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===Government=== | ===Government=== | ||
====International==== | ====International==== | ||
*] (Ph.D. 1971) – 22nd ] (Taiwan), former president of ] and ] - | |||
*] (Ph.D. 1962) – ] member of the ], former Polish minister of education - | |||
*] (LL.B. 1947) – 2nd ], 1987–97 - | |||
*] (B.A. 1945 Trin.) – British propagandaist and novelist; member of parliament in the British House of Commons for ], 1900–18 - | |||
*] (B.A. 1958 Vic., M.A. 1960) – 6th ] - | |||
*]<ref name="HeritageNF">{{citeweb |url=http://www.heritage.nf.ca/govhouse/governors/g54.html |title=Sir George William Des Voeux, 1886-1887: Government House |publisher=Memorial University of Newfoundland |accessdate=December 30th 2009}}</ref> (B.A. 1858) – ], 1880–85; ], 1886–87; ], 1887–91 + | |||
*] (M.A. 1976) – Director of the ] ] (colloquially "Drug Czar"), 2001–09 | |||
====Governors-General and Prime Ministers==== | ====Governors-General and Prime Ministers==== |
Revision as of 08:23, 14 March 2010
The following is a list of notable persons affiliated with the University of Toronto, including alumni, chancellors, presidents, and current and former faculty members.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.Alumni
To avoid redundancy, alumni who hold or have held faculty positions in the University of Toronto are placed on this list of alumni, and do not appear on the list of faculty. Individuals are ordered by the year of their first degree from the university.
For graduates of the Faculty of Arts and Science, college affiliations (if known) are indicated after degree years, with shorthands used for University College (U.C.), University of Trinity College (Trin.), Victoria University (Vic.), University of St. Michael's College (St.M.), Innis College (Innis), New College (New), Knox College (Knox), Regis College (Regis), Wycliffe College (Wyc.), Woodsworth College (Wdw.) and Massey College (Massey).
Government
International
Governors-General and Prime Ministers
- William Lyon Mackenzie King (B.A. 1895, M.A. 1897) – 10th Prime Minister of Canada
- Arthur Meighen (B.A. 1896) – 9th Prime Minister of Canada
- Vincent Massey (B.A. 1909 U.C.) – 18th and first Canadian-born Governor General of Canada, philanthropist
- Lester B. Pearson (B.A. 1919 Vic., professor of history) – 14th Prime Minister of Canada
- Adrienne Clarkson (B.A. 1960 Trin.) – 26th Governor General of Canada
- Paul Martin (B.A. 1961 St.M., LL.B. 1965) – 21st Prime Minister of Canada
- Stephen Harper (dropped out) - 22nd Prime Minister of Canada
Supreme Court judges
- Rosalie Abella (B.A. 1967, LL.B. 1970) – Puisne Justice, 2004–
- John Douglas Armour (B.A. 1850) – Puisne Justice, 1902–03
- William Ian Corneil Binnie (LL.B. 1965) – Puisne Justice, 1998–
- Henry Hague Davis (B.A. 1907, M.A. 1909, LL.B. 1911) – Puisne Justice, 1935–44
- Lyman Poore Duff (B.A. 1887, LL.B. 1889) – Puisne Justice, 1906–33, Chief Justice, 1933–44
- John Idington (LL.B. 1864) – Puisne Justice, 1905–27
- Albert Clements Killam (B.A. 1872) – Puisne Justice, 1903–05
- John Henderson Lamont (B.A. 1892, LL.B. 1893) – Puisne Justice, 1927–36
- Bora Laskin (M.A. 1935) – Chief Justice, 1973–84
- Louis LeBel (LL.M. 1966) – Puisne Justice, 2000–
- John C. Major (LL.B. 1957) – Puisne Justice, 1992–2005
- Yves Pratte (LL.M. 1947) – Puisne Justice, 1977–79
- John Sopinka (B.A. 1955, LL.B. 1958) – Puisne Justice, 1988–97
- Wishart Flett Spence (B.A. 1925) – Puisne Justice, 1963–78
Lieutenant-governors, premiers and mayors
- James Albert Manning Aikins (B.A. 1875) – 9th Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba, founder of the Canadian Bar Association
- John Black Aird (B.A. 1945 Trin.) – 23rd Lieutenant Governor of Ontario; Senator, 1964–74
- Ross Patterson Alger (M.B.A.) – Mayor of Calgary, 1977–80
- Louis Orville Breithaupt (B.A.) – 18th Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
- John Edward Brownlee (B.A. 1908 Vic.) – 5th Premier of Alberta
- Herbert Alexander Bruce (M.B. 1892) – 15th Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
