Rhonda L. Lenton | |||||||||||||||
Order: | 8th | ||||||||||||||
President of York University | |||||||||||||||
Term Start: | July 1, 2017 | ||||||||||||||
Chancellor: | Kathleen Taylor | ||||||||||||||
Predecessor: | Mamdouh Shoukri | ||||||||||||||
Alma Mater: | University of Winnipeg (BA with honours) University of Manitoba (MA) University of Toronto (PhD) | ||||||||||||||
Birth Date: | 10 August 1956[1] | ||||||||||||||
Birth Place: | Stratford, Ontario, Canada | ||||||||||||||
Occupation: | Professor | ||||||||||||||
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Rhonda L. Lenton is a Canadian academic administrator and professor. She became the 8th and current president and vice-chancellor of York University in Toronto, Canada, upon succeeding Mamdouh Shoukri on July 1, 2017 for a five-year term. She previously served as Dean of Atkinson College and later as York's Vice President Academic and Provost. Prior to her role in academic administration, Lenton was a Professor of Sociology. During her research career, Lenton led randomized public telephone surveys of social issues such as Internet dating, sexual assaults, and continues to examine Judaism in Canada.
Lenton completed her Ph.D in sociology at the University of Toronto in 1989. The title of her dissertation was Parental Discipline and Child Abuse.[2] Before becoming an academic administrator, she published research on a range of topics related to antisemitism,[3] [4] family violence, feminism in academia, and online dating.[5] Her work included a 1999 national telephone survey of randomly selected women, asking them about their experiences with sexual harassment and assault.[6] She has also researched the impact that the inclusion of women's studies within academia has had on feminism, determining that it had made feminism more conservative.[7] She also conducted randomized robocalls regarding Internet dating behaviours of the Canadian public in 2001.[8] In 2018, Lenton collaborated on a landmark study with her husband Robert Brym[9] and Environics, titled 2018 Survey of Jews in Canada.[10] The report was based on phone surveys of up to eighty questions[11] and presents a "portrait of the identity, practices, and experiences of Jews in Canada".[12] As university Provost, Lenton supported male students in their requests to keep them away from female students due to their religious preferences.[13]
Lenton's appointment as university president became effective on July 1, 2017. As the university's chief spokesperson during a divisive part-time faculty strike in 2015, during which time she was also on the university's negotiating committee, Lenton's anticipated presidential appointment generated widespread opposition from an alliance of university students and faculty members prior to its announcement.[14]
In 2018, during her first year, a second strike occurred at the university under her leadership.[15] Undergraduate students occupied the University Senate in support of the strike for several months. During the sit-in, the participants highlighted potential expense account spending issues from Lenton's term as Vice President Academic and President, in addition to various other tuition-oriented concerns.[16] [17] [18]
On May 1, 2018, an official letter by the Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT) admonished both Lenton and Richard E. Waugh, the Chair of the Board of Governors (BoG), for their concerted and repeated attempts to undermine academic self-governance at York University. At that time, several York University faculty councils and student associations also carried non-confidence motions in the conduct and leadership of Lenton as president.[19] [20] On May 11, the union representing the full-time tenured faculty stated the strike had lasted more than two months due to Lenton and the board's desire to break the union.[21]
On June 6, 2024, the York University administration, under Lenton's leadership, called dozens of police forces to dismantle an encampment that protestors had set up the day before to demand the university to disclose its investments and divest from and cut ties with Israel; CBC News noted on that day that another encampment at the University of Toronto remained.[22] Among the protesters were students and Indigenous elders according to a statement from the protestors.[23] Three weeks later on June 30, she was appointed the Chair of Council of Ontario Universities.[24]
In 2015, the Women's Executive Network named her one of the 100 Most Powerful Women in Canada during her past role as Provost of York University.[25]
Lenton married Robert Byrm, a Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto, in 1987 and converted to Judaism.[26] They have three daughters.