Recipients of the 2017 Killam Program are announced

Canada Council for the Arts,
02 May 2017, Canada

50 years of research impacting the lives of millions in Canada and abroad.

The Canada Council for the Arts announced today the winners and recipients of the 2017 Killam Prizes and Fellowships. Celebrating 50 years of research and innovation, this prestigious program recognizes working scientists, writers, doctors and researchers who have dedicated their careers to solving challenges in our daily lives. They risk, innovate and lead the next generation of brilliant minds to a stronger future.

Killam Prizes

The Killam Prize honors eminent Canadian scholars and scientists actively engaged in research, whether in industry, government agencies or universities. Winners are a vibrant group of scholars, whose lifetime of work has impacted the lives of Canadians and citizens around the world. Each will receive a $100,000 prize and be honoured at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on May 30th.

  • Social SciencesJohn Borrows, University of Victoria, is a scholar and lawyer specializing in Indigenous legal rights and comparative constitutional law. He is a strong supporter of incorporating Indigenous legal concepts into the practice of Canadian Law. Dr. Borrows is Anishinabe/Ojibway and a member of the Chippewa of the Nawash First Nation in Ontario, Canada.
  • Natural Sciences W. Ford Doolittle, Dalhousie University, is an evolutionary and molecular biologist integrating the philosophy of biology and genomic research on notions of the “tree of life” and Gaia Theory. His work in molecular genetics includes the study of lateral gene transfer, a key driver of microbial evolution and the proposition of an alternative “web of life” theory.
  • Humanities Tom Hurka, University of Toronto, is a philosopher whose research and teaching are about moral and political philosophy, especially normative ethical theory and asking the question “What makes a good life?” According to Dr. Hurka, the answer is pleasure, knowledge, achievement, virtue, and friendship.
  • Health SciencesJulio Montaner, University of British Columbia, is a physician and HIV/AIDS researcher credited for saving millions of lives worldwide with his bold work on Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy and championing the “Treatment as Prevention” Strategy. He is also a supporter of harm reduction, including safe injection sites and needle exchange programs and is currently working with the World Health Organization on prevention strategies for viral hepatitis.
  • EngineeringMolly Shoichet, University of Toronto, is a researcher whose work centers on tissue and polymer engineering, focusing on targeted drug delivery, tissue regeneration and stem cell research. She is a strong advocate of women in science and technology careers and is widely considered to be one of the world’s finest female scientists.

 

Killam Research Fellowships

Over two years, $840,000 will be awarded in Killam Research Fellowships, granting six scholars full teaching and administrative release so they may pursue independent research on a specific project.

  • Roberto Abraham, University of Toronto – Project: Probing the Low Surface Universe with Dragonfly
  • Deborah J Cook, McMaster University – Project: Modifying the Microbiome in Critical Illness: The Potential of Probiotics
  • Eric Helleiner, University of Waterloo – Project: Globalizing the Classical Foundations of International Political Economy
  • Dominic McIver Lopes, University of British Columbia – Project: Being for Beauty: Aesthetic Agency and Value
  • Louis Taillefer, Université de Sherbrooke – Project: High-temperature Superconductivity
  • Christine Wilson, McMaster University – Project: Dense Gas and Star Formation in Galaxies: An ALMA Archival Project

http://canadacouncil.ca/press/2017/04/recipients-of-the-2017-killam-program