RSC College for New Scholars, Artists & Scientists
The College of New Scholars, Artists, and Scientists, a branch of the Royal Society of Canada (RSC), is Canada’s first national system of multidisciplinary recognition for the emerging generation of Canadian intellectual leadership. It gathers scholars, artists, and scientists who have demonstrated a high level of achievement in an early and highly productive stage of their careers into a collegium of their diverse intellectual, cultural, and social perspectives. The membership of the College is made to be representative of the current state of academia in terms of research methods and domains, age, gender, and ethno-cultural diversity. Membership terms are seven years.
2024
- Emma Duerden, Faculty of Education
2022
- Arghya Paul, Department of Chemical & Biochemical Engineering
2021
- Catherine Neish, Department of Earth Sciences
2020
- Jessica Grahn, Department of Psychology
2019
- Lauren Flynn, Department of Chemical & Biochemical Engineering
- Janice Forsyth, Department of Sociology
2018
- Beth Gillies, Department of Chemistry
- Elizabeth Greene, Department of Classical Studies
- William Turkel, Department of History
- Danielle Way, Department of Biology
2017
- Laura Huey, Department of Sociology
- Sharon Sliwinski, Faculty of Information & Media Studies
2016
- Anita Kothari, Health Studies
- Thy Phu, English and Writing Studies
- Rachel Birnbaum, School of Social Work, King's University College
2015
- Bipasha Baruah, Department of Women’s Studies and Feminist Research
- Antonio Calcagno, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, King’s University College at Western University
- Joanna Quinn, Department of Political Science, Centre for Transitional Justice & Post-Conflict Reconstruction
- Chantelle Richmond, Department of Geography
- Claudia Nadine Wathen, Faculty of Information and Media Studies
2014
- Daniel Ansari, Department of Psychology, Numerical Cognition Lab
- Isaac Luginaah, Department of Geography
- Valerie Oosterveld, Faculty of Law
- Robert Ventresca, Department of History, King’s University College