Four Indigenous scholars gauge progress in respecting culture, scholarship

Artwork by Métis (Otipemisiwak) artist Christi Belcourt

Feb. 10, 2020. On the seventh floor of York University’s Kaneff Tower, people are taking their seats. It’s lunchtime and the host of the upcoming workshop, Professor Deborah McGregor, has arranged for shawarmas and veggies.

Two posters, taped to the wall, read: “Wet’suwet’en Supporter Toolkit,” with a website address, and “TODAY Emergency Action 3 – 7pm Eglinton Park.”

Deborah McGregor

McGregor, Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Environmental Justice, has asked four youth and students to reflect upon the most prominent Indigenous environmental justice occurring in Canada today in panel titled “The Wet’suwet’en and the Canadian State.”

By the time McGregor rises to introduce the panel, the audience has swelled to more than 50 people.

McGregor is jointly appointed at Osgoode Hall Law School and the Faculty of Environmental Studies, but she believes that being outside these offices, with groups like this, is precisely where she needs to be. She seeks to help grassroots people voice their feelings and deliver their knowledge about Indigenous law and beliefs, especially as those laws and beliefs relate to non-Indigenous laws.

McGregor, who is Anishinaabe, sustains a dizzying schedule of speaking engagements. Over the past four years, she has given more than 160 presentations.

She and her team at the Indigenous Environmental Justice Project (IEJ) devote a huge amount of energy to creating opportunities for Indigenous people to speak and be heard.

“The knowledge is being generated from the Indigenous community. We’re trying to mobilize. They have something to say. They don’t have the same opportunities I have as an academic. So, we create tools (such as the IEJ website) and events to give them an opportunity to have that voice. My job…is to bring their voices forward for other people to try to understand and consider, and say, ‘Oh well, I’ve never thought about that before.’”

McGregor is part of a growing scholarly community at York focused on infusing the University with eons of Indigenous wisdom that were dismissed and discarded through colonization.

An important step in building this pan-university Indigenous programming came with York’s Indigenous Framework in 2017. “This makes an important contribution to our shared commitment to reconciliation and to fostering stronger connections and support for the Indigenous community at York and beyond,” said York University President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda Lenton, at the time of the launch.

The Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies has an Indigenous Studies program and the Faculty of Education now offers a BEd, Waaban Indigenous Teacher Education, with a focus on Indigenous worldviews. Faculty of Education Associate Professor Susan Dion was instrumental in developing the program. She is also heading a PhD cohort in Indigenous education.

Ruth Koleszar-Green

York’s Indigenous Framework also included the appointment of Professor Ruth Koleszar-Green as special advisor to the president on Indigenous initiatives.

Koleszar-Green, from the Mohawk Nation and a member of the Turtle Clan, is pleased with the progress York is making in the Indigenization of the University. “I’ve been here for six years. When I stepped into the role of co-Chair of the York Indigenous Council in 2015, we had six or seven Indigenous scholars. Now we’ve almost tripled that number.”

She believes fervently in the value of education and the research being conducted at York University. “The research being done by my Indigenous colleagues and non-Indigenous allies has been phenomenal. The research projects I’ve been privy to are about Indigenous communities advancing themselves, about Indigenous knowledge being central, they’re about how Indigenous artists are leading. […] We may not be able to change everything immediately, but we’re impacting the next generation.”

Koleszar-Green, in the School of Social Work, believes the most important quality of Indigenous research at York is that “it’s Indigenous-led. This work is not studies being done on Indigenous people, it’s Indigenous people having sovereignty and having conversations about who we are.”

Following on the Indigenous Framework, the Office of the Vice-President, Research & Innovation (VPRI), incorporated “Indigenous Futurities” as one of five priority research opportunities in its Strategic Research Plan (2018-2023).

As stated in the plan, “This acknowledges the power of research that embraces future potential and past reality as integral to sound contemporary work. In the coming years, Indigenous leadership in York’s research will creative a unique space to support contributions to Indigenous knowledges within and beyond the academy.”

In addition, VPRI has developed (in consultation with Koleszar-Green) and delivered a series of five workshops by staff for staff to help participants understand colonization and decolonization, and create opportunities to reflect on how their professional roles and practices might serve as barriers to Indigenous research and Indigenous researchers.

