The Queen's Advocacy Coalition's public letter supporting the nomination of Iranian human rights lawyer and political prisoner, Nasrin Sotoudeh, for an honorary doctorate from Queen's University.
Signatories to public letter nasrin sotoudehJeremyWiener
Signatories to the public letter supporting Iranian human rights lawyer and political prisoner, Nasrin Sotoudeh, with a Doctorate of Laws (LL.D) from Queen's University.
Signatories to public letter nasrin sotoudehJeremyWiener
Signatories to the public letter supporting Iranian human rights lawyer and political prisoner, Nasrin Sotoudeh, with a Doctorate of Laws (LL.D) from Queen's University.
RELIGIOUS DEMOCRATS: DEMOCRATIC CULTURE AND MUSLIM POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN...Oyon08
Most theories about the negative relationship between Islam and democracy rely
on an interpretation of the Islamic political tradition. More positive accounts are also
anchored in the same tradition, interpreted in a different way. While some scholarship
relies on more empirical observation and analysis, there is no single work which
systematically demonstrates the relationship between Islam and democracy.
This study is an attempt to fill this gap by defining Islam empirically in terms of
several components and democracy in terms of the components of democratic culture—
social capital, political tolerance, political engagement, political trust, and support for the
democratic system—and political participation. The theories which assert that Islam is
inimical to democracy are tested by examining the extent to which the Islamic and
democratic components are negatively associated.
Indonesia was selected for this research as it is the most populous Muslim country
in the world, with considerable variation among Muslims in belief and practice. Two
national mass surveys were conducted in 2001 and 2002.
This study found that Islam defined by two sets of rituals, the networks of Islamic
civic engagement, Islamic social identity, and Islamist political orientations (Islamism)
does not have a negative association with the components of democracy. The only
negative relationship is found between Islamism and tolerance toward Christians.
iii
However, intolerant Islamism is not a real threat to democratic stability because
intolerant Islamists tends to be passive, not active, political participants. There is no
association between intolerant Islamism and protest activity that might have the potential
to destabilize the democratic system.
On the contrary, almost all components of Islam have a positive and significant
relationship with secular civic engagement, with political engagement, and with political
participation. These three components of democracy reinforce support for the democratic
system as whole. Therefore, Islam helps Muslim citizens to be active in politics and this
activity is congruent with the democratic system as a whole. What emerges is not
religious Muslims who are against democracy, nor non-religious democrats, but rather
religious Muslims who contribute to strengthening democracy. They are religious
democrats.
Onesmo Ole Ngurumwa Kasale is one of the leading figures in the field of human rights in Tanzania who has devoted his entire professional life to ensure that human rights defenders work freely while ending threats and hurdles to their cause.
Born on the rolling plains of Loliondo in the Maasai Steppe in Tanzania’s northern Ngorongoro District, Arusha Region, in 1980, Onesmo was educated at Sakala Primary School, Arusha Catholic Seminary School, and Dakawa High School in Morogoro and then joined University of Dar es Salaam in 2005 for his law studies where he graduated with honors four years later.Prior to that he attended Security and Protection Management training for Human rights defenders and social organization offered by Protection International where he earned a Diploma. He had also attended Security Management and Risk Assessment training from York University. Renowned and experienced human rights experts and numerous development organisations have mentored Onesmo.
“ From mentoring and nurturing him I knew he’s a potential leader who would climb to the top leadership position at a very young age”says Martina Kabisama, mentor THRDC Board chairperson
For more than a decade, he has tirelessly defended human rights for all, including the most marginalized and discriminated minority groups in Tanzania. Often lashing out against injustices whenever people take law into their own hands.
Slavomir Redo, Visiting Lecturer of the Institute for Criminal Law and Criminology, University of Vienna made a presentation linking Environmental justice, crime prevention and intergenerational learning on the second day of the Big Foot conference
Global Research Forum on Diaspora and Transnationalism (GRFDT) is a consortium of researchers and policy makers drawn from national and international universities, institutes and organizations. GRFDT is presently based in India and is shaping as the largest such group focusing specifically on the issues related to diaspora and transnationalism.
