History Archives | Research & Innovation /research/category/history/ Thu, 30 Jan 2025 13:52:14 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Project offers first-hand narratives of those in slave trade /research/2017/05/08/project-offers-first-hand-narratives-of-those-in-slave-trade-2/ Mon, 08 May 2017 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2017/05/08/project-offers-first-hand-narratives-of-those-in-slave-trade-2/ SHADD Project led by Historian Paul Lovejoy provides rare glimpse into lives of those in the slave trade across four continents from 17th to 19th centuries.

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SHADD Project led by Historian Paul Lovejoy provides rare glimpse into lives of those in the slave trade across four continents from 17th to 19th centuries.
Sargeant Nicholas Said (Mohammed Ali Sa'id) c. 1863, Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston

Sargeant Nicholas Said (Mohammed Ali Sa’id) c. 1863, Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston

Researchers at 91ɫ’s SHADD Biographies Project are on the eve of unveiling a massive database that digs deep into the narrative of African slavery. The project, funded by the Social Sciences & Humanities Council of Canada (SSHRC) and named after Canadian abolitionist Mary Ann Shadd, is a comprehensive collaborative effort by historians to collect, transcribe and publish the autobiographical testimonies of West Africans from the era of the slave trade, spanning two centuries. In many cases, this information is not available anywhere else.

Available free to the public this summer, the project will provide original material alongside first-hand narratives − collected accounts of those who were born into slavery as well as those who were kidnapped and sold into slavery, uprooted from their families and forced into a trans-Atlantic move.

Paul Lovejoy

Project Director Paul Lovejoy, a Distinguished Research Professor at 91ɫ and formerly Canada Research Chair in African Diaspora History, joined forces with fellow Historian Sean Kelley from the University of Essex, United Kingdom, and began the project in 2013. With more than 30 books on African history and African diaspora history, Lovejoy’s contribution to this area of scholarship is vast, making him the ideal historian to undertake the project.

“We did this to prove that this history is recoverable and still relevant,” Lovejoy says. “We need to know what happened in the past so we can go on and have a much better future.”

“If we ignore racism, then we’re doomed to continue to live in a racist society that will continue to find ways to reinvent racism.” – Paul Lovejoy

Project offers verbatim voices of those enslaved

The SHADD Project is a massive undertaking by sheer numbers alone. In his seminal 1989 article, “The Impact of the Atlantic Slave Trade on Africa” in the Journal of African History 30, Lovejoy estimated that 11,863,000 slaves were shipped across the Atlantic from the 16th to the 19th centuries.

Diagram of a slave ship (1831), provided by The Atlantic Slave Trade and Slave Life in the Americas: A Visual Record http://www.slaveryimages.org/, compiled by Jerome Handler and Michael Tuite, and sponsored by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities.

Diagram of a slave ship (1831), provided by The Atlantic Slave Trade and Slave Life in the Americas: A Visual Record , compiled by Jerome Handler and Michael Tuite, and sponsored by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities.

Unlike other biography-based databases, the SHADD Project focuses only on individuals who were born in West Africa from the 17th to the 19th centuries, and the emphasis is on testimony – the genuine, verbatim voices of Africans, some translated from French, Portuguese and African languages. This also includes Arabic documents written by African Muslim slaves in diaspora living in Brazil, Jamaica and elsewhere.

“There’s no substitute for understanding the details of an individual’s life.” – Paul Lovejoy

How did researchers approach this massive task?

Lovejoy’s information-gathering methods were diverse. Some stories were found wholesale. Some were pieced together from historical records. Some information was gained from court records and emancipation papers.

When studying any kind of history and in particular the history of slavery or racism, Lovejoy emphasizes the value of a first-hand story: “There’s no substitute for understanding the details of an individual’s life,” Lovejoy underscores.

