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    Exploring human dimensions and culture

    Exploring human dimensions and culture

    [Pascale Champagne and Kevin Deluzio receive awards]
    June 24, 2019

    Two faculty members from Queen’s Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science, Pascale Champagne (Civil Engineering) and Kevin Deluzio (Dean; Mechanical and Materials Engineering), were inducted as fellows of the Canadian Academy of Engineering at its annual general meeting in Quebec City on Friday, June 21.

    [Lindsay Morcom, Heather Aldersey and Anna Panchenko]
    June 18, 2019

    Three new Canada Research Chairs emphasize commitment to diversity and inclusivity.

    [Recipients of the 2019 Prizes for Excellence in Research]
    May 27, 2019

    During Spring Convocation 2019, Queen’s University bestowed its highest form of recognition for research excellence to five faculty members.

    [Queen's Principal and Vice-Chancellor, Daniel Woolf, and Minister of Science and Sport, Kirsty Duncan, sign the Dimensions EDI charter.]
    May 23, 2019

    Queen’s commits to the federal government’s Dimensions EDI program, championing equity, diversity, and inclusion across the research ecosystem.

    [Researchers examining fossils on Mistaken Point]
    November 1, 2017

    Mistaken Point, Newfoundland and Labrador, was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2016 – the first Precambrian fossil site to be given UNESCO status. Queen’s professor and Chief Scientist Dr. Guy Narbonne discusses the site's unique history and significance.

    [ Captives being rescued by boat ]
    November 1, 2016

    For Awet Weldemichael, an associate professor and Queen’s National Scholar in the Department of History, piracy was a chance to reveal the truth about a desperate people – and rediscover something about himself.

    [ Norman Vorano standing on shoreline ]
    November 1, 2016

    ֱ researcher Norman Vorano, Curator of Indigenous Art at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre and Queen’s National Scholar, is a leading figure in the study of Inuit art and its evolving political and cultural landscape in the Arctic.

    [Alice Vibert Douglas and colleagues at Yerkes Observatory, Chicago, 1925 (Queen's University Archives)]
    October 1, 2016

    One of the oldest universities in Canada, research at ֱ has left an indelible mark on the Canadian, and international, landscape of scholarly progress.

    Dr. Heather Jamieson samples soil near the Giant Mine in Yellowknife]
    October 1, 2016

    Queen’s made significant and successful efforts to attract women researchers to campus through the 1980s, including through such programs as the Queen’s National Scholar Program.

    [photo of student research from University Archives]
    October 1, 2016

    Today, with more than 120 programs, graduate and undergraduate education and research at Queen’s has spread to all corners of campus in all disciplines.

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