Monday, December 19, 2022

A climate engineer exploring the history of science communication. A chemist making your home safer. An expert in law and public administration with a passion for prison reform. And a nurse anchored in two cultures reforming the way we offer diabetes care.

Nayani Jensen, Jill Downey, Kate Mitchell and Damilola Iduye are the recipients of this year’s C. David Naylor Fellowships for graduate students. All are leveraging the power of interdisciplinary insights to create impactful, solution-focused research at the University of Toronto.

The Naylor Fellowships were established in 2013 with the support of the Arthur L. Irving Family Foundation, which seeks to provide meaningful support to students and empower them through education. The $30,000 awards support outstanding U of T students with origins in Atlantic Canada.

“We’re delighted to welcome Damilola, Jill, Kate and Nayani to the university,” says Leah Cowen, U of T’s Vice-President, Research and Innovation, and Strategic Initiatives. “They join a community of world-class scholars who are committed to serving society by solving the biggest challenges of our time. We’re so grateful to the Arthur L. Irving Family Foundation for championing researchers like these as they launch their careers.”

Kate Mitchell: A prison that treats prisoners humanely. How do we get there?

Kate Mitchell

Kate Mitchell knows a lot about the law—and about how scholarly research can make the case for change.

Currently studying for her SJD (Doctor of Juridical Science, a doctorate in law) at the University of Toronto, the Halifax native also already holds a JD from Queen’s University. And before that, “a bachelor of arts from Dalhousie, a master’s of public administration from Queen’s, and a master of laws at UCLA.”

Mitchell’s current focus is “how we can ensure the rule of law within prison walls. Although prisons have transformed from systems in which officials had basically unfettered discretion into rule-based systems in which prisoners have rights, many harsh practices remain.”

“My comparative study, looking at both Canada and the United States, explores that transformation, and I think more importantly, why we’ve failed to ensure that prisoners are treated in a humane and dignified manner. And, what a system would have to look like to ensure such treatment.”

“This fellowship has given me financial stability,” she says, “which also allows me to round out my studies: volunteering with Pro Bono Students Canada, and engaging with all of the different talks and events that U of T has to offer. It’s just a great community, so that support has meant everything to me.”

Republished from Defy Gravity: The Campaign for the University of Toronto