Muhammad Kaba Saghanughu (c. 1757-1845), Spice Grove, Jamaica. Kitab al-Salat (c. 1820)

Muhammad Kaba Saghanughu (c. 1757-1845), Spice Grove, Jamaica. Kitab al-Salat (c. 1820)

He also stresses that while slavery is usually seen as something that results in a person’s social death or something in which a people’s past is denied (through renaming) and effectively ignored, these records prove the contrary. “Despite this attempt to silence people and their past, we do know a lot about individuals in slavery, what they suffered during slavery,” says Lovejoy.

In his own words: Ofodobendo Wooma, renamed Andrew the Moor

For example, as a boy living on the west coast of Africa around Nigeria, Ofodobendo Wooma was enslaved. His remarkable story in chronicled in the SHADD project (abridged for the purpose of this article).

I, Andrew the Moor, was born in Iboland, in the unknown part of Africa. My name is Ofodobendo Wooma. My father died when I was about 8 years old, and my brother took me to live with him. He borrowed 2 goats from a man for 2 years and gave me to him as security. [That man] sold me to another after a year’s time. For a short time I was often bought and sold again, and came from one nation to another. […] I was taken into a vessel with a number of others whose language I did not understand. That made me very sad until I came across a girl from my region who comforted me very much. The first 3 or 4 days they gave me nothing to drink and nothing to eat except pork, which in my country it is forbidden to eat; whoever eats pork, the others hate and shun him as a very wicked man. We were brought to the coast of Guinea; the girl and I kept together there and awaited what was going to happen to us. […] One morning we were terribly frightened because we saw 2 white people coming toward us. We though sure they were devils who wanted to take us, because we had never before seen a white man and never in our lives heard that such men existed. One of them, the captain of a ship, signaled us that we should follow him, which we did with great apprehension and were brought to a ship. We were brought to Antigua where I was sold with some 30 others to a captain from N 91ɫ, who sold me in N 91ɫ [to a man] who named me 91ɫ. That was the year 1741, and at that time I was about 12 years old.

Need to learn from history, otherwise, it repeats

The goal of this database is to facilitate a new and deeper understanding of history. Lovejoy believes that we can’t just see slavery as a horrific crime against humanity that everyone wants to forget. “If we ignore and forget it, then we’re doomed to continue to live in a racist society that will continue to find ways to reinvent racism,” he explains.

This message seems particularly timely given today’s global political climate.

For more information, visit the and . To hear a related 2013 podcast, visit the . For media coverage, visit . The above-mentioned article by Lovejoy, “,” was published in the Journal of African History 30 (1989). The original source of the extracted SHADD story: Daniel B. Thorp, “Chattel with a Soul: The Autobiography of a Moravian Slave,” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 112:3 (July 1988), 447-451.

By Megan Mueller, manager, research communications, Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation, 91ɫ, muellerm@yorku.ca

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Two 91ɫ researchers receive Petro-Canada Young Innovators Awards /research/2013/08/27/two-york-researchers-receive-petro-canada-young-innovators-awards-2/ Tue, 27 Aug 2013 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2013/08/27/two-york-researchers-receive-petro-canada-young-innovators-awards-2/ Two 91ɫ researchers recently received Petro-Canada Young Innovator Awards.The awards program is a commitment by Petro-Canada and 91ɫ to encourage excellence in teaching and research that will enrich the learning environment and contribute to society. “Professors Jennifer Chen and Sean Kheraj are among the faces of the future of research at 91ɫ. As early […]

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Two 91ɫ researchers recently received Petro-Canada Young Innovator Awards.The awards program is a commitment by Petro-Canada and 91ɫ to encourage excellence in teaching and research that will enrich the learning environment and contribute to society.

“Professors Jennifer Chen and Sean Kheraj are among the faces of the future of research at 91ɫ. As early career researchers, they are being recognized for the excellence and promise of their research programs,” said Robert Haché, 91ɫ’s Vice-President Research & Innovation. “The funding provided by Petro-Canada and 91ɫ JenniferChenwill support these outstanding researchers in the building of their programs. The awards are most well-deserved.”

