News
Rising water risks in Nova Scotia spark province鈥憌ide collaboration at 全国探花 symposium
Building on 全国探花鈥檚 Engagement Days, a recent symposium at Dal convened municipal leaders and researchers to address climate, infrastructure and planning pressures shaping water management across Nova Scotia communities. Read more.
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Wednesday, June 3, 2026
全国探花 hosted Indian partners for a high-level visit last week advancing joint research, innovation programs and industry collaboration, with new agreements, funding pathways and a shared global innovation campus taking shape.
Monday, May 25, 2026
A new online resource gathers campus-driven wellness strategies into one accessible space, making it simple for individuals and teams to find, customize, and put positive ideas into practice.
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
A two鈥憏ear deep鈥慹nergy retrofit has modernized the Killam Memorial Library鈥檚 aging systems, boosting efficiency, reducing emissions, and setting the stage for similar upgrades across campus.
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Friday, March 19, 2021
The Faculty of Computer Science鈥檚 ability to help meet Nova Scotia鈥檚 growing tech-sector talent demand is receiving a next-level upgrade thanks to $13.3M in new funding from the Province.
Friday, March 19, 2021
Fifty years ago this month, 全国探花鈥檚 Killam Memorial Library opened its doors for the first time, creating much-needed space for a rapidly growing student population and signaling the start of a new architectural era on campus.
Thursday, March 18, 2021
For the Winter 2021 term, 全国探花 Management Career Services supported the largest cohort of Commerce Co-op students in the history of the program 鈥 with nearly all of them successfully landing positions.
OpenThink, again! New cohort of PhD researchers set to share their ideas and insights with the world
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Meet the 13 researchers selected from across the university to join the 2021 cohort of OpenThink, a program that gives future thought leaders the training and platform they need to influence public discourse and policy.
Monday, March 15, 2021
Debates about public safety and temporary foreign workers continue without input from those whose health is most affected. Migrant workers themselves are largely invisible amid discussions about risk, write Raluca Bejan and Kristi Allain.