Portrait of Sheila Cote-Meek, York University's inaugural VP Equity
Shelia Cote-Meek

Another thought leader is Professor Sheila Cote-Meek, who joined York in 2019 as the University’s first vice-president, equity, people and culture. She is Anishnaabe from the Teme-Augama Anishnabai.

Cote-Meek is pleased with what she sees as progress in non-Indigenous Canadians understanding the culture, history and current challenges of First Nations, Métis and Inuit people. “Yes, we’ve moved to a better understanding. I wish I could say that includes everyone, but it doesn’t. In the university system, there’s a better understanding of the needs of Indigenous learners and scholars. But there are still a lot of preconceived ideas and stereotypes. We have to deconstruct those stereotypes.”

Cote-Meet’s book Colonized Classrooms: Racism, Trauma and Resistance in Post-Secondary Education was a seminal publication. “The book was published in 2014, but it’s still relevant in 2020. We’re making headway, but there’s still a lot of work to do to dismantle systemic barriers that exist.”

Professor Michael Greyeyes, in the School of Arts, Media Performance & Design, believes theatre can help to break those stereotypes. He is Plains Cree from the Muskeg Lake First Nation in Saskatchewan.

A graduate of the National Ballet School and Kent State University’s School of Theatre and Dance, Greyeyes has built a successful career in dance, film, television and theatre.

Michael Greyeyes. Credit: Jeremy Mimnaugh

But it was education, he says, that made a huge difference to his career. “By the time I reached my mid-career, I’d been performing, choreographing and directing. But I always felt a call to higher learning. So, in my 30s, I went back to get my master’s. I knew my work as a director and artist would be informed by research. What surprised me is that the research fed so directly into the elevation of my artistic work.”

He feels there’s a solid connection between his identity as an Indigenous person and his role as a scholar. “I have a privilege as a professor and a responsibility as an Indigenous voice. My focus as a researcher is how Indigenous ontologies reflect back on Canadian and international audiences, and how our work, our history, our physical bodies are absent from larger discourses.”

To that end, Greyeyes has been “an activist for expanding the theatrical canon to include Indigenous perspectives and voices.”

He notes that when he was graduate program director for the Masters of Fine Arts program, he lobbied for an entire season to be dedicated to Indigenous research. During that time, the York theatre department hired Yvette Nolan as the program’s first outside Indigenous director. Nolan wrote an adaptation of the classical Greek play by Aristophanes, The Birds.

“It’s important to know that Indigenous scholars, by our networks and our research focus, always invite the larger academic apparatus to include our voices in setting curricula and setting the table for subsequent discourse,” Greyeyes says.

He is also founder and artistic director of Toronto’s Signal Theatre, which has presented two Indigenous-language operas.

Does he think Canada is at a turning point in respecting Indigenous culture?

“We’re waiting for the turning point. I think a lot more people are woke and listening … But all you have to do is turn on the news and look at the raids on the west coast camps and think, ‘This is business as usual.’ Will there be outrage? There’s outrage in my community. Will that be shared?”

For more on McGregor, visit her faculty profile page or the IEJ Project website. To learn more about Cote-Meek, see the YFile story about her appointment. To know more about Koleszar-Green, visit her faculty profile page. For more on Greyeyes, visit his faculty profile page.

To learn more about Research & Innovation at York, follow us at @YUResearch; watch our new animated video, which profiles current research strengths and areas of opportunity, such as Artificial Intelligence and Indigenous futurities; and see the snapshot infographic, a glimpse of the year’s successes.

Paul Fraumeni is an award-winning freelance writer who has specialized in covering university research for more than 20 years. To learn more, visit his website. He is non-Indigenous.

Toughest global health challenges will be tackled by Distinguished Research Chair at York University

FEATURED Global Health

A new research chair at York University will tackle the toughest global health challenges by studying the impact that policies and laws have on health.

