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CCPH
10th Anniversary Conference April 11-14, 2007 Hilton
Hotel Toronto, ON Canada
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Mobilizing
Partnerships for Social Change
OVERVIEW
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Introduction
to CCPHs 10th Anniversary Conference
How do we combine the knowledge and wisdom in communities
and in academic institutions to solve the major health, social and economic
challenges facing our society? How do we ensure that community-driven
social change is central to service-learning and community-based participatory
research?
Community-Campus Partnerships for Health is convening our 10th anniversary
conference, April 11-14, 2007 in Toronto, to nurture a growing network
of community-campus partnerships that are striving to achieve the systems
and policy changes needed to address the root causes of health, social
and economic inequalities. The conference, Mobilizing Partnerships
for Social Change, seeks to build knowledge, skills and actions
for achieving healthy and just societies. The conference aims not only
to ask and answer critical questions, but to equip participants with resources
they need to act on them:
- What do we know about the underlying determinants
of health, social and economic inequalities?
- How can communities, higher educational institutions
and other stakeholders mobilize to address these determinants so that
all people can participate, prosper and thrive? What are the barriers?
What are the leverage points for change?
- How can we balance the need to address acute problems
today while also striving for the systems and policy changes needed
to ultimately overcome the root causes of inequities? What strategies
have been successful and what can we learn from them?
- How do we fully realize authentic partnerships between
communities and higher education? How do we ensure that social change
is central to these partnerships?
This CCPH conference in particular is notable
for a number of reasons:
- It celebrates our 10th anniversary, allowing us to reflect on our
history and evolution and engage stakeholders in determining our future
directions.
- It is our first conference held in Canada, presenting unprecedented
opportunities to learn from Canadian experiences with community-campus
partnerships and the social determinants of health, and to explore synergies
across North America and beyond.
- It takes place in one of the most diverse cities in the world, enabling
us to explore critical issues of race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status,
wealth and culture.
- It represents an important product of our partnership with the Wellesley
Institute, the Toronto-based organization that advances the social determinants
of health through rigorous community-based research, reciprocal capacity
building, and the informing of public policy.
Important
Dates
About
Past CCPH Conferences
We
are a group that makes things happen.
~ Cheryl Maurana, Senior Associate Dean
for Public and Community Health,
Medical College of Wisconsin and Founding CCPH Board Chair
CCPH was founded in 1996 to promote health (broadly
defined) through partnerships between communities and higher educational
institutions. A non-profit organization based in Seattle, WA, USA, CCPH
is governed by a board of directors comprised of community leaders, students,
academic administrators, faculty members and other stakeholders. CCPH
members over 1,200 communities and campuses located across the
US, Canada and a dozen countries are promoting health through service-learning,
community-based participatory research, broad-based coalitions and other
community-campus partnership strategies. These partnerships are powerful
tools for improving higher education, civic engagement, and the overall
health of communities.
CCPH conferences are noted for their emphasis on inclusion, experiential
learning and subsequent action. Outcomes of past CCPH conferences have
included those at national and international levels, such as principles
of good practice and policy recommendations, and those at community levels,
including new connections, new ways of thinking, and relationships between
communities and campuses that come closer to the principle-centered partnerships
we are striving to achieve.
In 1997,
the first CCPH conference examined the key factors that contribute to
the sustainability of partnerships between communities and higher educational
institutions. The 1998
conference on principles and best practices of community-campus partnerships
led to a set of "principles of good partnerships that many
partnerships now use to guide their development. In 1999,
we focused on the knowledge, skills and attitudes needed to lead successful
partnerships. In 2000,
we delved into the policies that support and hinder community-campus partnerships,
and developed our members' advocacy skills. In 2001,
we highlighted the many ways in which community-campus partnerships could
advance national health objectives. In 2002,
we focused on the partnership and its role as a leverage point for change.
In 2003, we addressed
how to take partnerships to a new level, how to achieve desired outcomes
and how to sustain changes achieved. In 2004,
we collaborated with an international organization, The Network: Towards
Unity for Health, to offer a unique look at how partnerships between communities,
health services and health professional schools were helping to overcome
health disparities on a global level. In 2006,
we strived to understand and demonstrate the meaning of authentic
community-campus partnerships.
Meet
Our Major Canadian Partner!
Our major Canadian partner in planning the conference
is the Wellesley Institute
based in Toronto. We established a partnership with the Wellesley
Institute in 2004 that aims to increase the relevance and responsiveness
of CCPH in Canada and increase membership in Canada, including co-sponsoring
an electronic
discussion group on community-based participatory research, offering
a CBPR training institute held in Barrie, ON Canada in July 2006 and planning
this conference.

