Five York PhD students receive Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship 

books and pen

Five York University PhD students were awarded the Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship for 2022. This prestigious scholarship, valued at $50,000 per year for up to three years, is presented by the Government of Canada.  

The award is intended to support first-rate doctoral students who demonstrate both leadership skills and a high standard of scholarly achievement in the fields of social sciences, humanities, natural sciences, engineering and health. The selection criteria include academic excellence, research potential and leadership.   

“A Vanier scholarship is an honour, but it also materializes a belief with impressive financial support that these scholars will change our future for the better,” says Faculty of Graduate Studies Dean & Associate Vice-President Graduate, Thomas Loebel. “Each of the scholars has identified challenging problems to solve and proposed creative paths toward solutions – and the range across disciplines really stands out.”  

This year’s recipients come from a diverse set of research fields exploring a variety of topics from issues in family law to interactive projects aimed to accentuate the impact of the global climate crisis.  

“It’s heartening to see that nationally York is being recognized for what our community has long known: we nurture ingenuity.  As these award winners lead in the development of new research methods, results, and creation, society at large will experience the benefits,” says Dean Loebel.  

The 2022 Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship is presented to:  

Katherine Barron – Education: Language, Culture & Teaching

Katherine Barron
Katherine Barron

Barron’s cutting-edge research will examine the use of curriculum modifications for elementary school students. Curriculum modification includes changing a student’s curriculum to a different grade level if the teacher believes that the student is unable to work at grade level. This is a common practice in elementary education that has not been thoroughly explored by scholars. Barron proposes that the decision to modify a student’s curriculum is highly subjective and can have long-term negative impacts. This study is vital due to the fact that marginalized students (particularly Black and Indigenous students) have been disproportionately disadvantaged through special education processes throughout history.  

“Given the negative impacts that special education decisions can have on the trajectory of a student’s academic future, it is essential that we investigate the use of curriculum modifications and their efficacy in achieving their intended outcomes,” says Barron.  

Barron’s research in the Toronto District School Board will examine the use of curriculum modifications in relation to equity, achievement and well-being. 

Toby Finlay – Sociology  

Toby Finlay
Toby Finlay

Finlay’s project presents a historical study of the development of transgender health care in the Gender Identity Clinic (GIC) of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto, Ont. Through archival research and interviews, the results of the research aim to demonstrate how CAMH has shaped the landscape of transgender health care in Ontario for the last 50 years. 

This project presents trailblazing research by preserving an archive of the histories of transgender health-care practices and transgender community activisms in Ontario. This crucial study will provide a story of the ways that transgender communities have navigated and resisted dominant discourses about gender to access gender-affirming treatment.  

“This historical study has contemporary relevance to the politicized debates about trans health care taking place globally and to Canada’s current policy shifts towards gender-affirming approaches to trans health care,” says Finlay.  

Sarah Grace Grothaus – Computational Arts/EE and CS Departments 

Sarah Grace Grothaus
Sarah Grace Grothaus

Grothaus provides a glimpse into the deterring implications of black carbon air pollution through her research-creation project, Habitats. She will create visualization and environmental sensing wearables that create a second skin for the user, enabling individuals to bring their environmental data to life. Specifically, her project is aimed to ignite the public imagination and instigate policy change regarding toxic exposures to carbon emissions.  

Grothaus believes her project can create a sense of realization regarding the urgency of addressing global climate change. “Habitats will focus on empowering citizens to better understand and communicate their local environment, and issues connected to environmental sacrifice zones: places where residents live near environmentally threatening polluting industries and/or heavy usage transportation routes, notes Grothaus.” 

Once complete, the project can be shared with the larger community through educational workshops, public art performances and other contexts intended for raising the alarm about environmental dangers. 

Deanne Sowter – Law  

Deanne Sowter
Deanne Sowter

Sowter’s research “Towards a Modified Conception of the Family Lawyer” raises the concern that the current understanding of the lawyer’s role fails to properly capture the realities of family law. The structure that is being used, reinforces power imbalances and gendered hierarchies in terms of process and outcome. Specifically, the current model does not respond effectively to non-adversarial advocacy, family violence and issues involving a client’s child.  

Her research hopes to offer a reformulation of family lawyers’ duties to their clients, inform law reform and amendments to professional codes of conduct and make recommendations for pedagogical reforms at law schools and for continuing legal education.  

“Family law has an impact on more Canadians than any other area of law, yet the family justice system is widely perceived to be broken. There is potential for lawyers to be responsive to family laws’ challenges,” says Sowter.  

Alyssia Wilson – Clinical Developmental Psychology 

Alyssia Wilson
Alyssia Wilson

Wilson contends that homeless and precariously housed people continue to be understudied in brain injury research. In particular, women in this population report a greater number of injuries as they are more likely to experience intimate partner violence, making them uniquely vulnerable to repeated mild traumatic brain injury (mTBIs). Wilson explores how those who have suffered mTBIs can experience long-term effects on their psychological health, increasing the risk for both substance use and mood problems. The project aims to create a real-world impact by allowing clinicians to more readily identify individuals at risk for substance use and mental health disorders and develop targeted interventions that may reduce risk of mTBI and improve health outcomes.    

“These developments are particularly critical for underserved and marginalized populations, who already face numerous psychosocial and economic barriers,” says Wilson.  

By increasing the understanding of mTBIs, clinicians will be better informed in assessing and providing treatment, psychoeducation and intervention services to vulnerable community members.  

Liberal Arts & Professional Studies welcomes 28 new faculty members

Image shows fall trees in brilliant reds and golds. The trees line the campus walk on the Keele campus.

This story is published in YFile’s New Faces feature issue 2022. Every September, YFile introduces and welcomes those joining the York University community, and those with new appointments.

The Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies welcomes 28 new faculty members this fall.

“We are thrilled to welcome these very accomplished scholars to the Faculty,” says  J.J. McMurtry, dean of LA&PS. “These new faculty bring a wealth of knowledge, experience and passion to LA&PS. I know our new colleagues will help us build on our reputation for research and teaching excellence.” 

Eva Bogdan
Eva Bogdan

Eva (Evalyna) Bogdan 
Eva (Evalyna) Bogdan is an assistant professor in the School of Administrative Studies at York University. Bogdan is an environmental and disaster sociologist. She has studied and practiced at the intersection of society and the environment, focusing on topics such as floods, fuels, food, and farming, around the world in the Netherlands, Namibia, New Zealand, and various parts of Canada. Her focus has been on policies, practices and power dynamics. To examine complex socio-environmental problems, she applies an interdisciplinary lens with expertise in economic development, local government administration, community-based research and education.  

Bogdan is particularly interested in creating strategies to strengthen societal disaster resilience. Examples include the We’re Ready! Community Disaster Preparedness as community workshops and student practicum training, which she developed as a postdoctoral associate at the University of Calgary, and the Flood Resilience Challenge Serious Role-Playing Game which she developed as a postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Waterloo. Bogdan has a PhD focusing on flood risk governance from the University of Alberta. 

Anirban Kar
Anirban Kar

Anirban Kar
Anirban Kar is an assistant professor, teaching stream in the School of Administrative Studies at York University. Prior to making a career change in academia, Kar worked as an auditor, an accountant, a finance manager, a strategist and an entrepreneur, over a period of 14 years, in agriculture, steel and telecom businesses. 

Kar, along with a co-investigator, is studying the pedagogy of student’s teamwork skill development. He is currently working on two projects: a three-phase action research project to improve retention in a public sector organization and another large-scale research with a network of 431 collaborators, examining culture, trust and leadership across 143 countries (GLOBE 2020). 

He has presented his work at leading conferences and won the best paper and best symposium awards. He has a PhD in international management and organization from the University of Victoria. 

Cedric Dawkins
Cedric Dawkins

Cedric Dawkins
Cedric Dawkins is an associate professor in the School of Administrative Studies at York University. His research interests are in the broad area of corporate social responsibility and include connections between labour rights and human rights, labour union revitalization, and the impact of disclosure on corporate behaviour.  

Victoria Daniel
Victoria Daniel

Victoria Daniel
Victoria Daniel is a lecturer in the professorial stream in the School of Administrative Studies at York University. She is also completing her PhD in management (OB/HRM) from the Lazaridis School of Business and Economics at Wilfrid Laurier University.  

