Visiting Scholars
Click here for full information on our In-Resident and Visiting
Scholar programs.
CURRENT IN-RESIDENCE GUESTS 2009–2010
Michael Hodson
Business Person In Residence
August 2009 – December 2009
Michael Hodson is a Business Economist with experience of new product development, marketing, auctions, business strategy, lecturing and a passion for the application of theology to business organization. He has recently retired from his position as a senior economist in the UK government dealing with matters of business and industrial policy. Over the past year he has been collaborating with Paul Williams and Regent's Marketplace Institute and as a result of this collaboration Michael will spend several months with us here in Vancouver taking the lead in developing the Social Enterprise Incubator project at the Marketplace Institute. He will be co-teaching a course with Paul Williams, “Business as Mission: Engaging with Christian Social Enterprise,” in the Fall term.
Michael is married with two grown children. He is also a Licensed Lay Minister in the Church of England.
John Stenhouse
Scholar In Residence
August 2009 – January 2010
John Stenhouse is an historian and is a professor at the University of Otago, Dunedin, new Zealand. John has a long history with Regent. In 1986, shortly after completing his PhD, he taught and studied here. And in 2000 he was here on a study leave. His research interests center on nineteenth-century science, religion, race, politics and gender, and their interconnections. He is currently working on 3 projects: humanitarian Christianity in nineteenth-century New Zealand; the Christian missionary movement and modern Western science; and southern Dunedin's religions 1890s–1940s. While here he hopes to complete writing a book titled Missionary Science: Christian missions and the making and spreading of modern science.
Wayne Kirkland
Writer and Business Person In Residence
September – December 2009
Wayne Kirkland is a writer, consultant and resourcer in New Zealand. He currently manages a charitable organization, which allows him to give time to a variety of tasks and roles including writing, speaking, church leadership, school trusteeship, consulting and resourcing mission organizations, mentoring, and editing a small web-based magazine. He has a passion for helping others explore and develop their understanding and practice of what it means to follow Jesus in Kiwi culture. His writing is an expression of this—particularly through making thoughtful and challenging material accessible for a non-academic Christian audience.
Wayne is married to Jill and they have 3 daughters. He is also a Regent Alum.
Regent College Visiting Scholar and In Residence Program
Regent
College is an international graduate school of Christian studies
located in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. We stand in the
evangelical tradition and embrace the classic creeds of the Christian
faith.
Visiting Scholars and In Residence Positions
Each year, Regent
College provides the opportunity for 2-3 visiting scholars to
come to the College for a time of study and participation in
the Regent community. These visiting scholars have included post-doctoral
fellows, academic scholars-in-residence, pastors-in-residence,
missionaries-in-residence, business-persons-in-residence, an
artist-, a writer- and a chaplain-in-residence. Every visiting
scholar must have a faculty sponsor and this sponsor has the
responsibility to assure that any prospective application is
properly processed through the Dean’s office and the Faculty
Advisory Committee. If the faculty/board accept the visiting
scholar, the sponsoring faculty member will be responsible for
hosting the visiting scholar during his/her time at Regent. Such
hosting expectations are listed below.
Applications for visitors-in-residence
will be considered together as a group, about fourteen months
in advance of the proposed starting date. At that time all of
the applications will be reviewed and a decision made as to which
visitors will be accepted. The College will endeavour to achieve
a balance of different types of visitor in each academic year.
Qualifications
While previous theological education is not presupposed,
the scholar is expected to be firmly committed to the Christian
faith and is expected to be in agreement with the College’s
theological statement, and to sign the theological statement
and the sexual harassment policy. Applicants must also have a
faculty sponsor from Regent College.
There are three categories
to the program, based on the qualifications of each applicant:
- Academic
Scholar-in-Residence – is a position for scholars
who are firmly established in their academic identity, who
come to Regent to continue research within their own discipline,
and who are able to contribute in interdisciplinary areas
out of their experience. The successful candidate should:
1) have recognized teaching and/or writing-research experience
in a scholarly field; 2) demonstrate a strong interest in
integrating the Christian faith with his or her field of
study.
- Post-Doctoral Fellow – is
a full-time study program for scholars who have recently
graduated from a doctoral program, with or without teaching
experience, and who come to the College to continue post-doctoral
research in an integrative Christian environment. The successful
candidate should demonstrate a strong interest in integrating
the Christian faith with his or her field.
