For Release Upon Receipt - December 5, 2019
UWI
Vice-Chancellor Professor Sir Hilary Beckles has expressed his delight at the announcement of two UWI academics being among awardees – yet again – for the Anthony N Sabga Caribbean Awards for Excellence. Among the four named 2020 Caribbean Awards for Excellence Laureates, are Dr. Olivene Burke, Executive Director of The UWI Mona Social Service (MSS) organisation for Public and Civic Contributions; and Dr. Shirin Haque, Senior Lecturer in The UWI St. Augustine Department of Physics for Science and Technology.
Vice-Chancellor Beckles said, “among the myriad ways in which The University of the West Indies has provided positively impactful services and transformational leadership to the Caribbean region, we especially recognise that women have been central to our, and this Region’s, achievements. Just recently, Principal and Pro Vice-Chancellor Professor the Hon Eudine Barriteau of our Cave Hill Campus received a Barbados national honour; now another two of our women leaders, on the two ends of the Caribbean chain, have been recognised in this manner. Their contributions align with The UWI’s avowed mission as an activist university in strengthening underserved communities through social interventions and the advancement of stem education for sustainable development.”
The Anthony N Sabga Caribbean Awards is the only programme in the Caribbean which seeks out and rewards outstanding nominees in Arts & Letters, Public & Civic Contributions, Science & Technology, and Entrepreneurship. It has been in existence since 2005, and has named, inclusive of the current inductees, 43 Laureates from throughout the region. From these 43, just under half are from The University of the West Indies.
The other 2020 awardees are: Mr Jallim Eudovic, Sculptor of Saint Lucia, for Arts & Letters; and Mr Andrew Mendes, Energy Services Entrepreneur of Guyana for Entrepreneurship. The 2020 ceremony will be staged on April 25, 2020 at a venue to be announced.
About The UWI Awardees:
Dr Olivene Burke is a social scientist who has been MSS Executive Director for the last decade. She is responsible for executing the organisation’s vision of strengthening under-developed communities via a six-pillar social intervention model comprising education and training, health, sports, entrepreneurship, crime and violence reduction and peace. She is a leader in the university’s “gown meets town” initiative to make interventions in its communities.
Under Dr Burke’s leadership, MSS has transformed the lives and livelihoods of over 40,000 residents in 16 Jamaican inner-city communities – including August Town in St Andrew and Salt Spring in Montego Bay. These communities are among the most volatile in Jamaica and the Caribbean. Eighty-five young people from six of the communities have received MSS’s UWI Township tertiary scholarship, and 33 have graduated thus far.
In addition to formal schooling, MSS provides skills training to those older than school age in areas as diverse as construction, housekeeping, and database management for those who would not be caught in the formal school system. It also assists adults with a Small Business Lab Programme, which was established to provide opportunities for those not eligible for university.
MSS encourages housing stock rehabilitation by encouraging UWI students to secure off-campus housing in the communities, thus beautifying communities and providing an income for home-owners. Among MSS’s greatest achievements is its collective contribution to the reduction of the murder rate in August Town to zero in 2016 (from a high of 11 in 2012). Researchers are now studying the intervention strategies to apply them to other communities in Jamaica and elsewhere.
Burke’s accomplishments are achieved through building diverse teams, fund-raising, and targeted interventions. Her initiatives are large scale and require considerable funding and personnel, and have led her to create partnerships with community and academic institutions. MSS has worked in conjunction with local institutions like the Lions’ Clubs of Mona and New Kingston, Kiwanis and Rotary Clubs of Kingston and St Andrew, and foreign universities including Universities of Costa Rica and Florida State. She is also an active academic who publishes and participates in academic conferences.
Dr Shirin Haque is an astronomer, a senior lecturer, former deputy dean and former head of the Department of Physics, in the Faculty of Science and Technology at the St Augustine Campus. The first and only woman to head the department to date, in 2018 she also became the first woman to be awarded the prestigious CARICOM Science Award.