The GRFDT works as an academic and policy think tank by engaging national and international experts from academics, practitioners and policy makers in a broad range of areas such as migration policies, transnational linkages of development, human rights, culture, gender to mention a few. In the changing global environment of academic research and policy making, the role of GRFDT will be of immense help to the various stakeholders. Many developing countries cannot afford to miss the opportunity to harness the knowledge revolution of the present era. The engagement of diaspora with various platform need to be reassessed in the present context to engage them in the best possible manner for the development human societies by providing policy input at the national and global context.
This presentation highlights faculty accomplishments and areas of research expertise from the UTSA College of Public Policy. The College of Public Policy educates the next generation of public servants at the local, state, national and international levels. The College’s faculty and students are engaged in teaching and learning, research, and service initiatives addressing critical community issues. The College prepares future leaders to advance public policy and practice that contributes to the public good and equips students to manage and advocate for better policy solutions to some of the most critical issues facing the community, nation and the world.
STANFORD -- Two Stanford University students - Erez Kalir, a Phi Beta Kappa scholar who combines interests in the humanities and sciences, and Fayyaz Nurmohamed, a history honors student who has done extensive volunteer work with Muslim youth groups - have been named Rhodes Scholars for 1993.
RELIGIOUS DEMOCRATS: DEMOCRATIC CULTURE AND MUSLIM POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN...Oyon08
Most theories about the negative relationship between Islam and democracy rely
on an interpretation of the Islamic political tradition. More positive accounts are also
anchored in the same tradition, interpreted in a different way. While some scholarship
relies on more empirical observation and analysis, there is no single work which
systematically demonstrates the relationship between Islam and democracy.
This study is an attempt to fill this gap by defining Islam empirically in terms of
several components and democracy in terms of the components of democratic culture—
social capital, political tolerance, political engagement, political trust, and support for the
democratic system—and political participation. The theories which assert that Islam is
inimical to democracy are tested by examining the extent to which the Islamic and
democratic components are negatively associated.
Indonesia was selected for this research as it is the most populous Muslim country
in the world, with considerable variation among Muslims in belief and practice. Two
national mass surveys were conducted in 2001 and 2002.
This study found that Islam defined by two sets of rituals, the networks of Islamic
civic engagement, Islamic social identity, and Islamist political orientations (Islamism)
does not have a negative association with the components of democracy. The only
negative relationship is found between Islamism and tolerance toward Christians.
iii
However, intolerant Islamism is not a real threat to democratic stability because
intolerant Islamists tends to be passive, not active, political participants. There is no
association between intolerant Islamism and protest activity that might have the potential
to destabilize the democratic system.
On the contrary, almost all components of Islam have a positive and significant
relationship with secular civic engagement, with political engagement, and with political
participation. These three components of democracy reinforce support for the democratic
system as whole. Therefore, Islam helps Muslim citizens to be active in politics and this
activity is congruent with the democratic system as a whole. What emerges is not
religious Muslims who are against democracy, nor non-religious democrats, but rather
religious Muslims who contribute to strengthening democracy. They are religious
democrats.
Onesmo Ole Ngurumwa Kasale is one of the leading figures in the field of human rights in Tanzania who has devoted his entire professional life to ensure that human rights defenders work freely while ending threats and hurdles to their cause.
Born on the rolling plains of Loliondo in the Maasai Steppe in Tanzania’s northern Ngorongoro District, Arusha Region, in 1980, Onesmo was educated at Sakala Primary School, Arusha Catholic Seminary School, and Dakawa High School in Morogoro and then joined University of Dar es Salaam in 2005 for his law studies where he graduated with honors four years later.Prior to that he attended Security and Protection Management training for Human rights defenders and social organization offered by Protection International where he earned a Diploma. He had also attended Security Management and Risk Assessment training from York University. Renowned and experienced human rights experts and numerous development organisations have mentored Onesmo.
“ From mentoring and nurturing him I knew he’s a potential leader who would climb to the top leadership position at a very young age”says Martina Kabisama, mentor THRDC Board chairperson
For more than a decade, he has tirelessly defended human rights for all, including the most marginalized and discriminated minority groups in Tanzania. Often lashing out against injustices whenever people take law into their own hands.
Slavomir Redo, Visiting Lecturer of the Institute for Criminal Law and Criminology, University of Vienna made a presentation linking Environmental justice, crime prevention and intergenerational learning on the second day of the Big Foot conference
Global Research Forum on Diaspora and Transnationalism (GRFDT) is a consortium of researchers and policy makers drawn from national and international universities, institutes and organizations. GRFDT is presently based in India and is shaping as the largest such group focusing specifically on the issues related to diaspora and transnationalism.
