John O. Stubbs Explained

John O. Stubbs is a Canadian academic. He was president of Trent University and Simon Fraser University.

Stubbs began his career as a historian and political scientist, specializing in the history of 20th century British politics and media. He distinguished himself as a teacher and administrator at the University of Waterloo, serving in various positions including associate dean of arts. Stubbs was appointed president of Trent University in 1987, a post that he held until 1993, when he was appointed for a five-year term as president of Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. His term was renewed in April 1997.

In 1997, he was forced to resign for his mishandling of a controversial sexual harassment case. Since then he has been a member of Simon Fraser's history department. In 1998, he was appointed a board member of the Canada Millennium Scholarship Foundation.

Education

  1. B.A. in modern history, University of Toronto, 1966; M.Sc. in international history, the London School of Economics, 1967;
  2. D.Phil., Oxford University, 1973.
  3. Lecturer, Trent University, 1967–1969.
  4. Professor, University of Waterloo, 1973–1986.
  5. Visiting lecturer (1979), visiting fellow (1986), St. Catherine's (Oxford).

See also

Sources

"SFU President appointed to second five year term," SFU News, April 3, 1997, Vol 8 No 7, https://www.sfu.ca/archive-sfunews/sfnews/1997/April3/president.html