Her research examines how contemporary employees navigate the work-life interface as well as understanding barriers to workplace equity and inclusion. The research emphasizes on the intersection of gender and non-work obstacles people may face in their career advancement.  

Daniel has published a book chapter, has many papers currently under peer review, and has presented her research several times at national and international conferences including the Academy of Management, Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, Work-Family Researchers Network, and the Canadian Psychological Association.  

Her doctoral studies were funded by SSHRC Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship. 

Andrew Sarta
Andrew Sarta

Andrew Sarta
Andrew Sarta is an assistant professor of strategy in the School of Administrative Studies at York University. He holds a PhD in strategy from Ivey Business School Western University. His research focuses on organizational adaptation and behavioural strategy within environments undergoing social or technological change and his research is published in leading journals including the Journal of Management.  

He seeks to understand the early stages of adaptation in traditional sectors such as financial services, where he studies the emergence of FinTech, and healthcare, where he studies innovation in organizational forms. 

Sarta’s research has been featured in several management conferences, including the Academy of Management, Strategic Management Society and the European Group for Organizational Studies. He holds an honorary research fellowship at the University College London (UCL) School of Management in the U.K. and previously held research fellowships in the Innovating Across Sectors Program at UCL and in the Digital Banking Lab at Western University’s Ivey Business School. He has also held visiting fellowships at the University of Toronto’s Dalla Lana School of Public Health. 

Romi-Lee Seve
Romi-Lee Sevel

Romi-Lee Sevel
Romi-Lee Sevel is an assistant professor and teaches financial and non-financial reporting, finance, auditing and emerging technologies in the School of Administrative Studies at York University. 

She previously worked in public accounting in the audit and assurance sector, providing services to private companies, non-profits, and condominium corporations. Sevel also has experience providing clients in various industries with consulting services. 

She takes a hands-on approach to teaching. Her teaching philosophy is founded on three pillars: gradual and continuous learning, building rapport with students and post-secondary interaction as a means for instilling life skills.   

Nicholas Taylor
Nicholas Taylor

Nicholas Taylor
Nicholas (Nick) Taylor is an associate professor in the Department of Communication and Media Studies at York University. He received tenure in 2018, during his 10-year stint in the Department of Communication at North Carolina State University, where he also served for two years as the director of the interdisciplinary PhD program in Communication, Rhetoric, and Digital Media. 

Taylor combines critical and ethnographic approaches to analyze the subjectivities, communities, and industries associated with professionalized leisure practices. His work has appeared in journals such as Convergence, Critical Studies in Media Communication, and New Media & Society. He is also the lead editor of Masculinities in Play (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), the first volume on the intersections of masculinities and games, and LEGOfied: Building Blocks as Media (Bloomsbury, 2020).  

During the 2022-23 academic year, he will serve as the Högskolestiftelsen Research Fellow in the Faculty of Education and Welfare Studies at Åbo Akademi University in Vaasa, Finland.  

Robert W. Gehl
Robert W. Gehl

Robert W. Gehl 
Robert W. Gehl is an associate professor in the Department of Communication and Media Studies at York University and Ontario Research Chair in Digital Governance for Social Justice. He​ is a Fulbright scholar and award-winning author whose research focuses on contemporary communication technologies. He received his PhD in cultural studies from George Mason University in 2010. 

Before joining York University as an Ontario Research Chair of Digital Governance for Social Justice, he held an endowed research Chair at Louisiana Tech. He has published more than two dozen articles in journals such as New Media & Society, Communication Theory, Social Media + Society, and Media, Culture and Society. His books include Reverse Engineering Social Media, which won the Nancy Baym Book Award from the Association of Internet Researchers, Weaving the Dark Web, and Social Engineering, published in 2022 by MIT Press. He also has published a co-edited collection of essays, Socialbots and Their Friends.​ 

Sadia M. Malik
Sadia M. Malik

Sadia M. Malik
Sadia M. Malik is an assistant professor, teaching stream in the Department of Economics at York University. She holds a PhD degree in economics and has more than 15 years of professional experience in pedagogy and applied research.  

Prior to her current appointment as a teaching stream tenure-track faculty member, Malik served York University as sessional assistant professor where she taught a variety of core and specialized courses in economics with a high degree of teaching effectiveness. Malik has also supervised and mentored students by engaging them in her research projects. During her tenure as sessional assistant professor, she won two research grants: one from Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) and the other from Dahdaleh Institute of Global Health Research, Canada. She trained and mentored three PhD candidates who built their research and analytical skills by working on these projects under her guidance.  

Malik is looking forward to designing innovative pedagogical techniques to promote experiential education and enhance the student experience and learning outcomes at York University.​ 

Yishu Zeng
Yishu Zeng

Yishu Zeng
Yishu Zeng is an assistant professor in the Department of Economics at York University. She has a PhD in economics from University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and a PhD in mathematics from National University of Singapore. Her research interests focus on microeconomic theory, information economics and game theory.  

She is working on understanding the impact of strategic information transmissions on shaping agents’ interactions. She also studies how information intermediaries’ interactions could affect market information and its outcome. Her works shed light on the design of information policies and the regulation of market participants’ behaviours from an informational perspective. In addition, Zeng develops tools and simplification techniques that facilitate the understanding of the theoretical structure of optimal information policy and equilibria in various economic settings. 

Jun Zhao
Jun Zhao

Jun Zhao
Jun Zhao is an assistant professor in the Department of Economics at York University. She holds a PhD in economics from Vanderbilt University. 

Her recent research covers topics including the effects of campaign financing on electoral outcomes in the U.S., non-parametric identification and inference of general Bayesian games, empirical questions in auctions like the efficacy of a bidder training program, test for collusion in procurement auctions, and newly developed causal inference methods such as doubly robust difference-in-differences estimators. Her work has been published in well-recognized journals like the Journal of Econometrics

Pasha Malla
Pasha Malla

Pasha Malla
Pasha Malla is an associate professor in the Department of English at York University. He is the author of seven books of poetry and fiction, most recently a novel Kill the Mall and is a contributor to the New Yorker and The Globe and Mail. He has been shortlisted for the Amazon Best First Novel Award and a Commonwealth Prize; longlisted for the Giller Prize and the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, and twice had stories in the Journey Prize anthology. 

He has taught at the University of Toronto, the University of Guelph, Brock University and McMaster University, where he was the 2021-22 Mabel Pugh-Taylor Writer-in-Residence, and he has mentored writers through PEN Canada, the Writers’ Trust of Canada, the Banff Centre for the Arts and Creativity, and Diaspora Dialogues. 

Tiana Reid
Tiana Reid

Tiana Reid 
Tiana Reid is an assistant professor in the Department of English at York University. She holds a PhD from the Department of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University. Prior to her return to Toronto, she was a presidential postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of English at Brown University. 

Her current book project examines figurations of black women’s labors as sites of tension in literatures of the African diaspora. Reid has published in scholarly journals, including American Quarterly, Feminist Formations, Theory & Event, and Women & Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory. In addition to her academic work, her writing has appeared in a range of publications, including The New York Review of Books, The New York Times, Teen Vogue, The Paris Review, Canadian Art, Dissent, and The Nation.  

A former editor at The New Inquiry and Pinko: A Magazine of Gay Communism, Reid has also spent several years doing editorial work at academic journals, including Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism and Women & Performance.  

Some of the awards she received include Langston Hughes Thesis Award for Humanities, Columbia’s Institute for Research in African American Studies and a four-year doctoral Fellowship from the SSHRC. 

Bianca Beauchemin
Bianca Beauchemin

Bianca Beauchemin
Bianca Beauchemin is an assistant professor in the School of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies at York University. She holds a PhD in gender studies from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). She is currently completing a postdoctoral Fellowship in Black Feminist Thought at Queen’s University.  

She has published a book review of Brittney C. Cooper’s Beyond Respectability: The Intellectual Thought of Race Women in Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography and is currently working on an article for the Journal of Canadian Studies’ special issue on Black Studies in Canada. In her book manuscript Arousing Freedoms: Re-Imagining the Haitian Revolution through Sensuous Marronage, she re-narrates the Haitian Revolution through Black feminist and Black queer epistemologies and methodologies. Disrupting the authority of the colonial archive and of prevalent masculinist framings of insurgency discourses, she explores the ways in which embodiment, labour, sensuousness, spirituality, marronage, resistance and alternative sexualities and genders, re-imagine the edicts of freedom and Black liberation. 

