kubey co-founded the New York chapter of Architecture for Humanity (now Open Architecture/New York) and co-founded and led the New Housing New York design competition. Her work brings together architects\, policy and finance experts\, and community leaders to develop projects that contribute to more equitable housing and neighbourhoods.
URL:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/event/on-bricks-bonds-and-belonging/
CATEGORIES:HCRC Discussion Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/on-bricks-bonds-and-belonging-webinar-apr-16-2026.webp
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260528T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260528T130000
DTSTAMP:20260512T161734
CREATED:20260507T140534Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260508T135243Z
UID:2798-1779969600-1779973200@housingcommonsresearch.ca
SUMMARY:In Conversation with Dr. Tuna Taşan-Kok on Spatial Governance Landscapes: Regulation\, Property\, and Planning
DESCRIPTION:Register Online \nIn Conversation with Tuna Taşan-Kok \nOur final session of the season turns to a big question:\nHow are cities actually made? \nDrawing on their new book Spatial Governance Landscapes: Regulation\, Property and Planning\, Dr. Taşan-Kok\, Sara Özoğul\, and Andre Legarza will discuss how planning regulation\, property systems\, and investment logics interact to shape housing outcomes and urban development. \nDr. Tuna Tasan-Kok is Professor of Urban Governance and Planning at the University of Amsterdam and a member of the International Advisory Committee of the New Housing Alternatives (NHA) Partnership.  \nThis is a chance to move beyond abstract debates and better understand the systems that shape what gets built… and what doesn’t. \nMay 28 – 12:00–1:00 PM (ET)\nRegister on Eventbrite \nWe hope you can join us to close out the season. \nMore to come in the fall.
URL:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/event/tasan-kok-spatial-governance/
CATEGORIES:Webinars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://housingcommonsresearch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/tasan-kok-spatial-governance.jpg
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