‘Stay curious’ urges honorary degree recipient Anna Maria Tremonti

Hard work and curiosity are the keystones to a successful and fulfilling career, heard the graduands of York University’s School of the Arts, Media Performance and Design and Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies (LA&PS) during their convocation ceremony on Oct. 11.

Anna Maria Tremonti

The message was delivered in a speech by honorary degree recipient Anna Maria Tremonti, a celebrated Canadian journalist known for CBC’s Radio One show “The Current.”

Tremonti, the recipient of two Gemini Awards, an Outstanding Achievement Award from Women in Film and Television Toronto, and a Radio and Television News Directors Award, spoke to the graduating class about what might be next for them, and offered her advice on navigating the future.

“After all your hard work, you are opening to the door to more hard work,” she said to graduands. “It’s a tough job market for the new generation – but that doesn’t change what you’ve accomplished and whatever hopes and dreams you have today.”

From left: York President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton, Anna Maria Tremonti and York Chancellor Gregory Sorbara

Hang onto those dreams, she advised, and change them only for other hopes and dreams, and not for despair.

She emphasized that their first job won’t be their last, and their interests may change over time, and she shared a reminder that they are graduating because they made a proactive decision.

“You came here,” she said. “You are working at creating your own future, and your path going forward is something you get to determine.”

And along that path, she said, she hopes they never lose their curiosity.

“Somewhere along the way I discovered the thrill of following my own curiosity … and suddenly journalism began to matter in a different way,” she shared. She found the desire to learn about others and the curiosity to keep asking about it all.

Tremonti also spoke about the age of technology, and reminded graduands that it will continue to evolve during their future. We have never been so technologically enabled, she said, and yet much of the information that comes our way is ignored, or pushed away.

“It doesn’t go away, though, and it is the job of journalists to sort though it and find the truths … in the hopes that true information and informed truth will prevail,” she said. “That’s where you and I come in together – the more we ask about things … the more we expose the truth and the more we foster understanding.”

These elements are crucial today, during a very polarizing time, politically and socially.

“You may think I talk for a living, but what I really do is listen. I ask questions so that I can hear what people are thinking – everything they say teaches me something, teaches us all something,” she said. “The more we listen, the more we can think and hopefully the more we will find common ground.”

It’s your world too, she told graduands, and you have a say in how to fix the world’s problems – sometimes in small ways and sometimes in big ways.

“As you take what you learned here in a wider world, I would urge you to stay curious, and urge you to never stop talking or listening,” she said.

Five exceptional leaders to receive honorary degrees at York’s Fall Convocation

convocation york u

Five outstanding individuals who have devoted their lives and careers to the service of community, education, public service and business will receive honorary degrees from York University during the Fall 2018 Convocation ceremonies.

“Each of these individuals has proven themselves a remarkable leader, not only because of the ingenuity they have demonstrated in their chosen professional fields, but also because of their dedication to the communities they serve,” said York University President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda L. Lenton. “We look forward to celebrating their excellence, and we know they will inspire York’s newest graduates as they embrace their own roles as the leaders of tomorrow.”

York University’s Fall Convocation ceremonies will be held from Oct. 10 to 13. A full schedule can be found here.

Below are the recipients in order of the Faculty ceremonies at which they will be honoured:

Dr. Frances Shepherd, MD
Faculty of Health and Osgoode Hall Law School
Wednesday, Oct. 10, 10:30 a.m.

Dr. Frances Shepherd

Dr. Frances Shepherd is a respected medical oncologist recognized for her scientific research on lung cancer and her contributions to the design, development and conduct of clinical trials. Her landmark studies are noted for changing treatment and outcomes for patients with both small cell and non-small cell lung cancer at a global level.

She is currently a senior staff physician at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, where she has held the Scott Taylor Chair in Lung Cancer Research since 2001. She is also a full professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Toronto.

Shepherd has mentored more than 40 postdoctoral research Fellows from around the world, many of whom now hold senior academic positions of their own. She has authored or co-authored more than 500 peer-reviewed publications and 35 book chapters.