Steven Hoffman

York University Professor Steven J. Hoffman has been named inaugural holder of the Dahdaleh Distinguished Chair in Global Governance & Legal Epidemiology. Made possible by long-time York University donor Victor Phillip Dahdaleh, through his support of the Dahdaleh Institute for Global Health Research, it is the first endowed Chair in the world to focus on legal epidemiology.

This unique research Chair will bring scientific rigour and a social justice lens to seemingly intractable global health issues. Legal epidemiology uses a range of methods from epidemiology to study laws, policies and institutions, to improve health outcomes. The research Chair will provide flexible research funding and time to allow Hoffman to address the most pressing needs of the day, whether caused by a disease pandemic or misinformation being transmitted through social media.

Hoffman is appointed to the Faculty of Health, Osgoode Hall Law School and the Graduate Program in Political Science. He also leads York’s Global Strategy Lab, an interdisciplinary research platform that leverages the full range of social sciences to tackle global health challenges. The lab’s 20-person team advises the world’s governments and public health organizations on how to design laws, policies and institutions to address transnational health threats. The team focuses its efforts in three research program areas: global legal epidemiology; global governance of antimicrobial resistance; and public health institutions.

“We’re trying to work differently,” Hoffman explains. “Most global policymakers and diplomats think that the design of international laws and global governance structures is an art. We think this art is done best when informed by social science. We’re essentially trying to create a science focused on the design of institutions that can address the really tough global health challenges the world faces.”

“With Mr. Dahdaleh’s investment, the new Chair is a signal to the world that York University is fully behind Professor Hoffman in his fight for global health,” said Rhonda L. Lenton, president and vice-chancellor of York University. “Universities play a vital role in bringing together experts, government, business and community organizations to tackle complex global challenges that no single actor could address alone. Today’s appointment will allow Professor Hoffman to expand his important work and create a positive impact in the local and global communities we serve.”

Three recent examples of this work stand out:

  • Two articles by Hoffman’s team in the British Medical Journal (May 2019) detail an impact evaluation of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. The most rigorous impact evaluation of an international treaty ever conducted, it has created a new gold standard and elevated the science of treaty design in the process.
  • Hoffman conceived and developed a proposal for an international agreement on antimicrobial resistance, under active consideration by the United Nations and its 193 member states. This research continues through projects with colleagues at leading universities including Cambridge, Copenhagen, Harvard and Oxford.
  • Hoffman recently convened nearly all of the world’s public international law scholars who specialize in global health to achieve a juridical consensus on what countries may legally do to each other during infectious disease outbreaks. This consensus has proved extremely helpful during the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak and was summarized in The Lancet to guide countries’ decisions and hold those breaking international law accountable.

Hoffman’s work has addressed pressing health issues such as access to medicines, antimicrobial resistance, cannabis regulation, health misinformation, health worker shortages, pandemics and tobacco control.

“The sharp focus of the team on policy and social impact is key. The Chair will give us more flexibility to quickly shift our attention to where it’s urgently needed. Last year that was cannabis legalization. This year it’s COVID-19. Next year? Who knows. That’s part of the excitement, but it’s also why flexible resources like this endowed chair can have transformative effects,” said Hoffman. “I try to focus on the hard stuff.”

Considering copyright, collaboration and conflict at IP Osgoode Speaks Series

Osgoode Hall Law School’s Intellectual Property Law and Technology program (IP Osgoode) is welcoming Luke McDonagh – a senior lecturer at the City Law School of City, University of London – to York University as the latest presenter in the IP Osgoode Speaks Series. McDonagh’s talk, titled “Copyright and Collaboration in Works of Theatre,” will take place on March 2 beginning at 2:30 p.m. in Osgoode Hall Room 2003 at the Keele Campus.

Luke McDonagh
Luke McDonagh

Luke McDonagh undertakes research primarily in the areas of intellectual property and constitutional law, and has published in journals including The Modern Law Review, Journal of Law and Society and Civil Justice Quarterly. He is currently writing a monograph for Hart Publishing about copyright law and theatre.