The GRFDT works as an academic and policy think tank by engaging national and international experts from academics, practitioners and policy makers in a broad range of areas such as migration policies, transnational linkages of development, human rights, culture, gender to mention a few. In the changing global environment of academic research and policy making, the role of GRFDT will be of immense help to the various stakeholders. Many developing countries cannot afford to miss the opportunity to harness the knowledge revolution of the present era. The engagement of diaspora with various platform need to be reassessed in the present context to engage them in the best possible manner for the development human societies by providing policy input at the national and global context.
This presentation highlights faculty accomplishments and areas of research expertise from the UTSA College of Public Policy. The College of Public Policy educates the next generation of public servants at the local, state, national and international levels. The College’s faculty and students are engaged in teaching and learning, research, and service initiatives addressing critical community issues. The College prepares future leaders to advance public policy and practice that contributes to the public good and equips students to manage and advocate for better policy solutions to some of the most critical issues facing the community, nation and the world.
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Public Letter
1. Dear Principal Woolf and the Queen’s Senate Committee on Honorary Degrees,
We, the undersigned students, Professors, and Queen’s honorary doctorate recipients strongly believe that Queen’s
University should bestow Iranian human rights lawyer and political prisoner, Nasrin Sotoudeh, with an honorary doctorate
at next year’s Convocation. Ms. Sotoudeh is more than deserving of this honour, for her heroism and determination
embodies the struggle for human rights in Iran and the values of the Queen’s community: equality, accountability,
protection of the vulnerable, responsible leadership, justice and the rule of law.
Indeed, Ms. Sotoudeh’s courage and commitment to justice in the face of persistent and pervasive injustice has touched
the lives of all Iranian people, especially the women, children, journalists, and religious minorities she has dedicated her
life to defending.
Ms. Sotoudeh began her career as one of Iran’s first female reformist journalists, writing extensively on the imperative to
protect the rights of the vulnerable. As a lawyer, she continued fighting for the rights of marginalized Iranian groups,
working closely with Shirin Ebadi’s Defenders of Human Rights Centre (DHRC), the Society for the Rights of Children,
and a variety of women’s rights organizations. Ms. Sotoudeh has acted as a defence attorney to countless Iranians,
including members of the One Million Signatures for the Repeal of Discriminatory Laws campaign.
Ms. Sotoudeh was one of the last lawyers courageous enough to defend the dissidents and activists arrested in 2009,
following the Iranian election. Her bravery in defending the dissidents of the Iranian regime led to her first imprisonment
in the notorious Evin Prison in 2010. While imprisoned, Ms. Sotoudeh did not relent – her spirit persisted. She repeatedly
went on hunger strike protesting the injustices her, her family, and the Iranian people faced. For the better part of two
months, Ms. Sotoudeh refused all food and drank only water mixed with salt and sugar.
It is this unyielding spirit that earned her the PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award, the Geneva Institute for
Democracy and Development’s Giuseppe Motta medal, and the European Parliament’s Sakharov Prize for Freedom of
Thought. Each of these awards were awarded in absentia and helped secure her early release from prison in 2013.
Following her release, Ms. Sotoudeh marched on. This summer, even though she realized that it would endanger her and
her family’s safety, she defended the ‘Girls of Revolution Street’ who were arrested for publically removing their
headscarves in defiance of the compulsory hijab dress code, and organized a sit-in to protest recent restrictions on
defendants’ ability to hire independent lawyers.
In the words of Shirin Ebadi, the Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate who is herself one of Ms. Sotoudeh’s former clients,
“Nasrin is fearless in taking on the cases that other lawyers would carefully avoid.” Her fearlessness, fueled by the duty
she feels to protect and promote a just rule of law, has landed her once again in Evin Prison, where she has been since
June 2018. In a letter written from her cell, Ms. Sotoudeh courageously affirms: “I realize they had arrested me for my
work on human rights, the defense of women’s rights activists, and the fight against the death penalty. Still, I will not be
silenced.”
If Ms. Sotoudeh will not be silenced in the face of persecution and prosecution, neither shall we.
Honouring Ms. Sotoudeh with an honorary doctorate is not only just and merited in and of itself, but would also be the
most effective means of demonstrating our support for her and the Iranian people. And, like the honorary doctorate York
University bestowed onto Nasrin in 2013, it can help secure her early release from prison.