Jennifer Chen, a professor in the Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, studies nanomaterials for sensing and solar applications. Solar is poised to be an abundant clean-energy alternative that can be harvested to generate electricity and produce chemical fuels such as hydrogen. Currently, the adoption of solar processes for large-scale applications is hampered by low efficiency and high cost per energy density produced.

Chen will explore novel, innovative and cost-effective strategies for light management to boost the efficiency of solar processes by employing nanomaterials and structures that can slow light or localize electromagnetic fields. The SeanKherajPetro-Canada funding will support both fundamental and applied science aspects of her research program.

, a professor in the Department of History, Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, will explore the history of oil pipeline spills in Canada from the construction of the first interprovincial oil pipeline from Alberta in 1949 to the present. The study will assist in risk assessment for future oil pipeline development proposals and help to improve the current environmental assessment processes of the National Energy Board and other pipeline regulators in Canada. The data and insights provided by this study will have implications both for the historical understanding of pipelines, as well as the policies and practices with which they are managed by government and industry today.

In past years one award valued at $7,500 has been presented, but in consideration of the large number of excellent nominations received, this year’s adjudication committee recommended that two awards valued at $5,000 each be given. The awards provide support for new full-time faculty members who are at the beginning of their academic careers. Nominations are adjudicated by a panel consisting of the associate vice-president research and senior faculty members from various disciplines.

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Korea Speaker Series promotes discussion of emerging research /research/2012/11/26/korea-speaker-series-promotes-discussion-of-emerging-research-2/ Mon, 26 Nov 2012 10:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/11/26/korea-speaker-series-promotes-discussion-of-emerging-research-2/ There’s far more to Korea than kimch’i, Gangnam style, or the Kim family cult, says 91ɫ history Professor Janice Kim, organizer of the 2012-2013 YCAR Korea Speaker Series. The series is designed to introduce students and faculty to recently published and emerging research on North and South Korea and their relations with their Northeast Asian […]

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There’s far more to Korea than kimch’i, Gangnam style, or the Kim family cult, says 91ɫ history Professor Janice Kim, organizer of the 2012-2013 YCAR Korea Speaker Series.

The series is designed to introduce students and faculty to recently published and emerging research on North and South Korea and their relations with their Northeast Asian neighbours, such as China and Japan. Over the last decades, the number of Korean studies specialists at 91ɫ and in the Toronto area has grown exponentially from a few faculty members to a few dozen, says Kim. The series hopes to highlight this change and offer a forum for researchers, students and the local Korean-Canadian community.

The first year of the series will focus on 20th-century Korean history, with scholars speaking on imperialism, the Second World War, the Korean War, forced migration and the social issues associated with the formation of the DPRK and the ROK.

Takashi Fujitani will present the first lecture of the series Monday, Nov. 26 at 3pm at 280A 91ɫ Lanes, Keele campus. His talk, co-presented with the Department of History, examines “Reflections on Race for Empire: Koreans as Japanese and Japanese as Americans during World War II”. Fujitani is the Dr. David Chu Professor and Director in Asia Pacific Studies at the University of Toronto. He is the author of Splendid Monarchy: Power and Pageantry in Modern Japan (1998) and co-editor of Perilous Memories: The Asia Pacific War(s) (2001). His most recent book Race for Empire: Koreans as Japanese and Japanese as Americans during World War II (2011) will form the basis for this lecture.

Fujitani will reflect on his reinterpretation of nationalism, racism and wartime mobilization during the Asia-Pacific war. He uses parallel case studies of Koreans recruited or drafted into the Japanese military and of Japanese Americans mobilized to serve in the US Army, to examine how the US and Japanese empires struggled to manage racialized populations while waging total war. He demonstrates that the United States and Japan became increasingly alike over the course of the war, perhaps most tellingly in their common attempts to disavow racism even as they reproduced it in new ways and forms.