Dr Haque is an inspiring teacher and researcher at The UWI in the cutting-edge field of astrobiology, which seeks to understand the complexities of life in the universe. She has pioneered internationally recognised work on the Pitch Lake at La Brea and the mud volcanoes in Trinidad. She collaborates with astrobiologists in Finland, Germany, and the USA and started an observational astronomy programme at St Augustine in collaboration with the University of Turku in Finland. Its success has brought more international attention to The UWI with contribution of data to the monitoring of a monstrous binary black hole system and the first comet lander mission. The National Science Foundation in the USA, through the National Radio Astronomy Observatory appointed her as programme director for the development of a Caribbean hub in radio astronomy in 2018.
Dr Haque has a multidisciplinary approach to her work, having completed an MPhil degree in Psychology. She has spearheaded fundraising activities in the faculty for needy children in the community and for students in the faculty. She is a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, Member of the International Astronomical Union and the American Astronomical Society. She is a founding member of the Caribbean Institute of Astronomy (CARINA). This year, she was appointed National Outreach Coordinator for Trinidad and Tobago with the International Astronomical Union Office of Astronomy Outreach. She chairs the national committee coordinating the naming of an exoplanet and its host star that would be visible from the country, which would be named by the people of Trinidad and Tobago in an historic act as the first locally named celestial object.
As an educator, Dr Haque is a dynamic student-centred instructor and model, especially to young women, creating opportunities for them to do research visits at international institutes. She conducts astronomy and STEM workshops for teachers regionally and provides career guidance to secondary students. She was the co-chair of the International School for Young Astronomers held in Trinidad and Tobago in 2009, with participants from 17 countries and co-organised the first ever Caribbean Regional Astronomy conference in 2017.
Among the numerous awards for her work are: Guardian Life Teaching Award (2002), the international distinguished teacher award from the Association of Atlantic Universities (2004), the NIHERST 2011 Women in Science and Technology medal, and the 2013 Rudranath Capildeo Award for Applied Science and Technology (Silver). NIHERST also named her a science icon. The UWI featured her in “60 under 60” for its 60th anniversary publication highlighting 60 outstanding academics and again with an award for outstanding work as a woman scientist for UWI’s 70th anniversary. She has also been featured in “Eminent women scientists in Latin America and the Caribbean”.
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About The UWI
For over 70 years The University of the West Indies (The UWI) has provided service and leadership to the Caribbean region and wider world. The UWI has evolved from a university college of London in Jamaica with 33 medical students in 1948 to an internationally respected, regional university with near 50,000 students and five campuses: Mona in Jamaica, St. Augustine in Trinidad and Tobago, Cave Hill in Barbados, Five Islands in Antigua and Barbuda and an Open Campus. As part of its robust globalization agenda, The UWI has established partnering centres with universities in North America, Latin America, Asia, and Africa including the State University of New York (SUNY)-UWI Center for Leadership and Sustainable Development; the Canada-Caribbean Studies Institute with Brock University; the Strategic Alliance for Hemispheric Development with Universidad de los Andes (UNIANDES); the UWI-China Institute of Information Technology, the University of Lagos (UNILAG)-UWI Institute of African and Diaspora Studies and the Institute for Global African Affairs with the University of Johannesburg (UJ). The UWI offers over 800 certificate, diploma, undergraduate and postgraduate degree options in Food & Agriculture, Engineering, Humanities & Education, Law, Medical Sciences, Science & Technology, Social Sciences and Sport.
As the region’s premier research academy, The UWI’s foremost objective is driving the growth and development of the regional economy. The world’s most reputable ranking agency, Times Higher Education, has ranked The UWI among the top 600 universities in the world for 2019 and 2020, and the 40 best universities in Latin America and the Caribbean for 2018 and 2019. The UWI has been the only Caribbean-based university to make the prestigious lists. For more, visit www.uwi.edu.
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