So, let’s help Nasrin Sotoudeh and the Iranian people in building a more just rule of law in Iran by awarding Ms.
Sotoudeh an honorary doctorate at next year’s Convocation.
Sincerely,
2. Faculty Members
Adèle Mercier, Associate Professor of Philosophy
Adrienne Davidson, Term Adjunct in Political Studies
Ardi Imseis, Assistant Professor of Law
Arthur Cockfield, Professor of Law
Asha Varadharajan, Associate Professor of English
Allen Head, Professor, RBC Fellow and Associate Head of Economics Department
Alyssa King, Assistant Professor of Law
Annette Burfoot, Professor and Department Head of Sociology
Beverley Mullings, Associate Professor of Geography and Planning and Associate Head of Geography Undergraduate Programs
Carolyn Smart, Professor of English
Catherine Conaghan, Professor of Political Studies
Christine Sypnowhich, Professor and Department Head of Philosophy
Christopher Fanning, Associate Professor of English
Cynthia Levine-Rasky, Associate Professor of Sociology
David Lyon, Professor of Sociology and Director of the Surveillance Studies Centre
D.L.C. Maclachlan, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy
Don Stuart, Sessional Professor of Law
Dorit Naaman, Associate Professor of Film and Media
Eleanor MacDonald, Associate Professor of Political Studies
Elliot Paul, Assistant Professor of Philosophy
Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant, Associate Professor of Political Studies and Director of the IIGR and CORA
Elizabeth Hanson, Professor of English
Garry Kibbins, Associate Professor and Head of Film and Media Department
Glenn Willmott, Professor of English
Grant Amyot, Professor of Political Studies
Heather Macfarlane, Assistant Adjunct Professor of English
Huw Lloyd-Ellis, Professor and Head of Economics Department
Jonathan Rose, Associate Professor and Deputy Head of Political Studies Department
Joshua Karton, Associate Professor of Law and Associate Dean of Faculty of Law, Graduate Studies and Research
Katherine McKittrick, Associate Professor in Gender Studies and the Graduate Program in Cultural Studies
Karen Dubinsky, Professor of Global Development Studies
Kevin Banks, Associate Professor of Law and Director of the Centre for Law in the Contemporary Workplace
Kip Pegley, Associate Professor in the Dan School of Drama and Music
Korey Pasch, Doctoral Candidate and Teaching Fellow in Department of Political Studies
Laura J. Murray, Professor of English
Leela Viswanathan, Associate Professor of Geography and Planning Director of SURP, MCIP and RPP
Linda Mussell, Doctoral Candidate in the Department of Political Studies
Lisa Guenther, Queen’s National Scholar in Political Philosophy and Cultural Prison Studies
Lisa Kerr, Assistant Professor of Law
Maggie Berg, Professor of English Language and Literature
Margaret Moore, Professor of Political Studies and Director of the Centre of Democracy and Diversity
Mark Jones, Professor of English
Martin Hand, Associate Professor and Graduate Coordinator of Sociology
Mary-Jo Maur, Assistant Professor of Law