She is on the editorial board of several journals, including the Journal of Clinical Oncology, as well as on numerous lung cancer advisory boards and data and safety monitoring boards for international lung cancer trials.

Dame Moya Greene
Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies 1
Thursday, Oct. 11, 10:30 a.m.

Dame Moya Greene

Dame Moya Greene is one of Canada’s most influential and accomplished exports to the U.K. She has dedicated most of her life to public service and managing complex public and private organizations, mastering the daunting challenges that come with evolving business models.

She was appointed president and chief executive officer of Canada Post on May 12, 2005. In 2010, Greene was appointed chief executive officer of the U.K.’s Royal Mail. Greene was the first non-Briton and first woman to hold the post.

Greene has been the recipient of many personal awards in both Canada and the U.K. In 2003, she was named among the 100 most influential women in Canada by the National Post; in 2004, she was named one of the top 40 female corporate executives in Canada by Ivey Business School. In February 2013, BBC Radio 4 called her the 12th most powerful woman in Britain. Also in 2013, she received the Sunday Times Business Person of the Year Award. The following year saw Greene voted Business Person of the Year by the Financial Times. In 2015, she was ranked as one of the most powerful female CEOs in Europe, the Middle East and Africa in the Fortune 500. In 2018, Greene was named Business Leader of the Year by the Evening Standard. In June 2018, Greene was honoured by the Queen, who bestowed on her a damehood for services to the United Kingdom.

Anna Maria Tremonti
School of the Arts, Media Performance and Design and Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies 2

Thursday, Oct. 11, 3:30 p.m.

Journalist Anna Maria Tremonti

Journalist Anna Maria Tremonti is a familiar and engaging voice behind Canada’s most listened-to radio program, best known as a fearless interviewer who engages and informs on CBC’s Radio One show “The Current.”

Tremonti is dedicated to revealing the stories behind the headlines. Among her countless interviews have been those with Maher Arar, the Syrian-born Canadian whose detention as a political prisoner in Syria resulted in a public inquiry into Canada’s role in his deportation, and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai for which she was awarded a 2014 Gracie Award for Best Interview Program.

Tremonti has received two Gemini Awards, an Outstanding Achievement Award from Women in Film and Television Toronto, and a Radio and Television News Directors Award.

Tremonti was CBC’s foreign correspondent in Berlin, London, Jerusalem and Washington. She has covered pivotal historical events and conflicts, from the breakup of the Soviet Union to wars in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, and the efforts to impeach President Bill Clinton.

Colleen Johnston
Kellogg-Schulich Executive MBA
Friday, Oct. 12, 10 a.m.

Alumna Colleen Johnston

York University alumna and business executive Colleen Johnston has been praised by her peers for her visionary leadership in the emergent financial technology (fintech) space.

As chief financial officer from 2005-15, she helped guide TD through the financial crisis and played a key role in the bank’s growth and North American expansion. During her tenure as CFO, she built a world-class finance organization and developed an award-winning investor relations program. From 2015-18, Johnston was instrumental in reshaping TD’s technology capabilities and the digital and customer experience for the future.

After close to 14 years at TD, and a career that spans over 30 years, Johnston retired from TD Bank Group in April of 2018.

As Chair of TD’s Women In Leadership committee, Johnston championed the role of women and encouraged emerging leaders to gain the confidence to strive for and reach positions of increased responsibility.

As an active community member, promoting health and well-being, she chaired the boards of the Heart and Stroke Foundation, Bridgepoint Health and the ShareLife Corporate Campaign, she sits on the boards of St. Michael’s Hospital and the Shaw Festival, and she is a member of the Schulich School of Business Dean’s Advisory Council.

Thandika Mkandawire
Glendon
Saturday, Oct. 13, 2 p.m.

Professor Thandika Mkandawire

Professor Thandika Mkandawire is a noted economist and public intellectual who has published broadly on the social sciences. He is an expert and scholar on policy-making, transformation and democratization in Africa.

He is a former director of the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development and the first person to take on the new position of Chair in African Development at the London School of Economics.