In recent years, conflicts over authorship in theatre have become more prevalent, however only rarely have copyright cases involving works of theatre gone to court. There are a number of reasons why these disputes seldom result in formal litigation, which is explored over the course of this talk. In his presentation, McDonagh will examine how copyright law and authorship works in the context of theatre, including questions of joint authorship, infringement and moral rights. He will explore how playwriting occurs and its relationship with performance, evaluate empirical interview data conducted with actors, writers, directors and producers of theatre, and consider recommendations for legal reform.

Those wishing to attend this event are asked to RSVP. Additional details on this talk can be found on the event website. A calendar of events hosted by Osgoode Hall can be found on the school’s website.

Some of the past presenters of the IP Osgoode Speaks Series include copyright expert Abraham Drassinower and talk radio host Jerry Agar.

Feds seek Osgoode Environmental Justice & Sustainability Clinic’s help in Ring of Fire

In what is being described as “a stunning success,” Osgoode Hall Law School’s Environmental Justice and Sustainability Clinic has received word from the federal Minister of Environment and Climate Change that its request for a regional impact assessment for proposed mining and road infrastructure in Ontario’s Ring of Fire has been accepted.

Dayna Nadine Scott
Dayna Scott

Minister Jonathan Wilkinson granted the clinic’s request, with reasons, in a Feb. 10 letter addressed to clinic co-director, Professor Dayna Scott. He stated that the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada has been instructed to meet with the clinic in order to shape the terms of reference for the regional assessment.

The Ring of Fire is a large deposit of minerals, including nickel, copper, zinc, gold and most notably chromite, that has been discovered in the Far North of Ontario. It is in a remote part of the province, inhabited almost exclusively by Indigenous peoples.

The regional impact assessment will look at the mining and road proposals for the area and assess their cumulative impacts on Indigenous way of life, harvesting practices and jurisdiction, as well as climate change mitigation and fragmentation of the boreal forest.

“Building roads to the mine site could potentially threaten the integrity of one of the largest intact boreal forests remaining in the world, a globally significant wetland, and a massive carbon storehouse,” Scott said.  “It also could threaten the ways of life of Indigenous peoples who have been the stewards of those lands since time immemorial.”

Scott, who is the York Research Chair in Environmental Law & Justice in the Green Economy, described the government decision to conduct the Ring of Fire regional impact assessment as “a major accomplishment” for the Environmental Justice and Sustainability Clinic.

The clinic works to advance environmental justice and sustainability in Canada by carrying out a variety of legal work on a pro bono basis for a number of clients (individuals, communities, NGOs, municipalities, First Nations, social enterprises, etc.), often in cooperation with external public interest-oriented lawyers and legal service organizations. Students in the clinical program perform legal work supervised by experts in the field.

“One of the clinic’s projects for the year was to assist one of the remote First Nations in the region with work on the ongoing project-level environmental assessment,” Scott said. “In the course of that work, it became obvious that the interests at stake would be better protected through a regional assessment. Since the process for requesting a regional assessment is a novel part of the new federal legislation (the Impact Assessment Act), we weren’t sure how the request would be handled by the Minister.”

Scott said two students in clinic co-director Professor Estair Van Wagner’s Natural Resource class – Christie McLeod and Isaac Twinn – and three Environmental Justice and Sustainability Clinic students – Madhavi Gupta, Edith Barabash and Patrick McCaugherty – worked on research related to the file. McLeod, a clinic alumna from 2017-2018 and a JD/MES student, and Twinn also participated in the actual drafting of the request.

“What is most exciting for me in this stunning success for the clinic is the prospects for the federal Impact Assessment Agency to meaningfully partner with the Indigenous Governing Authorities in the region, so that they can resume the work of deliberating on the relative merits of competing visions for the future of their homelands,” Scott said.  “When that process broke down, and the process was reduced to those First Nations being merely ‘consulted on’ the proponents’ proposals, the prospects of a lasting resolution of the conflict had begun to fade.”

Passings: Peter Hogg, dean emeritus at Osgoode Hall Law School, dead at 80

Peter Hogg

Peter Wardell Hogg, dean emeritus and professor emeritus at Osgoode Hall Law School and one of Canada’s leading constitutional law scholars, died Feb. 4. He was 80 years old.

Hogg was appointed a professor of Law at Osgoode Hall Law School in 1970 and became dean in 1998, serving until 2003, when he joined the Toronto law firm Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP as a scholar in residence.

