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State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of Botswana, and to the Republic of South Africa by Their Excellencies the Right Honourable David Johnston, Governor General of Canada and Mrs. Sharon Johnston Delegation Republic of Ghana May 13 to 16, 2013 Republic of Botswana May 16 to 19, 2013 Republic of South Africa May 20 to 22, 2013

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Page 1: State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of

State Visits to the Republic of Ghana,

to the Republic of Botswana, and to the Republic of South Africa

by Their Excellencies the Right Honourable David Johnston, Governor General of Canada

and Mrs. Sharon Johnston

Delegation

State Visit to the Republic of GhanaMay 13-15, 2013

Republic of Ghana

May 13 to 16, 2013State Visit to the Republic of Botswana

May 16-18, 2013

Republic of Botswana

May 16 to 19, 2013State Visit to the Republic of South Africa

May 19-22, 2013Republic of South Africa

May 20 to 22, 2013

Page 2: State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of
Page 3: State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of

Delegação Oficial Visita ao Brasil, 2012Official Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

His Excellency the Right Honourable David JohnstonGovernor General of Canada

David Johnston began his professional career as an assistant professor in the Faculty of Law at Queen’s University in 1966, moving to the Law Faculty at the University of Toronto in 1968. He became dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of Western Ontario in 1974. In 1979, he was named principal and vice-chancellor of McGill University, and in July 1994, he returned to

the McGill Faculty of Law as a full-time professor. In June 1999, he became the fifth president of the University of Waterloo. Mr. Johnston has served on many provincial and federal task forces and committees. He has also served on the boards of a number of companies, including Arise, CGI, Fairfax, and Masco. He was president of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada and of the Conférence des recteurs et des principaux des universités du Québec. He was the founding chair of the National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy, chaired the federal government’s Information Highway Advisory Council, and served as the first non-American chair of the Board of Overseers at Harvard University. He is the author or co-author of two dozen books, holds honorary doctorates from over a dozen universities, and has been awarded the Order of Canada (Companion).

Mr. Johnston holds an LL.B. from Queen’s University (1966), an LL.B. from the University of Cambridge (1965), and an AB from Harvard University (1963). While at Harvard, he was twice selected for the

All-American hockey team and is a member of Harvard’s Athletic Hall of Fame. His academic specializations include securities regulation, information technology and corporate law.

Her Excellency Sharon Johnston

Mrs. Johnston graduated as a physical and occupational therapist in 1966, from the University of Toronto. She worked in the area of child psychiatry. She completed a master’s and doctorate in rehabilitation science, all while raising her five daughters. At the master’s level, she studied a more effective way of clearing the small airways of cystic fibrosis sufferers. Her doctoral thesis examined the coordination of respiratory muscles during normal speech, stuttered speech and singing. Her thesis resulted in the publication of scientific articles on respiratory mechanics.

While her husband, David Johnston, was president of the University of Waterloo (Ontario), Mrs. Johnston managed for 12 years a hundred-acre farm and a small horse-boarding business called Chatterbox Farm.

Mrs. Johnston has a novel-in-progress, begun in the postgraduate program for writers at Humber College. The novel is a fictional account of life in southwestern Alberta during a colourful, post-Great War era, and is based on the experiences of Mrs. Johnston’s grandmother.

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Delegação Oficial Visita ao Brasil, 2012Official Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

Deepak Obhrai (South Africa)Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Foreign Affairs

Deepak Obhrai was born in Tanzania and attended school on three separate continents: Tanzania, India and the United Kingdom. He immigrated to Canada with his family in 1977. In Canada, he became heavily involved in his community, acting as president of the India–Canada Association, the Monterey Community Association and the Hindu Society of Calgary. He was also vice-president of the National Indo-Canadian Council.

