File 15 - Speeches.

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Speeches.

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SCA224-GA469-2-15

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Name of creator

(1939-2022)

Biographical history

James Downey was born in Winterton, Newfoundland in 1939. He graduated from Memorial University of Newfoundland, and attended the University of London as a Rothermere Fellow where he earned a Ph.D. in English Literature. Downey began his career at Carleton University. There, he held a series of academic and administrative posts including Vice-President Academic and President pro tempore.

From 1980 to 1990, Downey was President of the University of New Brunswick. During that period, he also served terms as President of the Canadian Bureau for International Education, Chair of the Association of Atlantic Universities, and Chair of the Corporate-Higher Education Forum.
From 1990 to 1993, Downey was Special Advisor to the Premier of New Brunswick; Special Advisor to the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada; and co-chair of the New Brunswick Commission on Excellence in Education, which published two reports that guided educational reform in that province.
James Downey was President of the University of Waterloo from 1993 to 1999. During his presidency of the University of Waterloo, he also served terms as Chair of the Council of Ontario Universities and Chair of the Association of Commonwealth Universities.
After stepping down as president of the University of Waterloo, he founded and directed Canada’s first centre for the study of co-operative education, located at Waterloo; led an annual seminar for new university presidents sponsored by the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada; and from 2007 to 2010 was the founding president of the Higher Education Quality Council of Ontario.

Among Downey's awards are nine honorary degrees; the Symons Medal for outstanding service to higher education in the Commonwealth, received from the Association of Commonwealth Universities in 2000; and the David C. Smith Award for contributions to universities and public policy in Canada, received from the Council of Ontario Universities in 2003. In 1996, Downey was made an Officer of the Order of Canada. And, in 2005, he was appointed Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Royal Military College of Canada.

Downey's publications include The Eighteenth Century pulpit (Oxford University Press, 1969), Fearful joy (McGill-Queen1s University Press, 1973), Schools for a new Century and to live and learn (reports of the New Brunswick Commission on Excellence in Education, 1992, 1993), and Innovation : essays by leading Canadian researchers, edited with Lois Claxton (Key Porter Books, 2002).

James Downey died in March 2022.

Custodial history

Scope and content

Materials related to speeches and papers written by James Downey between the years 1994 and 2006. Includes drafts and final versions of speeches.
Titles of speeches are:

  • “Notes for a speech to the United Way Campaign leaders conference,” Ottawa (February 12, 1994),
  • “Epiphanies now and then: the process and prospects of educational reform,” UW Arts Faculty Lecture (April 6, 1994),
  • “President’s report to the AGM of the UW Board of Governors,” (November 26, 1996),
  • “The University as Trinity: balancing corporation, collegium, and community,” The Louise McBee Lecture, University of Georgia (1995),
  • “Turning a corner: remarks by the president at the Annual State-of-the University meeting,” (November 20, 1997),
  • “Home free, outport style: presentation at the Winterton Homecoming dinner,” Winterton, Newfoundland and Labrador (August 1997),
  • “University of Toronto Convocation address,” (June 11, 1998),
  • “Board remarks,” (May 31, 1999),
  • “Downey Tennisfest remarks” (September 26, 1999),
  • “Presentation to colleagues at the Institute of Higher Education,” University of Georgia (March 23, 2000),
  • “Honoring the commonplace,” Carleton University convocation address (June 16, 2000),
  • “UW Art HGallery opening,” (September 21, 2000),
  • “The president as stand-along word processor,” New Presidents’ Seminar, Calgary (October 5, 2000),
  • “University of Waterloo Convocation address,” (October 2000),
  • “Schools are Us,” David Smith Lecture, Council of Universities (October 14, 2003),
  • “Management, leadership and change in universities,” Hong Kong Polytechnic University (Juley 6, 2006),
  • “Giving voice to vision,” Association of Atlantic Universities, Memorial University of Newfoundland (October 27, 2006).

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Donated by James Downey in 2019.

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  • English

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Described by CGD in 2022.

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  • English

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