“He was a good friend and mentor to many current and former faculty members and students,” said Osgoode Hall Law School Dean Mary Condon in her letter to the community.

As scholar in residence at Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP, Hogg combined his scholarly and counsel work with rendering opinions and expert testimony in Canadian constitutional law cases, government liability and trusts. He was the author of Constitutional Law of Canada (Carswell, 4th ed., 1997), the most cited book in the history of the Supreme Court of Canada, and Liability of the Crown (Carswell, 3rd ed., 2000 with former Osgoode Hall Law School Dean Patrick J. Monahan), as well as other books and articles.  He appeared as counsel in constitutional law cases. Hogg was cited by the Supreme Court of Canada more than twice as much as any other author: Black and Richter, “Citation of Academic Authority by the Supreme Court of Canada, 1985-1990” (1993) 16 Dalhousie L.J. 377, 389.

Peter Hogg

Hogg held the following distinctions: Queen’s Counsel, Ontario, 1980; University Professor, York University, 1986; Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, 1988; Officer of the Order of Canada, 1991; Award for Legal Research and Law Reform, Can. Assn. of Law Teachers and Law Reform Commission of Canada, 1992; Mundell Medal for Letters and Law, Attorney General of Ontario, 1993; Law Society Medal, Law Society of Upper Canada, 1996; Teaching Excellence Award, Osgoode Hall Law School, 1996; LL.D. (Hon.), Law Society of Upper Canada, 2003; Ramon John Hnatyshyn Award for Law, CBA, 2003; Companion of the Order of Canada, 2003; and LL.D. (Hon.), York University, 2006.

Born March 12, 1939 in Lower Hutt, New Zealand, Hogg attended Nelson College, graduating in 1956. He earned his LLB from the University of New Zealand in 1962, his LLM from Harvard Law School in 1963, and his PhD from Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, in 1970.

Details about a memorial service are being finalized and will be communicated to the community once known.

Inclusion Day 2020 agenda promises thoughtful discussions, insightful opinions and more

Tuesday, Feb. 4 is Inclusion Day 2020.

A free, annual event, Inclusion Day is hosted by the Centre for Human Rights, Equity & Inclusion, the Law Commission of Ontario, RISE, Enable York and SexGen York. A light lunch will be served as part of the day’s proceedings. Students, faculty and staff who are interested in attending Inclusion Day events should submit their RSVP by clicking here.

Organizers have planned a full agenda of panels, information sessions and networking opportunities. The morning portion of Inclusion Day features a series of fascinating conversations exploring critical questions relating to the impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on human rights. These thought-provoking dialogues will be presented in a dynamic three-segment session and will address the following topics: What is AI? How is AI impacting York? What are the solutions to challenging outcomes? What can York do to respond?

This session will be facilitated by Ryan Fritsch, counsel with the Law Commission of Ontario, who will unpack these questions in conversation with AI thought-leaders Trevor Farrow(Osgoode Hall Law School), Ruth Urner (Lassonde School of Engineering), Insiya Essajee (Ontario Human Rights Commission) and Regina Rini (Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies), who will be sharing their perspectives and responding to audience questions and comments.

In the afternoon session, why not participate in a dialogue with RISE, Enable York and SexGen—York’s own race & inclusion, accessibility and sexuality-gender affairs committees—as they explore belonging through various initiatives.

Inclusion Day presents an opportunity for York University community members to engage in a conversation with committee members, learn more about their work and provide direct feedback on some of their progress.

RISE – An Introduction to RISE and Approaches to Belonging
Explore the history of this ground-breaking committee and learn more about their initiatives for the future, including the York Student Identity Census project and how it can support a sense of belonging among racialized and Indigenous students.

Enable – Launch of the Access Website and Community Engagement/Feedback Forum
Do you have a question about access, policies and spaces that support belonging at York? Do you have some ideas and want to have you voice heard? Give live feedback to members of Enable, who will be workshopping an access-oriented online interface that they have been developing for over a year.

