The preliminary program of the congress is available online, and more information can be found on the congress website. 
Courtesy
 of the UArctic Thematic Network on Arctic Health and Well-Being, there 
will also be a free Pre-Congress Workshop on Community-Based 
Participatory Research: Principles and Practices in the North on 
Saturday August 16th.  Space is limited and pre-registration is 
required. Please see the attached flyer and share with other interested 
colleagues!
  
Below are brief biosketches of the CBPR Workshop presenters: 
  
Cindy Jardine, PhD 
Dr.
 Cindy Jardine is a Professor in the School of Public Health at the 
University of Alberta. She is also an Adjunct Professor in the Dept. of 
Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology at the University of 
Alberta, an Associate Professor (nil-appointment) with the Dept. of 
Community Health Sciences at the University of Manitoba, and an 
Affiliate Scholar with the International Institute of Qualitative 
Methodology.  Dr. Jardine has diverse academic background, with a PhD in
 Medical Sciences (Public Health Sciences - Environmental Health), MSc 
in Environmental Science/Engineering (both from the University of 
Alberta), and BSc (Hons) in Zoology from the University of Manitoba.  
Prior to joining the University of Alberta, she worked for many years 
for various government agencies, including the Manitoba Dept. of Natural
 Resources, Alberta Environment, Ontario Ministry of the Environment and
 Alberta Health.  She also spent three years in Indonesia working on a 
Canadian International Development Agency project in conjunction with 
the Indonesian Environmental Impact Management Agency. 
Dr. Jardine’s
 research interests are in the areas of health risk communication, risk 
perception, risk assessment and risk management.  Her goal is promote 
productive dialogue on risks that leads to informed decision-making. 
Much of her research is conducted in partnership with Aboriginal 
communities in Canada’s north.  In recent years her research has focused
 on participatory health promotion projects with Aboriginal youth 
involving PhotoVoice and participatory video. Dr. Jardine is the former 
Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Qualitative Methods. She
 is currently on sabbatical, having been awarded a 2013/14 Fulbright 
Scholarship to work with the University of Arizona on issues of trust 
between academic researchers and Indigenous communities in health 
research partnerships. 
  
Michelle Driedger, PhD 
Dr. 
Michelle Driedger is a Professor and Tier II Canada Research Chair in 
Environment and Health Risk Communication, in the Department of 
Community Health Sciences at the University of Manitoba, and a member of
 the Metis nation.  Dr. Driedger’s academic training has been 
interdisciplinary. Following a BA (Honours – U Winnipeg) in 
environmental studies, with an emphasis in geography and political 
science, she did a MA (Carleton University) in health geography, and a 
PhD (McMaster University) in environmental health.  
Her broad areas of 
research interests include public and health risk communication, risk 
perception, and knowledge translation under conditions of uncertainty. 
Equally embedded in this program of research is the role that trust 
plays in the individual or organization that is doing the communication,
 as well as the way in which they engage relevant communities. Drawing 
primarily on qualitative methods, her research focus involves the study 
of how new and emerging risk controversies develop in science, policy 
and public forums. She is particularly interested in how risk 
communicators can meaningfully engage public audiences to enable 
informed decisions about risk recommendations. Her research explores 
these aspects with both general population and Metis (following 
community based participatory principles) contexts.  She has a number of
 funded research projects looking at public risk communication 
concerning pandemic H1N1, as well as looking at how decision-makers 
navigate uncertainty in policy decisions involving different cancer 
control and Multiple Sclerosis treatments. Growing from her initial 
partnerships with Metis communities and the Manitoba Metis Federation, 
she is collaborating in other Metis relevant research topics. 
  
Rhonda M. Johnson, DrPH, MPH, FNP 
Dr.
 Rhonda Johnson is Professor of Public Health and Chair, Department of 
Health Sciences at University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA); since 2004, she
 has coordinated the Master of Public Health (MPH) program there focused
 on circumpolar and northern health issues.  She completed her Doctorate
 of Public Health-DrPH-as a Public Health Leadership Fellow at 
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (1998-2001); her dissertation 
involved a statewide evaluation of a national demonstration project to 
improve the health care response to domestic violence in Alaska. She has
 also been a nationally-certified family nurse practitioner (CFNP), with
 about 20 years of primary care practice and program management 
experience, mostly in rural, underserved areas of the US, including but 
not limited to Alaska.  An Arizona native, her first degree was in 
Political Science (ASU, 1979), followed by graduate work in 
International Relations/Rural Development at the International Graduate 
School in Stockholm, Sweden. Service as a Peace Corps Volunteer (Rural 
Development-northeastern Thailand, 1981-2), and Peace Corps Trainer 
(Bangkok, Thailand, 1983) shifted her focus to health issues, with a 
particular interest in community-based public health and primary care 
efforts. 
Particular interests include rural health practice, 
interpersonal violence prevention, innovative provider teams, health 
literacy/ health communication, community-based participatory research, 
and maternal and child health. Dr. Johnson has worked in Alaska in a 
variety of roles since 1992, and recently served as Principal 
Investigator for the NIH-funded Center for Addressing Health Disparities
 through Research and Education (CAHDRE) at UAA, and as Project Director
 of a regional Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) continuing 
education-distance learning project called “Frontier Models of 
Leadership:  Learning from Communities.”  She teaches courses in health 
education and health behavior, program evaluation, circumpolar health 
issues, and public health ethics. 
    
        World Congress of Epidemiology and CBPR Workshop, 17-21 August, Anchorage, Alaska
Wed, May 28, 2014
    
    		The 20th IEA World Congress of Epidemiology will take place in Anchorage, Alaska on August 17-21, 2014. The theme is Global Epidemiology in a Changing Environment: The Circumpolar Perspective, and there will be content specific to Arctic communities as well as several sessions on women’s health. There will also be a free Pre-Congress Workshop on Community-Based 
Participatory Research: Principles and Practices in the North on 
Saturday August 16th, organized by the UArctic Thematic Network on Arctic Health and Well-Being.