Myriam Denov | |
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Academic background | |
Education | BA, Sociology and Criminology, 1993 University of Toronto, BSW, 1994,McGill University MA, Criminology, 1996, University of Ottawa PhD, Criminology, 2000, University of Cambridge |
Thesis | Gender typifications and the experiences of survivors of child sexual abuse by female perpetrators: a qualitative analysis (1996) |
Academic work | |
Institutions | McGill University University of Ottawa |
Myriam S. Denov is a Canadian scholar and child advocate. She is a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Children,Families,and Armed Conflict at McGill University. Denov is a Trudeau Foundation Fellow and a Member of the Royal Society of Canada's College of New Scholars,Artists,and Scientists.
Denov completed her Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology and criminology at the University of Toronto,and her BSW at McGill University before enrolling at the University of Ottawa for her Master of Arts degree. Upon completing these degrees,she moved to the United Kingdom to attend the University of Cambridge for her PhD in Criminology. [1]
Following her PhD at the University of Cambridge,Denov returned to Canada and became an assistant professor in the Department of Criminology at the University of Ottawa. [1] In this role,she travelled to Sierra Leone to partner with a local NGO interviewing former child soldiers as part of a research project on the long-term effects of the war. [2] During her time in Sierra Leone,she employed a community-based participatory research method called PhotoVoice which allows the former child soldiers to document their daily lives using cameras. [3]
Denov eventually joined the faculty of McGill University's School of Social Work where she was appointed a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Children,Families,and Armed Conflict to extend her research in the lived experiences of children during wartime. [4] Denov used her 2014 Trudeau Foundation Fellowship to focus on children born of wartime rape. She collaborated with two NGOs to investigate these children's lived experiences and their relationships with their families and communities. [5] As part of her fellowship,she co-developed an art-based research project involving 79 children who had been born into captivity in the LRA. The children created masks to narrate their experiences and process their traumatic memories. [2] The results of her study found that children who were born to mothers abducted and raped by members of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) felt that wartime was better than peacetime. This was because they felt a greater sense of family cohesion and status within the LRA during the conflict. As well,following the conflict these children often endured stigmatization and social exclusion. [6]
Following her fellowship,Denov was named a member of the Royal Society of Canada's College of New Scholars,Artists,and Scientists for "opening up new lines of inquiry and drawing international attention to war-affected children." [7] In 2020,Denov was the recipient of a Killam Research Fellowship to focus on continuing her research investigating the perspectives,realities,and psychosocial needs of children born of war in northern Uganda. [8] She was also awarded a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Impact Award in recognition of her research on children and families affected by war. [9] In 2022,Denov was renewed as a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair at McGill. [10]
In 2024 she was named the recipient of the Prix Marie-Andrée-Bertrand. [11]
Eric William Hoskins is a Canadian physician and former politician who served as Ontario Minister of Health and Long-Term Care from 2014 to 2018. A member of the Liberal Party,he sat as a member of the Provincial Parliament (MPP) from 2009 to 2018,representing the electoral district of Toronto—St. Paul's in the Ontario Legislature.
The Sierra Leonean Civil War (1991–2002) was a civil war in Sierra Leone that began on 23 March 1991 when the Revolutionary United Front (RUF),with support from the special forces of Liberian dictator Charles Taylor's National Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL),intervened in Sierra Leone in an attempt to overthrow the Joseph Momoh government. The resulting civil war lasted almost 11 years,and had over 50,000,up to 70,000,casualties in total;an estimated 2.5 million people were displaced during the conflict.
Jennifer Mary Welsh is a Canadian professor of international relations,currently working as the Canada 150 Research Chair in Global Governance and Security at McGill University. Welsh is the Director of the Centre for International Peace and Security Studies at McGill's Max Bell School of Public Policy,and a co-director of the Canadian Research Network on Women,Peace and Security. Welsh is a frequent commentator in Canadian media on foreign affairs.
The Killam Trusts were established in 1965 after the death of Dorothy J. Killam,the widow of Izaak Walton Killam,a Canadian financier,for a time the wealthiest man in Canada. He died intestate in 1955,but before his death he and his wife discussed in extensive detail the scholarship plan on which the Killam Trusts were founded. Approximately one half of his estate went to the government as inheritance tax. It was used to found the Canada Council,along with similar funds from the estate of Sir James Dunn,also from Nova Scotia. The rest of Killam's estate was inherited by his widow. In the ten years between his death and hers,she doubled the Killam fortune.
John McGarry,OC is a political scientist from Northern Ireland. He was born in Belfast and grew up in Ballymena,County Antrim. He is currently the Stephen Gyimah Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Political Studies at Queen's University in Kingston,Ontario,Canada.
Samantha Joan Nutt is a Canadian physician and philanthropist who is the founder and president of War Child Canada. She has more than sixteen years of experience working in war zones. Her 2011 book Damned Nations:Greed,Guns,Armies and Aid details her work over the course of fifteen years in some of the most devastated regions of the world.
Stephen Alexander Smith was a Canadian legal scholar and writer.