SexGen –The Hows and Whys of They: Respecting Trans Pronouns
Do you have questions about how to use pronouns? Do you want to learn more about the history of pronouns and how that history is impacting appropriate approaches now? Do you need an opportunity to practice in real time and learn some useful skills you can employ day to day? Join the conversation and learn together!

To register, visit http://bit.ly/37J7UoO.

For more information about Inclusion Day, visit https://rights.info.yorku.ca/event/inclusion-day-2020/.

York launches a virtual assistant for undergraduate students

Student Virtual Assistant
Student Virtual Assistant

The following is a message to the York University community from Lisa Philipps, provost and vice-president academic, and Carol McAulay, vice-president finance and administration:

We are thrilled to announce that York has launched a virtual assistant as part of its commitment to enhancing student experience and developing a more student-centred approach.

What is it? The virtual assistant is an online tool accessed through Moodle (eClass for Glendon). It enables students to receive immediate answers to many of the most commonly asked questions related to campus services, course and program changes and extra-curricular activities. Students can pose questions in their own words and receive information that is tailored to their Faculty and program.

More than 100 students were involved in developing the new tool – a 24/7 virtual assistant that will be rolled out in stages. By March 2020, it will be available to undergraduate students in eight Faculties (School of Arts, Media, Performance & Design, Education, Environmental Studies, Glendon, Health, Lassonde School of Engineering, Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, Science). Plans are being made to incorporate students in the Schulich School of Business and Osgoode Hall Law School.

The virtual assistant will provide students with uninterrupted advising support that complements in-person advice by our staff. It will allow students to connect with a range of readily available information and resources, often specific to their studies, whenever they need it. It will also direct students to the right on-campus, in-person services for more sensitive or complex matters.

Some topics covered by the virtual assistant include:

  • academic advising referrals,
  • Registrarial & financial services,
  • campus life & events,
  • career advising information, and
  • mental health & well-being resources.

What’s next?

The virtual assistant is being launched Jan. 28 to students in AMPD, Glendon and Lassonde. Students in those Faculties will receive an email inviting them to log into the virtual assistant via Moodle (eClass for Glendon students). Detailed instructions and FAQs will help students become familiar with this new tool and a feedback form will allow students to engage with us. A contest to name the virtual assistant will also be launched, giving students an opportunity to be part of this exciting program and develop a sense of pride and ownership.

Student interaction with the virtual assistant is key to helping the tool continually evolve. The more questions students ask, the more the data is refined to deliver the best possible answers on a growing range of topics. Content experts and program staff will ensure that the virtual assistant provides increasingly detailed responses as time progresses.

York is proud to collaborate with IBM, an industry leader, to connect our students to the right people, resources and support to help them meet their goals.

Learn more about the virtual assistant and other transformational projects underway at the University on the Transformation York website. If you would like to see how the tool works, click here for a demonstration.

Look for another email close to the launch of the five other undergraduate Faculties in March.

Osgoode welcomes McMurtry Visiting Fellow Fathima Cader

Fatima Cader
Fatima Cader
Fatima Cader

Fathima Cader joins York University as Osgoode Hall Law School’s McMurtry Visiting Fellow. Cader is a Toronto-based litigator, with a focus on human rights, labour, and employment law, including anti-discrimination applications, union certifications, grievance arbitrations, workplace investigations and preventative training.

Having previously worked in the clinic bar and then at a downtown boutique, she recently opened her own firm. Her areas of practice now include prison law, with a particular interest in assisting female inmates.

Cader is joining Osgoode after spending the 2019 fall term as faculty at the City College of New York. She has also served as adjunct faculty at the University of Windsor’s Faculty of Law. She holds the 2012 Marlee G. Kline Essay Award from the University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Law for her research on R v NS, the first Supreme Court of Canada case to consider the rights of Muslim veil-wearing courtroom witnesses. Her critical essays, creative non-fiction, and poetry have appeared in The New Inquiry, Hazlitt, Apogee, Fader, and elsewhere. She is a board member of the Canadian Labour International Film Festival.

“As a McMurtry Fellow, Fathima will help strengthen bridges between the academy, bar and bench through her exploration of the relationship between law, art and critique in supporting grassroots social change,” said Osgoode Dean Mary Condon in announcing Cader’s arrival at the law school.