Natasha L. Henry
Natasha L. Henry

Natasha L. Henry
Natasha L. Henry is a lecturerin the professorial stream in the Department of History at York University. She is also a PhD candidate in the Department of History. The 2018 Vanier Scholar is researching the enslavement of African people in early Ontario. Her publications include Emancipation Day: Celebrating Freedom in Canada (June 2010), Talking about Freedom: Celebrating Freedom in Canada (2012) and several entries for the The Canadian Encyclopedia on African Canadian History. She has developed educational resources for several projects on the Black experience in Canada. Through her various professional, academic and community roles, Henry’s work is grounded in her commitment to research, collect, preserve, and disseminate the histories of African Canadians. 

Hannah Johnston
Hannah Johnston

Hannah Johnston
Hannah Johnston is an assistant professor in the School of Human Resources Management where her research focuses on the digitalization of work. Prior to joining York, Johnston was a postdoctoral Fellow at Northeastern University in Boston. She holds a PhD in geography from Queen’s University. 

She has also worked professionally at the International Labour Organization and with trade unions and workers’ organizations on issues related to collective organizing, algorithmic management and technological change.  Johnston has a long-standing interest in the platform economy and is a collaborator with Oxford University’s Fairwork Project. Her recent publications can be found in journals, including Industrial and Labor Relations Review, Work and Occupations, and the International Labour Review.  

Jeremy Green
Jeremy Green

Jeremy Green
Tehota’kerá:ton, Jeremy D. Green, is Kanien’kehá:ka (Mohawk), wolf clan and from the Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory. An assistant professor in the Department of Humanities at York University, Green is both a scholar and Ontario Certified Teacher (OCT) of Indigenous language learning and acquisition in adult and youth learners over the past 25 years. Green’s transformative research and teaching are at the forefront of efforts to ensure that Canadian Indigenous languages and traditional cultures not only survive but thrive.  

Tehota’kerá:ton’s completed research to date has focused on diverse localized language acquisition and status planning for Indigenous language proficiency development for Rotinonhsión:ni (Six Nations) and other Indigenous nations and communities. Tehota’kerá:ton also provides training and information to support these localized Indigenous language acquisition planning efforts to create new speakers of Indigenous languages focusing primarily on strategic planning for teaching, learning, assessment, evaluation, language use and conversational and ceremonial language and dynamic cultural practices. 

Jean-Thomas Tremblay
Jean-Thomas Tremblay

Jean-Thomas Tremblay
Jean-Thomas Tremblay is an assistant professor in the Department of Humanities at York University, teaching across environmental studies, sexuality studies, literary, screen and media studies. They are the author of the forthcoming Breathing Aesthetics (Duke University Press, October 2022) and, with Andrew Strombeck, a co-editor of Avant-Gardes in Crisis: Art and Politics in the Long 1970s (State University of New York Press, 2021).  

Tremblay’s scholarship has appeared or is set to appear in such journals as differences, Discourse, SubStance, Modernism/modernity, American Literature and GLQ. Their public writing has been relayed by venues that include the Los Angeles Review of Books, Chicago Review, Public Books and Full Stop. Tremblay is working on two books that seek to render theories of negativity and non-sovereignty responsive to the pressures of life under climate crisis: The Art of Environmental Inaction and, with Steven Swarbrick, Negative Life: The Cinema of Extinction

Marc Herman
Marc Herman

Marc Herman
Marc Herman is an assistant professor at York University in the Department of Humanities. Herman’s research focuses on the interactions of Jewish and Islamic intellectual history in the medieval Mediterranean, with a particular interest in the overlapping sacred histories of Jews and Muslims. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, he has held postdoctoral fellowships at Columbia University, Fordham University, Harvard University, the University of Michigan, the University of Pennsylvania, and Yale Law School. He is the coeditor of Accounting for the Commandments in Medieval Judaism: Studies in Law, Philosophy, Pietism, and Kabbalah (Brill, 2021) and is finishing a monograph titled After Revelation: The Rabbinic Past in the Islamic World.  

Carolyn Steele
Carolyn Steele

Carolyn Steele
Carolyn Steele is an assistant professor, teaching stream in the Department of Humanities at York University. Steele’s research specializes in the National Film Board’s educational production unit Studio G, interactive and immersive art forms, the digital humanities and modes of experiential education. Her interactive digital productions have received accolades nationally and internationally. She created the Humanities capstone course (Doing Culture HUMA 3207/4207 6.0), in which students gain real-world experiences in the cultural sector through course placements and community-focused projects, as well as Digital Culture in the Humanities (HUMA 3140 6.0). 

For several years, Steele has partnered with York University’s Media Creation Lab and Canadian virtual artist Bryn Oh in the development of a high-impact humanities course exploring immersive art forms in virtual and augmented reality (VR, AR), and Second Life (In Other Worlds HUMA 2205 3.0).  

Steele has received several Academic Innovation (AIF) and Experiential Education grants along with the Humanities Award for Teaching Excellence (2020), Dean’s Award for Excellence in Teaching (2020) and President’s University-Wide Teaching Award (2022).   

Ayana Samuel
Ayana Samuel is an assistant professor in the Department of Philosophy at York University. Her broad research interests are in meta-ethics, and her recent work focuses on related issues in action theory and speech-act theory. ​ Samuel holds a PhD from University of California, Los Angeles​. 

Teshager Dagne
Teshager Dagne

Teshager Dagne​ 
Teshager Dagne  joins the School of Public Policy and Administration as an Ontario Research Chair in Governing Artificial Intelligence (AI) and associate professor, with tenure, in the professorial stream. He has previously taught at the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University, where he earned his doctoral degree and was a Schulich Research Fellow. He has extensively published in areas of knowledge governance in intellectual property law, emerging technologies regulation, and big data governance. His current research explores legal, ethical, and regulatory considerations in the challenges and opportunities that the deployment of AI and related technologies bring in different spheres of activities.  

Dagne is interested in researching the intersection between intellectual property and privacy norms about access and control of data, investigating frameworks for allocating rights and AI.​ 

Johanne Jean-Pierre
Johanne Jean-Pierre is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at York University and holds a PhD in sociology from McMaster University. 

She conducts research projects in English and in French in the fields of sociology of education, sociology of race and ethnicity, youth studies, and research methodology. More specifically, she focuses on school and post-secondary trajectories, alternative school discipline interventions, the scholarship of learning and teaching, and qualitative research. Her current research projects investigate the social-cultural dynamics that can inform promising policies and practices to work with Francophone minority communities, refugee and immigrant youth, and Black Canadian communities. 

Jean-Pierre is also a co-founder of the Canadian Sociological Association Black Caucus and a co-founder of the first Canadian Sociological Association Francophone award:  Prix d’excellence en sociologie de langue française de la Société canadienne de sociologie. She is also a co-investigator in the Empowering Next-generation Researchers In perinatal and Child Health (ENRICH) initiative.  

Wendy Makoons Geniusz
Wendy Makoons Geniusz

Wendy Makoons Geniusz
Wendy Makoons Geniusz is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology at York University and holds a PhD in American studies from the University of Minnesota. Makoon Geniusz is an Indigenous woman of Cree and Métis descent. She was raised in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, but her Cree family comes from the Pas, a Reserve in Manitoba. To honor her Ojibwe namesake, Keewaydinoquay, Geniusz was raised with Ojibwe language and culture. Before coming to York, Geniusz was a professor of Ojibwe Language at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, where she taught for 14 years.   

Since childhood, Geniusz has worked on Ojibwe language and culture revitalization projects in Indigenous communities throughout the Great Lakes Region. All her publications and research focus on creating decolonization tools for Indigenous language and culture revitalization. Geniusz is the authoress of: Our Knowledge is Not Primitive: Decolonizing Botanical Anishinaabe Teachings, the editor of: Plants Have So Much to Give Us, All We Have to Do is Ask by Mary Siisip Geniusz, and the authoress of the Ojibwe plant name glossary found in that text. She is the co-editor with Brendan Fairbanks of Chi-mewinzha: Ojibwe Stories from Leech Lake by Dorothy Dora Whipple.  

