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» Go to news mainMeet ±«Óătvâs New President, Dr. Kim Brooks
Original story appeared on DalNews: Kim Brooks Appointed As ±«Óătv's 13th President and Vice-Chancellor
±«Óătvâs 13th president will be familiar to many within the university â someone known for her inspiring approach to leadership, community building and positive change.Â
This morning (Wednesday, July 19), the ±«Óătv Board of Governors announced the appointment of the universityâs own Dr. Kim Brooks for a five-year term as president and vice-chancellor set to begin August 14.Â
Dr. Brooks, who has been supporting the current leadership transition as acting provost and vice-president academic, has the rare distinction of having served as dean of two different ±«Óătv faculties: the Schulich School of Law and the Faculty of Management. She is a 3M Teaching Fellow and an accomplished tax scholar and lawyer who has held research chairs at multiple top Canadian universities. Her extensive leadership and service reaches into the public sector and the local community with organizations such as Halifax Public Libraries, where she is the current Board Chair.Â
âI am excited about the difference the ±«Óătv community makes to the province, country, and world and Iâm humbled by the opportunity to serve as president,â says Dr. Brooks. âWeâve been deeply integrated into the fabric of Nova Scotia for over 200 years and yet it feels like weâre entering a new era of possibilities and opportunities.â
âIâm looking forward to connecting and re-connecting with all who support our vital work as we hold tight to our sense of purpose and possibility; grow a culture of inclusive excellence, curiosity and exploration; and strengthen ±«Óătvâs engagement with communities across Nova Scotia and around the world.â
Video: Message from New President Kim Brooks
Dr. Brooksâs appointment is on recommendation of a presidential search committee that included representatives from the Board, Senate, students and administration. Board Chair Cheryl Fraser, who chaired the search committee, says Dr. Brooksâs impressive skills and qualifications distinguished her amongst an incredibly competitive field of candidates from across Canada and around the world.Â
âWe were seeking a president with the energy, passion, and commitment to capitalize on the tremendous opportunities ahead for our university,â says Fraser.
âAnyone who has gotten to know Dr. Brooks during her 13 years at ±«Óătv has been witness to her exceptional leadership that puts integrity and empathy first, with a steadfast commitment to inclusion and community. For Dr. Brooks to now bring that same leadership to the Presidentâs Office represents an incredible opportunity for ±«Óătv, for Nova Scotia, and for fulfilling the potential and possibility at the heart of our Third Century Promise.â
Fraser also notes that while ±«Óătv has a proud history of accomplished leaders who have brought a variety of different backgrounds and experiences to bear in their work, Dr. Brooks is both the first woman and first openly queer person to be permanently appointed university president. âThese are overdue milestones,â she adds, âbut ones worth recognizing.â
Frank Harvey, currently serving as acting president, says he is thrilled by Dr. Brooksâs appointment and excited about working with her and the rest of the senior leadership team as he returns to the Provostâs Office.
âI have had the distinct pleasure of working with Kim for many years now and have witnessed and directly benefited from the many extraordinary results of her visionary, inspiring, transformative, and compassionate leadership,â says Dr. Harvey. âI have never been more confident in ±«Óătv's future or more optimistic about the prospects for fulfilling our third-century promises.
âKim is exactly the kind of leader ±«Óătv needs right now."
Dr. Brooks speaks at Dalâs annual Progress Report update last month.
