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UNBC researcher named to Royal Society of Canada

UNBC researcher Sarah de Leeuw has been appointed as a member of the Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists.
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Sarah de Leeuw

UNBC researcher Sarah de Leeuw has been appointed as a member of the Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists and Scientists. 

A Northern Medical Program and geography program associate professor, de Leeuw is one of 70 researchers from across the country who will be inducted at the 2017 Royal Society of Canada’s annual general meeting this November. 

The college is focused on addressing issues and concerns of new scholars, artists, and scientists. Inductees are selected after demonstrating a high level of achievement in the early stages of their career.

“It is one of the highest honours one can receive. When fellow researchers, especially those outside your discipline, recognize your work,” said de Leeuw. 

“I am excited to join the college and I look forward to generating dialogue around issues related to northern, rural, and marginalized geographies. I am interested in exploring the possibilities of what can happen when you bring artists and scientists together, when they consider each other’s’ works in their own disciplinary areas of specialty.”

Her areas of interest include the medical humanities and determinants of marginalized peoples' health.

De Leeuw is the third UNBC professor to have been named to the Royal Society of Canada. She joins professor emeritus of political science Alex Michalos and associate professor of history Dana Wessell Lightfoot. 

The college is one of four entities of the Royal Society of Canada, which also include the Academy of the Arts and Humanities, the Academy of Social Sciences, and the Academy of Science.