The Institute for Human-Animal Connection (IHAC) is advancing awareness and understanding of the interrelationships among people, other animals and the environment. Keep up with the latest news about IHAC and our work related to human-animal-environment interactions.
What's New at IHAC
June 3
Upcoming Cohort: Animals and Human Health Certificate Program
Our popular Animals and Human Health certificate program starts the next cohort on June 3! Join us to learn with a completely refreshed curriculum that includes the latest research in the human-animal interactions and interventions field and current best practices, alongside experienced instructors that are currently practicing in the field.
Throughout the program, you will develop skill and expertise regarding the practical application of human-animal interactions and understand how the effects of these methods can be demonstrated with various settings and populations -- tailored to you! You will select your animal species, population, and setting you focus on, resulting in a specialized education that fits your goals. By the end of our certificate, you will be prepared to create (with instructor and peer feedback) a high-quality, science-backed, and ethical human-animal-environment interaction program or intervention, ready to be taken into your place of employment and implemented.
Our program is completely virtual and is designed for working professionals that need flexibility and to learn on their own time, within the assigned weekly due dates.
Upcoming Info Session: Come Learn About Our Animals and Human Health and Canine-Assisted Intervention Specialist Certificates!
We are hosting an information session for two of our professional development certificates -- Animals and Human Health, and Canine-Assisted Intervention Specialist. Join us on May 15, from 11 AM to 12 PM Mountain Time via Zoom, to learn more about the certificate programs and have the chance to ask questions. Even if you cannot attend live, if you register for the session you will receive the recording and presentation materials.
Our next Animals and Human Health cohort starts June 3, and the next time we run the Canine-Assisted Intervention Specialist certificate will be in August. There is still time to apply and join our next cohort!
All of our programs are designed for working professionals. Coursework is completed online, with feedback and guidance from experienced instructors that are currently working in the field of human-animal interactions and interventions.
Reach out to us at ihac@du.edu with any questions!
Our amazing research team has a new publication out! It is titled, "Measuring social and emotional functioning as a facet of positive youth development among children and adolescents in special education and mental health treatment."
This study features exciting results from a two-year study at Green Chimneys that evaluated the social and emotional functioning of children and adolescents diagnosed with mental health issues. The implications of this study have valuable insights for educators, clinicians, and parents when it comes to planning treatment for diverse youth.
Save the date! IHAC will be partnering with Green Chimneys for the hai2025 conference, dates April 25 to April 26, 2025 in Brewster, New York.
There will be phenomenal speakers, poster presentations, opportunity for hands-on learning with animals, and plenty of time for networking and collaboration. Green Chimneys' farm setting is a "living classroom" and an excellent place to learn best practices and exchange ideas with other professionals in the human-animal-environment interactions field!
Adam Clark is a Licensed Clinical Social Work (LCSW) graduate from the University of Denver Graduate School of Social Work where he received his Animal-Assisted Social Work (AASW) Certification through the Institute for Human-Animal Connection and specialized in Family Systems work. After graduating Adam focused his career on grief and loss, with a specialization in understanding pet loss and its effect on human-animal relationships.
At the Institute for Human–Animal Connection, American Humane Endowed Chair Kevin Morris is working to improve animal and human welfare through more rigorous research.
Jennifer Dietrich uses the comprehensive knowledge and experiences she gained in the Equine-Assisted Mental Health Practitioner Certificate in her work as a school counselor and in private practice.
After completing the Animals and Human Health and Canine-Assisted Intervention Specialist certificate programs, Lauren Kruger now works for New Ground, a New York nonprofit organization that provides intensive social work services to veterans experiencing homelessness.
The Animals and Human Health certificate enhanced Lynn Belkin's understanding of all aspects of animal well-being. She feels more aware of dog stress signals, and is able to evaluate these signs effectively and respond accordingly.
Colorado's First GentlemanMarlon Reis and the Institute for Human-Animal Connection share a commitment to advancing animal welfare and elevating awareness and understanding of the value of healthy human-animal-environment relationships.
