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Françoise Baylis, Doug Knockwood and Art McDonald named to Order of Nova Scotia

Posted by Communications and Marketing on September 16, 2016 in Kudos

Congrats to Françoise Baylis (Canada Research Chair in Bioethics and Philosophy, head of the Impact Ethics research group), Doug Knockwood (Elder in Residence) and Art McDonald (alum, BSc'64, MSc'65, Nobel Prize winner) for being named to the Order of Nova Scotia.

The three are among the five individuals who will be invested into the Order on October 12 at Province House in Halifax. The Order of Nova Scotia was established in June 2001 and is the highest honour bestowed by the province. Since it was created, 82 recipients have been invested into the Order.

Look for more coverage of the Order of Nova Scotia following the investment ceremony in October.

From the Government of Nova Scotia's announcement:

Françoise Elvina Baylis
CM, ONS, PhD, FRSC, FCAHS
Halifax


Professor Françoise Baylis is an expert in the field of bioethics. She is a Professor in the Faculty of Medicine at Dalhousie University and is the Canada Research Chair in Bioethics and Philosophy. Her work with those outside the medical profession has brought honour, understanding and respect to her field.

Baylis is able to take complex issues such, as stem cell research and new reproductive technologies, and make them understandable and assessable to society. She uses film and other media to educate and engage the public without jargon and other barriers created by complex academic subjects.

At the heart of Baylis’ work is the belief that citizens belong in the discussion and decision making about scientific advances that affect our lives. Her commitment has won the affection and admiration of her colleagues and citizens of Nova Scotia.
    
Freeman Douglas Knockwood
ONS, DHum (Hon)
Indian Brook


Elder Doug Knockwood embodies the spirit of resilience. He had a loving father who fought and succeeded in liberating him from a residential school. When he returned home he had to relearn his language and his culture.

A short stint in the Canadian Armed Forces resulted in tuberculosis and the loss of a lung. He has survived homelessness and alcoholism. Elder Knockwood fled to the New England States, as did many of his generation. There he became a respected cook and earned his sobriety.

Elder Knockwood used his experience of survival and redemption to empower others. He has used Mi’Kmaw spiritual teaching and personal experience to help others overcome addiction across Canada. He is well known for his work with youth and vulnerable people afflicted with drug and alcohol problems. Elder Knockwood is a loved and respected elder.

Arthur Bruce McDonald
CC OOnt ONS FRS FRSC
Sydney, Nova Scotia, and Kingston, Ontario


Arthur McDonald is a teacher, collaborator and Nobel Prize winning Astrophysicist. His career in science began as a student at Sydney Academy. Some fifty years later his work has changed our understanding of the innermost workings of matter — the behavior of neutrinos.

Those extra math classes at Sydney Academy led to bachelor and master degrees in physics from Dalhousie University. He then moved on to earn a doctorate at the California Institute of Technology. He worked at Chalk River Nuclear Laboratories and became a professor at Princeton University and then Queens.

He led a team of international scientists as Director of the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) Collaboration and shared the 2015 Nobel Physics Prize with Takaaki Kajita of the SuperKamiokande Collaboration for measurements that defined important basic properties of fundamental particles called neutrinos. McDonald has received many honours for his science and is valued by his colleagues for his vision, his leadership and his persistence.

Throughout his career, Dr. McDonald has supervised and mentored the research of more than 100 graduate students, postdoctoral fellows and research associates. He is an Ambassador of Canadian science who has not lost touch with his Nova Scotia roots.