Associate Deans research published in Nature Chemistry
Queens University researchers Cathleen Crudden and Hugh Horton (), along with students, postdoctoral fellows and other collaborators have developed a new process that allows organic compounds to bind to metal surfaces.
Experts to explore status and future of Arctic, northern and Indigenous women
Feminist Legal Studies Queens (FLSQ) is hosting Arctic/Northern Women: Situating Law and Justice in Development and Equality, a ground breaking, interdisciplinary, and multinational conference on Feb. 28 and March 1 that will bring to campus experts in Indigenous, northern, and Arctic issues from Finland, Sweden, Norway, the U.S. and Canada.
Semester-abroad program immerses students in vibrant Shanghai
Julia Marsala (Artsci14) is from a small farm town in Pennsylvania, so when she stepped into the megalopolis of Shanghai, with its more than 23 million people, she felt a little overstimulated, a little overwhelmed.
John Smol - Winner of the Brockhouse Award
Queens University scientist Dr. John P. Smol goes deep below the surface of our lakes and rivers to uncover the secrets of our environmental history, written in mud and silt. His collaborator and half-brother, Dr.
Semester in Shanghai
The is announcing a study abroad program available to all 腦瞳憫 students in their third year who would like to spend fall semester 2014 at Fudan University in Shanghai.
Two 腦瞳憫 Geology alumni receive Johnson Award
Mike Rose (Artsci'79) and Susan Riddell Rose (Sc86) were awarded the Queens University Alumni Associations Johnson Award, the highest honour bestowed by the associations Calgary Branch.
Symposium to honour 腦瞳憫 professor emeritus
Ofyn Veg: A Symposium on Canadian Jewish Studies in Honour of Gerald Tulchinsky will be held next month at the University of Toronto's Centre for Jewish Studies. Dr. Tulchinsky is a Queen's professor emeritus of history and a leading scholar in the area of Jewish studies in Canada.
Curriculum changes reflect changing trends in student learning
The new Languages, Literatures and Cultures department (LLCU) is making some curriculum changes as part of an annual review of its overall academic program.