People Directory

Professor Emeritus, FCIP, RPP

qadeerm@queensu.ca

Mackintosh-Corry Hall, Room E320

Multiculturalism and planning; urban development

Economic Geography, tropical Africa, Trinidad & Tobago, and Third World underdevelopment.

Research Areas: Carbon emissions, land atmosphere gas exchange

Professor Emeritus

rosenber@queensu.ca

Mackintosh-Corry Hall, Room E308

Research Areas: Aging across Canada, Geographies of voluntarism, Health status and access to health care among older Indigenous people, Health care delivery systems in Ontario and Canada, and Women’s health.

Professor Emeritus

In Memoriam

Professor Emeritus

In Memoriam

Research Areas: Playfulness, Relational Placemaking, Spatial Affordances, Social Responsiveness

Research Areas: Vegetation and landscape effects on nutrient cycling and greenhouse gas emissions from high-arctic ecosystems; land-use change effects on net (sources and sinks) greenhouse gas emissions; modeling of biogeochemical processes (e.g. carbon and nitrogen cycling) in terrestrial ecosystems; impacts of land-use history on contemporary ecosystem dynamics

Research Areas: Microwave remote sensing, synthetic aperture radar methods, applications, image processing and data analysis

Research Areas: Financialization; ESG; Political Economy; Brazilian Companies

Urban spatial structure, housing, methods, finance.

Research Areas: Regional Development; Economic Sustainability; Northern Communities

Research Areas: geomicrobiology, astrobiology

Research Areas: Arctic Canada, historical and political geography, youth research, land claims, Nunavut and Northwest Territories

Research Areas: Surface-atmosphere interactions influenced by management and human-induced modification of ecosystems; trace gas exchanges; wetland ecosystems.

Assistant Professor

In Memoriam

Professor Emeritus

In Memoriam

Research Areas: Active monitoring and prediction of northern landscape evolution using innovative geospatial, geophysical, and climate-coupled modelling techniques designed to identify and address current challenges facing the rapidly changing Arctic

Geographic information systems, health care planning, the spread and control of infectious diseases with special emphasis on rabies in wildlife.