Dr. Brooks is an energetic conversationalist and devoted Bruce Springsteen fan who says sheâs up for trying almost anything at least once. In other words: she might not be the type of person you picture when you hear âtax law expert.â That she has become so well known for supporting vital conversations around equity and inclusion â including as co-chair of the committee that produced ±«Óătvâs 2015 Belong report â may also be surprising in that context, but it makes plenty of sense to her.Â
âTax intersects in all kinds of equity-informing and inequity-creating ways that are fascinating,â says Dr. Brooks. âAnd so, while Iâm far from an expert on equity, diversity, inclusion, accessibility, and decolonization, those are commitments I hold close to my heart. I appreciate and am delighted to see the work so many people at ±«Óătv have been doing to help us move more closely toward inclusive excellence in all that we do. I donât think thereâs a magic formula; ultimately, it takes attention, care, and thoughtfulness.â
Following time as a practising lawyer and academic appointments at Queenâs, UBC and McGill â where she was the H. Heward Stikeman Chair in the Law of Taxation at McGill University â Dr. Brooks first arrived at ±«Óătv in 2010 to serve as dean of the Schulich School of Law. She helped lead the school through a noted period of evolution and impact under its new name and powered by a transformative investment from Seymour Schulich. She remained in Law following the completion of her term, serving as the Purdy Crawford Chair in Business Law, until 2020 when she crossed to the other side of University Avenue to serve as dean of the Faculty of Management. Her primary assignment: bring together a wide range of views, perspectives and interests to determine a new structure and strategy for the Faculty.
âThe Faculty had broad agreement that they were due for change, but not a lot of consensus on the way forward,â she explains. âAnd thatâs how I got to be part of one of the most amazing reform processes Iâve ever seen at a university.â
It took two years of tough discussions â through a pandemic no less â but as the Management community worked through myriad wrinkles and challenges in considering its future, a direction began to crystalize, one powered by the willingness of colleagues to engage with one another and work collaboratively. The resulting plan has been embraced with incredible enthusiasm from all corners â a remarkable turn considering where the process started. Â
âWhat Iâm always most proud of is being able to work with people â not necessarily getting it right all the time but figuring out how we can be the best versions of ourselves under the circumstances and then taking action on bringing that vision to life,â says Dr. Brooks.
A university that belongs to everyone
Dr. Brooks says she sees the presidentâs role as holding tight to the âpurpose, magic and possibilityâ of the university.
âTo me, that means cultivating the value of learning and the acquisition, preservation, and production of new knowledge,â she explains. âIt means inspiring curiosity and exploration. Itâs enabling students to chart directions for their lives and promoting their personal and professional growth. Itâs supporting informed citizenry and effective democracy. Itâs accelerating innovation and responsiveness to societyâs challenges. And I think the president should be a relentless cheerleader for ±«Óătv, our people and our communities â whether weâre thinking in terms of Halifax or Truro, Nova Scotia or Mi'kma'ki.âÂ
Those community connections have always been an essential part of Dr. Brooksâs work as a teacher, researcher and administrator. Sheâs served on key committees with the Canada Revenue Agency and the Tax Court of Canada and has chaired organizations like Halifax Public Libraries and the Canadian Centre for Legal Innovation in Sexual Assault Response. Now, as president, sheâs eager to see ±«Óătv grow and strengthen partnerships with communities across Nova Scotia on everything from health-care solutions and inspiring future-ready leaders to playing a role in the provinceâs ambitious growth strategy. Â
ⱫÓătv should feel like it belongs to all corners of our province,â she says. âTruly extraordinary universities are understood as communally-owned institutions. That will happen when our studentsâ families, alumni, donors, employer-partners, governments, Indigenous nations, private sector contributors, and community organizations see themselves as reflected in and responsible for Dalâs success. These external stakeholders should be able to look to ±«Óătv as a partner in generating new possibilities to address the challenges we collectively face.â
As for Dalâs students, faculty and staff, what can they expect when Dr. Brooks moves into the Presidentâs Office next month?
âWe have a lot of good work to do to realize the potential of the Third Century Promise plan, so I expect my focus wonât be all that different on August 14 than it is today: championing our work to progress our shared goals in the strategic plan,â she says.
âBut I also hope to connect with everyone across the university to start to better understand who we are. In my time at Dal, Iâve been able to work very closely with colleagues in the Schulich School of Law, Faculty of Management, and units within central administration, but I have a lot to learn about the challenges, aspirations, and dreams of folks in other parts of the university. So as a starting place, I am very much looking forward to developing a richer understanding of who we are and where we see ourselves headed, collectively. As a university we have an incredible amount to offer our province and I think weâre just getting started.â
âItâs about finding that shared sense of purpose and meaning together.âÂ
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