Congratulations to recent faculty recipients of two new research funding opportunities at Huron!
Drs. Amy Bell (History) and Steven Bland (Philosophy) were awarded funding from the Targeted Research Fund for their collaborative research-learning project “Emotion, Reason and Psychic Research.” This project explores the worlds and ideas of late nineteenth-century Victorian spiritualism and belief in the occult in order to ask questions about the history, nature, and potential limits of rational thinking.
Experiential learning opportunities for Huron students are incorporated into the project through Research Assistant positions and through new courses involving archival research and replication of historical psychic experiments. Bell and Bland explain that this experiential learning approach “adds an immediacy and relevance to student research across disciplinary boundaries, and teaches problem-solving and communication skills along with the acquisition of knowledge.”
An award from the Technology Support Fund will facilitate ongoing research by Dr. Mahdiyeh Entezarkheir (Economics) into the impact of technology standards on innovation, market structure, and productivity. Entezarkheir’s research investigates policy-relevant questions surrounding intellectual property and the role of patents. Her work considers the requirements for technology standards in the case of developing technologies such as artificial intelligence, and decision-making by technology firms joining these standard setting organizations.
Dr. Teresa Hubel (English) will use funding from the Targeted Research Fund to produce a short documentary film, “Dancing Back from the Margins of India?” Produced in collaboration with researchers at Western and King’s, and London filmmakers, the documentary offers a contemporary perspective on the history of ‘devadasis,’ the performing women and girls of hereditary performing families of South India. According to Hubel, the ultimate aim of the film is “to explore the artistic legacy of the devadasis and the implications of this legacy for diasporic Indians, and to cast light on questions related to the invention of tradition, cultural appropriation, political resistance in the arts, and female empowerment—questions that have as much valency in London, Ontario, as in Chennai, India.”
The Targeted Research Fund and Technology Support Fund are in their inaugural year in 2019-20, and are intended to establish critical support for large-scale faculty research and teaching projects and promote research excellence at Huron.





Lisa Jones Keenan is the Vice President of Sales at Xplornet Communications, the largest rural fixed wireless broadband service provider in Canada. 
Leigh Allen is the AVP, Global Strategic Research, Reinsurance Group of America Inc., one of the world’s largest global life and reinsurance companies.
Yola Ventresca is a Managing Partner, Lerners LLP, Secretary of Huron’s Board of Governors and a Huron Class of ’02 alumni. Selected as one of Canada’s “Best Lawyers,” she is passionate about the value of Liberal Arts in helping students succeed in their careers.
Susan Farrow is an Assistant Professor in The Temerty Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto and a Founding Partner and Co-Director of The Toronto Institute of Group Studies, an organization offering certified training and education in group leadership.
Frank Holmes is CEO and Chief Investment Officer of U.S. Global Investors, as well as a business commentator, philanthropist and Huron Class of ‘78 alumnus. Holmes also serves as the Executive Chairman of HIVE Blockchain Technologies, the first cryptocurrency mining company to go public in 2017.
Kelly Meighen is an experienced philanthropist and volunteer. In her role as president of the T.R. Meighen Family Foundation, she has created a legacy of volunteerism and philanthropic giving in the areas of youth mental health advocacy, environmental conservation and cultural vibrancy.
Ranjita is Executive Chair of the Oxford Global Partnership, advising investors, businesses, family offices and entrepreneurs on sustainable, inclusive and responsible value creation. A Business Fellow at Oxford University’s Smith School, Ranjita engages with companies on pursuing value with values, and teaches a postgraduate “Essentials of ESG & DEI” course.
Caleb Hayhoe is the Founder & Chairman of Flowerdale Group and a Huron Class of ’85 Alumnus. Flowerdale Group is a Hong Kong based family office with a global investment outlook across public markets, real estate and private investment. Hayhoe previously spent over ten years building a global sourcing business together with an exceptional team, and remains committed to entrepreneurialism and helping great ideas become sustainable companies.