Mariatu Kamara is an author,public speaker,and UNICEF Canada's Special Representative for Children in Armed Conflict. She is chiefly known for her book,The Bite of the Mango, which details her experience surviving the civil war in Sierra Leone.
Constance Barbara Backhouse,is a Canadian legal scholar and historian,specializing in gender and race discrimination. She is a Distinguished University Professor and University Research Chair at the Faculty of Law,University of Ottawa in Ottawa,Canada. In addition to her academic publications,Backhouse is the author of several books on feminist- and race-related legal rights topics. Backhouse is President of the American Society for Legal History,and is the first non-US scholar to hold this position.
Sandra Djwa is a Canadian writer,critic and cultural biographer. Originally from Newfoundland,she moved to British Columbia where she obtained her PhD from the University of British Columbia in 1968. In 1999,she was honored to deliver the Garnett Sedgewick Memorial Lecture in honor of the department's 80th anniversary. She taught Canadian literature in the English department at Simon Fraser University from 1968 to 2005 when she retired as J.S. Woodsworth Resident Scholar,Humanities. She was part of a seventies movement to establish the study of Canadian literature and,in 1973,cofounded the Association for Canadian and Québec Literatures (ACQL). She was Chair of the inaugural meeting of ACQL. She initiated textual studies of the poems of E. J. Pratt in the eighties,was editor of Poetry,"Letters in Canada" for the University of Toronto Quarterly (1980-4),and Chair of Canadian Heads and Chairs of English (1989).
Grace Akallo is a Ugandan woman who was abducted in 1996 to be used as a child soldier in the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA),a rebel military group led by Joseph Kony. At the time of her abduction,Akallo was 15 years old and attending St. Mary's College,a Catholic boarding school in Aboke,Uganda. She remained in the LRA for seven months before escaping. After escaping the army,Akallo returned to St. Mary's College to finish her high school education. She began her college education at the Uganda Christian University,but finished her undergraduate degree at Gordon College after receiving a scholarship. Akallo then went on to receive her master's degree from Clark University. Upon her escape from the LRA,Akallo began working as an advocate for peace and for the rights of African women and children. She has been using both her experiences as a child soldier and the information she has gained in her higher education to advocate against violence and the use of child soldiers,as well as to help counsel other escaped child soldiers like herself.
Roughly 100.000-140.000 child soldiers in Sierra Leone fought between 1991 and 2002 in the Sierra Leone Civil War. Children fought on both sides of the conflict. Nearly half of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF),and a quarter of the government armed forces consisted of children aged 8–14 years old.
Ruth B. Phillips is a Canadian art historian and curator who specializes in North American aboriginal art. She is an author of numerous books and articles on the subjects of Indigenous studies,anthropology/archaeology,political science,international studies,public policy,Canadian studies,and cultural studies.
Janine Marchessault is a professor of Cinema and Media Studies and Canada Research Chair (2003-2013) at York University in Toronto,Canada. Her main fields of research are Ecologies of Media and Mediation,(sub)urban cultures,the works of Marshall McLuhan,contemporary art exhibitions,Expo 67,artists' cultures,new media technologies,media archives,city and its sustainability issues. She is also a Trudeau Fellow.
Michael Brecher was a Canadian political scientist and teacher in Quebec.
Alan Charles Evans is a Welsh-born Canadian neuroscientist who is a James McGill Professor of Neurology and Neurosurgery,Psychiatry and Biomedical Engineering,and holds the Victor Dahdaleh Chair in Neurosciences at McGill University. He is also a researcher at the McConnell Brain Imaging Centre of the Montreal Neurological Institute,Co-Director of the Ludmer Centre for Neuroinformatics and Mental Health,Director of the McGill Centre for Integrative Neuroscience,Scientific Director of the Canadian Open Neuroscience Platform,Scientific Director of McGill's Healthy Brains,Healthy Lives program and Principal Investigator of CBRAIN,an initiative aiming to integrate Canadian neuroscience data with the Compute Canada computing network. He is recognized for his research on brain mapping,and was a co-founder of both the International Consortium for Brain Mapping and the Organization for Human Brain Mapping. He was OHBM Chair in 2017-18.
Vivian K. Mushahwar is a Palestinian-Canadian biomedical engineer. She is a Canada Research Chair in Functional Restoration at the University of Alberta,Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences and Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering.
Nathalie Tufenkji is a Canadian chemical engineer. She is a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Biocolloids and Surfaces and a professor of Chemical Engineering at McGill University. In 2022,Tufenkji was recognized by the Ordre des ingénieurs du Québec with their Honoris Genius award in the Research or Teaching category.
Hanadi Farouk Sleiman is a Canadian chemist who is Canada Research Chair in DNA Nanoscience at McGill University. Her research makes use of DNA as a template for nanomaterials. She was awarded the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Polanyi Award in 2021.
Girl soldiers,also referred to as female child soldiers,girls in fighting forces or girls associated with an armed force or armed group (GAAFAG),have been recruited by armed forces and groups in the majority of conflicts in which child soldiers are used. A wide range of rough estimates of their percentage among child soldiers is reported in literature,but scarcity of high-quality data poses problems for establishing their numbers.