Land Donation gives Queen鈥檚 Access to Unique Ecosystem
Larry McKeown, MA'86, and his sister, Anna Kelly. Artsci'81, Ed'81, donated land in honour of their grandmother, Kathleen McKeown (nee Ralph), Arts 1916.
Students and researchers have access to ecologically important land and a wider range of plants, animals, and insects for field studies, thanks to the generosity of a Queen's family.
Welcoming international students to campus
With the start of a new academic year fast approaching, the Queen鈥檚 University International Centre (QUIC) in Student Affairs is preparing to welcome over 1,400 international students to campus.
School of Computing Celebrates 50 Years
Last weekend marked the beginning of our 50th year in the School of Computing. The festivities welcomed back our alumni, our previous department heads, and our retired faculty and staff. Together with many of our current faculty, staff, and students, we acknowledged and celebrated this community for how it has shaped the School into what we are today.
Geography and Planning Graduate Students Launch National Indigenous Climate Change Platform and Lead Indigenous Women Entrepreneurship Programming Across Ontario
Shyra Barberstock and Ryan 鈥淩ye鈥 Barberstock, both PhD students in the Geography and Planning department, have some exciting news to share. The Barberstocks are cofounders of , a global Indigenous consulting boutique and design thinking firm.
Queen鈥檚 prepares to welcome the Class of 2023
Months of preparation and collaboration have been leading up to Move-in Day on Saturday, Aug. 31.
Queen鈥檚 will soon be the site of an annual feat of coordination: the safe and well-organized move-in of 4,500 students into university residences. Move-in Day this year will be on Saturday, Aug. 31.
Researchers and policymakers to discuss 鈥榠nclusive prosperity鈥
成人大片 experts ensure past won't stay buried
For more than a century, a burial ground beneath a church in downtown Kingston has remained hidden. Some of the city鈥檚 earliest citizens 鈥 including prominent residents, sailors, Black slaves brought here by the Loyalists, and American prisoners of the War of 1812 鈥 are interred there; their identities slowly fading from the pages of history.