Mr. Obhrai was first elected as the member of Parliament for Calgary East in 1997, and was subsequently re-elected five times. In 2006, he was appointed parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Foreign Affairs. In 2008, he was vested with the additional responsibility of serving as parliamentary secretary to the Minister of International Co-operation. Currently, Mr. Obhrai serves as parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Foreign Affairs. He also serves as chair of the Canada–Indonesia Parliamentary Friendship Group. As the former chair of the Canada–India Parliamentary Friendship Group, he initiated many activities that led to further strengthening of Canada’s relations with India. For the past 10 years, Mr. Obhrai has also hosted an annual event on Parliament Hill to mark Diwali, which has evolved to become Canada’s National Diwali Celebration. Africa is Deepak’s other great passion. Born and raised in Tanzania, he has travelled widely across the continent and continues to work hard to build bridges of understanding between Canada and countries of Africa. He is a member of the Canada-Africa Parliamentary Association. Mr. Obhrai remains committed to ensuring that the voices of Canada’s multicultural communities are heard in Ottawa, and has been recognized for his contributions to the Indo-Canadian community. In January 2009, the Government of India awarded him with the prestigious Pravasi Bharatiya Samman award, the highest honour given to overseas Indians. In 2008, India Abroad newspaper named him one of 35 most influential Indo-Canadians in Canada. In 2006, he was honoured with awards from the Indo-Canada Chamber of Commerce Ottawa Business Council and from the National Indo-Canadian Council.

Mr. Obhrai and his wife, Neena, have three children and two grandchildren.

David McGuintyMember of Parliament

David McGuinty is a bilingual lawyer who has worked with governments, businesses and non-profit organizations around the world. Based in Côte d’Ivoire from 1988 to 1990, he worked with UNICEF on the ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 23 West and Central African countries.

In London, U.K., from 1990 to 1993, David taught law at King’s College, while practicing environmental and commercial law. He was then seconded to

the International Development Law Organization, in Rome, where he designed and taught advanced courses for lawyers, judges and senior officials from throughout the developing world. Returning to Canada in 1995, he was appointed president and CEO of the Prime Minister’s National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy. He was also a senior advisor to the International Development Research Centre, the Rockefeller Foundation and LEAD International, on sustainability training. In June 2004, David was elected to the House of Commons as member of Parliament for Ottawa South. Re-elected in 2006, 2008 and 2011, he has served as official Opposition house leader and as the Liberal Party critic for environment, energy, transportation, natural resources, and science and technology.

He is president of GLOBE Canada.

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Delegação Oficial Visita ao Brasil, 2012Official Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

Peter BraidMember of Parliament

Peter Braid was elected member of Parliament for Kitchener-Waterloo in 2008, and re-elected in 2011. Peter received his degree in international relations from the University of Toronto, in 1989. He has a diverse background in both the private and public sectors, including the Immigration and Refugee Board, and Sun Life Financial.

In Ottawa, Peter is the vice-chair of the House of Commons Government Operations and Estimates Committee, and is a member of the Industry,

Science and Technology Committee. In addition, he is a vice-chair of the Canada-Africa Parliamentary Association, and has traveled to Ethiopia, Kenya and South Sudan, fostering working relationships among Parliamentarians and international organizations. Peter represents a dynamic community that is focused on education, innovation and entrepreneurialism. With two world-class universities, as well as the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics and the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), Kitchener-Waterloo is an important centre of research and technology that contributes to the advancement of knowledge and the development of innovative enterprises. Recognizing the importance of charitable organizations to the well-being of society, Peter is an important advocate for Canadian charities.

Peter and his wife, Annette, have two daughters: Tamara and Alexandra.

John RaffertyMember of Parliament

John Rafferty is the current member of Parliament for Thunder Bay–Rainy River and a member of the New Democratic Party caucus in the House of Commons, in Ottawa, Ontario. He was first elected in the 2008 and subsequently re-elected in 2011.

Mr. Rafferty has served as an educator in Canada and abroad. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Waterloo (1978), where he specialized in English and theatre arts, and a Bachelor of Education from the

University of Western Ontario (1979), where he specialized in intermediate- and senior-level education. He has taught in Yellowknife and was the first high school principal in Rankin Inlet, Nunavut. He is an alumnus of World University Service Canada (WUSC) and lived abroad while working as a teacher in Nigeria, and as a field director in Lesotho and Botswana, for more than six years. He has also worked as a broadcaster and owned a small business. After earning a diploma in broadcasting from Confederation College (1994), he hosted an afternoon radio talk show on CKPR, prior to entering political life. He also started and successfully ran Rafferty Communications, a small business dedicated to producing voice-overs for health, training and safety CD-ROMs. Mr. Rafferty is also a dedicated community volunteer, having served with Special Olympics Ontario and the Voyageur Lion’s Club. He is also a supporter of a number of arts and cultural groups including the Pictograph Gallery, in Atikokan, and the Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra, among others.

