The Rhodes Scholarship stands as one of the most coveted postgraduate awards globally, offering exceptional students the chance to pursue fully funded studies at the University of Oxford. For Canadians, this honour not only recognizes academic brilliance but also leadership potential and commitment to positive societal impact. On November 21, 2025, the Rhodes Trust announced its 2026 cohort of Canadian Rhodes Scholars-Elect, selecting 11 outstanding individuals from across the country. These scholars, drawn from diverse regions and disciplines, will commence their Oxford journey in October 2026, joining a legacy of over 1,000 Canadian alumni who have shaped global leadership since the first in 1904.
This year's class reflects Canada's higher education strengths, with representatives from prestigious institutions like the University of Toronto, Dalhousie University, and the University of British Columbia. Their specialties span cognitive science, earth sciences, medicine, sustainable agriculture, international law, environmental policy, nutrition, gender studies, political science, psychology, and biology. What unites them is a shared drive to address pressing challenges—from climate change and health equity to Indigenous sovereignty and biodiversity conservation.
Selection Process and Regional Representation
The rigorous selection unfolds through six regional committees representing British Columbia, the Prairies (Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Territories), Ontario, Quebec, the Maritimes (New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, PEI), and Newfoundland and Labrador. Candidates undergo interviews assessing academic promise, character, leadership, and extracurricular impact. This year's scholars hail from varied backgrounds, including rural farms, urban research hubs, and international campuses, underscoring the scholarship's commitment to diversity.
Canadian Rhodes Scholarships emphasize not just scholarly merit but real-world contributions. For instance, applicants demonstrate through startups, advocacy, Paralympic achievements, and policy research. The 2026 class exemplifies this, with scholars founding ocean-monitoring ventures, developing surgical training apps, and leading women's health networks.
Full List of 2026 Canadian Rhodes Scholars
| Name | Region/Hometown | University | Specialty/Field | Key Achievements |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alice Ferguson-O'Brien | Newfoundland and Labrador | Trinity College, University of Toronto | Cognitive Science and Philosophy | Board member, University of Toronto Student Union; Climate Justice U of T organizer |
| Isaac Bahler | Maritimes | Dalhousie University | Earth Science and Physics | Carbon capture research; Co-founder Equlantic Aquatic Monitoring startup |
| Adham El Sherbini | Maritimes | University of Toronto & Queen’s University | Medicine | Developed free surgical training app; Publications in digital health |
| Julie Beaulieu | Quebec | New York University Abu Dhabi | Social Research & Public Policy, Political Science | Field research on sustainable agriculture in Uzbekistan |
| Omid Yeganeh | Quebec | University of Oxford & Harvard University | Public International Law and Human Rights | Work at ICJ, ITLOS, human rights courts |
| Gabrielle Moreau | Ontario | UNC Chapel Hill / Duke University | Geography / Environmental Sciences and Policy | Research on sea-level rise, Indigenous governance |
| Trinity Lowthian | Ontario | University of Ottawa | Nutrition and Food Science, Sport Management | Advocacy for patient-engaged research |
| Emma Wintermute | Prairies (Saskatoon, SK) | University of Saskatchewan | Gender, Sexuality, Social Justice Studies, History | Queer feminist activism on Treaty 6 Territory |
| Sydney Whiting | Prairies (Lethbridge, AB) | University of Lethbridge | Political Science | Thesis on sustainable development in corporate settings |
| Shafaq Batool | Prairies | University of Calgary | Psychology | Co-founder Khairiyat Women’s Health Equity Network |
| Julie Sieg | British Columbia | University of British Columbia | Biology | Monarch butterfly decline research, machine learning habitat models |
This table captures the scholars' current academic homes and core focuses, highlighting Canada's talent pipeline in STEM, social sciences, and policy.
Spotlight on Prairies Scholars: Environmental and Health Leaders
The Prairies region shines with three scholars tackling sustainability and equity. Isaac Bahler from Dalhousie exemplifies interdisciplinary innovation, blending earth sciences and physics to advance carbon removal technologies. His startup, Equlantic Aquatic Monitoring, deploys sensors for ocean health, addressing climate imperatives vital to Canada's coastal economies.
