MEDIA RELEASE CAFA DISTINGUISHED ACADEMIC AWARDS, 2015

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Sep 14, 2015 - Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, at the University of ... Professor of Political Studies
CAFA

Confederation of Alberta Faculty Associations

11043-90 Avenue University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2E1 (780) 492-5630

MEDIA RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SEPTEMBER 14, 2015

CAFA DISTINGUISHED ACADEMIC AWARDS, 2015 (EDMONTON) – The Confederation of Alberta Faculty Associations (CAFA), the provincial organization representing academic staff associations at the University of Alberta, the University of Lethbridge, the University of Calgary, and Athabasca University, is pleased to announce the recipients of the CAFA Distinguished Academic Awards for 2015. Dr. Lars Hallström, Professor of Political Studies in the Department of Social Sciences, Augustana Campus, with a joint appointment in the Department of Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology, at the University of Alberta, has been chosen to receive the 2015 CAFA Distinguished Academic Award. Dr. Ubaka Ogbogu, Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Law, with a cross appointment in the Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, at the University of Alberta, is the recipient of this year’s CAFA Distinguished Academic Early Career Award. The CAFA Distinguished Academic Award recognizes academic staff members who through their research and/or other scholarly, creative or professional activities have made an outstanding contribution to the wider community beyond the university. The CAFA Distinguished Academic Early Career Award recognizes academic staff members who, at an early stage of their careers, through their research and/or other scholarly, creative or professional activities have made an outstanding contribution to the wider community beyond the university. “Through the annual CAFA Distinguished Academic Awards, now in their ninth year, the academic staff associations of Alberta’s four research-intensive universities celebrate the exceptional contributions made by our members, through their research, scholarly and creative activities, to the community beyond the academy,” notes Dr. Mark McCutcheon, President of CAFA. “This year CAFA is saluting the achievements of Dr. Lars Hallström and Dr. Ubaka Ogbogu, of the University of Alberta. On behalf of CAFA, I extend warmest congratulations to Dr. Hallström and Dr. Ogbogu.” The 2015 CAFA Distinguished Academic Awards will be presented at a banquet at the Shaw Conference Centre, Edmonton, on Thursday, September 17, 2015. For further information on this year’s Award recipients, please see the attached backgrounders.

Media Enquiries: John Nicholls, Executive Director, CAFA Tel (780) 492-5630 e-mail [email protected] http://www.ualberta.ca/cafa

Backgrounder  –  2015  CAFA  Distinguished  Academic  Award     Dr.  Lars  K.  Hallström,  University  of  Alberta     Dr.  Lars  K.  Hallström,  Professor  of  Political  Studies  in  the  Department  of  Social  Sciences,   Augustana  Campus,  with  a  joint  appointment  in  the  Department  of  Resource  Economics  and   Environmental  Sociology,  at  the  University  of  Alberta,  has  been  chosen  to  receive  the  2015   CAFA  Distinguished  Academic  Award  in  recognition  of  his  outstanding  work  with  rural   communities.     Before  joining  the  University  of  Alberta,  Dr.  Hallström,  who  has  a  Ph.D.  in  Political  Science   from  Purdue  University,  taught  at  St.  Francis  Xavier  University,  where  he  held  a  Canada   Research  Chair  in  Public  Policy  and  Governance  and  took  a  leadership  role  in  establishing   the  National  Collaborating  Centre  for  Determinants  of  Health.    In  2009,  he  was  named  the   inaugural  Director  of  the  Alberta  Centre  for  Sustainable  Rural  Communities  (ACSRC)  at  the   U  of  A’s  Augustana  Campus,  located  in  Camrose.    Under  Dr.  Hallström’s  leadership,  the   ACSRC  has  developed  a  groundbreaking  program  connecting  research  and  public  policy-­‐ making  in  rural  areas  ‘by  fostering  constructive  dialogue,  promoting  interdisciplinary  and   collaborative  research,  and  developing  partnerships  between  the  University  of  Alberta  and   rural  communities  in  Alberta  and  beyond’.       Early  in  his  tenure  at  ACSRC,  Dr.  Hallström  convened  what  has  been  described  as  a   landmark  event  for  rural  research  in  this  country  -­‐  a  national  conference  of  over  100   academic  researchers  and  community  partners  to  examine  the  full  range  of  community-­‐ based  planning,  policy-­‐making,  community  development  and  implementation  initiatives   across  Canada.    According  to  Allen  Berger,  the  Dean  of  Augustana  Campus,  this  conference   ‘established  the  ACSRC  as  a  critical  resource  for  rural  communities  in  Canada  and  sparked  a   wide  range  of  rural  community-­‐based  projects,  outputs  and  partnerships’.     Working  within  the  broad  priority  research  areas  of  natural  resource  management,   demographic  change,  and  rural  planning  and  policy,  Dr.  Hallström’s  projects  have  ranged   across  a  variety  of  different  disciplines  including,  for  example,  community  health,   watershed  management,  and  municipal  governance.    Working  with  rural  communities  and   organizations,  Dr.  Hallström  has  succeeded  in  drawing  together  networks  of  researchers,   across  disciplines  and  across  institutions,  to  address  what  Dean  Berger  describes  as  ‘some   of  the  core  social,  political  and  environmental  questions  facing  rural  communities  in   Canada’.         It  is  Dr.  Hallström’s  passionate  commitment  to  rural  capacity-­‐building  and  sustainability,   through  knowledge  transfer  and  mobilization,  which  shines  through  all  of  his  work.    His   accomplishments  as  a  scholar,  not  least  his  impressive  record  of  peer-­‐reviewed  and   technical  publications,  have  been  matched  by  his  success  in  developing  new  and  productive   connections  between  the  academy  and  rural  communities,  which  directly  feed  into  rural   policy-­‐making  and  planning.     An  exemplar  of  the  engaged  academic,  whose  research  is  having  a  real  impact  in  the  wider   community,  Dr.  Hallström  earlier  this  year  received  promotion  and  was  named  Professor  of   Political  Studies,  with  a  joint  appointment  in  Resource  Economics  and  Environmental   Sociology,  at  the  University  of  Alberta.    