Mr. Rafferty also holds a certificate in dispute resolution from Lakehead University. He presently lives with his partner, Pam, and is the proud father of five adult children.

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Delegação Oficial Visita ao Brasil, 2012Official Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

Trudy KernighanHigh Commissioner of Canada to the Republic of Ghana

Trudy Kernighan became high commissioner for Canada to Ghana in 2010. She also covers the Republic of Togo and the Republic of Sierra Leone. Her 30-year diplomatic career has included assignments in Yugoslavia, South Africa, India and Ghana. She has also served in director capacities in human resource management and finance at the headquarters of the Department of Citizenship and Immigration, in Ottawa, Canada. She assumed ever-increasing levels of responsibility including her most recent post as an immigration program manager covering 18 eastern Africa countries.

Mrs. Kernighan received a bachelor’s degree from the University of Waterloo, and a Bachelor of Education from the University of Western Ontario.

Lisa StadelbauerHigh Commissioner of Canada to the Republic of Botswana

Lisa Stadelbauer received her bachelor’s degree from the University of Western Ontario in 1988, and then joined External Affairs and International Trade Canada in 1990.

Her first assignment abroad was in 1992, to Tel Aviv, Israel; she later served in Hanoi, Vietnam, as a counsellor, then in Oslo, Norway, as a counsellor and consul.

In Ottawa, she worked with the India, Bangladesh, Burma, Nepal and Bhutan desks, with the Middle East Peace Process Coordination Group, and with

the United Nations and Commonwealth Affairs Division. She was the director of the Eastern and Southern Africa Division and deputy to Canada’s Africa Personal Representative to the G-8 before her appointment as ambassador of Canada to the Republic of Zimbabwe, with accreditation to Botswana and Angola.

Ms. Stadelbauer is married to Mr. Brad Adams, and they have two daughters, Olivia and Samantha. She succeeded Barbara Richardson in October 2011.

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Delegação Oficial Visita ao Brasil, 2012Official Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

Gaston (Gastone) BarbanHigh Commissioner of Canada to the Republic of South Africa

During his career, Gaston Barban has occupied a number of managerial and executive positions, in Ottawa and abroad, with experience in administration, public affairs and communications, information management and technology, and diplomacy.

Mr. Barban joined the Passport Office of the then-named Department of External Affairs in 1978. In 1981, he became the first regional director of the

newly opened London Regional Passport Office. Mr. Barban returned to Ottawa in 1983. In 1987, he was appointed deputy director of the Domestic Communications Division. From 1989 to 1993, Mr. Barban was first secretary and head of Public Affairs and Culture at the Canadian Embassy in Rome, Italy. In 1993, Mr. Barban returned to the Bureau of Communications as deputy director of the Foreign Policy Communications Division. In 1998, he was asked to create the Communications Programs and Outreach Division. He was promoted to the executive ranks of the Public Service of Canada in 1999, and named director of the new division, where he expanded the department’s outreach program, aimed at increasing public awareness of Canada’s international relations. In 2001, Mr. Barban was posted to Canberra, Australia, as deputy high commissioner. He served as Canada’s acting high commissioner to Australia from July 2004 to July 2005.

He returned to Ottawa and was appointed deputy chief information officer and then, in July 2008, chief information officer and director general of the Information Management and Technology Bureau. On November 23, 2012, Mr. Barban was named high commissioner to the Republic of South Africa, with concurrent accreditation to the Republic of Namibia.

He was raised in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada. He graduated from Carleton University, in Ottawa, with an Honours Bachelor of Arts in 1977. He is married to Jane Barban (nee Wilson) and they have two children, Matthew and Alicia.

Page 8: State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of

Delegação Oficial Visita ao Brasil, 2012Official Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

Stephen WallaceSecretary to the Governor General of Canada

One of nine children from a naval family originating in the Atlantic provinces, Mr. Wallace grew up in Halifax and Ottawa, studied the arts and business administration, and has focused much of his career on international affairs and public administration. His early work as a teacher, volunteer, diplomat and aid worker concentrated mainly on Africa and Central America. Mr. Wallace spent many years with the Canadian International Development Agency, where he managed

several reconstruction programs and served as the vice-president of the Afghanistan Task Force.

