The Urban Studies Alumni Award for Community Engagement was established in 2014 through a generous gift from the Urban Studies Alumni Council. The award is intended to recognize and support graduate students in the Urban Studies Program who have an established record of, and future promise in, urban leadership, while maintaining an excellent academic record.
The award is given out every year, with decisions made by by the Dean of Graduate Studies on behalf of the Senate Graduate Awards Adjudication Committee, upon the nomination of the Director of the Urban Studies Program. The winner is announced each September.
Unlike other awards at SFU, part-time students are eligible to apply. Our program is designed to facilitate the participation of students who are already in the workforce and/or who have family responsibilities to manage. As alumni, we know that students often choose to study part-time when they are looking to balance home and work life with their ambition to advance their knowledge and career. Structuring the award this way allows us to recognize the important contributions both full and part-time students make to the Urban Studies Program
Your generous contribution will allow us continue to recognize the great work our students do. As the Urban Studies Program grows, we hope you'll consider becoming a regular contributor so we may recognize more of our outstanding students.
With your help, we can support more engaged and promising urban studies graduate students like the ones profiled below.
2024
ALIE LYNCH: ADVOCATING FOR BETTER HOUSING SOLUTIONS
尤物视频 Urban Studies master鈥檚 student Alie Lynch devotes her professional and academic life to advocating for better housing in Vancouver鈥檚 Downtown Eastside. Her commitment to helping people in one of Canada鈥檚 poorest communities has earned her the 2024 Urban Studies Alumni Award for Community Engagement.
Lynch鈥檚 interest in the Downtown Eastside developed when she was an undergraduate who played in local bands.
鈥淚 would be playing music all over the city, in all these different underground venues, most of which were illegal, some of which were legal,鈥 she says. 鈥淎 bunch of venues were located in the Downtown Eastside, so I became more involved in the community.鈥...read more
2023
BILL YUEN: REDEFINING HERITAGE
Bill Yuen鈥檚 understanding of Vancouver鈥檚 urban heritage goes well beyond the age of its buildings. As Executive Director of the since 2015, he has created opportunities for place-based and intersectional identity-based knowledge of the city鈥檚 development. In SFU鈥檚 Urban Studies master鈥檚 program, he has focused his thesis research on sustainability and community building within the challenging realm of housing provision in Vancouver. His excellent work in the program has won him graduate fellowships and awards, including the Urban Studies Alumni Award for Community Engagement.
Belle Cheung, Senior Manager of Strategic Initiative in the City Manager鈥檚 Office at the City of Vancouver, has worked with Yuen through the Heritage Vancouver Society. She says, 鈥淚 cannot think of someone else who has had such an outsized impact in supporting communities, the practice of heritage, and in advocating tirelessly for a more equitable city.鈥... read more
2022
ROBYN CHAN: BUILDING NEIGHBOURHOOD FUTURES
Robyn Chan pursues her conviction that engaged urban communities can plan, replan and shape their home environments to be the best places to live. She lives and is raising her family in Vancouver鈥檚 False Creek South, a remarkable part of the city that was designed in the 1970s as an experimental, mixed income community of co-ops, rental, supportive and market housing, where families could thrive in a green and blue oasis of post-industrial False Creek.
Robyn began her work in False Creek South with a track record of engagement and activism with Evergreen, including Green Bloc and 100in1Day Vancouver projects, that address critical and timely urban issues from sustainability choices, to urban nature, public space activation and accessibility... read more
2021
CLAIRE ADAMS: EMERGING LEADER
Urban Studies master鈥檚 student Claire Adams is dedicated to helping transform the way self-identified women experience urban spaces and participate in civic processes, and she has been recognized for this work with the Urban Studies Alumni Award for Community Engagement.
The award recognizes and supports graduate students in SFU鈥檚 Urban Studies Program who have an established record of, and future promise in, urban leadership, while maintaining an excellent academic record...read more
2020
DIONNE HILARY CO: TRANSFORMING COMMUNITIES
From a young age, Dionne Hillary Co has always been fascinated by cities and urban spaces鈥揾aving lived in them her entire life. She was drawn to Vancouver to SFU鈥檚 Urban Studies program for the diversity in faculty research and the university鈥檚 commitment to community engagement.