Marsha Rampersaud
Marsha Rampersaud

Marsha Rampersaud
Marsha Rampersaud is an assistant professor in the Department of Social Sciences at York University. She is doing a postdoctoral Fellowship with the Rights for Children and Youth Partnership Project in the School of Social Work at Toronto Metropolitan University. Rampersaud is a sociolegal researcher who combines insights from the critical race, punishment, and abolition theories to examine issues of racial and social justice, the purpose of punishment, and the impacts of societal structures on differently situated groups. Her approach to research is firmly rooted in praxis, and she works closely with the communities who inform her research to cultivate projects from the ground up. Rampersaud also holds a PhD in sociology from Queen’s University. 

Tanja Juric
Tanja Juric

Tanja Juric
​Tanja Juric is an assistant professor, teaching stream​ in the Department of Social Science at York University. Juric specializes in moral philosophy and political subjectivity, with reference to social diversity and the law.  Her current research focuses on human rights and citizenship in multicultural democracies and asks how values of cultural neutrality and inclusion might be impacted by changes in legislation, such as those recently seen in Bill C-24 and Bill C-51. Her research interests are human rights, multiculturalism, religion and citizenship.​ 

Christopher Morris
Christopher Morris

Christopher Morris 
Christopher Morris is an assistant professor in the Writing Department at York University. His research interests include rhetoric, poetry, and technical and professional communication, with his current project exploring the rhetoric of housing and economic development. His poems have appeared in Northwest Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, and Transition Magazine. Morris holds a PhD in English from The Ohio State University. 

Matthew Bucemi
Matthew Bucemi

Matthew Bucemi 
Matthew Bucemi is an assistant professor in the Writing Department at York University. He is an award-winning editor, writer and instructor and holds a PhD in English literature from Cornell University. He has held creative leadership roles at publishing houses, production studios, ad agencies, and newspapers and was the founding managing editor at Sutherland House Books. Bucemi taught courses about topics that range from philosophy, cultural studies, and history to kung fu movies and video game theory. Bucemi has given talks on literature, film, music, comics, and games at conferences all over North America. He has also won Dean’s Prize for Distinguished Teaching, Martin Sampson Teaching Award and Instructor of the Year award.  

Environmental and Urban Change introduces three faculty members this fall

Usa globe resting in a forest - environment concept

This story is published in YFile’s New Faces Feature Issue 2022. Every September, YFile introduces and welcomes those joining the York University community, and those with new appointments.

The Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change (EUC) welcomes three new faculty members this fall: Mahtot Gebresselassie, Adeyemi Oludapo Olusola and Joshua Thienpont

“The Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change is excited to welcome Professors Mahtot Gebresselassie, Adeyemi Olusola and Joshua Thienpont as the newest members of our academic community,” said EUC Dean and Professor Alice Hovorka. “They bring with them a wealth of knowledge and skills within their respective fields – students and colleagues alike will benefit from their expertise and commitments to justice and sustainability.”

Mahtot Gebresselassie
Mahtot Gebresselassie

Mahtot Gebresselassie 
Mahtot Gebresselassie is an architect, urban planner, educator and social-science researcher with research interests in smart mobility and equity, accessible urban and digital spaces, urban design, human-computer interaction (HCI), Uber and Lyft transportation in unusual events, and the sharing economy in the transportation sector. Most of her research focuses on Uber and Lyft and transportation equity in relation to people with disabilities and low-income earners.  

Her current research centres on Uber and Lyft usage disparity during extreme weather, comparing the two companies’ usage during heatwaves between high- and low-income neighbourhoods in New York City. For further information about Mahtot, visit her personal webpage, which details her research, teaching, publications and architecture portfolio. 

Adeyemi Oludapo Olusola 
Adeyemi Oludapo Olusola

Adeyemi Oludapo Olusola 
Adeyemi Oludapo Olusola is a physical geographer with research and teaching interests in fluvial geomorphology, ecohydrology, environmental science as well as GIS/remote sensing. His other research interests include landscape evolution, polluted pathways and sediment fingerprinting. He completed his postdoctoral research at the University of Free State in South Africa and has served as a lecturer at the University of Ibadan and Osun State University, both in Nigeria. He finished his PhD at University of Ibadan with a dissertation on the process-form dynamics of Upper Ogun River Basin in Southwestern Nigeria. 

Joshua Thienpont 
Joshua Thienpont

Joshua Thienpont 
Joshua Thienpont’s teaching and research focus on landscape disturbances and how they impact ecosystem processes. He is particularly interested in studying the connection between physical disturbances and ecosystem changes, including the biogeography of organisms. His current research examines how marine storm surges in the Mackenzie Delta of the western Canadian Arctic result in widespread salinization, fundamentally altering terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. He uses lake sediment records to reconstruct past environments where direct monitoring data are sparse or absent. 

Two new faces join Osgoode Hall Law School

Judge signing papers

This story is published in YFile’s New Faces Feature Issue 2022. Every September, YFile introduces and welcomes those joining the York University community, and those with new appointments.

Osgoode Hall Law School welcomes two new faculty members this fall: Suzanne Chiodo and Patricia (Trish) McMahon.

“We’re proud that we’ve attracted some of the world’s most accomplished legal thinkers and teachers to Osgoode,” said Dean Mary Condon. “Professor Chiodo and Professor McMahon both come to us with exceptional track records and we’re excited to welcome them aboard.”

Suzanne Chiodo
Suzanne Chiodo

Suzanne Chiodo
Assistant Professor Suzanne Chiodo comes to Osgoode Hall Law School from the Faculty of Law at Western University. Before joining Western Law in 2020, she was a stipendiary lecturer in Law at the University of Oxford, U.K., and an adjunct faculty member at Osgoode. Prior to her academic career, she practiced as a class actions lawyer and insurance defence lawyer. She also served as a judicial clerk to Justice James O’Reilly with the Federal Court of Canada. She holds a BA Hons. and MA in modern history from the University of Oxford (2000) and a JD with Distinction from Western Law (2011). In addition, she completed a master of laws at Osgoode (2017) and recently successfully defended her DPhil degree from the University of Oxford (2021).

Chiodo’s research interests are interdisciplinary and engage civil procedure, access to justice and class actions in both the domestic and international contexts. She will teach several courses across the JD curriculum, specifically in the areas of civil procedure, litigation, legal process and tort law.

Patricia (Trish) McMahon
Patricia (Trish) McMahon

Patricia (Trish) McMahon
Assistant Professor Patricia (Trish) McMahon joins Osgoode from the law firm Torys LLP, where she was as a senior associate in the litigation department starting in 2016. She has also served since 2015 as the coordinator and lead interviewer in the oral history program with the Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History. Prior to these roles, she was an associate in the litigation department for the Toronto-based law firm Osler and served as a law clerk to Justice Ian Binnie of the Supreme Court of Canada. McMahon has a BA in modern history from Western University (1994) and an MA in Canadian history from the University of Toronto. In 1999, she completed a PhD in Canadian history from the University of Toronto, followed by an LLB (2002). She completed an LLM at Yale Law School and a JSD in 2015. Her primary research interests relate to civil procedure, equity and legal history broadly defined.

She has extensive and varied research experience in civil procedure, constitutional history, legal biography and Canadian political history and foreign relations. She will teach several different courses in Osgoode’s JD program, particularly in the areas of civil procedure, contract law, legal process and legal history.

Faculty of Education welcomes two new professors

A black man delivering a lesson to students in a classroom

This story is published in YFile’s New Faces Feature Issue 2022. Every September, YFile introduces and welcomes those joining the York University community, and those with new appointments.

Korina Jocson and sava saheli singh are joining the Faculty of Education.

“We are thrilled to welcome two new colleagues: Korina Jocson and Sava Saheli Singh,” says Faculty of Education Dean Robert Savage. “Each are respected scholars and teachers in their particular fields of study. They bring a talented range of expertise to the Faculty of Education and we very much look forward to their new ideas, perspectives, and contributions. As well as the actions they will take towards our ongoing mission of reinventing education for a diverse, complex world.”

