August 26, 2022 by
A&S News
From the mysteries of dark matter to breakthrough nanotechnology, scholars from a range of disciplines across the Faculty of Arts & Science are sharing their expertise on a variety of issues in the media.
Here’s some of what they had to say this week.
August 19, 2022
- Miriam Diamond, assistant professor in the Department of Physics, is highlighted in The Globe and Mail (paywall) for her role in an international experiment attempting to intercept particles of dark matter as they pass through the Earth.
- Siena Anstis, senior legal advisor at the Citizen Lab at the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, analyzes the impact of the group’s work uncovering digital surveillance, as noted in The Guardian.
- Michelle Cho, assistant professor in the Department of East Asian Studies, discusses trending topics in pop culture on CBC Radio’s q.
August 20, 2022
- Department of Economics professor emeritus Gustavo Indart writes in the Toronto Star (paywall) about the potential of a recession.
August 21, 2022
- School of Cities director and Department of Geography & Planning professor Karen Chapple shares with the Salt Lake Tribune her research on downtown Salt Lake City’s post-pandemic recovery.
August 22, 2022
- Department of Chemistry professor Cynthia Goh explains to The Globe and Mail (paywall) how research developed in her lab led to an agricultural technology breakthrough.
- On CTV News, Jack Cunningham of the Bill Graham Centre for Contemporary International History at Trinity College discusses the Justin Trudeau-Olaf Scholz talks on green energy.
August 24, 2022
- Matti Siemiatycki, professor in the Department of Geography & Planning and director of the Infrastructure Institute at the School of Cities, discusses with CityNews online the scale of projected population growth in Ontario.