Mkandawire was formerly director of the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa. He also served as senior research Fellow at the Centre for Development Research in Copenhagen and has taught at the Universities of Stockholm and Zimbabwe.

He has held the Olof Palme Professor for Peace with the Institute for Future Studies in Stockholm. He was born in Malawi and received his bachelor of arts and master of arts degrees in economics at Ohio State University.

Mkandawire has served on the board of the Social Science Research Council. He is also a member of the editorial boards of Africa DevelopmentAfrica Review of Books, Development and ChangeGlobal GovernanceJournal of Development StudiesJournal of Human Development, Oxford Development Studies and Feminist Economics.

Ceremonies on Wednesday and Thursday will take place at the Aviva Centre, 1 Shoreham Dr., Keele Campus. The Kellogg-Schulich Executive MBA ceremony on Friday will take place in the McEwen Auditorium, Seymour Schulich Building, also on the Keele Campus. The Glendon ceremony on Saturday will be held on the Glendon Campus, located at 2275 Bayview Ave.

Winters College Flea Market & Book Sale seeks donations of gently used items

This year, the Winters College Flea Market & Book Sale will take place from Oct. 16 to 19 in Room 012, Junior Common Room, Winters College. The sale will run from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day.

There are plenty of good buys to be found at the Winters College Flea Market & Book Sale

Organizers are accepting donations of a variety of items from now until Oct. 10. They are seeking gently used or new clothing items (cleaned and wearable, no socks or undergarments), small knick-knacks and decorative items, jewelry, comic books, records, frames, books in good condition and other resaleable items. Any unsold merchandise will be held by Winters College for future flea markets. Money raised will go towards the Winters College Life Fund, which helps students in desperate financial need and supports special student projects.

York University community members can drop off donations at the Office of the Head of Winters College, Room 121, Winters College.  Donations will be accepted between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. each day. Donations should be clean and in good condition, and appropriately boxed or bagged.

YCAR graduate students earn awards for research on Asia and Asian diaspora

The York Centre for Asian Research (YCAR) has awarded funding to 21 graduate students to support research on Asia and Asian diasporas.

The recipients were selected through a competitive application process and represent multiple disciplines and areas of research, including imperialism, environmental justice, immigrant and refugee experiences, art history, humanitarian aid, housing, disaster response, information technology and labour movements.

“Our graduate student awards serve as an acknowledgment of student accomplishments as well as an acknowledgment of what students need to continue doing the excellent work that they do in furthering research on Asia and Asian diasporas,” said YCAR Director Abidin Kusno (Faculty of Environmental Studies). “Graduate students are an important part of the YCAR research community and we aim to support their scholarly pursuits with the right institutional supports.”

Students use their awards to support a range of research activities, including fieldwork travel and language training. YCAR is pleased to introduce our award recipients to the York community:

Golaleh Pashmforoosh (Department of History, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies) was awarded the Nirvan Bhavan Graduate Fellowship to support her research examining Portuguese overseas expansion in the Indian Ocean, with an emphasis on the exchange and sale of enslaved peoples between South Asia and the East African coast. With the support of the fellowship, she will conduct research in the Historical Archives of Goa, India.

The recipient of the Albert C.W. Chan Foundation Award, Carly Thomas (Faculty of Environmental Studies) is conducting comparative research on sustainable choices amongst Canadian and Chinese students. Her research includes interviews and focus groups with students in southern China, near Guangzhou.

Sheila Htoo (Faculty of Environmental Studies) is the recipient of the inaugural Penny and John Van Esterik Award for Graduate Research on Southeast Asia. She takes a participatory approach to her research that focuses on the alternatives to dam development proposed by the Salween Peace Park initiative of the Indigenous Karen people in eastern Burma.

The recipient of the David Wurfel Award in Philippines Studies, Colleen Curran (Faculty of Environmental Studies) is researching disaster vulnerability and disaster risk in the Philippines.

Min Ah Park (Department of English, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies) received the Dr. Sangdeok Woo and Mrs. Kwisoon Lim Woo Memorial Graduate Award to support her research on community archives of Korean-Canadian diasporic literature in Canada and South Korea.