Korina Jocson
Korina Jocson

Korina Jocson
Korina Jocson is an interdisciplinary scholar with interests in youth literacies, race and ethnic studies pedagogies, media technologies and learning in participatory cultures, and equity in education. Her scholarship draws on the humanistic social sciences to illuminate youth’s modes of expression in navigating school and society. Her thinking is informed by radical women of color feminisms and critical theories in pursuing social inquiry. She is the author of award-winning Youth Media Matters: Participatory Cultures and Literacies in Education (University of Minnesota Press), Youth Poets: Literacies In and Out of Schools (Peter Lang), and a forthcoming book on race, gender, and technologies in the school-work nexus (Routledge). She is also the editor of Cultural Transformations: Youth and Pedagogies of Possibility (Harvard Education Press). Other publications have appeared in a number of scholarly journals, including Curriculum Inquiry, Critical Studies in Education, Reading Research Quarterly, International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, Cultural Studies <-> Critical Methodologies, Anthropology and Education Quarterly, Juvenilia Studies, and Daedalus. As a U.S.-Canada Fulbright Scholar, Jocson served as Visiting Research Chair of Human Rights and Social Justice at the University of Ottawa. She earned her PhD in education at the University of California, Berkeley, and completed a postdoctoral research fellowship at Stanford University.

Sava Saheli Singh
sava saheli singh

sava saheli singh
Joining the Faculty of Education as an assistant professor is sava saheli singh. As an interdisciplinary scholar working at the nexus of educational technology, speculative futures, digital literacy, digital media narratives, critical data studies, surveillance, and platforms, she has a strong commitment to community-based public scholarship. She is also a research Fellow of surveillance, society and technology with the Centre for Law, Technology and Society at the University of Ottawa. Before that, as a postdoctoral Fellow first with the Surveillance Studies Centre at Queen’s University and then with the eQuality Project and the AI+Society Initiative at the University of Ottawa. She conceptualized and co-produced a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada (OPC) funded, multi-award winning, knowledge translation project Screening Surveillance – a series of four, short, near-future fiction films speculating surveillance futures, available online as a free educational resource. The films have been screened at film festivals, international conferences, workshops, global public events and in classrooms across the world. She is a member of the editorial collective for the Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy, and recently co-edited a special issue on Surveillance in Education. She was also a script consultant for the 2022 Netflix show, The Future of….

Lassonde School of Engineering welcomes cohort of 19 faculty members

YFile Featured image Lassonde School of Engineering

This story is published in YFile’s New Faces Feature Issue 2022. Every September, YFile introduces welcomes those joining the York University community, and those with new appointments.

The Lassonde School of Engineering welcomes 18 new faculty members this fall: Elisabet Burjons, Marios Fokaefs, Moshe Gabel, May Haidar, Edris Hassan, Hadi Hemmati, Benard Isojeh, Shahin Kamali, Houshang Karimi, Kostas Kontogiannis, Sana Maqsood, Kiemute Oyibo, Aditya Potukuchi, Meiying Qin, Razieh Salahandish, Laleh Seyyed-Kalantari, Jarek Szlichta, Pooja Vashisth and Kai Zhuang.

“As we grow, so does the positive impact of our community,” said Jane Goodyer, dean, Lassonde School of Engineering. “I am thrilled to welcome 19 new faculty members to our School this year. At Lassonde, we understand the challenges of the future will be met by the people and knowledge we develop today. Our newest faculty members will bring fresh perspectives and diverse experiences to educate the next generation of creators, engineers and scientists and help us tackle the local and global challenges ahead through their research pursuits.”

Elisabet Burjons
Elisabet Burjons

Elisabet Burjons
Elisabet Burjons is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science at the Lassonde School of Engineering. After studying mathematics and physics, she pursued a PhD in theoretical computer science in the topics of online algorithms and parameterized complexity at ETH Zürich. She was then awarded a two-year postdoc mobility grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation to further her research on the topic of Turing Kernelization at RWTH Aachen. Her main research interests lie in the areas of kernelization and parameterized complexity, algorithms and complexity of geometric problems, online algorithms and applications.

Marios Fokaefs
Marios Fokaefs

Marios Fokaefs
Marios Fokaefs is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Lassonde School of Engineering, where he directs the EASE (Economics and Administration of Software Engineering) lab. His expertise revolves around software engineering and more specifically, software evolution and DevOps. His research focuses on software engineering economics, software performance engineering, cloud computing and self-adaptive systems, among others. Fokaefs holds a BSc in computer science from the University of Macedonia, Greece, and an MSc and PhD in software engineering from the University of Alberta. Before joining York University, he was an assistant professor in the Department of Computer and Software Engineering at Polytechnique Montreal. He has long-standing partnerships with various companies, most notably IBM Canada. His work is also funded by NSERC, Mitacs and the Wellcome Trust.

Moshe Gabel
Moshe Gabel

Moshe (Mickey) Gabel
Moshe (Mickey) Gabel joins York University as an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Before joining Lassonde, he served four years as a limited-term assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Toronto and in the Department of Computer and Mathematical Sciences at UTSC. Gabel earned his PhD in computer science from the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, where he also got his MSc and BSc.

Gabel’s research lies in the intersection of distributed algorithms, systems and machine learning. His current research interest is edge computing, specifically his focus is in making geo-distributed data analysis more practical and accessible to typical software developers. He has also worked extensively on machine learning applications in pervasive health monitoring and in computer systems. His work appeared in top venues for systems and data science. He has served on multiple programs and organizing committees, most recently as program chair for SYSTOR ’22 and PC member of NeurIPS ’22 and ICML ’22.

May Haidar
May Haidar

May Haidar
May Haidar is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Haidar received her PhD in computer science from Université de Montréal with distinction, in 2008. She also received her MSc from Concordia University and her BSc from the American University of Beirut, Lebanon. She has more than 20 years of combined experience in teaching and research, as well as in the software industry. She served at several computer science departments in Montreal and American universities in the Middle East including Université de Montréal, the American University of Beirut, the Lebanese American University and Fahad Bin Sultan University in Saudi Arabia. Her interests include software engineering, web applications, formal methods, and temporal logics.

Hadi Hemmati
Hadi Hemmati

Hadi Hemmati
Hadi Hemmati is an associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Lassonde School of Engineering. Previously, he was an associate professor in the electrical and software engineering department at the University of Calgary, Alta. In the past, he was also an assistant professor at the University of Manitoba, a postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Waterloo and at Queen’s University. He received his PhD from the University of Oslo, Norway. His main research interests are automated software engineering (with a focus on software testing, debugging and repair), and trustworthy Artificial Intelligence (AI), with a focus on robustness and explainability. His research has a strong focus on pragmatic software/ML solutions for large-scale systems and empirically investigating them in practice. He has been a principal investigator on multiple industry research projects in different domains such as IT, aviation, insurance, urban development, fintech and beyond.

Benard Isojeh
Benard Isojeh

Benard Isojeh
Benard Isojeh is a registered engineer within Ontario and has experience in numerical analyses and design of engineering structures such as dams and bridges. His areas of expertise include fatigue analysis, fracture mechanics, linear and nonlinear finite element analysis, bridges, and analysis and design of composite structures. Other areas of interest include constitutive modelling and numerical analyses of concrete undergoing time-dependent deterioration.

Isojeh completed his PhD at the University of Toronto in 2017. He was also the recipient of the Institution of Structural Engineers Andrew Beeby Prize in 2012 (UK).

Shahin Kamali
Shahin Kamali

Shahin Kamali
Shahin Kamali is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Lassonde School of Engineering. Kamali obtained his PhD in computer science from the University of Waterloo in 2014. He received his BSc from the University of Tehran and his MSc from Concordia University, both in computer science.

Kamali was a postdoctoral Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and an assistant professor at the University of Manitoba before taking up a faculty position at York.

Houshang Karimi
Houshang Karimi

Houshang Karimi
Houshang Karimi is a professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. He received BSc and MSc degrees from Isfahan University of Technology, Iran, in 1994 and 2000, respectively, and a PhD degree from the University of Toronto in 2007, all in electrical engineering.

He was a visiting researcher and a postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Toronto, from 2001-03 and from 2007-08, respectively. He was an assistant professor with the Department of Electrical Engineering at the Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran, from 2009-12. From June 2012 to January 2013, he was a visiting professor in the ePower lab of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Queen’s University. He was a faculty member of the Department of Electrical Engineering at Polytechnique Montreal, from 2013-22. In July 2022, he joined the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at York University where he is currently a professor. His research interests include power systems, control systems, microgrid control, and smart grid.

Karimi is a registered professional engineer in Quebec, a senior member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and an associate editor of the IEEE Systems Journal.

