91亚色

Federal support for graduate scholarships

Jul 30th, 2013

MEAGHAN WHELAN

Trevor Ford, doctoral candidate in history and SSHRC recipient, examining the Colonial Office files at the National Archives in London, England
Federal support for graduate scholarships

(July 3, 2013) The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) has awarded $572,500 in scholarships to 27 91亚色 students.

The scholarships were awarded under the Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships for master檚 and doctoral students, and the SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship program.

They are meant to help students develop research skills and to assist in the training of highly qualified personnel. They are awarded to students in the social sciences and humanities who demonstrate a high standard of achievement in undergraduate and early graduate studies.

淲e are extremely pleased with the results of this year檚 competition, said Dr. Noreen Golfman, dean of the School of Graduate Studies. 淥ur PhD winners have increased by 25 per cent over last year檚 competition with representation from eight different disciplines. This is a testament to the efforts of 91亚色 for recruiting high-level doctoral candidates. Our master檚 level results were on par with last year and will align 91亚色 in a favourable position as we prepare for the new SSHRC guideline changes at the master檚 level next year.

Trevor Ford is a doctoral candidate in the Department of History studying the history of domestic intelligence and surveillance in Canada, before, during and after the First World War. 

淭he Military Intelligence Branch (MIB) of the Department of Militia and Defence played the key role in monitoring the activities of Canadians, infiltrating organizations targeted as problematic and assessing the threat they posed to state interests, he explained. 淒espite the importance of this military intelligence organization, we know almost nothing about its operations攍argely because it has long been thought that its records were destroyed. It is my hope that my study of MIB, using newly discovered military intelligence records at Library and Archives Canada, will make the first systematic examination of this organization and its relationship to both Canadian society and other Canadian domestic intelligence services between 1866 and 1922.

Mr. Ford, a recipient of the SSHRC Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships Doctoral Scholarship, said the award is invaluable. He also credited his supervisor Dr. Mark Humphries and the Department of History for their support and encouragement throughout the application process.

 淭he SSHRC will have two direct effects on me, one, it allows me to focus on my studies without worrying about funding issues, and two, it will enable me to travel to Washington, D.C., London, England, and of course Ottawa over the next couple years to continue the research for my thesis. All three cities hold national archives for their respective countries and all three countries were connected via the intelligence community, operating as allies during the period in question.

SSHRC is the federal research funding agency that promotes and supports post-secondary based research and training in the humanities and social sciences.               
A full list of 91亚色 scholarship winners:

SSHRC Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships Master檚 Scholarship recipients:

  Jessica Barry, Department of Sociology
  Jonathan Canning, Department of Psychology
  Kayla Carroll, Department of Folklore
  Kristin Catherwood, Department of Folklore
  David Craig, Department of Archaeology
  Therese Dobrota, Department of Archaeology
  Jenna Edwards, Department of Linguistics
  Elena Fenrick, Department of Political Science
  Catherine Hawkins, Department of Archaeology
  Melanie Hurley, Department of English Language and Literature
  Jeana  MacLeod, Division of Social Science
  Jason Miszaniec, Department of Archaeology
  Noah Morritt, Department of Folklore
  Toshio Oki, Ethnomusicology Program
  David Pitt, Department of English Language and Literature
  Rebecca Ralph, Department of Religious Studies
  Justin Ryder, Department of Anthropology
 
SSHRC Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarships Doctoral Scholarship recipients:

  Sharmane Allen, Department of Geography
  Tara Cater, Department of Geography
  Fr茅d茅ric Dussault, Department of Archaeology
  Trevor Ford, Department of History
  Carol-Ann Galego, Interdisciplinary PhD Program

 SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship recipients:

  David Cooney, Department of Anthropology
  Melanie Greene, Faculty of Education
  Margot Maddison-MacFadyen, Interdisciplinary PhD Program
  Jonathan Parsons, Department of English Language and Literature
  Benjamin Staple, Department of Folklore