Andrew Gayed (Departments of Art History and Visual Culture, School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design) received the Young‐Rahn Woo Memorial Graduate Award for his work on international art fairs on the Asia-Africa border, in Arab regions and within Asia. His research investigates Asian, Middle Eastern and diasporic artists in North America who are creating political work surrounding queer identity.

This year, there were 10 recipients of the Vivienne Poy Asian Research Award, which assists graduate students with the costs of fieldwork in Asia: Katherine Cheng (Development Studies), Hazel Dizon (Geography), Chaya Ocampo Go (Geography), Lianrui Jia (Communication and Culture), Ayyaz Mallick (Environmental Studies), Jaspreet Ranauta (Environmental Studies), Aisha Siddika (Development Studies), Tasnuva Tanzim (Development Studies), Jie Wu (Communication and Culture) and Jing Xu (Humanities).

Cheng conducted fieldwork in Kathmandu this summer, collaborating with the Nepal Development Research Institute to document China’s health and humanitarian aid to Nepal. Dizon’s fieldwork will focus on the takeover of government-built housing occupied by the homeless and informal settlers in the Philippines. Go used her award to conduct fieldwork in the Philippines to map out the ecosystem of “disaster” NGOs and learn about the lives of disaster response workers. Jia is examining the political economy of Chinese internet development through fieldwork in Zhongguancun in Beijing – the “Silicon Valley” of China. Mallick is currently in Karachi for his fieldwork, studying trade union and labour movement archives, interviewing labour organizers and trade unionists, and conducting participatory observations with labourers across the “formal-informal” divide. Ranauta’s fieldwork in Punjab and British Columbia focuses on environmental justice in Punjab, community mobilizations and diasporic oral histories related to the Green Revolution. Siddika’s fieldwork is focusing on how the agricultural market in Bangladesh reflects and shapes gender relations, norms and practices, and how it impacts women’s land ownership and participation in agricultural production and marketing. Tanzim is studying the effects of information and communications technology (ICT) on rural development in Bangladesh. Wu is conducting his fieldwork with community activists at the Talimi Haq School in Howrah, India, to explore alternative radical pedagogy and creative practices of storytelling and participatory action research. Xu’s dissertation research examines how cultural memories of Russian, Japanese and Chinese legacies are incorporated into city development in Harbin, a city located in Northeast China.

YCAR also awarded five Language Awards to help students acquire language skills that will assist them in conducting their research: Katherine Cheng (Development Studies), David Cribb (Politics), Joseph Fiumara (Cinema and Media Studies), Jillian Fulton (Social Anthropology) and Elena Lopez (Human Geography). The Language Awards were created to help to fulfill the language requirement for the Graduate Diploma in Asian Studies.

Cheng is continuing her language training in Mandarin in support of her research on Chinese aid. Cribb is using his award to advance his Japanese language skills to complete field work for his master’s thesis on Japanese security, nationalism and constitutional change as they relate to the referendum in Japan on Article 9. Fiumara is also using his award for Japanese in support of his research on diverse representation, globalization and fair labour practices in the anime industry, with a focus on the anime studio Kyoto Animation. Fulton is continuing her Arabic studies. Fulton’s research examines the countercultural music scene nu-tarab, which fuses deep house and techno music with Middle Eastern instruments, and she used the award funds to support language studies this summer in Morocco. Lopez will improve on her Tagalog language skills to support her research on mobilization and organization of Filipino labour migrants.

The deadline for the 2018-19 competition for the YCAR Awards is Feb. 11, 2019. For more information about YCAR awards and recipients, visit ycar.apps01.yorku.ca/research-fellowships-awards.

AMPD scholarships are live, deadlines announced

handshake

During the 2017-18 academic year, students in York University’s School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design (AMPD) received more than $2.4 million in scholarships, awards and bursaries.

The vast majority of eligible students who apply do receive an award.

The process is simple. First, fill out the Student Financial Profile (SFP) on the Student Financial Services (SFS) website before the deadline of Oct. 15. (That profile can also qualify you for work/study jobs on campus.)