Dimensions of Humane Communities Online Lecture Series
With human behavior at the center of the most pressing issues facing humanity, other animals and the environment, the Institute for Human-Animal Connection (IHAC) aims to reflect, explore and discuss how human change mechanisms at the individual, community and organizational levels are needed to create sustainable improvements for all. IHAC’s Dimensions of Humane Communities webinar series features natural and social science-informed education, research and advocacy efforts that work toward a more compassionate and humane world, one community at a time.This online lecture series will feature events with experts in each of the Institute for Human-Animal Connection’s three core areas: Therapeutic Human-Animal Interactions, Animals & Communities, and Conservation Social Work.
Why Access to Pet Resources is a Social Justice Issue
Amanda Arrington, Senior Director of the groundbreaking Pets for Life (PFL) program at the Humane Society of the United States, discusses how pet ownership crosses all geographic, racial, ethnic and socio-economic boundaries, but access to information and services does not. Institutional bias and systemic inequity can have a negative impact on pets and there is a great need to understand and deepen the connection between animal welfare and social, racial, and economic justice. Recorded Wednesday May 6, 2020.
View anytime! Discounts still apply and upon registration, you will receive a link to view this important event.
Sarah Schmidt, the founder and president of The Big Fix Uganda’s Comfort Dog Project and Meg Daley Olmert, Director of Research for the Warrior Canine Connection will present the first One Health animal assisted therapy model fighting cruelty and despair in Northern Uganda. The Big Fix Uganda—a non-profit , based in Port Townsend, WA--operates the only veterinarian hospital in Northern Uganda. Recorded Wednesday May 20, 2020.
View anytime! Discounts still apply and upon registration, you will receive a link to view this important event.
The Missed Opportunities of Shying Away from Public Policy Engagement
Vince Wong serves as Director of Collective Impact for the Michelson Found Animals Foundation talks about how public policy engagement is a long, drawn-out process that we tend to shy away for myriad reasons – time, resources, attention, anxiety, exhaustion, fear, inexperience – just to name a few. But to effect long-term and sustainable change, you need multiple stakeholders – corporate, nonprofit, community, philanthropy, and yes even government – from diverse areas to all come together on collective action that actually makes a difference. Recorded on Wednesday June 3, 2020.
View anytime! Discounts still apply and upon registration, you will receive a link to view this important event.
Traditional Stories of the Relationship between the Arikara (Sahnish) and the Animal World
The Arikara, or more accurately “Sahnish,” are a northern Great Plains tribe currently living on the Ft. Berthold Indian Reservation in central North Dakota, USA. In this session, Dr. Michael Yellow Bird (Arikara) will share a series of short teaching stories of the relationship between the Arikara people and the animal world. The stories are intended to nurture participant’s understanding of the important connection between humans and animals and how renewing this tradition can help restore this relationship.
View anytime! Discounts still apply and upon registration, you will receive a link to view this important event.
Educating Human Children about Animal and Other Alterity: A critical foundation for moving toward a plant-based and more compassionate society
Maneesha Deckha, professor and Lansdowne Chair in Law at the University of Victoria, argues that any advocacy or policy agenda directed at transitioning to plant-based societies should include education that combats the anthropocentric, gendered and colonial cultural messaging human children typically receive. Deckha will discuss how this cultural messaging can be delivered through a critical iteration of humane education focused on cultivating empathy and disrupting the Othering/dominating messages children receive and internalize about animals, the earth’s “resources” and human Others. Recorded Wednesday July 1, 2020.
The need for humane education has never been greater
Dr. Sarah Bexell, Clinical Associate Professor at the University of Denver's Graduate School of Social Work and Director of Humane Education at IHAC, believes that humane education is needed now more than ever before. In this session, Dr. Bexell will talk about humane education as a comprehensive and needed methodology that equips learners with the tools to think critically to identify impactful solutions to the interconnected global challenges of violations of human rights and well-being, the protection of other species, and mass environmental degradation. Recorded Wednesday July 15, 2020.
View Anytime! Discounts still apply and upon registration, you will receive a link to view this important event.
This conference highlights the latest research, best practices and future directions of human-animal-environment interactions and inspires attendees to rethink human relationships with other animals.
This public lecture series features natural and social science-informed education, research and advocacy work to create a more compassionate and humane world, one community at a time.