His public policy assignments included the Special Joint Committee of Parliament Reviewing Canadian Foreign Policy, as well as work on civil society with the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development. As a senior public servant, Mr. Wallace served as assistant secretary of government operations at the Treasury Board Secretariat, and most recently, as associate deputy minister for the Department of Canadian Heritage. He is a recipient of the 125th Anniversary of the Confederation of Canada Medal. Stephen Wallace became Secretary to the Governor General in February 2011.

Patricia MalikailDirector General of Africa BureauForeign Affairs and International Trade Canada

Patricia Malikail joined the Department of External Affairs in 1981. She has served in Canberra, Beijing and Singapore. During her tenure as deputy director of the China Division (1994-1996), Ms. Malikail was recognized with a Government of Canada Merit Award.

Her headquarters assignments have spanned relations with Korea, international energy issues, and trade and development issues. Ms. Malikail led the team that formulated Canada’s Least Developed Countries Market Access Initiative. The initiative came into effect in 2003. From 2004-2008, Ms. Malikail was the director of the International Economics Relations and Summits Division. During this period, she managed a wide range of economic, trade, investment and security files for eight G8 and APEC leaders summits, and assisted Canada’s G8 Sherpa. From 2008-2011, Ms. Malikail served as executive director of the Science, Technology and Innovation Council Secretariat. The council is an advisory body appointed by the minister of Industry and comprises 18 eminent Canadians from business, academia and government. Ms. Malikail oversaw the preparation of independent advice to the government and major reports on the performance of Canada’s science, technology and innovation system.

After serving as acting director general of the Africa Bureau of the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada since October 2011, Ms. Malikail was appointed its director general in July 2012. Ms. Malikail is married and has two sons.

Page 9: State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of

Delegação Oficial Visita ao Brasil, 2012Official Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

Sonya ThissenDeputy Chief of Protocol of CanadaForeign Affairs and International Trade Canada

Sonya Thissen has been with the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade for nearly 20 years. She has worked in a number or areas including investment promotion, science and technology, European trade relations, film and television, forestry and mining, and clean technologies.

She also served as deputy director of arts promotion, overseeing a grant program for Canadian artists and cultural groups to pursue representational and trade

activities internationally. In 2005, Ms. Thissen became the executive director of the Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards Foundation, a not-for-profit organization dedicated to recognizing lifetime artistic achievement and celebrating excellence in the arts. A signature event of the awards was a tribute performance and gala at the National Arts Centre, in Ottawa, that was broadcast across Canada in English and French. In 2009, Ms. Thissen joined the Office of Protocol where she has worked on numerous high-level visits and events, including the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games.

She holds a M.A. in international affairs from the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs at Carleton University, and a B.A. (Hons.) in political science and a B.A. in business administration from the University of Western Ontario.

Page 10: State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of

Accompanying Delegation Visits to Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago 2012

Délégation d’accompagnement Visite à la Barbade et à Trinité-et-Tobago 2012

Accompanying Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

The Honourable Perrin Beatty (Ghana & Botswana)President and Chief Executive Officer, Canadian Chamber of Commerce

The Honourable Perrin Beatty is the president and CEO of the 200 000-member Canadian Chamber of Commerce, Canada’s largest and most representative national business association. Mr. Beatty is its principal spokesperson, advocating the policy positions of the Canadian Chamber’s members to the federal government, international organizations, the media and the general public. Prior to joining the Canadian Chamber in August 2007, Mr. Beatty was the president and CEO of Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters (CME).

A descendant of one of Canada’s most prominent manufacturing families, Mr. Beatty grew up in Fergus, Ontario, and graduated from the University of Western Ontario, in 1971. In 1972, he was elected to the House of Commons as a Progressive Conservative and in 1979, he was appointed minister of State (Treasury Board) in the government of Joe Clark. He held six additional portfolios in subsequent Progressive Conservative governments, including National Revenue in 1984; Solicitor General in 1985; National Defence in 1986; Health and Welfare in 1989; Communications in 1991; and Secretary of State for External Affairs in 1993. In 1994, Mr. Beatty joined a number of private-sector boards and worked as a consultant in the field of communications. He was an honorary visiting professor with the Department of Political Science at the University of Western Ontario. He wrote a weekly column on government and politics for a major Canadian newspaper. From 1995 to 1999, Mr. Beatty was president and CEO of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC).