Backgrounder  –  2015  CAFA  Distinguished  Academic  Early  Career  Award     Dr.  Ubaka  Ogbogu,  University  of  Alberta     Dr.  Ubaka  Ogbogu,  an  Assistant  Professor  cross-­‐appointed  in  the  Faculty  of  Law  and  the   Faculty  of  Pharmacy  &  Pharmaceutical  Sciences  at  the  University  of  Alberta,  has  been   chosen  to  receive  the  CAFA  Distinguished  Academic  Early  Career  Award  for  2015  in   recognition  of  his  outstanding  contributions  in  the  field  of  health  law  and  policy.     Dr.  Ogbogu,  who  received  his  Doctorate  in  Juridical  Sciences  from  the  University  of  Toronto   in  2014,  held  research  positions  at  the  University  of  Alberta,  University  of  Toronto,  and   University  of  Minnesota,  prior  to  taking  up  a  tenure-­‐track  appointment  at  the  University  of   Alberta  in  2013.    Even  at  this  very  early  stage  in  his  career,  his  academic  work,  on  a  range  of   contemporary  public  policy  issues  such  as  vaccination,  stem  cell  research,  genetic  testing,   bio-­‐banks,  medical  tourism,  and  research  ethics,  is  being  published  in  leading  academic   journals.           At  the  same  time,  however,  as  the  Dean  of  Law  notes,  Dr.  Ogbogu  has  also  demonstrated  ‘an   acute  awareness  of  the  importance  of  health  law  issues  to  the  public  and  had  made   consistent  efforts  to  disseminate  his  finds  to  ensure  that  the  broader  community  benefits   directly  from  his  expertise.’    Dr.  Ogbogu’s  work  on  vaccination  issues,  for  example,  has   resulted  in  presentations  to  policy-­‐makers  in  Ottawa,  and  garnered  a  good  deal  of  attention   in  the  media,  where  his  ability  to  address  complex  issues  in  non-­‐academic  language   accessible  to  a  lay  audience  is  highly  valued.         A  colleague  has  identified  Dr.  Ogbogu’s  ‘gift  for  moving  quickly  between  highly  conceptual   legal  scholarship  and  more  broadly-­‐based  practical  policy  work’.    Under  his  leadership,  a   recent  interdisciplinary  research  project  funded  by  the  Office  of  the  Privacy  Commissioner   of  Canada,  on  the  privacy  challenges  raised  by  cell-­‐based  research,  has  produced  not  only   several  academic  papers  in  law  journals,  but  also  a  multi-­‐authored  policy  paper  offering   concrete  recommendations  aimed  at  both  researchers  and  policy-­‐makers.     To  promote  the  wider  discussion  of  topical  health  law  matters,  Dr.  Ogbogu  maintains  a  high-­‐ profile  presence  on  social  media,  using  Twitter  and  various  blogs  to  reach  diverse   audiences.    He  has  raised  funds  for,  organized,  and  presented  a  number  of  ‘Philosopher  Café   events,  open  to  the  public,  covering  such  hot-­‐button  issues  as  medical  tourism,  genetic   engineering,  and  stem  cell  research.     In  addition  to  the  evidence  of  his  exceptional  promise  as  a  scholar  in  the  field  of  health  law   and  policy,  then,  it  is  Dr.  Ogbogu’s  wholehearted  engagement  with  the  community  beyond   the  university  -­‐  with  the  general  public,  as  well  as  with  healthcare  providers  and  policy-­‐ makers  -­‐  which  has  so  impressed  those  familiar  with  his  work  at  this  point  in  his  academic   career.    As  his  Dean  comments,  Dr.  Ogbogu’s  committed  outreach  on  health  law  policy   issues  ‘demonstrates  his  commitment  to,  and  his  understanding  of,  these  matters  as  they   apply  to  real  people  as  well  as  how  they  might  be  resolved  on  a  theoretical  level.’