Year in Review 2019: Top headlines at York University, October to December

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2019 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for October to December 2019, as chosen by YFile editors.

October

Osgoode Professor Emeritus John McCamus co-recipient of 2019 Justice Medal
The Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice (CIAJ) has announced its Justice Medal Award will be jointly awarded to Osgoode Hall Law School Professor Emeritus John McCamus and Patrick J. LeSage, former chief justice of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice.

York University vision scientists disprove 60-year-old perception theory
Vision researchers at York University have disproved a long-standing theory of how the human vision system processes images, using computational models and human experiments.

New Joan and Martin Goldfarb Art Gallery will help others find their passions through art
For Joan and Martin Goldfarb, art has always been a major passion and a significant part of their lives. Now they are on a mission to help others find their own passion through art by contributing $5 million to build a new art gallery on Keele Campus.

Chris Caputo

York chemistry professor receives Petro-Canada Young Innovator Award
Chemistry Professor and Tier II Canada Research Chair Chris Caputo in the Faculty of Science has received the 2019 Petro-Canada Young Innovator Award. The award is presented to outstanding early-career faculty members at York University and is a commitment by Petro-Canada (now Suncor Energy Inc.) and the University to encourage excellence in teaching and research that will enrich the learning environment and contribute to society.

November

‘The Economist’ ranks the Schulich School of Business No. 1 in Canada
The Economist magazine has ranked the MBA program at York University’s Schulich School of Business No. 1 in Canada in the magazine’s annual survey of the world’s top 100 MBA programs.

Writer and scholar Jesse Thistle headlines 2019 Kitty Lundy Memorial Lecture
The 2019 Kitty Lundy Memorial Lecture will be presented by best-selling author and scholar Jesse Thistle, author of the memoir From the Ashes: My Story of Being Métis, Homeless, and Finding My Way (2019). Thistle’s talk will be followed by a discussion with panellists Shane Belcourt, ShoShona Kish and Jesse Wente.

Janke receiving the award from Russ Jackson

Lions football player Jacob Janke wins U SPORTS Russ Jackson Award, named all-Canadian
York University Lions football player Jacob Janke was named the recipient of the U SPORTS Russ Jackson Award on Nov. 21 as the national award winners and all-Canadians were celebrated at the annual Vanier Cup gala. Janke is the first-ever York recipient of the national award.

York U researchers play major role in advancing autonomous rail travel
Professor Gunho Sohn from the Department of Earth and Space Science and Engineering in the Lassonde School of Engineering is playing a major role in advancing autonomous transportation through a cutting-edge autonomous train research project.

December

The Art Gallery of York University wins major awards and accolades from OAAG
The Art Gallery of York University (AGYU) swept the 2019 Ontario Association of Art Galleries (OAAG) Awards of Excellence, and took home seven awards out of the 25 awards presented, including a special accolade for Interim Director/Curator of the AGYU, Emelie Chhangur, who received the OAAG’s inaugural Changemaker Award.

From left: Collette Murray with the President of Mod Developments, Noorez Lalani and Toronto Arts Foundation Director & CEO, Claire Hopkinson

MEd student Collette Murray wins Neighbourhood Arts Network Community Arts Award
Faculty of Education master’s student Collette Murray was awarded the 2019 Community Arts Award by Toronto Arts Foundation’s Neighbourhood Arts Network. The $10,000 award, sponsored by MOD Developments, was presented to Murray recently at a reception at the Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery.

Introducing the 2019-20 cohort of York University President’s Ambassadors
York University has announced the students selected to participate in the second cohort of the President’s Ambassador Program. This diverse group of multi-talented undergraduate and graduate students are engaged York community members who will share their commitment for the University through various institutional events and initiatives.

Research on cloud computing earns award 10 years after publication
Professor Marin Litoiu, from York’s Lassonde School of Engineering, along with an interdisciplinary group of colleagues, have received the Most Influential Paper award for research on cloud computing that was published 10 years ago.

This concludes the Year in Review 2019 edition.