Melissa Houghtaling, Adjunct Professor and Undergraduate Chair of Gender Studies Department
Nicholas C. Bala, Professor of Law
Paritosh Kumar, Professor, Undergraduate Chair, and Placement Coordinator for Global Development Studies Department
Rahul Kumar, Professor of Philosophy
Rebecca Hall, Assistant Professor of Global Development Studies
Robert Yalden, Sigurdson Professor of Corporate Law and Finance
Ruth Wehlau, Associate Adjunct Professor
Samantha King, Professor in the School of Kinesiology and Health Studies and Head of Gender Studies Department
Scott-Morgan Straker, Associate Professor of English
Sergio Sismondo, Professor of Philosophy
Sharry Aiken, Associate Professor of Law
Stéfanie von Hlatky, Associate Professor of Political Studies and Research Fellow at the CIDP
Stéphanie Martel, Assistant Professor of Political Studies
Stephen Leighton, Professor of Philosophy
Susanne Soederberg, Professor of Global Development Studies and Canada Research Chair
Victoria Systsma, Assistant Professor of Sociology
Wayne Cox, Associate Professor of Political Studies
Honorary Doctorate Recipients
Margaret Atwood, CC, O.Ont, FRSC, FRSL
The Rt Hon. Beverley McLachlin, PC, CC, CSTj
The Hon. Bob Rae, PC, CC, O.Ont, QC
3. Students
Abdel-Kader, Yousif
Abduljawad, Zainb
Adams, Nicholas
Adams, Ryanne
Adams, Ryanne
Aird, Ashley
Alcamo, Adam
Alejandro, Cassidy
Ali, Hadi
Ali, Isiah
Allington, Sydney
Amendola, Alex
Anderson, Rowan
Andres-Bordas, Jose
Anstis, Nikky
Arhen, Ben
Ariss, Esmé
arnott, Abigail
Arora, Rikin
Asbell, Jacob
Ascough, Josiah
Assaly, Jeremy
Asselstine, Callum
Baryliuk, Meghan
Basset, Shaughnessy
Beale, Jake
Beaton, Kobe
Beckett, Maeve
Bennett, Haydn
Bentley, Rachel
Berze, Katherine
Beudoin, Natasha
Bin-Edward, Buse
Binkley, Emily
Blacklock, Yasemin
Blasko, Mitchell
Blumberg, Michelle
Bortrem, Caroline
Boston, Paige
Brodigan, Natalie
Brough, Savannah
Brownell, Darcie
Bruce, Harlee
Bryan, Samantha
Bundgaard, Sam
Burnside-Marshall, Nichola
Burrows, Tori
Burton, Richard
Buskermolan, Dylan
Byron, Greame
Cadena, Kian
Cain, Noah
Caldwell, Becky
Carbajal, Maria
Carr, Chloe
Carr, Sheridan
Cehic, Alic
Chan, Jessie
Channon, Gabriella
Chapur, Estanislao
Charbine, Justin
Charbine, Justin
Chauhan, Zaina
Chen, Kelston
Cheung, Carina
Chick, Alexa
Chow, Carolyn
Ciraco, Dominic
Clark, Vanessa
Clarke, Delaney
Cohen, Laura
Cole, Avery
Cole, Melissa
Collings, Rachel
Cooper, Jason
Cormack, Ryan
Counter, Kaia
Crete-Woodhouse, Zacharias
Crosby, Bria
Cruz-Diaz, Mal
Cunningham-Outinen, Patrick
Cvetlcola, Marija
Dantes, Adam
Daridele, Stephanie
Deacon-Lawr, John
den Hartog, Selma
Dent, Evelyn
Deogan, Gursh
Deogan, Gursharan
Depacina, Irene
Derak, Tina
DeRoche, Stephanie
Dewhurst, Brooke
Dhugee, Gobind
Diab, Natasja
Dimitrov, Elizabeth
Din, Sara
Dinsdale, Ben
Dong, Wenxin
Dorland, Emma
Dorland, Riley
Douglas, Stephanie
Downie, Noah
Duffy, Lauren
Dwight, Ela
Dye, Connor
Edmondson, Samuel
Egan, Adelaide
Elamuvugan, Keshina
Eldin, Sasha
Elson, Kyrsten
Ernst, Jessica Rose
Espersen-Peters, Mary
Espersen-Peters, Mary
Evans, Richie
Falconer, Adam
Farrell, Paige