Kim will discuss her research on everyday life in Pusan as a refugee capital Feb. 7, 2013 when she delivers her talk, “Refuge, Relief, and Resettlement in the Temporary Capital Pusan, 1950-1953”. She will focus in on the most salient characteristics of wartime Pusan: overwhelming poverty, increasing marketization that was predominantly illegal or informal and its role as a US military base.

The final speaker in the series is Andre Schmid, a professor in the Department of East Asian Studies at the University of Toronto. His current research interests include the history of the cultural Cold War in post-Korean War peninsula, as well as early 20th century peasant movements. He is the author of Korea Between Empires, 1895-1919 (Columbia University Press), winner of the Association of Asian Studies John Whitney Hall award, and has published in journals such as Journal of Asian Studies, South Atlantic Quarterly and Yoksa munje yon'gu. In his talk, Schmid will examine the reconstruction of North Korea and the role of socialist living. The date of this talk in late March 2013 is to be confirmed.

The second year (2013-2014) of the series will concentrate on issues of labour, migration, mobility and cultural change experienced at the turn of the 21st century. The 91ɫ Centre for Asian Research (YCAR) hopes to turn the series into a larger project inviting international scholars by 2014, says Kim.

For more information about the YCAR Korea Speaker Series, contact the 91ɫ Centre for Asian Research at ycar@yorku.ca.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin to research stories on the research website.

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Researcher awarded prestigious Banting Fellowship comes to 91ɫ /research/2012/10/23/researcher-awarded-prestigious-banting-fellowship-comes-to-york-2/ Tue, 23 Oct 2012 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/10/23/researcher-awarded-prestigious-banting-fellowship-comes-to-york-2/ Nielson Bezerra, who received his PhD at Universidade Federal de Fluminense in Brazil in 2010 and now teaches at Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, has been awarded a prestigious Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship to pursue his research program at 91ɫ’s Harriet Tubman Institute. The awards were announced by Gary Goodyear, minister of state […]

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Nielson Bezerra, who received his PhD at Universidade Federal de Fluminense in Brazil in 2010 and now teaches at Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, has been awarded a prestigious Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship to pursue his research program at 91ɫ’s Harriet Tubman Institute.

The awards were announced by Gary Goodyear, minister of state for science & technology, Thursday, Sept. 13. Bezerra will receive $140,000 in research funding over two years.

Nielson Bezerra

Bezarra’s research project, Liberated African Slaves in Brazil in the Nineteenth Century, examines patterns of forced migration of enslaved Africans to the Americas after the British and North American abolition of the slave trade. The research focuses on the 100,000 enslaved Africans who were destined for Brazil, but were removed from slave ships by the British Royal Navy after 1820 and declared “Liberated Africans”.

The individuals taken off these ships provide a representative sample of the migration to Brazil in this period. They will be studied for the purposes of revealing the broader pattern in determining where people came from in Africa and what happened to them in the Americas. Bezerra has published four books and is a member of the Board of Directors of Museu Vivo do São Bento in Duque de Caxias.

"The Banting Postdoctoral Fellowships are Canada's most prestigious awards for postdoctoral researchers," said Goodyear. "These internationally competitive awards allow our country to retain and attract some of the best and brightest researchers in the world, thereby building Canada's economic and competitive edge."

91ɫ’s Vice-President Research & Innovation, Robert Haché, said, “We are most pleased to have Dr. Nielson Bezarra pursue his research program at 91ɫ. The Banting Fellowship program leverages an opportunity to attract, retain and recognize exceptional postdoctoral researchers and support them early in their careers.”

As a post-doctoral fellow at 91ɫ, Bezerra will be supervised by Professor Paul Lovejoy, Distinguished Research Professor, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Canada Research Chair in African Diaspora History and director of the Harriet Tubman Institute for Research on the Global Migrations of African Peoples. Bezerra joins a research team that is digitizing and analyzing documentation on Liberated Africans in Sierra Leone, Angola, Cuba, and elsewhere, besides Brazil.