Then, you can apply for York-wide scholarships on the SFS website, plus others that are specifically for AMPD students. As long as your SFP is complete, the AMPD awards deadline is Sunday, Oct. 28 at midnight.

To learn more about how these awards help students, visit the AMPD website.

York researchers receive major award to develop the study of Korea

YCAR Korea research team
Back, left to right: Abidin Kusno, Ahrong Lee, Laam Hae, Ann H. Kim and Hyun Ok Park; front, left ot right: Theresa Hyun, Mihyon Jeon and Hong Kal. Absent from the photo is Thomas Klassen (imaget: Alex Felipe, YCAR)

York University has received a major award that will be used to establish an initiative to develop the study of Korea in Eastern Canada as well as globally. The Academy of Korean Studies will fund the $1.1-million project over five years.

The innovative and groundbreaking project, which encompasses education, research and institutional building activities, includes scholars at York University as well as at six other Canadian universities and two American institutions. Partners in the Korean-Canadian community in Toronto will also participate in the project.

YCAR Korea research team
Back, left to right: Abidin Kusno, Ahrong Lee, Laam Hae, Ann H. Kim and Hyun Ok Park. Front, left to right: Theresa Hyun, Mihyon Jeon and Hong Kal. Absent from the photo is Thomas Klassen (image: Alex Felipe, YCAR)

The project will develop educational and research opportunities for York undergraduate and graduate students, offer scholarships, create new degrees, introduce innovative curricula and initiate experiential learning programs and awards. Many of these activities and initiatives will be coordinated by a new Korean Office for Research and Education (KORE) at York, which will open during the Winter 2019 term of 2019. A full-time project coordinator, who will support KORE, will be located at the York Centre for Asian Research.

The project funds will enable York to bolster its teaching infrastructure and enhance its course offerings in Korean studies. With a greater diversity of programs, the University will become the prime destination for students, both undergraduate and graduate, who wish to study Korea and Korean diaspora. These students will have range of research opportunities in specific initiatives associated with KORE, as well as financial support.

Professor Hyun Ok Park of the Department of Sociology, Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies (LA&PS), is the project’s director, with Professor Mihyon Jeon (Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics, LA&PS) as deputy director.

“In Canada, York University has the second-highest concentration of Korean faculty and research activities after the University of Toronto,” said Park. “Ten faculty members with Korea-related research at York, including seven tenured faculty members, are appointed in diverse disciplines of humanities and social sciences. Building on this asset, we will embark on developing an innovative global approach to Korean studies and interrogating key debates across disciplinary and area studies boundaries.

“The project’s participants will lead five clusters: theory and method; Korean Canadian studies; transcultural pedagogy; translation and transformation; and resistance and transformative politics. All faculty and graduate and undergraduate students are welcome to join colloquium, workshops, and research and scholarship opportunities.”

Other York faculty members involved in the project are Laam Hae (Department of Politics, LA&PS), Theresa Hyun (Department of Humanities, LA&PS), Hong Kal (Visual Art and Art History, School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design), Ann H. Kim (Department of Sociology, LA&PS), Thomas R. Klassen (School of Public Policy and Administration, LA&PS) and Ahrong Lee (Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics, LA&PS).

The application for the funding was supported by Abidin Kusno (Faculty of Environmental Studies), director of YCAR.

More information on the project is available by emailing kore@yorku.ca.

Computational Arts Professor Doug Van Nort receives AMPD Teaching Award

Interim Dean Norma Sue Fisher-Stitt presents the Junior Teaching Award to Professor Doug Van Nort
Interim Dean Norma Sue Fisher-Stitt presents the Junior Teaching Award to Professor Doug Van Nort

York University Professor Doug Van Nort, Canada Research Chair in Digital Performance, was recognized with the School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design (AMPD) Junior Teaching Award by Interim Dean Norma Sue Fisher-Stitt on Sept. 20.

The award was presented at a reception in the Tribute Communities Recital Hall, and was given in recognition of his teaching contributions to the Digital Media program and the Departments of Music and Theatre.