Meet
the Conference Planning Committee!
Below is information on the conference planning committee.
CCPH has also convened two subcommittees to help us plan two exciting
tracks at the conference. Click on the links below for more information
on the subcommittee members.
Aboriginal
& Indigenous Peoples Health Track
Emerging
Leaders Track
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Hamed Adetunji
Oxford, United Kingdom
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Hamed
Adetunji is Programme Leader for the Postgraduate Programme
in Public Health, Oxford Brookes University, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Hameds background is in Nutrition and Public Health. His PhD
(in Public Health) is in Health Economics where he estimated the costs
and cost-effectiveness of adding Hepatitis B into the Expanded Programme
on Immunization (EPI). Hamed later attended the Imperial College London,
University of London for Diploma and MSc in Modern Epidemiology. He
is a Fellow of the Royal Institute of Public Health. His work experience
includes Universities, Ministries of Health in Africa and the Middle
East as well as National Health Service/ Primary Care Trust in the
UK. His expertise includes enhancing capabilities of primary health
care professionals especially in community development / action research
including health promotion implementation, the development of Public
Health Programmes, Hepatitis B immunization policy and control of
infectious diseases. Hamed joined CCPH two years ago and hopes to
utilize the experience gained so far to coordinates a collaborative
research projects between the academics and communities in Oxfordshire. |
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Estelle Archibold
Atlanta, GA
USA
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Estelle
Archibold is the Managing Consultant of the Archibold Consulting
Group, an organization that develops resource opportunities and helps
to build the capacity of not-for-profit organizations. She received
her B.A. from Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia, an M.A. in Ethics
(with an emphasis in Health Policy and Bioethics) from Georgia State
University, and teacher's certificate from the George Washington University
in Washington DC. Estelle has more than 10 years of experience working
with government social work programs, not-for-profit/community organizations
and educational institutions (both public and private). Additionally,
Estelle has a strong commitment to fostering community-based efforts
that strengthen communities' capacity to meet growing social needs.
As a teacher, minister and active community member, she has helped
to galvanize the efforts of community members and leaders, politicians,
youth, and congregations to create innovative solutions to community
challenges. Estelle also has a strong commitment to fostering community-based
efforts that challenge and help to rectify socio-political structures
robbing communities of equitable participation in policymaking processes.
As a young teacher, minister and active community member, she has
worked along with parents, students, colleagues, and congregations
to address institutional structures that prevent community member
access to and participation in the democratic process.
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Photo Coming Soon!
Monique Barber
Houston, TX
USA
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Monique
Barber is the Community Liaison Specialist at the University
of Texas Prevention Research Center (UTPRC). She is responsible for
the coordination of UTPRC Community Advisory Group activities
and collaborations with UTPRC investigators. She also manages efforts
of the Collaborative Research Projects program.
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Margaret
Bogle
Little Rock, AR
USA
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Margaret Bogle
is Executive Director of the Lower Mississippi Delta Nutrition Intervention
Research Initiative (Delta NIRI) in Little Rock, AR. The Delta NIRI
is a consortium of universities, cooperative extension services,
and community groups in Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi with
a mission to improve the nutritional health of the Lower Mississippi
Delta population through community-based participatory nutrition
intervention research. It is funded by the Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) of USDA.
Margaret has spent the major part of her
professional career in public health and academic positions. In
her current position she coordinates the research activities focused
on the development and testing of nutrition intervention strategies
that can be sustained in the Delta. The Delta NIRI is also involved
in studying the process of community-based participatory research
in rural areas.
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Photo Coming Soon!
Erica Di
Ruggiero
Toronto, ON
Canada
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Erica
Di Ruggiero is the Associate Director of the Canadian Institutes
of Health Research (CIHR)-Institute of Population and Public Health.
Erica works with the Institutes Scientific Director, Advisory
Board, CIHR colleagues, key partners and stakeholders to facilitate
the development, implementation and evaluation of research and knowledge
exchange initiatives that respond to priority population and public
health research problems of local and global importance. She brings
to the position 15 years experience as an effective strategic and
operational manager leading the research, design, and evaluation of
health promoting policies and interventions and collaborative requests
for applications with a range of stakeholders. Through a variety of
government and NGO positions, she has fostered the development of
numerous multi-sectoral partnerships involving the public and non-governmental
health sectors, at national, provincial and regional levels and as
health promotion research consultant. She is actively involved in
Canadas Global Health Research Initiative (a partnership between
Health Canada, CIDA, IDRC and CIHR) aiming to strengthen our research
and policy response to global health problems in low and middle-income
countries.