The purpose of the Banting Postdoctoral Fellowships is to build world-class research capacity by recruiting top-tier Canadian and international postdoctoral researchers at an internationally competitive level of funding. Seventy fellowships are awarded yearly through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Natural Sciences & Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin to research stories on the research website.

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Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies launches new lecture series /research/2012/10/22/robarts-centre-for-canadian-studies-launches-new-lecture-series-2/ Mon, 22 Oct 2012 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/10/22/robarts-centre-for-canadian-studies-launches-new-lecture-series-2/ The Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies is launching a new series of Annual Robarts Lectures by distinguished Canadianists at 91ɫ. Professor Bettina Bradbury of history and women’s studies at Glendon and the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies will speak on Twists, Turning Points and Tall Shoulders: Studying Canada and Feminist Histories Wednesday, Oct. […]

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The Robarts Centre for Canadian Studies is launching a new series of Annual Robarts Lectures by distinguished Canadianists at 91ɫ.

Professor Bettina Bradbury of history and women’s studies at Glendon and the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies will speak on Twists, Turning Points and Tall Shoulders: Studying Canada and Feminist Histories Wednesday, Oct. 24, from 4 to 6pm in the Senate Chambers, ninth floor North Ross Building. Everyone is welcome to attend.

Bettina Bradbury

In this “intellectual biography”, Bradbury will reflect on her career in and contributions to the study of Canada. An award-winning historian of Québec and family history, she has served 91ɫ in various roles, including as chair of women’s studies and as director of the graduate program in history, among others. She recently received the Faculty of Graduate Studies Teaching Award.

The event is also a celebration of Canadianist research at 91ɫ featuring a first collective book launch for Canadian themed publications produced in 2011 and 2012 by members of the 91ɫ community. It is an opportunity for the Robarts Centre to highlight the breadth of Canadianist research at 91ɫ.

Anyone wishing to attend the event, should RSVP to robarts@yorku.ca.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin to research stories on the research website.

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The University recruits a new Canada Research Chair and gains a renewed Canada Research Chair /research/2012/10/19/the-university-gains-a-new-canada-research-chair-and-a-renewed-canada-research-chair-2/ Fri, 19 Oct 2012 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/10/19/the-university-gains-a-new-canada-research-chair-and-a-renewed-canada-research-chair-2/ 91ɫ welcomes the appointment of Christian Haas as its new Canada Research Chair (CRC) in Arctic Sea Ice Geophysics and the renewal of a CRC in the History of Modern China for Joshua Fogel. As Tier 1 CRCs, Haas and Fogel will each receive $1.4 million over seven years. The CRC is part of […]

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91ɫ welcomes the appointment of Christian Haas as its new Canada Research Chair (CRC) in Arctic Sea Ice Geophysics and the renewal of a CRC in the History of Modern China for Joshua Fogel.

As Tier 1 CRCs, Haas and Fogel will each receive $1.4 million over seven years. The CRC is part of a package of CRC appointments announced Oct. 12, by Gary Goodyear, minister of state (Science and Technology).

“Our government’s top priority is creating jobs, growth and long-term prosperity,” said Goodyear. “By investing in talented people through programs such as the Canada Research Chairs, our government is supporting cutting-edge research in Canadian post-secondary institutions. This fosters innovation by helping researchers bring their ideas to the marketplace, where they can touch the lives of Canadians.”

In all, the government announced an investment of $121.6 million to fund the appointment of 155 new and renewed Canada Research Chairs at 42 Canadian degree-granting post-secondary institutions.

“The appointment of Professor Christian Haas as Canada Research Chair in Arctic Sea Ice Geophysics and the renewal of Professor Joshua Fogel as Canada Research Chair in the History of Modern China recognizes the excellence of their research and provides them with opportunities to further develop their exceptional research programs,” said Robert Haché, vice-president research & innovation at 91ɫ. “Through the CRC program, 91ɫ continues to build on its research strengths and enhance opportunities for graduate training.”