Year in Review 2019: Top headlines at York University, July to September

As a new year emerges, YFile takes a look back on 2019 to share with readers a snapshot of the year’s highlights. “Year in Review” will run as a four-part series and will feature a random selection of top news stories published in YFile. Here are the stories and highlights for July to September 2019, as chosen by YFile editors.

July

Glendon Co-Principal Dominique Scheffel-Dunand

Glendon awarded funding to expand French-language health-care education
The federal government, through the Consortium national de formation en santé (CNFS), announced new funding of $1 million over five years to York University’s bilingual campus, Glendon, to improve training in French-language health services.

Research institution at Osgoode to study long-term impacts of access to legal help
The Canadian Forum on Civil Justice (CFCJ), a not-for-profit organization at York University’s Osgoode Hall Law School and a recognized leader in civil and family justice research in Canada, received a grant from the Law Foundation of Ontario to begin a study of the long-term impacts of access to legal help to resolve disputes.

Innovative, pan-University capstone classroom launches in September
A new, full-year capstone course was announced to begin pilot testing in the fall at York University. C4: The Cross-Campus Capstone Classroom brings together third- and fourth-year students from different faculties into multidisciplinary teams focused on solving pressing, real-world challenges posed by organizations operating in both the for-profit and not-for-profit worlds.

Jupiter

Lassonde postdoctoral researcher selected to join NASA mission to Jupiter
NASA selected Christina L. Smith, a postdoctoral researcher at York University’s Lassonde School of Engineering, to be a participating scientist on NASA’s Juno Mission to Jupiter. Juno’s principal goal is to understand the origin and evolution of Jupiter. Smith has a deep interest in the dynamics of clouds of other planets based upon her past work observing the atmosphere of Mars with the Curiosity rover.

August

New funding for Indigenous-led initiative to help equip youth with skills training
The Indigenous Friends Association, an initiative designed by York University students to connect and support Indigenous youth, will receive funding of more than $350,000 from the Government of Canada under the Canada Service Corps program.

York University professor first Canadian to receive Bibliographical Society Gold Medal
York University Professor James Carley has been awarded the Gold Medal by the Bibliographical Society, a U.K.-based organization that describes itself as the “senior learned society dealing with the study of the book and its history.” Carley is a Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus in the Department of English, Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies (LA&PS).

Aerial view of the telescope being installed

Installation of new telescope expected to be largest at a Canadian university
York University is now home to a new one-metre custom telescope that will enhance hands-on learning experiences and undergraduate research opportunities for the York community and beyond. Installed at the Allan I. Carswell Observatory on Aug. 16, the telescope is expected to be the largest situated on a university campus in Canada.

Lassonde launches the Helen Carswell STEAM Program for Women
The Lassonde School of Engineering welcomed 30 female high-school students to participate in a four-week program of paid research opportunities doing meaningful work in science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics (STEAM).

September

Just how big is a proton? York scientists help resolve decade-old puzzle
York University researchers have made a precise measurement of the size of the proton – a crucial step towards solving a mystery that has preoccupied scientists around the world for the past decade.

York University President and Vice-Chancellor Rhonda Lenton with Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell

Professor Emeritus Allan Carswell’s gift to accelerate research in dementia care at York University
On Sept. 17, in honour of Helen Carswell and World Alzheimer’s Month, York University and the Alzheimer Society of York Region announced a joint $2.26-million partnership to research Alzheimer’s and dementia care programs. Funded by the Carswell Family Foundation, this gift will be used to advance research into the efficacy of dementia day programs, respite services and various models of care as well as the benefits of integrating support for caregivers into the programming.

Theatre Professor Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston wins two prestigious awards
York University theatre Professor Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston was recently honoured with two prestigious awards for her research – one from the Canadian Association for Theatre Research and one from the American Anthropological Association.

York University takes academic program to Markham with new space at IBM Canada
York University continued to expand its footprint in Markham, Ont., by offering academic programming for the first time at IBM Canada’s headquarters. The classes provide York University students the opportunity to benefit from a high-profile and dynamic environment where they can learn among academics, small and large businesses, entrepreneurs, startups and developers.

Check back in the next edition of YFile for Year in Review 2019: Top headlines at York University, October to December.