Kaitlyn Cramb, 2020

Parkinson’s Disease, is the most common movement disorder, affecting ten million persons worldwide, including 100,000 Canadians. It results from the degeneration of a specific cell type in a specific region of the brain. Kaitlyn Cramb’s thesis for her Oxford DPhil at...

Martin Crevier, 2020

Martin Crevier is a PhD student in History at Cambridge University whose objective is to work as a historian of Canada and the world, with a specific focus on Canada’s place within the British Empire. His dissertation, titled ‘Settling In: Museums, Sensibility and...

Colin Goad, 2020

Colin Goad comes from Toronto. He is an MPhil candidate in Political Theory at St. Hugh’s College, University of Oxford, having completed his Honours BA in Political Studies and History at Queen’s University in Kingston.  Colin’s research lies at the intersection of...

Jessica Hogan, 2020

Jessica Hogan – originally from Carleton Place, Ontario, and raised by proud Newfoundlanders – is currently completing a doctoral degree at the University of St Andrews in Scotland. Her doctoral work is a timely contribution to energy and governance research....

Heather McTaggart, 2020

To say that the world has entered an era of heightened, and uncertain, geopolitical tensions is an understatement: Russia, China and of course the impact of Covid-19 on international relations. The critical role played by ambassadors and their impact on policy...