Kostas Kontogiannis
Kostas Kontogiannis

Kostas Kontogiannis
Kostas Kontogiannis is a newly appointed professor at Lassonde School of Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Kontogiannis received a BSc degree in mathematics from the University of Patras, Greece, a MSc degree in computer science from Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium, and a PhD degree in computer science from McGill University. Prior to joining York, he served as a tenured associate professor at the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of Waterloo, as a professor at the Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering at the National Technical University of Athens, and as a professor at Western University Department of Computer Science where he held a research chair in software engineering for cyber-physical systems.

Kontogiannis is working in the areas of software and system analytics, DevOps, cyber-physical systems, and model driven engineering. He is the author of more than 100 influential conference papers, journals, and book chapters in these areas. His work on software maintenance, system analysis, fault localization, software transformations and service computing has received over the years wide attention and citations. Kontogiannis has been the recipient of two patents with IBM, two most influential decade paper awards (WCRE/SANER, CASCON), three IBM University Partnership Awards and a Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) New Opportunities Award. He is a faculty Fellow at the IBM Center for Advanced Studies, IBM Toronto Laboratory, and a former visiting scientist at SEI, Carnegie Mellon University. Kontogiannis has been a member of the IEEE Distinguished Visitors Program and has served as a Steering Committee member, General Chair, Program Chair and Program Committee member, in a number of IEEE Software Engineering related conferences.

Sana Maqsood
Sana Maqsood

Sana Maqsood
Sana Maqsood is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. She received her BSc, MSc and PhD degrees in computer science from Carleton University in Ottawa. Prior to joining York, she was an instructor at Carleton University, teaching undergraduate courses in computer science and human-computer interaction (HCI).

Her research interests are in usable security – an intersection of security and HCI. She is interested in making computer security systems more usable and accessible for users and improving their understanding of these systems. She utilizes interactive technologies, such as games, to improve users’ understanding of computer security. Her recent game, A Day in the Life of the JOs, for improving tweens’ understanding of security and privacy, has been deployed to more than 300 Canadian elementary schools by the non-profit MediaSmarts.

Kiemute Oyibo
Kiemute Oyibo

Kiemute Oyibo
Kiemute Oyibo is an assistant professor of computer science with the Interactive Systems Research Group in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. He joined York University in the summer of 2022. He received his PhD in computer science from the University of Saskatchewan in 2020. He completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Waterloo from 2020-22. His research interests include persuasive design, personalization, user modelling, user experience and digital health. He has published more than 90 scientific papers in these areas, which have received more than 1000 citations on Google Scholar. 

His persuasive design of a culture-tailored fitness app won the gold award at the Human Computer Interaction International 2019 Student Design Competition in Florida. His research proposal on designing contact tracing apps as persuasive technologies was nominated for the 2022 national Banting Fellowship competition by the University of Waterloo. Oyibo’s long-term goal is to use personalization to tackle digital health inequities in high-, middle- and low-income countries. He is currently researching the utilization of machine learning techniques to personalize persuasive systems and bridge the digital divide in the health domain. When Oyibo is not working, he enjoys writing poetry and working out to keep fit physically and mentally.

Aditya Potukuchi
Aditya Potukuchi

Aditya Potukuchi
Aditya Potukuchi is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at York University. He obtained his PhD in 2020 from Rutgers University. After that, he was a postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science at the University of Illinois in Chicago hosted by the TRIPODS Institute for Foundations of Data Science during 2020-22.

His main area of research is theoretical computer science, especially combinatorial problems that arise in the context of algorithms, coding theory and the foundations of data science. Specifically, his focus is on applying methods from statistical physics and enumerative combinatorics to obtain phase transitions and algorithms for sampling and counting.

Meiying Qin
Meiying Qin

Meiying Qin
Meiying Qin is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Lassonde School of Engineering. Her teaching and research interests include robotics, human-robot interactions, animal-robot interactions, robot tutoring systems, AI, machine learning and computer science education. Qin is expected to receive her PhD in computer science from Yale University by the end of 2022 in the area of robotics. She received an MSc and MPhil in computer science from Yale University and a BSc in computer science and psychology from the University of Toronto. Originally from China, she received a BSc in biology from Peking University.

Rezieh Salahandish
Rezieh Salahandish

Razieh (Neda) Salahandish
Neda Salahandish is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Lassonde School of Engineering. Salahandish obtained her PhD in electrochemistry in 2018, with her doctoral research focused on the synthesis and fabrication of nano-structure-based biosensors for early-stage ultra-sensitive detection of breast cancer.

Prior to joining York, she was a postdoctoral Fellow (2019-22) at the University of Calgary, Department of Biomedical Engineering, developing in-vitro diagnostic (IVD) platforms for clinical early diagnosis of various disease biomarkers, including quantitative rapid detection of COVID-19. Currently an assistant professor at the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, she leads interdisciplinary research revolving around the development of miniaturized electrical and electrochemical sensors, integrated microfluidics systems, smart organ-on-chip platforms and wearable medical devices. As an entrepreneurially minded scholar, she co-founded Criticare Dx in 2018, a start-up company in the field of medical device development. She has also been an academic collaborator with a variety of early-stage ventures in the advanced sensing field, such as CardiAI Inc and Selective Lab, enthusiastically pursuing her translational research.

Lelah Seyyed-Kalantari
Lelah Seyyed-Kalantari

Laleh Seyyed-Kalantari
Laleh Seyyed-Kalantari is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Before this, she was an associate scientist at Lunenfeld Tanenbaum Research Institute in Toronto, Canada. With a PhD in electrical engineering from McMaster University (2017), she was also an NSERC postdoctoral Fellow at the Vector Institute and the University of Toronto (2019-22). Her research interests are responsible AI and developing AI diagnostic tools with a focus on their fairness. Her ultimate goal is to remove barriers toward the trustable deployment of AI diagnostic tools in clinics, such that they benefit the patients, provide fairness and reduce the workload of clinical staff. She has received a number of highly competitive national, provincial and institutional awards such as Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship (2022-declined), NSERC Postdoctoral Fellowship (2018), Research in Motion Ontario Graduate Scholarship (2015), Ontario Graduate Scholarship and Queen Elizabeth II Graduate Scholarship in Science and Technology (2014) and an Ontario Graduate Scholarship (2013), among others.

Jaroslaw Szlichta
Jaroslaw Szlichta

Jaroslaw (Jarek) Szlichta
Jarek Szlichta is an associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at York University. He is also a faculty Fellow at IBM Centre for Advanced Studies (CAS). Prior to this, he was a postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Toronto and an associate professor at Ontario Tech University. His research concerns various topics in data science with special interests in data management, large-scale data analysis, data systems, graph data, and machine learning to obtain trustworthy insights from data. He is a recipient of the CeBIT computer expo Business Award for the work on the OCEAN GenRap analytic reporting tool and the runner-up IBM Project of the Year Award for automatic tuning of the IBM Db2 system. His research grants are from both government (NSERC, MITACS and SOSCIP) and industry (IBM and AT&T). He received his PhD degree from York University while he spent a three-year student fellowship at IBM CAS (with the IBM Research Student of the Year Award).

Pooja Vashisth
Pooja Vashisth

Pooja Vashisth
Pooja Vashisth is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science. Prior to joining York, she worked as an assistant professor in the Department of Mathematical & Computational Sciences at the University of Toronto, Canada. She has diverse experience in teaching both introductory and advanced courses in computer science at well-known Canadian universities. She completed her PhD in 2014 at the University of Delhi, India. She holds three master’s degrees (MCA, MPhil, and MTech) in computer science. She has been an enthusiastic administrator, researcher and dedicated teacher. She has 20 years of enriched experience as an academician.

She was a faculty member in Delhi University Computer Science Department of SPM college from 2002-18. She led the department from 2014-18. She was awarded as the Best College Teacher by the Delhi state government in 2017-18 for her efforts in teaching, convening and research. Her areas of interest include recommender systems, machine learning, and computer science education research. She has published several research papers in reputed journals and conferences and has been serving as an editorial board member of reputed journals and conferences. In her personal time, she loves to be outdoors and enjoy nature walks.

