Richard (Dick) Bourgeois-Doyle (formerly Doyle, born 1952) [1] [2] is a Canadian writer and science administrator whose works have focused on innovation history, research ethics, and gender issues in technology. His books include Her Daughter the Engineer, [3] the first full biography of aeronautical engineer Elsie Gregory MacGill and George J. Klein: The Great Inventor, [4] the official biography of the design engineer dubbed Canada’s most productive inventor in the 20th century. Bourgeois-Doyle was also lead writer and editor of Renaissance II, an account of the Millennium Conferences on Creativity and Innovation. [1]
A three-time winner of the National Research Council Canada (NRC) Outstanding Achievement Award for public awareness of science and former NRC Secretary General, Bourgeois-Doyle chaired the organization’s 100th anniversary: A Century of Innovation in Canada. [5] He has served on a number of national and international bodies dedicated to the promotion of science and innovation. He acted as Chair of the EU Path2Integrity Project from 2019-2022. [6]
His other books celebrating Canadian achievement include Stubborn: Big Ed Caswell and the Line from the Valley to the Northland [7] and What’s So Funny? Lessons from Canada’s Leacock Medal for Humour Writing, the first complete review of winners of the major award for Canadian literary humour. Bourgeois-Doyle is an Honorary Life Member of the Leacock Associates, [8] the organization that awards the medal.
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