Emma Wintermute of the University of Saskatchewan brings a social justice lens, her double honours in gender studies and history fueling advocacy for marginalized communities on Treaty 6 Territory. Sydney Whiting from the University of Lethbridge scrutinizes political discourse around sustainability, her honours thesis probing corporate greenwashing—a timely critique amid Canada's energy transition debates.
Shafaq Batool at the University of Calgary focuses on psychology to champion women's health equity through her Khairiyat network, creating culturally sensitive resources for underserved groups.
Ontario and Maritimes: Policy, Health, and Innovation
Ontario's duo includes Gabrielle Moreau, a Robertson Scholar bridging UNC Chapel Hill and Duke, specializing in environmental geography and Indigenous policy. Her work on energy governance and sovereignty resonates with Canada's reconciliation efforts. Trinity Lowthian from the University of Ottawa advances nutrition and sport management, pushing for lived-experience integration in research—a model for patient-centered healthcare.
In the Maritimes, Adham El Sherbini (U Toronto/Queen’s) innovates in medicine with digital tools like his surgical app, poised to transform training amid physician shortages. Isaac Bahler's Dalhousie roots reinforce the region's science legacy.
Quebec, BC, and Atlantic: Global and Local Impacts
Quebec's Julie Beaulieu (NYU Abu Dhabi) champions food security, drawing from her dairy farm upbringing to study conflict-zone agriculture. Omid Yeganeh, with Oxford and Harvard credentials, excels in international law, litigating at global courts.
British Columbia's Julie Sieg (UBC) safeguards biodiversity via monarch research and AI habitat modeling, crucial for conservation in a warming world. From Newfoundland, Alice Ferguson-O'Brien (U Toronto) merges cognitive science and philosophy with climate activism, embodying holistic leadership.
Diversity and Emerging Themes in Canadian Talent
This cohort's diversity—spanning genders, regions, immigrants, and disciplines—mirrors Canada's multicultural fabric. Common threads include climate action (five scholars), health equity, Indigenous issues, and tech innovation. Such alignment signals higher education's role in national priorities like net-zero goals and reconciliation.
- Climate and Environment: Bahler, Sieg, Moreau, Ferguson-O'Brien focus on carbon, biodiversity, policy.
- Health and Medicine: El Sherbini, Lowthian, Batool advance digital tools, nutrition, psychology.
- Social Justice: Wintermute, Beaulieu address equity, food security.
- Law and Policy: Yeganeh, Whiting tackle international human rights, sustainability discourse.
Canadian universities like U Toronto (2), producing multiple scholars, underscore institutional excellence. Official Rhodes announcement highlights their potential as changemakers.
Legacy of Canadian Rhodes Scholars in Higher Education
Since 1904, Canadians have leveraged Rhodes for groundbreaking contributions. Alumni include Nobel laureates, prime ministers like Lester B. Pearson, and leaders like Ivan Fellegi (Statistics Canada chief). In academia, figures like Margaret Atwood (early influence) and current presidents exemplify impact. The 2026 class joins this network, amplifying Canadian voices at Oxford amid global challenges.
Universities celebrate: USask hails Wintermute's leadership; Dalhousie praises Bahler's startups. These awards boost institutional prestige, attracting talent and funding.
Future Outlook: Oxford and Beyond
At Oxford, scholars will pursue MSc, DPhil in aligned fields—e.g., environmental change, public policy, global health. Post-Oxford, expect policy roles, startups, academia. Rhodes fosters lifelong networks; 80% alumni enter public service or nonprofits.
For aspiring scholars, applications open June 2026 via Rhodes Canada site. Canadian HE benefits as these alumni return, driving innovation.
Photo by Andy Holmes on Unsplash
Implications for Canadian Higher Education
Selecting 11 from top applicants validates Canada's universities as incubators of global leaders. Amid funding pressures, Rhodes spotlights excellence, inspiring interdisciplinary pursuits. Themes like sustainability align with federal priorities (e.g., $2.4B climate research). Institutions may emulate by enhancing leadership programs.
Challenges persist: underrepresentation in some regions/disciplines. Yet, this cohort advances equity, with women (8/11), visible minorities, and rural voices.
