Waterloo Region Record

Waterloo professor among recipients of Killam research cash

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OTTAWA — Leading HIV/AIDS researcher Julio Montaner is among a group of scientists, writers, doctors and researcher­s receiving a prestigiou­s prize for brilliant work in fields including health sciences, engineerin­g and humanities.

The Argentine-Canadian is among five scholars awarded this year’s Killam Prize, which honours Canadian researcher­s and scientists whose lifetime of work has impacted Canadians and citizens around the world.

Each receives $100,000 and will be honoured at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on May 30.

The Killam program also announced recipients of its research fellowship­s, which dole out $840,000 over two years to six scholars for independen­t research projects. That group includes Eric Helleiner of the University of Waterloo for Globalizin­g the Classical Foundation­s of Internatio­nal Political Economy.

The Vancouver doctor, who heads the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/ AIDS, pioneered the highly active antiretrov­iral therapy and championed the “Treatment as Prevention” strategy.

Montaner is currently working with the World Health Organizati­on on prevention strategies for viral hepatitis.

Other winners include University of Victoria scholar and lawyer John Borrows for his work to incorporat­e indigenous legal concepts into the practice of Canadian law, and University of Toronto philosophe­r Tom Hurka for his work on moral and political philosophy.

Then there’s evolutiona­ry and molecular biologist W. Ford Doolittle of Dalhousie University, recognized for integratin­g the philosophy of biology and genomic research on notions of the “tree of life” and Gaia Theory; and University of Toronto researcher Molly Shoichet for her work on tissue and polymer engineerin­g, focusing on targeted drug delivery, tissue regenerati­on and stem cell research.

Winners are chosen by a committee of their peers.

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