

The Interconnectedness of Quality of Life and Environmental Impact in Refugee Camps
Written by: Louise Deltheil Edited by: Iris Bisson In 2022, 35.3 million people lived in refugee camps – temporary shelters meant to house people fleeing from conflicts around the world (Luca Trabattoni & Esmaeili, 2024). Despite supposedly being temporary, less than 3% of refugees get reallocated per year, meaning that many people spend years living in these camps which are meant to be short-term solutions (UNHCR, 2021). What is the architecture of a refugee camp? The United

Louise Deltheil


Precision Agriculture: Surveillance Capitalism’s Shiny New Toy
Written by: Adam Assimakopoulos Edited by: Sunny Bell Agriculture technology has promised to “feed the world” ever since the Green Revolution in the mid-20th century. In 2025, digitization and data-driven “solutions” pervade democratic and empowered approaches to solving world problems. Precision agriculture is defined as: A management strategy that gathers, processes and analyzes temporal, spatial and individual plant and animal data and combines it with other information to

Adam Assimakopoulos


Voluntary Carbon Markets: Crucial Climate Strategy or Fraudulent Practice Perpetuating Inequality?
Written by: Owen Casey Edited by: Ashley Yeung With the enactment of the Kyoto Protocol in 1997, the recognition of carbon markets as a legitimate method to reduce carbon dioxide emissions was born. The protocol established a compliance carbon market, the type of carbon markets dictated by policy or regulation, and laid the groundwork for the future proliferation of voluntary carbon markets (VCMs), the type of carbon markets driven by corporate and individual climate commitme

Owen Casey


Tapping the Heat: A Canadian Innovation Aims to Turn Industrial Waste Energy into Power
Written by: Juan David Rodriguez Edited by: Iris Bisson Unfortunately, there’s no such thing as eternally self-sustaining energy; however, we can reduce energy usage by recycling wasted energy. Just like the rest of the world, Canada is facing increasing energy demands. In a world increasingly driven by AI and data, massive amounts of thermal energy from data centers, industrial furnaces, and vehicle engines are simply lost to the atmosphere (PyroDelta Energy, 2025). As clima

Juan David Rodriguez



