Kai Zhuang
Kai Zhuang

Kai Zhuang
Kai Zhuang is an assistant professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science. Zhuang is an engineer, educator, comic artist and professor of engineering and computer science. Zhuang has a diverse background in systems engineering, environmental biology, computational modeling, leadership development and many forms of body and visual arts. Through his teaching and creative works, Zhuang aspires to help people think bigger, learn better, care more and do meaningful good in the world. You can learn more about Zhuang by visiting his website www.Kai-Zhuang.com.

Seven new professors join Faculty of Science ranks

This story is published in YFile’s New Faces Feature Issue 2022. Every September, YFile introduces and welcomes those joining the York University community, and those with new appointments.

Six new faculty members, Kohitij Kar, Allysa Lumley, Daniela Monaldi, Gloria Orchard, Kelly Ramsay, Sarah Rugheimer and Jennifer van Wijngaarden are joining the Faculty of Science.

“It is my pleasure to welcome our new faculty members to the Faculty of Science,” said Dean of Science Rui Wang. “Our Faculty is committed to fostering scientific discovery and tackling global challenges to create positive change in our world. By recruiting talented new researchers and teachers like these individuals, we are building science for the future and making York Science a great place to learn and be a researcher.”

Kohitij Kar
Kohitij Kar

Kohitij Kar
Kohitij Kar is an assistant professor at the Department of Biology in the Faculty of Science at York University. Kar is also a Canada Research Chair in Visual Neuroscience. Prior to this, Kar was a research scientist at the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT working in the lab of James DiCarlo. He completed his PhD in the Department of Behavioral and Neural Sciences at Rutgers University in New Jersey in 2015 before joining the DiCarlo Lab. Kar’s research lies at the intersection of neurophysiological investigations of visual intelligence in the non-human primates and artificial intelligent systems. His work has been published in top-tier neuroscience journals like Science, Nature Neuroscience, Neuron and in highly competitive machine learning conference like NeurIPS. Kar has also recently become a SFARI investigator after receiving a Simons Foundation grant to develop a non-human primate model of autism.

Allysa Lumley
Allysa Lumley

Allysa Lumley
Allysa Lumley joins the Faculty of Science as assistant professor (teaching stream) in the Department of Mathematics & Statistics. Lumley received her PhD from York University in 2019 in analytic number theory. She went on to do a post doc at the Centre des Recherches Mathematiques in Montreal. She is currently co-organizing a summer school in explicit number theory for mature undergraduates and beginning graduate students. After re-joining York as a teaching faculty, she has begun helping the student chapter for the Association for Women in Mathematics to offer a number of workshops for both graduate students and undergrads alike.

Kelly Ramsay
Kelly Ramsay

Kelly Ramsay
Kelly Ramsay was appointed as an assistant professor in July 2022. Ramsey recently completed her PhD in statistics at the University of Waterloo under the supervision of Professor Shoja Chenouri. During her time at Waterloo, her research was recognized with the Sprott Award. Her research is focused mainly on robust and nonparametric statistics. One of her main areas of interest are functional data. She is interested in how outliers affect inference for functional data and how we can quantify variability in functional data samples. Another main area of interest is differential privacy. She is currently interested in how robust statistics connects to differential privacy as well as the theoretical tradeoff between privacy and statistical accuracy. Some of her areas of application are medical imaging, finance, and speech recognition. In the past, she has also worked on data collection and web-scraping. Ramsey is excited to begin exploring these topics with students at York University. 

Daniela Monaldi
Daniela Monaldi

Daniela Monaldi
Daniela Monaldi holds a university degree in physics (Laurea in Fisica) from the University La Sapienza in Rome, Italy and worked as a junior researcher in a high-energy physics experiment at the HERA accelerator in Hamburg, Germany. Her PhD is in the history of science, with a focus on 20th-century physics, from the Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology at University of Toronto, Canada. She was a postdoctoral Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin, Germany. Monaldi taught history of science, science and technology studies, and natural science courses at York University for many years as a contract instructor, and was appointed as assistant professor in the Science & Technology Studies Department in 2022. Her most recent published works are on the evolving conceptual understanding of quantum statistics, and on the role of food traditions in the transition to sustainable food systems. Her current research is on Laura Chalk, the first woman to obtain a PhD in physics at McGill University and the first researcher to provide experimental evidence for Edwin Schrödinger’s wave mechanics.   

Gloria Orchard
Gloria Orchard

Gloria Orchard
Gloria Orchard joins the Department of Physics and Astronomy as an assistant professor. Her post-secondary education includes a BSc in applied physics at York University followed by an MSc at the University of Toronto in medical physics. During her PhD, also in medical physics, from McMaster University, she was awarded a Canada Graduate Scholarship from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC). Before returning to York University, she completed an NSERC postdoctoral fellowship and was a sessional instructor in the field of radiation science at Ontario Tech University (then the University of Ontario Institute of Technology). 

During her PhD and postdoctoral fellowships, Orchard’s main research interests were in microdosimetry and radiation detector development. Microdosimetry, an experimental technique, uses a Tissue Equivalent Proportional Counter (TEPC) to measure the energy deposition of ionizing radiation in microscopic tissue volumes. The design of this type of detector simulates microscopic tissue sites, such as single cells, and data collected is used to quantify DNA damage due to ionizing radiation. Her main research included designing and developing a thick gas electron multiplier TEPC for microdosimetry and an electron attachment spectrometer using a thick gas electron multiplier.

Following her postdoctoral studies, she joined the Department of Physics and Astronomy at York University as a laboratory technologist. In this role she was responsible for developing the undergraduate physics laboratories. As she continues her academic career, Orchard will continue to explore her interests in experimental physics, teaching physics and working in the laboratory.

 Sarah Rugheimer
 Sarah Rugheimer

Sarah Rugheimer
Associate Professor Sarah Rugheimer is the new Allan I. Carswell Chair for the Public Understanding of Astronomy in the Faculty of Science at York University. Rugheimer is an astrophysicist interested in understanding how to detect life on exoplanets by looking for atmospheric biosignatures (i.e., atmospheric evidence for past or present life). Previous to her post as the new Chair, she was a Glasstone Research Fellow and a Hugh Price Fellow at the University of Oxford. She received her PhD in astrophysics from Harvard University and completed a Simons Origins of Life Research Fellowship at the University of St. Andrews, U.K.

Rugheimer’s research interests are in modelling the atmosphere and climate of extrasolar planets with a particular focus on atmospheric biosignatures in Earth-like planets, as well as modelling early Earth conditions. Her interests include many topics in the field of astrobiology, such as the origin of life on Earth and the pursuit of detecting life on other planets and moons in the universe. She says she is excited to start a new exoplanet research group at York to pursue these interests and to share the joy of astronomy to new communities within Canada.

She has also been actively involved with public outreach. She is the author of Searching for Extraterrestrial Life, an astrobiology course for the public on Amazon Audible Originals. Her TED talk The Search for Microscopic Aliens has more than 1.6 million views on TED.com. She received the Barrie Jones Award and the BSA Rosalind Franklin Lectureship in 2019, as well as the Caroline Herschel Lectureship Prize in 2018. She has also appeared on NPR and BBC discussing her work on modelling the atmosphere and climate of extrasolar planets.

Additionally, Rugheimer is an advocate for women in science, hosting the podcast Self-care with Drs. Sarah with Professor Sarah Ballard (University of Florida). The podcast features wide-ranging conversations around navigating science culture and the importance of self-care for women scientists. Her other passions include dance and high-altitude mountaineering.

Jennifer van Wijngaarden
Jennifer van Wijngaarden

Jennifer van Wijngaarden
Jennifer van Wijngaarden is the new Chair of the Department of Chemistry. Van Wijngaarden joins York University from the University of Manitoba’s Department of Chemistry. Her research falls in the field of molecular spectroscopy with a focus on techniques in the microwave through infrared regions. Her research group uses modern spectroscopic and computational tools to model the energy landscape of molecules, such as short-lived species that drive chemical processes in the lab and beyond to the stars.

She received her Honours BSc from Western University and her PhD in physical chemistry from University of Alberta. She was a postdoctoral research Fellow at Universität Basel before joining Mount Holyoke College as a visiting assistant professor. In 2006, she joined University of Manitoba as an assistant professor. She is a highly regarded researcher, award-winning instructor, and active contributor to the Canadian chemistry community. She currently serves as board member of the Canadian Society for Chemistry, the Journal of Molecular Spectroscopy, and the Canadian Light Source.

