November 12: Join FIFSW for the 2025 Janis Rotman Distinguished Lecture on Mental Wellness, featuring Ramona Alaggia
Categories: Alumni + Friends, Faculty, Ramona Alaggia, ResearchThe Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work is pleased to announce that the 2025 Janis Rotman Distinguished Lecture on Mental Wellness will take place on Wednesday, November 12, both in person, at Hart House, and online, via zoom.
Professor Ramona Alaggia will present “Rescue and Recovery: Building Resilience with Children, Families, and Communities.” All are welcome to attend.
Date, Time and Location
Wednesday, November 12
This is a hybrid event.
Reception (in-person only): 5:30 to 6:15pm
Lecture and Q&A: 6:15 to 7:30pm
Online: Zoom
In person: Hart House Debates Room, 7 Hart House Circle, Room 2034
About the Lecture
Trauma in various forms shapes the lives of children and their families, with disruptions evident across all domains — home, school, and community. The rise of novel social and environmental challenges, such as online harms, presents new and urgent challenges. This lecture will explore the far-reaching effects of these shifts, including their impact on health and mental health, and identify resilience-building strategies that promote recovery and strengthen well-being at the individual, familial, and community levels.
Register to attend online.
Register to attend in person.
Our Featured Speaker
Dr. Ramona Alaggia is a Professor at the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work where she holds the Margaret and Wallace McCain Family Chair in Child and Family. Her work centers on trauma and resilience across the life course, with a focus on gender-based violence, child sexual abuse and its mental health impacts, intimate partner violence, and the structural barriers that impede recovery. She is particularly committed to identifying and promoting resilience processes among children, youth, and adults exposed to violence.
Dr. Alaggia is the Director of the ThRIve research Incubation Laboratory for Child and Youth Trauma, at the University of Toronto, a collaborative hub where researchers, practitioners, students, and community partners come together to inform policy and establish best practices in trauma-informed care.
Locally, she leads research projects aimed at improving the well-being of children, youth, and their families by supporting prevention and intervention initiatives and developing innovative service models to enhance mental health outcomes. Internationally, she has delivered training in Scotland, Ireland, and Germany on trauma and resilience-informed approaches to enhance mental health. A recent study published in the journal Research on Social Work practice identified Dr. Alaggia as one of the 100 most impactful global contributors to social work scholarship.
The Janis Rotman Distinguished Lecture Series on Mental Wellness
The Janis Rotman Distinguished Lecture Series On Mental Wellness presents an annual keynote address by a leading researcher, practitioner or educator on topics such as innovations in culturally-attuned mental health services, social work’s role in addressing widening mental health disparities, the impact of community-based care, and other contemporary concerns at the intersection of social work and mental health.
We’d like to thank Janis Rotman for her generous support of FIFSW’s Talk It Out Online Counselling Clinic, which inspired the launch of this series