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Sarah Flicker
Toronto, ON
Canada
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Sarah
Flicker is a faculty member at York University in Toronto. Previously Sarah was the Director of Research at the Wellesley Institute. She has a doctorate in Social Science and Health from the University of Toronto's Department of Public Health Sciences. She has been an active member of the TeenNet Research Group throughout her doctoral studies. Her research interests are in the areas of youth health, health promotion, HIV and community-based participatory research. She holds a MPH in Maternal and Child Health and Epidemiology from UC Berkeley and an honours degree in Anthropology from Brown University. Sarah sits on a number of community boards and believes strongly in community partnerships for research and action.
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Sherril Gelmon
Portland, OR
USA
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Sherril
Gelmon is Professor of Public Health in the Mark O. Hatfield
School of Government at Portland State University. She is the Coordinator
of two masters degree programs in health administration and policy,
as well as a faculty member in the doctoral program. She has over
20 years of experience in applied program evaluation, with two areas
of particular expertise: community health program assessment and improvement,
and design and implementation of models of assessment of community-based
learning. Sherril is also a CCPH
Senior Consultant. |
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Adrian Guta
Toronto, ON
Canada
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Adrian
Guta is currently pursuing a Masters of Social Work
at the University of Toronto, specialising in Diversity and Social
Justice. His research interests are in the areas of HIV, Health Promotion,
Sexual Diversity, Research Ethics, and Community-Based Participatory
Research. Adrian is currently doing a practicum at the Ontario
HIV Treatment Network, as well as sitting on a number of community
boards.
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Randy Jackson
Ottawa, ON Canada
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Randy
Jackson is currently Director of National Research and
Programs at the Canadian Aboriginal AIDS Network (Ottawa, Ontario,
Canada) and is also a member of the Chippewa's of Kettle and Stoney
Point First Nation in south-western Ontario. Randy is a community
representative and is co-principal and/or co-investigator on several
community-based research projects focused on issues of HIV/AIDS in
Aboriginal communities. These projects have been funded by the
Ontario HIV Treatment Network and the Canadian Institute of Health
Research. Randy is himself Aboriginal, has training in sociology
from the University of Manitoba, and has worked at the HIV/AIDS community
level for over 12 years.
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Erika
Khandor
Toronto, ON
Canada
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Erika
Khandor is the Research and Evaluation Coordinator at Street
Health, an innovative, community-based health care organization providing
services to address a wide range of physical, mental, and emotional
needs for homeless and marginalized downtown Toronto. Street Health
has a strong history of engaging in community-based research and advocacy
to address issues that are important to the community we work with.
Erikas research interests focus on community-based research
and the social determinants of health, including housing, income security,
employment, and immigration status. She holds an MHSc in Health Promotion/Public
Health from the University of Toronto, and a BA in International Development
and Environmental Studies from Trent University. Erika is also actively
involved in several community-based advocacy efforts, working on issues
such as income security, workers rights and the rights of non-status
immigrants. |
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Rohinee
Lal
Burnaby, BC
Canada
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Rohinee
Lal is the Community Liaison Coordinator
for Simon Fraser Universitys Faculty of Health Sciences and
Institute for Health Research and Education. Devoting her time to
numerous research and educational initiatives, she is responsible
for developing linkages between the university and other research
institutions, health organizations, government, health care provider
groups, and community members in the broad area of population and
public health. Building health research capacity, Rohinee provides
direct support and guidance to existing and new health researchers
attempting to develop and maintain community links, create new research
partnerships, and maintain ongoing dialogue for opportunities for
collaboration. To support educational programs in the area of population
and public health, she works to establish partnerships with members
of the community to offer practical placements and community service-learning
opportunities for graduate students. |
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Ann
C. Macaulay
Montreal, QC
Canada
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Ann
C. Macaulay is Professor of Family Medicine, the Inaugural
Director of the Centre for Participatory Research at McGill University
(September 2006) and foreign member of the Institute of Medicine,
USA. Her past experiences include her position from 1994-2006 as the
Scientific Director of the Kahnawake Schools Diabetes Prevention Project
This is an ongoing community-based participatory research project
where the Mohawk community of Kahnawake is in partnership with the
researchers to promote healthy lifestyles for the primary prevention
of type 2 diabetes. She continues to see patients one day a week in
Kahnawake and teaches in the family medicine residency program at
McGill University. |
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Dennis Magill
Toronto, ON
Canada
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Dennis
William Magill is Professor Emeritus, Department of Sociology,
University of Toronto. He is a Board Member of Community
Campus Partnerships for Health, Board Chair The Wellesley Institute,
and Managing Director, Centre for Urban Health Initiatives, University
of Toronto. He is one of the editors of the recently published book
Survival Strategies: The Life, Death, and Renaissance of A Canadian
Teaching Hospital (Canadian Scholars' Press). This book is of interest
not only to scholars and practitioners of organizational change and
decision making, but also to historians, health lawyers, policy makers
and anyone who cares about how community involvement influences
the health of urban communities. |
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Ryan Meili
Saskatoon, SK
Canada
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Ryan
Meili, a second year resident in Family Medicine, lives
in Saskatoon. While he readily admits there is no better place
to reside than the Paris of the prairies, he endeavors,
strangely, to spend as much time as possible in the exotic locale
of Mozambique where he works with medical students in a rural hospital.
