With a $30 million investment, the Bruce Mitchell Research Program continues to drive excellence across disciplines, supporting new faculty appointments, and expanding opportunities for doctoral and ...
Queen’s and Bell sign Memorandum of Understanding to collaborate on a proposal to build a new supercomputing facility in Kingston.
This year brought major moments across Queen’s, from renewed campus spaces and student driven fundraising to important research milestones, athletics success, and leadership appointments. The ...
Faculty, staff, and retirees set donations record in support of programs across the Kingston, Frontenac, Lennox and Addington area.
Supercomputing expert Ian Karlin’s new role at Queen’s aims to help Canada advance its global high-performance computing capacity.
Pushing boundaries in immunology – In 2024, Paul Kubes joined Queen’s as the Canada Excellence Research Chair (CERC) in Immunophysiology and Immunotherapy. Since his arrival, he's made significant ...
The Board of Trustees has approved a report from a special committee set up in response to a student group request.
At a time when universities worldwide are competing for top research talent, Queen’s is reinforcing its role as a destination for leaders whose work drives discovery, innovation, and societal impact.
OPEA 2025 – Dr. Heidi-Lynn Ploeg, P.Eng. (Engineering Medal – Research and Development)16 December 2025 ...
The concept of a vampire predates Bram Stoker’s tales of Count Dracula — probably by several centuries. But did vampires ever really exist? In 1819, 80 years before the publication of Dracula, John ...
Picture a computer that can perform a billion-billion operations per second. A technology capable of solving complex problems, from designing new proteins for drug treatments, vaccines, and ...
Canada is a suburban nation, not only because of consumer preferences, but also because of federal government policy in the years following the Second World War. Most post-war population growth in ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results