Interim Dean Norma Sue Fisher-Stitt presents the Junior Teaching Award to Professor Doug Van Nort

Since joining York University in 2015, Van Nort has developed innovative courses exploring sound, performance and telematics. He has also played an important role in the development of the Digital Media Graduate program, which now offers a master of arts (MA) and a master of science (MSc), with a doctor of philosophy (PhD) coming in 2019.

The teaching award adjudication committee was impressed with Van Nort’s practice of integrating students into a range of research-creation projects. He does so in such a way that each student is provided with meaningful opportunities for learning, as well as artistic experimentation and development. His DisPerSion lab has attracted an impressive and vibrant community of students and many students have joined and continued as members of the Electro-Acoustic Orchestra.

Kieran Maraj, a former student of Van Nort, wrote that that his time working with and learning from Van Nort “has absolutely been the most engaging, challenging and intellectually satisfying experience of my post-secondary career thus far.”

Rory Hoy, another student who wrote a letter supporting Van Nort’s nomination, wrote, “Professor Van Nort’s classes have been the most challenging, but also the most rewarding of my university career. By forcing me to think critically about every decision along my creative process, working with him has opened pathways to future careers I had not previously considered, as well as honing my craft as a digital media creator.”

To learn more about Van Nort, visit his website.

Winters College Flea Market & Book Sale seeks donations of gently used items

This year, the Winters College Flea Market & Book Sale will take place from Oct. 16 to 19 in Room 012, Junior Common Room, Winters College. The sale will run from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day.

There are plenty of good buys to be found at the Winters College Flea Market & Book Sale

Organizers are accepting donations of a variety of items from now until Oct. 10. They are seeking gently used or new clothing items (cleaned and wearable, no socks or undergarments), small knick-knacks and decorative items, jewelry, comic books, records, frames, books in good condition and other resaleable items. Any unsold merchandise will be held by Winters College for future flea markets. Money raised will go towards the Winters College Life Fund, which helps students in desperate financial need and supports special student projects.

York University community members can drop off donations at the Office of the Head of Winters College, Room 121, Winters College.  Donations will be accepted between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. each day. Donations should be clean and in good condition, and appropriately boxed or bagged.

Five York University professors elected to the Royal Society of Canada

The Royal Society of Canada (RSC) has elected four York University professors to its ranks as Fellows, and one professor as a member of the RSC’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists.

The University’s newest members of the RSC are Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies (LA&PS) Professors Wenona Giles and Joan Judge, School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD) Professor Paul Sych, and Osgoode Hall Law School Professor David Vaver. Lassonde School of Engineering Professor John Moores has been named a member of the RSC’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists.

“York is delighted to see that Professors Wenona Giles, Joan Judge, Paul Sych and David Vaver have been recognized by the Royal Society of Canada, as Fellows; and Professor John Moores as a College Member,” said Robert Haché, vice-president Research & Innovation. “This reflects the fact that York is home to distinguished researchers and academics from all branches of academia who have made remarkable contributions in the arts, the humanities and the sciences, and Canadian public life.”

Academy of the Arts & Humanities

Division of Social Science

Wenona Giles

Wenona Giles, Department of Anthropology, LA&PS, has made significant contributions to the anthropologies of gendered migration, displacement and war. Her ground-breaking work on the gender relations of militarization and conflict, and her research and engaged scholarship on long-term forced migration ranks among the best in its field and has consistently helped to open doors to new scholarly explorations through synergistic laboratory like collaborations.

David Vaver

David Vaver, Osgoode Hall Law School, is one of the world’s preeminent scholars of intellectual property law. His pioneering work on “user rights” and the public interest has brought fairness and balance to Canada’s intellectual property system. The prolific author of many acclaimed books, edited collections, and peer-reviewed articles, his scholarship is relied on as persuasive authority by courts and lawmakers, while his teaching and mentorship have nurtured many leading minds in the field.

Division of Humanities

Joan Judge

Joan Judge, Department of History, LA&PS, has reshaped understanding of modern Chinese history through methodologically innovative studies in Chinese print culture, periodical studies and women’s history. Prominent among her publications are three books: Print and Politics: ‘Shibao’ and the Culture of Reform in Late Qing China; The Precious Raft of History: The Past, the West, and the Woman Question in China; and Republican Lens: Gender, Visuality, and Experience in the Early Chinese Periodical Press.

