2025 Northeastern Association of Graduate Schools (NAGS) Distinguished Doctoral Thesis Award
Laurence Ricard (D.C.L.) is the 2025 winner of the NAGS Distinguished Doctoral Thesis Award.Â
This thesis is a philosophical study of the Anglo-American legal systems of child protection, through the use of a theory of recognition. Anglo-American jurisdictions share similar child protection systems, characterized by their formalism (through legal regulation) and their individualism. They are organized in two parts: intervention by social workers, and judicial oversight by the courts, who can allow the social workers to take actions without the consent of the parents and the child. This thesis contends that the law has a liberal understanding of the person and of relationships. The relationship between a parent and a child is described in law only in terms of rights and duties. In contrast, the social intervention is premised on a more nuanced conception of the person, informed by psychology and social work research.
The thesis argues that the theory of recognition, inspired by the work of philosopher Axel Honneth, offers a fruitful conceptual framework to analyze the limitations of the legal framework of child protection. It offers a new version of the theory of recognition as a critical legal theory offering an alternative to relational theories of law. It demonstrates that the tripartition of recognition put forward by Honneth (interpersonal, social, and legal) are evidenced in the literature on child development, child maltreatment factors and causes, and critical legal pluralism. The theory of recognition is used to critically analyze the shortcomings of the ways law conceptualizes childhood, parenthood, and the social responsibility to intervene when the relationship is harmful to the child. It is then used to argue that the adversarial stance is built in the substantive child protection laws, as a consequence of liberalism. Lastly, the thesis concludes on a case study of the child protection system in Québec.
2024 Prix d'excellence de l'ADÉSAQ for Distinguished Dissertation
Dr. Alex Diaz-Papkovich is the 2024 winner of the Prix d'excellence de l'ADÉSAQ for Distinguished Dissertion in Quantitative Life Sciences.
The genomic revolution has given us biobanks—massive repositories of human genetic data connected to information like biomedical measures and demographic data. We can use biobank data to study how genetics are related to health or population histories. Since biobank data is incredibly large and complex, we have a classic needle-in-a-haystack problem, and we need to develop new statistical approaches to find the needles. My research pioneered a method of biobank analysis that simplifies genetic data by studying its topology with visualization and cluster analysis. By taking this topological approach, we can quickly find subtle signals in our data and identify patterns between genetic variation, population history, geographic distribution, and health measures. This methodology was fast and flexible enough to handle genetic data from hundreds of thousands of individuals and has been rapidly adopted by biobank consortia around the world.
You may read more about his research via .
2019 CAGS-ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Award
Dr. Janelle Marie Baker is the 2019 winner of the CAGS/ProQuest Distinguished Dissertion Award in the Catefory of Fine Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. The award will be presented during the 57th Annual CAGS Conference in Halifax.
Dr. Baker’s dissertation is an exploration of sakâwiyiniwak (Northern Bush Cree) experiences with wild or ‘bush’ food contamination in what is now known as Alberta’s oil sands region. It is based on ethnographic research and collaborative experiences with members of Bigstone Cree Nation and Fort McKay First Nation in their traditional territories, and during community-based environmental monitoring studies of wild food contamination. As a highly original work of engaged ethnography, Baker’s dissertation probes indigenous diagnostics and etiologies of degraded food quality and discloses a complex of social, cultural, and environmental effects commonly overlooked in conventional impact studies.
You can read more about her research .
2015 Canadian Association of Graduate Studies (CAGS) Distinguished Dissertation Award
Dr. Bree Akesson is the 2015 winner of the CAGS Distinguished Dissertation Award in the category of Fine Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. The award was presented during the CAGS Annual Conference in Calgary in October, 2015.
Dr. Akesson has spent much of her academic career studying how political violence and war affects children’s sense of place. She used innovative technologies to track and create maps of individuals' sense of place in war-torn areas and to give voice to the people involved in her research. She received her PhD in Social Work from ´ó·¢²ÊƱƽ̨ and is now an Assistant Professor at Wilfrid Laurier University specializing in international child protection and the psychosocial effects of war and disaster on young families.
2013 Council of Graduate Schools (CGS)/ProQuest Distinguished Dissertation Award
Dr. Valorie Salimpoor is the 2013 recipient of the CGS/ProQuest Distinguished Disseration Award, presented at a ceremony during the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) 53rd Annual Meeting. The award recognizes recent doctoral recipients who have already made unusually significant and original contributions to their fields. ProQuest, an international leader in dissertation archiving, discovery and access, sponsors the awards and an independent committee from the Council of Graduate Schools selects the winners.
Dr. Salimpoor received her PhD in Psychology in the Behavioral Neuroscience Training Program from ´ó·¢²ÊƱƽ̨. In her research, she explores the strong impact music has on humans by investigating the reward systems in the brain to better understand how humans experience pleasure and what motivates our thoughts and behaviours. She is currently a postdoc in Randy McIntosh's lab at the Rotman Research Institute at the University of Toronto.