- Professional-in-Residence – is
a position for persons established in secular or church-related
professions who come to the College to share with the students
their experience in integrating the Christian faith and the
marketplace. To date, this title has included Pastors-in-Residence,
Missionaries-in-Residence, a Writer-in-Residence, Business
persons-in-Residence, a Chaplain-in-Residence, and an Artist-in-Residence.
Candidates should demonstrate a strong interest in integrating
the Christian faith with his or her field.
Travel & Housing Costs
Regent College provides no housing
or travel expenses for visiting scholars. Applicants must find
their own accommodation and be able to cover all their expenses
during their time at Regent.
Provisions and Benefits for Applicants
Accepted scholars usually
stay for a term (Fall or Winter term) or a year (12 months) and
sometimes for shorter visits. The Fall term commences in September
and the Winter Term in January. The Summer Term encompasses the
months of May to August and includes Spring School (May to June)
and Summer School (July to August). Every year during Spring
School, Regent College hosts the Pastors’ conference.
Our Summer School program attracts students come from all
over the world. Please check our website www.regent-college.edu
for details on upcoming conferences and for the Fall and
Winter timetables.
Visiting scholars are allowed to audit
most courses they wish to attend without needing to register
(with the exception of limited enrollment courses). Administrative
fees may apply. If scholars come with a spouse, the spouse is
allowed to audit one course per term (subject to the stated exception).
Visiting Scholars and spouses are invited to the all-college
September weekend retreat. An extra charge will apply to
the spouse for overnight retreats.
The sponsoring faculty member will host
their sponsored scholars on an informal basis during their time
at Regent College. Such hosting may include: meeting at the airport,
an invitation home for a meal and fellowship, a tour of the College
and availability to answer questions and give advice about Regent
College and Vancouver in general. Based on the individual
situation, sponsoring faculty members may include more than
what is noted in this information sheet. The visiting scholar
should feel free to turn to his/her sponsoring faculty member
if there are any questions, concerns or problems. If available,
visiting scholars will be provided with shared office space
at Regent for one or more days during the week. Visiting
scholars will have Regent and UBC library privileges as well
as the faculty rate for athletic facilities privileges at
UBC.
Teaching or Lecturing at Regent College
A visiting scholar may
be invited to give a guest lecture or teach in an area of expertise.
This, however, is at the discretion of the College and cannot
be an assumption or expectation on the part of the visiting scholar.
Regent’s
Expectations of Visiting Scholars
When approved applicants are
chosen as visiting scholars and come to Regent, it is the College’s
desire that the scholars embrace as much of the Regent experience
as they can during their visit. It is expected that the scholars
will also share their knowledge and expertise with the Regent
students, faculty and community as a whole. Examples of what
some visitors have done during their time at Regent include:
pastors-in-residence making themselves available to students
for spiritual counsel; missionaries-in-residence have shared
their experiences during chapel time or student forums and
made themselves available to students interested in similar
work; artists-in-residence have provided a performance or
an exhibition of artistic work and a presentation of a scholarly
paper to the faculty. It is expected that research accomplished
during the time spent at the College and destined for publication
will include an acknowledgment of the contribution made to
the research by the Visiting Scholar program and the facilities
provided by the College.
Visitors are also requested to provide
a brief written assessment of their time (one to two pages) at
the College to the Academic Dean following their period of residence.
Visa
and Taxation Requirements
To ensure adequate processing time,
accepted applicants who live outside of Canada should contact
the nearest Canadian embassy as soon as possible after their
acceptance regarding visa requirements to enter Canada. If the
visit is for less than 6 months, and the scholar will not be
receiving any financial remuneration from Regent College, a visitor’s
visa should suffice. If the scholar is a professor at an
educational institution, and may be receiving income from
Regent College for teaching or guest lecturing, s/he should
apply for an educational exemption (in member GATS or NAFTA
countries) which allows a visiting scholar to research and
teach at a Canadian educational institution for up to 2 years
without having to obtain a work permit. If any financial
remuneration will be received, Regent will apply to Revenue
Canada for a tax waiver on behalf of the visiting scholar
to waive the normal15% withholding tax. If the waiver is
denied, 15% will be withheld from any payment made to the
scholar for work completed at Regent.
Requirements for Application
Interested individuals should fill
out an application for a position as visitor at least eighteen
months in advance of their proposed visit. Other requirements
are specified on the application form.
The Office of the Academic Vice President/Dean
Visiting Scholar Applications
Regent College, 5800 University Boulevard
Vancouver, B.C. V6T 2E4 Canada