Since arriving in Canada, Dionne has worked with vulnerable people in the Metro Vancouver region, despite being in a vulnerable position herself as a recent immigrant. Dionne worked as a Housing Outreach Worker at the Downtown Eastside Women鈥檚 Centre, where she helped community members access safe, adequate and affordable housing. From here, she joined the volunteer board for Women Transforming Cities, a non-profit society advocating for women鈥檚 political participation at all levels of municipal governance... read more
2020
AMAN CHANDI: DEDICATED COMMUNITY MEMBER
For Aman Chandi鈥揳 Surrey, British Columbia resident鈥揷ommunity has been a long-time inspiration and interest. When asked what inspires her, Aman writes, 鈥淚 am inspired by the dedication and creativity of volunteers, artists, activists and students who work tirelessly to create radically inclusive spaces in Newton, Surrey. Additionally, I am inspired by the legacy of local heroes and artist-activist, Don and Cora Li-Leger, who conceptualized several art-led and place-based solutions addressing critical urban issues like food insecurity, homelessness, addiction and social isolation鈥... read more
2019
AUDREY GUAY: COMMITTED TO ENGAGEMENT IN AFFORDABLE HOUSING
Audrey Guay joined SFU鈥檚 Urban Studies Program after years of working with community building organizations in Vancouver鈥檚 Downtown Eastside. 鈥淭his left me with lots of questions about why the city wasn鈥檛 working for my neighbours,鈥 Guay says. 鈥淭he Urban Studies Program has allowed me to take a step back and develop a big-picture perspective of the city.鈥 Since beginning the program, Guay has broadened the scope of her community organizing work, most recently by planning public education and engagement events that explore civil society-led affordable housing solutions, including community land trusts and housing redevelopment projects led by churches. Audrey鈥檚 work in this vein, as well her outstanding research skills, have earned her the 2019 SFU Urban Studies Alumni Award for... read more
2018
LANI BRUNN: CREATING SPACE FOR STORYTELLERS, CHANGE-MAKERS AND NEIGHBOURS
Lani Brunn is described by professor Meg Holden, who supervises her M.URB project, as an "up-and-coming urban leader on the issues of housing, social planning and engagement of vulnerable populations." She adds that in addition to achieving academic excellence, Lani's "experience is diverse, and her long record of contributions to the community shows that she consistently fosters healthy change and long-term relationships."
Currently a community planner with consulting firm, where her role... read more
2017
JAMES LONG: CONNECTING STUDIO TO CLASSROOM TO COMMUNITY
At first thought, you might not see an obvious connection between a career spent creating, producing and managing theatre and pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in urban studies, but for the winner of the Alumni Community Engagement Award in 2017, the link is clear.
鈥淭he idea of entering of the Urban Studies Program was really just to take the opportunity to step outside the studio, where I鈥檝e spent 20 years making work that looks at the urban environment and human co-existence, and do that in a different way.鈥... read more
2016
KAREN SAWATZKY: FACULTY OF ARTS AND SOCIAL SCIENCES
Karen investigate whether Airbnb, a website where homeowners can list a shared or private room, or even an entire house for short term rental, could be taking housing away from Vancouverites. Property owners can often garner much higher rates for their properties through short-term rentals than through conventional long term leases, potentially resulting in tourists taking up housing that could be used for residents of the city....Karen鈥檚 research has attracted attention from several news outlets, with features in the , , , , , and on the of Vancouver City Councillor to name a few... read more
2015
STEPHANIE ALLEN: CORRECTING PAST ERRORS
Stephanie Allen, who had previously spent a number of years working in real estate development, began her master鈥檚 in urban studies at 尤物视频 in 2012. During a class on urban inequality and justice, she began to see the correlation between real estate development and its effect on different communities, and wanted to get a better understanding of how the building of the Georgia and Dunsmuir Viaducts removed the black community that once lived there....鈥淭his has had a significant and lasting impact on the growth of Vancouver鈥檚 black community,鈥 says Allen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a civic shame of ours, and we need to speak about it.鈥 And speak about it she has. Using her findings, Allen spoke at the (October 21st, 2015) public hearing regarding the removal of the viaducts, providing her recommendation on how the City should be moving forward with redevelopment... read more
2014
JONATHAN X. COT脡: NEW WESTMINSTER'S MAYOR COT脡 USES DEGREE TO SOLVE REAL-WORLD PROBLEMS
Jonathan Cot茅 wasn鈥檛 even dreaming of becoming a mayor when he enrolled in SFU鈥檚 master of arts program in urban studies in 2011. He was looking for solutions to New Westminster鈥檚 rental housing and transit issues.
Yet today, at age 35, he is Metro Vancouver鈥檚 youngest mayor, and his rental housing innovations are capturing the attention of mayors across the region... read more