Four professors join the Faculty of Health

Collage showing DNA, medicine and more

This story is published in YFile’s New Faces Feature Issue 2022. Every September, YFile introduces and welcomes those joining the York University community, and those with new appointments.

Four new faculty members, Donald V. Brown, Jr., Karen Campbell, Devin Phillips, and Sachil Singh are joining the Faculty of Health this fall.

“The Faculty of Health has added outstanding new faculty members that are aligned with the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals of good health and well-being, quality education, and reduced inequalities. Our new hires contribute to diversifying our faculty complement, advancing the quality of our academic programs, contributing to new program development, and advancing our goals for research intensification,” says Faculty of Health Interim Dean Susan Murtha.

Donald V. Brown, Jr.

Donald V. Brown, Jr.
Donald V. Brown, Jr. joins York University as an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology; specifically, the program in Historical, Theoretical, and Critical Studies of Psychology. Prior to coming to York, he engaged in research and graduate studies through the Critical Social/Personality and Environmental Psychology Program at The Graduate Center, City University of New York (CUNY). He also taught gender studies at John Jay College of Criminal Justice at CUNY.

Brown’s interdisciplinary research program integrates perspectives from critical theory, philosophy of science, and science and technology studies to better understand social identity-based scientific practices and knowledge production in psychological science. His current project investigates the creation, use and circulation of social identity categories in social psychology laboratories. Further, this work explores how identity-based knowledge is translated between scientific institutions and society by examining texts in which scientific inquiry shapes nonacademic social exchanges. Brown’s work has been funded by the CUNY Graduate Center and the National Science Foundation in the United States.

Karen Campbell

Karen Campbell
Karen Campbell joins the School of Nursing as an assistant professor. She recently completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Arthur Labatt Family School of Nursing, Western University, which focused on a nursing intervention to support women leaving situations of intimate partner violence. She received her PhD in nursing from McMaster University.

Her program of research is at the intersection of women’s health and physical and social geography. She is interested in how community health nursing intervention programs can improve health and quality of life for women experiencing health inequities across diverse settings, including rural communities and women with episodic disabilities. Her clinical background is in public health nursing. 

Devin Phillips

Devin Phillips
Devin Phillips joins the School of Kinesiology and Health Science as an assistant professor of applied cardiorespiratory physiology. He completed his graduate work in the Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation at the University of Alberta, followed by a postdoctoral fellowship in the Department of Medicine at Queen’s University.

His current research focuses on better understanding the mechanistic link between respiratory neuromechanical function, perceived breathlessness, and exercise performance in adults living with cardiorespiratory disease. His research is data driven and utilizes both invasive and non-invasive techniques to assess human cardiorespiratory and neuromuscular function during exercise.

At York University, Phillips’ research program will broaden to focus on healthy aging and biological sex-differences and their interrelationships with cardiorespiratory function and exercise performance. Additionally, his research will evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of novel treatments that can be used in conjunction with exercise training to reduce breathlessness and improve cardiorespiratory function, exercise performance, and quality of life, in patients living with cardiorespiratory disease.

Sachil Singh

Sachil Singh
Sachil Singh joins the School of Kinesiology & Health Science as an assistant professor of physical culture and health technologies in datafied societies. His main areas of focus are medical sociology, critical race studies and algorithmic inequality. The common thread in all his work is attention to the racial outcomes of digital sorting technologies, which has allowed him to research topics as varied as credit scoring in South Africa and health care in Canada.

His current research focuses on the unintended racial biases that influence patient care whether through health care practitioners’ personal biases, those embedded in health technologies, or both. Singh is also co-editor for the leading journal Big Data & Society with particular editorial interests in health, medicine, race and surveillance. Singh is an enthusiastic teacher and has taught nearly 5,000 students in the last five years. His main mode of instruction is to challenge students (and himself) to confront their own biases through his method of unsettling the conventional syllabus.

Canadian Writers in Person returns Sept. 20 

stack of books

If you love meeting talented writers and hearing them read from their published work, or just want to soak up a unique cultural experience, don’t miss the opportunity to attend the Canadian Writers in Person Lecture Series, which launches its 2022-23 season on Sept. 20

Canadian Writers in Person poster 2022-23

The series features 11 authors who will present their work and answer questions. Copies of all books can be found in the York University Bookstore or at a local bookseller. Canadian Writers in Person is a for-credit course for students. Readings are free and open to members of the public and members of the York community not enrolled in the course. 

All readings take place online via Zoom at 7 p.m. on select Tuesday evenings. 

The lineup consists of a unique selection of award-winning Canadian writers and nominees, who explore a broad range of topics, and a variety of geographical and cultural landscapes. Featuring seasoned and emerging poets and fiction writers, the series highlights Canada’s ever-growing literary talent. 

On, Sept. 20, Pulitzer prize-winning author Jack Wang kicks off the 2022-23 series with a reading from We Two Alone.  

Set on five continents and spanning nearly a century, We Two Alone traces the long arc and evolution of the Chinese immigrant experience. A young laundry boy risks his life to play organized hockey in Canada in the 1920s. A Canadian couple gets caught in the outbreak of violence in Shanghai during the Second Sino-Japanese War. The Consul-General of China attempts to save lives following Kristallnacht in Vienna. A family aspires to buy a home in South Africa during the rise of apartheid. An actor in New York struggles to keep his career alive while yearning to reconcile with his estranged wife. From the vulnerable and disenfranchised to the educated and elite, the characters in this extraordinary collection embody the diversity of the diaspora at key moments in history and in contemporary times.  

Wang has crafted deeply affecting stories that not only subvert expectations but contend with mortality and delicately draw out the intimacies and failings of love. 

Other presentations scheduled in this series are: 

Oct. 4: Sheung-King, You Are Eating an Orange, You Are Naked 
Oct. 25: Cheluchi Onyemelukwe-Onuobia, The Son of the House 
Nov. 8: Katherena Vermette, The Strangers 
Nov. 22: Pik-Shuen Fung, Ghost Forest 
Dec. 6: David Bradford, Dream of No One but Myself 

2023 

Jan. 17: Iain Reid, We Spread 
Jan. 31: Tolu Oloruntoba, Each One a Furnace 
Feb. 14: Casey Plett, A Dream of a Woman 
March 7: Liz Howard, Letters in a Bruised Cosmos 
March 21: Omar El Akkad, What Strange Paradise

Canadian Writers in Person is a course offered out of the Culture & Expression program in the Department of Humanities in York University’s Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies. 

A Zoom link will be made available a week before the reading. Additional information is available at yorku.ca/laps/huma/canadian-writers or by emailing Gail Vanstone gailv@yorku.ca 

L’Amicale francophone de York is recruiting

A person is using a computer

In the spring, l’Amicale francophone de York/York’s Francophone Friendship Association was created by a group of francophone faculty members. It is an informal academic network for researchers conducting projects in French at York University.

L’Amicale is a peer support group for members to share information on research opportunities in French, consolidate their research networks, and find support to advocate for a better research environment in French at York.

The creation of the Amicale is a response to some of the logistical and practical challenges to conducting research in French at York University, including the lack of visibility for new opportunities in French at the university level, fragmented networks and opportunities currently in place, and difficulties in conducting research or enhancing research impact in French.

Professor Gertrude Mianda, director of the Harriet Tubman Institute for Research on Africa and its Diasporas, says, “I’ve come to realize that there are several francophone faculty members at York outside of Glendon College, but the lack of a network contributes to their invisibility and impedes fruitful collaborations, which could bring to light York’s contribution to bilingualism.”

In response to these challenges, l’Amicale was conceived as a way to bring together researchers, faculty members and graduate students alike, who are interested in or are conducting research initiatives in French. It is meant to create a collegial community raising visibility and amplifying French scholarship at York University, as well as exploring connections to growing francophone academic networks in the Greater Toronto Area.

Professor Jean Michel Montsion, director of the Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies, explains, “there are great opportunities for any researchers interested in conducting research or connecting with the local francophone academic community, notably l’Association francophone pour le savoir (L’Afcas), which is celebrating its 100th anniversary in 2023 and has a new local chapter here in Toronto.”

Any faculty members or graduate students at York interested in being part of l’Amicale francophone de York is invited to do so by emailing robarts@yorku.ca