Ferguson, Jessica
Ferreira, Tina
Fillion, Maye
Fobert, Sarah
Foote, Nicole
Forrestall, Shauna
Forster, Autumn
Forteau, Sabrina
Fourney, Lauren
Fowlie, Ryan
Fox, Nicole
Frampton, Johnathan
Franko, Jessica
Fraser, Julian
Friedman, Julia
Galdbraith, Caitlin
Gallea, Hannah
Galway, Jordan
Garland, Katie
Gename, Magdalena
Gilbert, Maria
Gilbert, Valerie
Girard, Meagan
Gladnov, Philipp
Glover, Katie
Goddard, Marie Elena
Goepel, Bailey
Gofordump,Anita
Goldstein, Jaqueline
Goldstein, Raena
Gollner, Julia
Golzadeh, Niusha
Goodfield, Kobe
Goordat, Joshua
Gowdy, Katrina
Grant, Sydney
Grat, Lauren
Gray, Emily
Graziani, Brandon
Green, Daniel
Greene, William
Gresser, Hope
Grossinger, Zane
Grzegorczyk, Hannah
Guida, Carlie
Guo Yufei
Guyon, Julien
Gwin, Katelyn
Haba, Catherine
Hagen, Brittany
Haluro, Gillian
Hamel, Angelique
Hamilton, Rhianna
Han, Brian
Han, Jessie
Han, Ningfu
Handyside, Elle
Hanna, Natalie
Hannah, Allison
Hanson, Olivia
Harder, Rachelle
Hargrave, Emily
Harper-Simard, Chase
Hau, Isabelle
Hawryluk, Sydney
Hayes, Julia
Hector, Sofie
Helmke, Delaney
Hickey, Chloe
Hicks, Taylor
Ho, Tiffany
Hodgson, Julia
Hoehner, Jenna
Holas, Kobe
Holmes, Christina
Holt, Emma
Hopper, Brynn
Hornstein, Daniel
Howell, Danika
Hrushevsky, Matt
Huang, Akela
Hultin, David
Imada, Moeri
Imre-Millei, Bibora
Ingoldsby, Erin
Inniss, Brad
Inniss, Brad
Intounas, Constance
Irvine, Peter
Jackson, Jenna
Jadd, Leah
Jagoe, Michael
James, Abbey
Jingwei, Jeremy
Johnson, Mauilyn
Johnson, Tabitha
Jokic, Dallas
Jurak, Paul
Jureta, Emily
Kamalathasan, Hishani
Kaoud, Hania
Kearney, Alana
Kehyeian, Vanessa
Kelly, Erika
Kennedy, Aimee
Kermali, Aliya
Khademi, Ghazal
Khanbhai, Yasmin
King, Ben
King, Chris
Knight, Matthew
Kobayashi, Hihano
Kornak, Tabitha
Krstovic, Angela
Kube, Lauren
Kucera, Ingrid
Kutzner, Hannah
Kwasnicki, Julia
Ladner, Duncan
Lambropoulos, Stephanie
Lane, Alix
Langston, Kendall
Lansley, Josephine
Laperriere, Sophie
Laplante, Celina
Larkin, Kathleen
Larson, Claire
Laurat, Grace
Lauren Di Felice
Lauzon, Alexandra
Laver, Andrew
Lawrie, Christena
Lawson, Cheurlotte
Lawson, Jack
Lazarowich, Meg
Lederman, Leeor
Lee, Jacob
Lee, Jaewon
Leefe, Spencer
Levars, Donna
Levesque, Samina
Levine, Alisha
Levito, Mattias
Levitt, Bryne
Lidtke, Katherine
Lieon, Valierie
Lipuouitz, Alexis
Lollar, Faith
Loucks, Madison
Lu, Eris
Luis-Mangubat, Jose
Luoma, Michael
Luppe, Hannah
Lussier, Kelsey
Luttikuis, Ryan
MacCulloch, Zoë
Macdonald, Victoria
MacKinnon, Charles
Mackintosh, Dee
Macrae, Kate
Maddison, Charlotte
Madigan, Amanda
Maggs, Elliot
Mahmoud, Hana
Mahomy, Claire
Mainwaring, Hugh
Majury, Emma
Malik, Mehrisa
Mao, Jane
Mao, Mingzhu
Marcoux, Gabrielle
Marin, Sophie
Marischenko, Alyssa
Mariz, Katie
Martensson, Celia
Marthens, Josh
Martin, Rosalyn
Martins, Emily
Matharoc, Simrit
Mathison, Megan
McAfee, Foster
McAfee, Madison
McAlpine, Ariel
McAuley, Adam
McCarthy, Meagan
McComb, Lucas
McCormack, Zoe
McCortney, Alex
McCullough, Sam
McDonald, May
McFetridge, Alex
Mcgovern, Kyra
McGunnigle, Liam
McHale, Sophie
McKay, Camryn
Mckay, Maddie
McKenzie, Adam
McKinlay, Lachlan
