The reception to celebrate excellence, which took place on September 23, served to draw attention to the quality teaching and research work being done by about three dozen professors, all of whom either won prizes or were awarded chairs during the past year.
Deryn Elizabeth Fogg is one researcher who did not wait around before making her mark both at the University and in her field. Fogg, an associate professor in the Department of Chemistry, recently won the University's 2004 Young Researcher of the Year award. Known mostly for her work on the catalytic properties of ruthenium, Fogg has also received the Polanyi Prize, won a Premier's Research Excellence Award and obtained funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation.
During the course of the gala – an annual event for the last four years – attention was also drawn to the three holders of the first research chairs in Canadian Francophonie: Linda Cardinal, Joseph-Yvon Thériault and Lucie Hotte.
Cardinal, a professor at the School of Political Studies, is particularly interested in the situation of francophones in Ontario, and especially how people at the community level can participate in political and social change.
Thériault is a sociologist and the director of the Interdisciplinary Research Centre on Citizenship and Minorities, known by its French acronym, CIRCEM. His research chair has three components: Acadians and the francophone minorities of Canada; the question of identity in Quebec society; and Francophonie, globalization and small societies.
Hotte is a professor in the Department of Lettres françaises and a specialist in literary theory and Quebec and Franco-Ontarian literature of the 19th and 20th centuries.
Five other professors received University Research Chairs this year. These chairs, created in June 2002, provide these professors with $15,000 for five years. The new holders of these chairs are:
Honorees at the reception celebrating excellence in teaching and research (PDF document)
Three new research chairs on Canadian francophonie at the University of Ottawa
New University Research Chairs at uOttawa
Chemist is ‘catalyst’ for 2004 Young Researcher of the Year award