Mr. Beatty has served on a number of Canadian government advisory committees, is a member of the advisory council of the Canadian Defence and Foreign Affairs Institute, and is a member of the board of directors of the Canadian International Council. In 2008, Mr. Beatty was named chancellor of the University of Ontario Institute Of Technology. In 2012, Mr. Beatty became a member of the board of directors of Mitsui Canada.

Page 11: State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of

Accompanying Delegation Visits to Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago 2012

Délégation d’accompagnement Visite à la Barbade et à Trinité-et-Tobago 2012

Accompanying Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

Dr. Amit ChakmaPresident and Vice-Chancellor, Western University and Chair, World University Service of Canada (WUSC)

Amit Chakma is the 10th President & Vice-Chancellor of Western University. Dr. Chakma arrived at Western in July 2009 after serving the University of Waterloo since 2001 as Vice-President, Academic & Provost, and as a professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering. Prior to that, he served as Dean of Engineering and then Vice-President (Research) and International Liaison Officer at the University of Regina.

He began his academic career as a professor of chemical and petroleum engineering at the University of Calgary. On November 22, 2012, Western’s Board of Governors re-appointed Dr. Chakma to a second term as President extending to June 30, 2019.

Dr. Chakma is a graduate of the Algerian Petroleum Institute (Dip. Ing., 1982) and the University of British Columbia (Master of Applied Science, 1984 and PhD, chemical engineering, 1987). The author of more than 100 articles, he is a leading expert in areas related to petroleum research and energy management. His research interests include mass transfer, gas separation, gas processing, membrane separation, petroleum waste management, greenhouse gas control technology, and energy and environmental systems modeling. In addition to his roles at Western, Dr. Chakma currently serves as Chair of the World University Service of Canada, as a member of the Board of Directors for the Ontario Centres of Excellence, and as a member of the Science, Technology & Innovation Council of Canada. He also served as Chair of the Federal government’s Advisory Panel on Canada’s International Education Strategy.

In 1998, Dr. Chakma was recognized with Canada‘s Top 40 Under 40 Award, given annually to honour Canada’s best and brightest in their fields younger than 40. He is also a fellow of the Canadian Academy of Engineering, and he received the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2012 in recognition of his contributions to Canadian post-secondary education.

Paul DavidsonPresident, Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC)

Paul Davidson was appointed President of the AUCC in May 2009. In 2011 AUCC marked its 100th anniversary as the voice of Canada’s universities. AUCC has been instrumental in public policy development in higher education and research for ten decades. In addition to advancing the mission of higher education and research in Canada; the AUCC plays a leading role in internationalizing Canada’s campuses.

Prior to joining AUCC, Mr. Davidson was the Executive Director of World University Service of Canada (WUSC) an international development agency active on 70 campuses across Canada, and 17 countries overseas, including Ghana and Botswana. Mr. Davidson has held senior positions in the Canadian book publishing including five years as Executive Director of the Association of Canadian Publishers. Mr. Davidson has also served as an advisor to the Leader of the Opposition, Treasurer and Deputy Premier in Canada’s largest province, Ontario.

Mr. Davidson holds a MA from Queen’s University in Kingston where he studied southern African history, and a BA from Trent University, where he was in the first class of the Trent International Program. Mr. Davidson is married to Elly Vandenberg, and they have three sons.

Page 12: State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of

Accompanying Delegation Visits to Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago 2012

Délégation d’accompagnement Visite à la Barbade et à Trinité-et-Tobago 2012

Accompanying Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

Derek EvansExecutive Director, Cuso International

Derek G. Evans is the executive director of Cuso International, an international development organization supporting programs in some 40 countries. He has an extensive background in senior management and governance in the NGO sector, both nationally and internationally.

His primary background is in education and human rights. He served through the 1990s as deputy secretary general of Amnesty International. From 2000 to 2005,

he was executive director of the Naramata Centre for Continuing Education, one of Canada’s foremost experiential learning institutes.

