Friendshoring, Arts, Arctic Security, AI and Supply Chains
Learn how we’re fortifying Arctic security through arts, sustainable development, resilient communities, infrastructure, and strategic partnerships.
Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4 aims to ensure inclusive and quality education for all and promote lifelong learning. Education: enables upward socioeconomic mobility, is a key to escaping poverty, helps reduce inequalities and reach gender equality, is crucial to fostering tolerance and more peaceful societies, has a direct impact on the realization of all human rights and is a primary driver of progress across all 17 SDGs.
Ensuring inclusive and equitable quality education and promoting lifelong learning opportunities for all are essential for Canada’s economic and social prosperity, and for the well-being of all Canadians.
Click here to learn more about SDG 4.
Learn how we’re fortifying Arctic security through arts, sustainable development, resilient communities, infrastructure, and strategic partnerships.
Explore how the OpenAI Researcher Access Program is supporting Indigenous artists and youth to leverage advanced AI tools to address food security challenges and safeguard cultural heritage in northern regions.
Just as partnerships at the domestic level are critical to ensuring the safety and security of Canada’s Arctic, it is equally important to work with other Arctic states and international partners in the broader region.
The University of Manitoba and Perrie Law, funded by the Law Foundation of Manitoba, are hosting a Summit on the viability of an Inuit Legal Clinic in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
A new food sector entrepreneurship program is starting up this summer in Winnipeg, Manitoba. In the coming months, a small group of youth artists studying entrepreneurship with the non-profit organization Niriqatiginnga are designing, marketing and selling a special edition line of homemade jams for the fall and holiday season.
Youth, Artists and Volunteers from the Canada Council for the Arts-funded Digital Greenhouse program applied their skills to rejuvenating online presence for Kivalliq and Manitoba Arts and Culture programming.
In a significant move geared towards strengthening Canada’s workforce capabilities in artificial intelligence (AI), Prime Minister Justin Trudeau unveiled a transformative $2.4 billion investment plan in Budget 2024. This strategic allocation underscores the government’s dedication to empowering workers with AI skills, driving economic growth, and positioning Canada as a global leader in AI innovation.
The team at @1860 Arts were recently asked to provide as supplemental report on our Digital Greenhouse pilot program.
The Permafrost Pathways Project with the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. will present for Arctic Congress 2024.
There’s a new marketplace taking shape. It’s designed by youth and artists with @1860, a Winnipeg-based arts and culture collective that has been exploring digital arts and cultural entrepreneurship since 2021.
Our project is firmly committed to advancing the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and this objective lies at the core of everything we do.
With a dedicated focus on sustainability, we’ve woven these global goals into the fabric of the Niriqatiginnga project and its activities.
Click on an SDG icon to learn more about how our efforts are making a tangible impact in that area.