Mcltugh, Maggie
Mcmahon, Siobhan
Meeson, Fiona
Meikle, John
Melmer, Phallon
Melrose, Syndey
Menszies, Maria
Mentenon, Claude-Michel
Menzies, Maria
Miao, Rita
Michel-Mentenon, Claude
Mikhail, Joseph
Miller, Tyler
Mochulla, Rachel
Mohabeer, Justine
Moniz, Cassandra
Morris-Smale, Emily
Morrison, Reily
Morrissey, Alex
Mostero, Calee
Müller, Portia
Munaro, Eve
Munro, Alastair
Murray, Sarah
Myers, Madison
Nadarajah, Nevin
Nadeau, Frank
Nagamatsu, Taylor
Nam, Katherine
Neander, Michael
Ng, Chelsea
Nicholson, Ryan
Nitchov, Evan
Niven, Michael
Noronha, Derek
Nussbaum, Eric
Nygren, Alex
O’Brien, Carlie
O’Handley, James
Ochocinski, Abby
Oladimeil, Joseph
Oliveira, Patrice
Pan, Chen
Panhuyzen, Emily
Parikh, Anjali
Parkes, Brandon
Parris, Jazzy
Pascoe, Molly
Pasqual, Solona
Peacock, Quinn
Penacchietti, Sofia
Penfold, Devon
Peng, Jiachen
Phillips, Alexandra
Pijselman, Kim
Pippo, Adel
Playford, Abbey
Plender, Jonathan
Pogue, Colin
Ponetta, Matthew
Power, Daniel
Pridgeon, Matt
Procska, Nickolas
Querques, Daniel
Querques, Daniel
Radcliffe, Sean
Ramer, Hannah
Raotenbach, Thomas
Rashford, Sanyu
Rasp, Jennifer
Rea, Alexandra
Read, Copeland
Régnier, Micha
Rehman, Hannah
Reis,lJared
Renton, Sophie
Richardson, Haley
Rivard, Jeremy
Rivera-Wong, Luis
Roberts, Evan
Robichaud, Elissa
Robichaud, Elissa
Robinson, Braedan
Rogerson, Sydney
Romanson, Matt
Rondeau, Madeleine
Rong, Iris
Ross, Emily
Ross, Sophia
Roubotham, Sarah
Rowed, Grace
Rumball, Dominique
Russell, Samual
Saba, Natalie
Sadnzadeh, Sara
Sahi, Angela
Salek, Olyvia
Salvatore, Vanessa
Sampson, D’antal
Sander, Nick
Sanginga, Rosine
Santamaura, Nicholas
Sarazin, Brady
Schell, Madeline
Scherer, Laura
Scott, Melanie
Scruby, Claire
Scully, Katharine
Sengupla, Kunal
Shah, Tamjid
Shau, Randy
Shepperdson, Sarah
Shi, Sarah
Shin, Hanseul
Shin, Nolan
Shiuprasad, Julian
Shmidt, Amanda
Shokour, Arianna
Shumiatcher, Eva
Simunovic, Saskia
Sinclair, Mark
Sivaneshan, Sahana
Sloan, Cameron
Smart, Donny
Smith, Andrew
Smith, Jesse
Soleman, Nick
Somerville, Tyler
Springstead, Jake
Stanbra, Jaqueline
Steele, Brendan
Stephans, Catherine
Stern, Henry
Styles, Alison
Su, Rachel
Surette, Emilie
Susanna, Chiara
Sutherland, Sean
Szutka, Jacob
Tallmeister, Emily
Tambakis, Kloé
Tanaka, Sydney
Taylor, Abby
Terry, Liam
Theodoropoulos, Andreas
Thomas, Lauren
Thompson, Jalisa
Thomson, Yasmin
Tomayk, Michelle
Tomazos, Leon
Towes, Lucas
Troop, Megan
Turnbull, Kieran
Umar, Aysha
Umengan, Chloe
Vandenberg, Erin
Varga, Cameron
Vaughan, Michelle
Ventura, Sabrina
Veres, Taylor
Verschuerer, Evie
Vuong, Kelly
Wagram, Kristina
Wakefield, Jamie
Walker, Eliza
Wang, Kathy
Wang, Yolin
Waxman, Remi
Webler, Elizabeth
Welsh, Rose
Westbrook, Daniel
White, Courtney
White, Courtney
Wiener, Jeremy
Wight, Lisa
Wigmore, Grace
Wilson, Emily
Wilson, Sloane
Wilson, Stephanie
Win, Catherine
Winters, Russell
Woods, Robert
Woodworth, Merissa
Wrenshall, Luka
Xu, Jiaqi
Xu, Qianzi
Yang, Browen
Yang, Elaine
Yang, Yuxin
Yao, Cong
Ye, William
Yoruk, Bertug
Yu, Jess
Yu, Jixian
Yvan, Edward
Zaleska, Zaya
Zeldin, Sasha
Zhang, Vicky
Zhang, Xinyue
Ziegler, Grace