These four 山ǿ students are Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Scholars
Four University of Toronto doctoral students have been awarded the prestigious Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation scholarship – marking the first time the foundation has named four award winners from a single institution.
A total of 14 students were named scholars this year – including four 山ǿ alumni: Wendell Adjetey; Ayden Schiem; Rebecca Sutton and Aaron Mills. Schiem holds a BA in sociology from 山ǿ and is a graduate of the University's Transitional Year Program. He plans to study the impact of social exclusion on transgender Ontarians. Now a PhD student at Yale University, Adjetey completed his BA and MA at 山ǿ. He plans to study how cross-border migrations in Great Lakes cities enabled Black people to effect political change in both Canada and the United States.
Sutton and Mills are both Faculty of Law alumni. Sutton, currently completing her articles as a clerk at the Ontario Court of Appeal, plans to study "the international community’s response to armed conflict today through the new lens of law, war, and aid combined" as a doctoral student at the London School of Economics. Mills, a PhD student at the University of Victoria, is a Bear Clan Anishinaabe from Couchiching First Nation, Treaty 3 Territory, and from North Bay, Ontario, Robinson-Huron Treaty territory. A member of the board of directors of the Indigenous Bar Association, he is "examining the Anishnaabe legal tradition and how a revival of Indigenous legal orders will help Canadians to better understand Aboriginal issues." (.)
The Trudeau scholarship – regarded as the most prestigious doctoral award for the social sciences and humanities in Canada – supports doctoral students who are committed to solving issues of critical importance to Canada and the world.
In addition to an annual grant of up to $60,000 over three years, the scholars will also benefit from the expertise of the foundation’s fellows and mentors.
The 山ǿ students named 2014 Trudeau scholars are:
- Geoffrey Cameron (Political Science): Cameron is studying the influence of religious communities on the development of international refugee policies in North America. Before coming to 山ǿ, Cameron conducted field work in Ghana and Nigeria to study the countries’ national human rights institutions. He also co-authored an award-winning book on migration, which was named by The Economist as one of the best books in politics and current affairs in 2011. “I think the main purpose of research is to generate knowledge and help us to understand our society, so that we can work more effectively to improve it,” he said.
- Tammara Soma (Geography and Planning): Soma is studying the factors that influence food consumption, food wasting in urban Indonesia, as well as ways to end food waste in landfills. Raised in Indonesia, Soma witnessed firsthand how rapid urbanization often fails to consider food sustainability. “Food waste research is fascinating,” she said. “It lies within the intersection of culture and structure. By understanding how each of the variables influences the others, planners can make better decisions to help prevent food waste.”
- Joanna Langille (Law): Langille is examining the legitimacy of courts of law applying foreign private law in contractual and property disputes, as well as family-law matters that are related to multiple jurisdictions. Langille is a lawyer and a scholar of international law and legal theory. During the 2013-2014 academic year, she was a visiting researcher at Yale Law School and a Global Justice Fellow at the Munk School of Global Affairs. Next fall, she will be a Furman Academic Fellow at New York University’s School of Law.
- Nathan Lemphers (Comparative Politics): Lemphers is seeking to apply to Canada Norway’s experience of decreasing its domestic carbon emissions while continuing fossil fuel extraction. Prior to his doctoral studies at 山ǿ, Lemphers spent four years as a senior policy analyst at the Pembina Institute, a Canadian environmental and energy policy thinktank. There, he worked on policy issues related to oilsands and pipeline development – one of the highest-profile public policy areas in the country. He has also worked as a biologist in the Yukon, Alberta and France, as an environmental educator and youth mentor.
“These four extraordinary students exemplify the dynamic and important research being conducted at the university,” said Professor Peter Lewis, associate vice-president (research). “On behalf of the University of Toronto, I congratulate them on this prestigious honour. We are also grateful to the Trudeau Foundation for this important investment in the next generation of scholars.”
.