Esteemed community leaders among honorary doctorates at Waterloo convocation
Stephanie and Joseph Mancini’s response to unemployment and poverty allows for decades of community development in downtown Kitchener
Stephanie and Joseph Mancini’s response to unemployment and poverty allows for decades of community development in downtown Kitchener
By Emma Johnston University RelationsIt all began as a more profound way of thinking about community.
Now, with over three decades and numerous subsequent projects to its name, The Working Centre is a local legacy beaming brightly from the heart of downtown Kitchener.
Founded by Waterloo alumni Stephanie Mancini (BA ’82) and Joseph Mancini (BA ’81, MA ’82) in the spring of 1982, The Working Centre serves as an ongoing response to unemployment and poverty within the community.
The non-profit organization uniquely offers access to tools, resources and practical job search to support the unemployed — changing the way many people think about community aid. Among the growing network of not-for-profits is also St. John’s Kitchen, which was established in 1985 to serve hot meals to those in need. And 34 years later, the Kitchen includes a primary care clinic, Downtown Outreach workers and nurses, a dental clinic and a Hospitality House. Nearly 3,000 job searchers were helped through the resource centre last year.
At its roots, the Centre exists not only as a project of development, but also as a movement for social change.
“Community builds when people are able to use their skills and abilities in a way where they are not controlled but can offer them into something greater,” the two explain. “That is why The Working Centre has 500 volunteers supporting its projects. It’s a deeper idea of community about using tools with the freedom to serve others and connect with each other.”
In addition to being an outstanding model for community co-operation, The Working Centre also shines because of its ability to simply create a space for gathering, where people respect and support one another.
“When you look at The Working Centre today, you can see that there is a free meal being served, there is a bike shop, cafes, a two-acre market garden, buildings that have been renovated along with fourteen buildings and houses,” says Joseph Mancini. “You can see the concept of a village living within The Working Centre and its related projects. It supports people who are left out.”
Recognized in 2014 with the Benemerenti Medal, a Papal honour, and in 2016 with the Order of Canada, Stephanie and Joseph Mancini will now receive the highest honour conferred by the University of Waterloo. They are set to receive honorary doctorates in recognition of their outstanding service to society at the morning convocation ceremony on Saturday, October 26, 2019.
“We’ve never really left the University of Waterloo,” the pair says. “The Working Centre and Waterloo have hundreds of connections and the University has been a big part of the development of The Working Centre.”
Being quite young when they began their project, both Stephanie and Joseph Mancini have contributed much to the community and continue to develop projects to help marginalized communities in downtown Kitchener.
“When you start a project, it’s so small, no one can even notice that it’s there,” Joseph Mancini notes. “The starting of something is not about the individual, but rather about the small community of people who gather around an idea and work together to turn it into something a little bit bigger and deeper.”
Distinguished alumni and professors among honorary award recipients
Honorary Degrees
Innis Dagg received her PhD from the University of Waterloo in 1967, after completing an honours BA in Biology and an MA in Genetics at the University of Toronto. Her remarkable record includes seminal contributions to the fields of animal biology, behaviour, and sociobiology, as well as tireless advocacy and analyses of gender bias in academia. She was the first person to study animals in the wild in Africa, and her body of work has laid the foundation for notable progress in her discipline and the advancement of a generation of women scholars.
DiCiccio graduated from the University of Waterloo with a BASc and an MASc in Electrical Engineering. He was instrumental in founding the Institute for Computer Research (ICR), a multidisciplinary institute supporting collaborations across the University and with other academic and corporate partners in the areas of computing, communications and other aspects of information technology. When digital media research was in its early days, DiCiccio capitalized on opportunities for Waterloo to expand its activities in this field. DiCiccio also promoted Waterloo researchers’ increased participation in Ontario and Canadian research networks and created several large grant proposals that were awarded to Waterloo researchers and their teams.
Dybenko has been a technology and education leader since graduating from the University of Waterloo in 1972. Career highlights include her appointment as founding president and CEO of Bell Advanced Communication and dean of the Lazaridis School of Business and Economics. At Waterloo, she served as the first executive director of the Stratford campus, contributing to its enormous growth and success. Dybenko has served on many boards, including TV Ontario, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council and the Greater Kitchener Waterloo Chamber of Commerce. She was identified as one of Canada’s Top 100 Most Powerful Women and in 2012 was honoured with a Waterloo Barnraiser Award.
Soulis’ long history with the University began at the age of seven, when her father was hired as a professor in the Faculty of Engineering at the then-new University of Waterloo. Soulis joined Waterloo herself in 1971 as an earth sciences student, later completing her master’s in Civil Engineering in 1978. Soulis joined Institutional Analysis and Planning (IAP) in 1981. Over the course of her 35-year career in IAP, both the University and the broader postsecondary education sector across Ontario and Canada benefited from her keen analytical mind and methodical and creative solutions to challenging problems.
Godsil earned his PhD in mathematics from the University of Melbourne in 1979. He joined Simon Fraser University as an assistant professor in 1981 and was promoted to professor in 1985. In 1987, he moved to Waterloo and joined the University’s Department of Combinatorics and Optimization. He has served as department chair and several times as associate chair for Graduate Studies and Postdoctoral Affairs. Godsil is a world-leading authority in the field of algebraic combinatorics, especially algebraic graph theory. His scholarly work has been profoundly influential on the development of the subject, impacting the work of many researchers in mathematics and beyond.
Woody earned his PhD from Duke University and spent 36 years as a professor at the University of Waterloo. As a clinical psychologist, his leadership in the accredited Clinical Psychology graduate program was crucial to the continuing success of that program. He has served terms as associate chair (graduate) for the Department of Psychology and twice as the director of clinical training. He was elected fellow of the Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis in 1993 and received the society’s highest honour, the Henry Guze Award, in 2011. At Waterloo, he was recognized with the Distinguished Teacher Award in 2006 and with two Outstanding Performance Awards.
Besner received his PhD from Reading University in the United Kingdom, following which he spent 37 years as a professor at the University of Waterloo. As a cognitive psychologist, his expertise is in the domain of attention and basic processes in reading, a field in which he is an internationally recognized leader. He has been elected fellow of the Association for Psychological Science, The Psychonomic Society, and the Canadian Society for Brain, Behaviour and Cognitive Science. He has had continuous grant funding from NSERC throughout his career. At Waterloo, he was recognized for his stellar scholarship with an Arts Research Award in 2017.
Family and friends gather to commemorate the academic achievements of graduates this October
Author Si'Yam Lee Maracle’s unflinching look at life on Turtle Island under settler colonialism propelled a generation of storytellers
Barbara Liskov and Shafi Goldwasser (pictured above) are two of only three women to have won the prestigious Turing Award
The University of Waterloo acknowledges that much of our work takes place on the traditional territory of the Neutral, Anishinaabeg, and Haudenosaunee peoples. Our main campus is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land granted to the Six Nations that includes six miles on each side of the Grand River. Our active work toward reconciliation takes place across our campuses through research, learning, teaching, and community building, and is co-ordinated within the Office of Indigenous Relations.