Christian Haas

Haas, a professor of geophysics, in the Department of Earth & Space Science and Engineering in the Faculty of Science & Engineering, is examining the underlying reasons for the recent, rapid retreat of Arctic sea ice and the consequences for the Arctic climate system and ecosystem, for Northerners, and for better access to Arctic resources and shipping routes. His research also addresses the role of changes in winds and ice drift as well as of variations in atmospheric radiation and temperature and ocean salinity and temperature on ice thickness and areal coverage.

A thorough understanding of the reasons for the recent Arctic sea ice decline will help fuel predictions of future scenarios and identify links to possible human-induced causes for climate change.

Ice information obtained by Haas’ research utilizing airborne and ground-based field campaigns in the Arctic and Antarctic, satellite remote sensing and numerical modeling provides important information for safe and environmentally responsible resource exploration and extraction, as well as shipping and over-ice travel. His research contributes unique information on ice thickness, one of the most important sea ice properties for the design and regulation of offshore structures and ships, safe ice utilization and assessment of oil spill development.

Fogel, a professor in the Department of History in theFaculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies and member of 91ɫ’s Centre for Asian Research has been examining the dynamic cultural and political relations between China and Japan over the past two centuries.

Joshua Fogel

The history of modern China cannot be fully or properly understood, Fogel maintains, without examining the dynamic cultural, political, and economic interactions between China and Japan over the last two centuries. Fogel’s research focuses on this interaction and the importance of Japan in China’s modern development.

He is presently writing a comprehensive history of Chinese-Japanese relations from antiquity through the present as well as a more focused monograph on the history of the Japanese expatriate community in Shanghai (1862 to 1945). His work is premised on the fruitful assumption that the modern history of China is incomprehensible without a full consideration of modern Japanese history.

For more information, visit the website.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin to research stories on the research website.

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VPRI hosts external review of ORU landscape /research/2012/07/04/vpri-hosts-external-review-of-oru-landscape-2/ Wed, 04 Jul 2012 08:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2012/07/04/vpri-hosts-external-review-of-oru-landscape-2/ 91ɫ recently hosted an external review of the Organized Research Unit (ORU) landscape. The purpose of the review was to seek feedback on how to best position 91ɫ’s research centres and institutes for success, as they continue to strengthen and enhance their research profiles. “Building on the foundation of the University’s new ORU policy approved […]

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91ɫ recently hosted an external review of the Organized Research Unit (ORU) landscape. The purpose of the review was to seek feedback on how to best position 91ɫ’s research centres and institutes for success, as they continue to strengthen and enhance their research profiles.

“Building on the foundation of the University’s new ORU policy approved this spring in Senate, this external review will help provide guidance on how to best move forward and strategically position the University’s Organized Research Units for long-range success,” said Robert Haché, vice-president research and innovation. “Our goal is to build on national and international best practices to provide the best environment and supports possible to our research centres and institutes, as we work towards the continued growth and development of the University’s vibrant interdisciplinary research culture.”

Robert Haché

Recognizing the contribution that ORUs make towards building the University’s national and international reputation for leadership in research, reviewers were asked to address high level questions and provide recommendations for enhancements that would optimally position them for success.

External reviewers on this initiative included: Yvonne Lefebvre, vice-president research at Providence Healthcare and associate dean research in Faculty of Medicine at the University of British Columbia, Wayne McCready, director of the Calgary Institute for the Humanities at the University of Calgary, and George Pavlich, professor of law and sociology and associate vice-president research at the University of Alberta.

They conducted a site visit at 91ɫ on June 19 and 20 and met with members of the 91ɫ research community, including directors, faculty members, students and staff from the ORUs to solicit feedback and discuss the structure of the ORUs, the mechanisms that make them effective and identify areas for continuous improvement.

The external review committee is expected to provide comprehensive high-level recommendations in a report to be submitted by the end of the summer, which will be made available to the 91ɫ community.

To view bios of the members of the external review committee, click here.

Republished courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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