In 2005, he was appointed associate of the Centre for Dialogue at Simon Fraser University, and served as principal of an independent consultancy providing strategic policy and planning services, largely in support of UN and other international agencies dedicated to advancing the Millennium Development Goals.

Mr. Evans has served as a peace negotiator in numerous civil conflicts, and has led more than 70 international delegations throughout the world. He is the author or co-author of 14 books on human rights and international development. In 2010, he was awarded an honorary doctorate in recognition of his work in human rights and interfaith dialogue, and a Vision Award for strategic leadership.

Craig Kielburger (Botswana and South Africa)Co-Founder, Free the Children

Craig Kielburger is a social entrepreneur, New York Times best-selling author, and syndicated columnist.

He co-founded Free The Children in 1995, when he was 12 years old. Today, more than 1.7 million young people are involved in its programs. In North America, the organization provides comprehensive service learning programs, including its We Day celebrations,

which are attended annually by more than 160 000 students from 3 000 participating schools.

Internationally, the organization works in eight developing countries, providing a holistic and sustainable development model that includes education, health care, food security, clean water, and alternative income programs. Its programs have empowered more than one million beneficiaries.

Alongside his brother Marc, Craig is also the co-founder of Me to We, an innovative social enterprise that seeks to support the work of Free The Children by providing socially conscious products and experiences. Craig is the author of ten books. He holds 13 honorary doctorates and degrees, and has received the Order of Canada, the Roosevelt Freedom Medal, and the World Children’s Prize for the Rights of the Child. He has made multiple appearances on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” and “60 Minutes”, and his work has been featured in National Geographic, TIME and The Economist.

Page 13: State Visits to the Republic of Ghana, to the Republic of

Accompanying Delegation Visits to Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago 2012

Délégation d’accompagnement Visite à la Barbade et à Trinité-et-Tobago 2012

Accompanying Delegation Visits to Ghana, Botswana and South Africa 2013

Jean LebelActing President, International Development Research Centre (IDRC)

With his wide-ranging experience in research for development, particularly in the areas of the environment and agriculture, Jean Lebel oversees all of IDRC’s research programming.

As a pioneering environmental health specialist, Lebel frequently comments on issues ranging from agriculture and food security to the impact of the environment

on health, as well as the management of natural resources and climate change. Lebel joined IDRC in 1997, and has been a team leader of the Ecosystems and Human Health program and director of the Agriculture and Environment program. Lebel is an associate editor of the journal Ecohealth. He is also IDRC’s representative to the board of directors of the International Institute for Sustainable Development, and to the Fund Council of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research.

In 2001, Lebel received the first Prix Reconnaissance from the Faculty of Sciences at the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) for his work on protecting ecosystems and human health in developing countries.

Lebel has a PhD in environmental sciences from UQAM.

Rodney N. ThomasFirst Vice President, Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada

Rod Thomas is first vice president and incoming president (2014–2016) of the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada (PDAC). Throughout his career, Mr. Thomas has worked in mineral exploration and development in both the senior and junior mining sectors as an exploration geologist and executive. He is a strong advocate of the mineral exploration and development industry as a primary driver of wealth creation in Canada and around the world.

Mr. Thomas initially became involved with the PDAC as a volunteer with the Convention Committee in the early 1990s, and worked his way up to eventually chair the convention during the rapid growth period of 2006 to 2008. Since becoming a director in 2006, he has also served on the audit committee, sits on the executive committee as first vice president and incoming president (2014–2016), and is a member of the awards committee. He received his undergraduate degree in earth sciences from McGill University, followed by an Applied Master of Science degree from Queen’s University. After finishing his postgraduate education in geology in the late 1970s, he worked in mineral exploration for several major mining companies, including Urangesellschaft, SMDC (now Cameco), Utah Mines and BHP (now BHP-Billiton). After leaving BHP, he worked in the junior sector in various senior roles in both technical and executive capacities. He returned to the senior mining sector in 2008, and is currently general manager and director of Votorantim Metals Canada Inc., a subsidiary of Votorantim Metais, which is part of the Votorantim Group of Brazil.

Mr. Thomas lives in Oakville, Ontario, and is married to Peggy; together they have three adult children: Aislinn, Zachary and Kaitlin.