In addition to his work in Saskatoon with the Student Wellness Initiative
Toward Community Health (SWITCH), a program which he helped to found
(and in which he is commonly referred to as the SWITCHblade),
his interests include public health care, puzzles (primarily of the
crossword variety), punning persistently, playing guitar, Prine (John),
and, not surprisingly, alliteration. He has recently taken up
the piano; his roommate wonders whether he will ever put it down. |
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Simone Merchant
New York, NY
USA
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Simone
Merchant is with the Institute for Urban Family Health
in New York City.
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Ruth Nemire
Ft. Lauderdale, FL
USA
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Ruth
E. Nemire is the director of community engagement and an
associate professor of pharmacy practice at Nova Southeastern University
College of Pharmacy and a voluntary assistant professor for the University
Of Miami College Of Medicine. As the Director of Community Engagement
Ruth works with various community organizations and schools to increase
partnerships that benefit faculty, students and members of the community.
She has authored chapters on preceptor development, and articles relating
to service-learning, intellectual property, and course development
and is the co-editor of the book Pharmacy Clerkships: A Survival Manual
for Students (McGraw-Hill 2002). She is the co-developer of a web
based experiential education program for NSU preceptors and students.
She has served as chair of the NSU College of Pharmacy technology
committee. She has served in multiple elected leadership positions
nationally for the American Epilepsy Society and American Association
of Colleges of Pharmacy. She has been asked to develop learning communities
within the AACP organization during the 2005-2006 school year. She
is currently completing a doctorate in education with a specialty
in higher education leadership at Nova Southeastern University College
of Education.
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Robb Travers
Toronto, ON
Canada
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Robb
Travers is a Scientist and Director of Community-Based
Research (CBR) at the Ontario HIV Treatment Network (OHTN) based in
Toronto. His passion for community-based research dates back more
than 15 years and is rooted in his experience in community development.
Robb completed a Masters degree in Community Psychology at the Ontario
Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto, and
received his PhD in Public Health Sciences from the University of
Toronto. Robb developed and taught Canadas first undergraduate
course in CBR in the Health Studies Program at the University of Toronto
and oversees an active research program addressing ethical issues
in CBR, community engagement in research, HIV vulnerability among
gay men and youth, and the health of people living with HIV. From
2002-2004, Robb was Director of Research at the Toronto-based Wellesley
Institute, where he was instrumental in developing numerous community
and research-related initiatives including the Resource Centre for
Community-Based Research and the Wellesley Urban Health CBR Certificate
Program.
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Robert V.
TwoBears
Minneapolis, MN
USA
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Robert
V. TwoBears is an enrolled tribal member Ho-Chunk Nation,
traditional practitioner of tribal culture. Father, husband, brother,
uncle, & role model to three boys and a wonderful wife. Director
of Facilities & Transportation Indian Health Board of Minneapolis.
Community Health Care Center, Student of Public Health Management.
Chairman of Indian Education School District 13, Mn.
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Affiliate Meetings
We are pleased that these organizations and initiatives have chosen to hold meetings in connection with the CCPH conference:
The Research Development Centre is holding their annual meeting at the Hilton Toronto hotel on Tuesday, April 10, and on Wednesday, April 11. For more information, contact Vera Ndaba.
The Health Disparities Service-Learning Collaborative is meeting at the Hilton Toronto hotel on Wednesday, April 11. For more information, contact CCPH executive director Sarena Seifer.
The Centre for Urban Health Initiatives and the Wellesley Institute, in partnership with University College at the University of Toronto will be presenting the 2007 Community Based Research Award of Merit during the CCPH conference at the Hilton Toronto hotel on Friday morning, April 13. For more information, contact Alexis Kane Speer.
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