Division of Arts

Paul Sych

Paul Sych, Department of Design, AMPD, continues to create cutting-edge works in both digital and print that range across typography, branding and motion design, with a renowned career of graphic expression spanning three decades. His work has appeared in more than 130 books and publications worldwide. Since his appointment to the Department of Design, he has been celebrated with more than 100 international art direction, design and typography awards.

College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists

John Moores

John Moores, Department of Earth and Space Science & Engineering, Lassonde School of Engineering, is an internationally recognized planetary scientist and space engineer whose research explores the atmospheres and surfaces of other worlds. His research group has been a member of the science and operations teams of four ESA and NASA space missions to Mars and Titan and has been awarded the NASA group achievement award on 16 occasions. In this work, he has published 55 papers garnering more than 4,000 citations.

Eighty-nine new Fellows in the Academies of Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences, and Science have been elected by their peers for their outstanding scholarly, scientific and artistic achievement. Recognition by the RSC is the highest honour an individual can achieve in the Arts, Social Sciences and Sciences.

The RSC is also welcoming 52 new Members of the College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists, that includes top mid-career leaders in Canada. The college provides the RSC with a multigenerational capacity to help Canada and the world address major challenges and seize new opportunities including those identified in emerging fields.

“These exceptionally talented scholars, artists and scientists have made an outstanding mark in their fields, advancing knowledge and creating a positive impact on the world. We are thrilled to welcome them, knowing they will continue to work towards a better future for all of us based on deep knowledge and understanding of the past and present,” says RSC President Chad Gaffield.

The 2018 Fellows and Members will be welcomed into the RSC this November, in Halifax, during the RSC’s AGM, The Celebration of Excellence and Engagement. The presentation of RSC Medals and Awards, will also take place along with multiple opportunities to learn about and discuss the latest research results.

For more information, visit the RSC website.

New Faces: AMPD welcomes two new faculty members

Two new faculty members will join the School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design this fall: Manfred Becker and Mary Bunch.

“It’s exciting to welcome Manfred and Mary to the AMPD community,” said Norma Sue Fisher-Stitt, interim dean of the School of the Arts, Media, Performance and Design. “Their disciplinary rigour and teaching excellence will support our mission of preparing tomorrow’s creative pioneers whose skills and talent will shape the future.”

Manfred Becker
Manfred Becker
Manfred Becker

Manfred Becker joins the Department of Cinema and Media Arts as assistant professor with a full-time faculty position, and previously taught editing and story editing at York and Ryerson Universities, as well as Seneca and Humber Colleges. Since arriving in Toronto in 1983 from Germany, he has held many prestigious positions in film, beginning with the National Film Board (NFB). He was principal editor for Barna-Alper Productions for their non-fiction work, and has earned many producer and writer credits. He has edited feature-length documentaries for several Canadian filmmakers and his work has been screened internationally. Becker has several writing and directing credits for documentary work in television, and is the recipient of the Donald Brittain Gemeni for best social-political documentary in Canada. More recently, he has directed and written for the CBC, and also serves as an advisor, web documentary director and writer for the NFB interactive website.

Mary Bunch
Mary Bunch
Mary Bunch

Mary Bunch joins AMPD as assistant professor in the Department of Cinema and Media Arts, and affiliated with Theatre Studies and Vision: Science to Applications (VISTA). She earned her PhD in theory and criticism at Western University in 2011. Bunch’s teaching and research interests include interdisciplinary and collaborative critical disability, feminist, queer studies and critical theory, research creation and arts-based methodologies. She works at the intersection of the political imagination and its visual/sensory expressions. Her current project on “ecstatic freedom” engages theoretical, activist and arts epistemologies as these re-envision the forms that democratic participation, political belonging and justice take. She has published articles in the Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies; Feminist Theory; Culture, Theory and Critique; and the Canadian Journal of Human Rights. Previously, Bunch has taught at McGill University, the University of Toronto and Western University.