- Emerson Coatsworth (LL.B. 1886) - 33rd Mayor of Toronto
- Gordon Daniel Conant (B.A.) - 12th Premier of Ontario
- Marilyn Trenholme Counsell (M.D.) – Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick, 1997–2003
- Don Cousens (D.Th. Knox) – Mayor of Markham, Ontario, 1994–2006
- Vincent Dantzer (M.A.) - Mayor of Edmonton, 1965–68
- Bill Davis (B.A. 1951) – 18th Premier of Ontario
- Thomas Russ Deacon (B.A.Sc. 1891) – Mayor of Winnipeg, 1913–14
- George A. Drew (B.A. 1916) – 14th Premier of Ontario and High Commissioner of Canada in London
- Harry Marshall Erskine Evans (B.A. 1897) – Mayor of Edmonton, 1917–18
- Susan Fennell (B.Sc. 1977 UTM) - Mayor of Brampton, Ontario, founder and commissioner of the National Women's Hockey League
- Howard Ferguson (B.A.) - 9th Premier of Ontario
- Harold Fisher (B.A.) – Mayor of Ottawa, 1917–20
- Leslie Frost (B.A.) - 16th Premier of Ontario
- George Reginald Geary (LL.B. 1896) - 35th Mayor of Toronto
- John Morison Gibson (B.A. 1863 U.C., LL.D. 1869) – 9th Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
- Frederick W. A. G. Haultain (B.A. 1879) – 1st Premier of the Northwest Territories
- George Stewart Henry (B.A., LL.B.) - 10th Premier of Ontario
- Allan Higdon (B.Ed.) – Mayor of Ottawa, 2000–01
- Oliver Aiken Howland (LL.B.) - 31st Mayor of Toronto
- Keith Hymmen (B.Sc.) – Mayor of Kitchener, Ontario, 1963–65
- Henry N. R. Jackman (B.A. 1953 Vic., LL.B. 1956) – 25th Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, financier and philanthropist
- Hugh John Macdonald (B.A. 1869) – 8th Premier of Manitoba
- William Ross Macdonald (B.A. 1914) – 21st Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, Solicitor-General of Canada
- Grant MacEwan (B.Sc. 1926 OAC) – 9th Lieutenant Governor of Alberta
- Kenneth W. MacKenzie (B.A. 1893) – Mayor of Edmonton, 1899–1901
- John Alexander Douglas McCurdy (B.A.Sc. 1906) – Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia, first person to fly an airplane in the British Empire
- Pauline Mills McGibbon (B.A. 1933 Vic.) – 22nd Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
- William Barclay McMurrich (B.A. 1863, M.A. 1864) - 22nd Mayor of Toronto
- Roland Fairbairn McWilliams (B.A. 1896) – Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba, 1940–53
- David Miller (LL.B. 1984) - 63rd Mayor of Toronto
- William Mulock (B.A. 1863) – 14th Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
- Harry Nixon (B.Sc. OAC) – 13th Premier of Ontario
- Fabian O'Dea (M.A.) – 4th Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland and Labrador
- David Onley (B.A. 1975) - 28th Lieutenant Governor of Ontario
- Leonard Outerbridge (LL.B.) – 2nd Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland and Labrador
- David Peterson (LL.B. 1967) – 20th Premier of Ontario
- Bob Rae (B.A. 1969, LL.B. 1977) – 21st Premier of Ontario, 5th Leader of the Ontario New Democratic Party
- Edward Roberts (B.A. 1960, LL.B. 1964) – 11th Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland and Labrador
- Robert Gordon Robertson (Ph.D.) – 7th Commissioner of the Northwest Territories
- John Sewell (B.A. 1961, LL.B. 1964) - 58th Mayor of Toronto
- William Short (LL.B.) – Mayor of Edmonton, 1901–04
- Arthur Sifton (B.A. 1880 Vic.) – 2nd Premier of Alberta
- McLeod Stewart (M.A.) – Mayor of Ottawa, 1887–88
- Freeman Ferrier Treleaven (B.A.) – Mayor of Hamilton, Ontario, 1926–27
- Frederick Warriner (D.D.S. 1907) – Mayor of Winnipeg, 1937, Mayor of Winnipeg Beach, 1931–36
- Errick Willis (B.A.) – Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba, 1960–65, a member of the Canadian curling team that won a gold medal in the 1932 Winter Olympics
Ministers, diplomats, party leaders and other political figures
- James H. Aitchison (Ph.D.) – Leader of the New Democratic Party of Nova Scotia, 1963–68
- Alfred Apps (LL.B. 1984) – President of the Liberal Party of Canada, 2009–
- Wayne Arthurs (B.Ed.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Pickering—Scarborough East, 2007–, member of the Ontario Liberal Party
- James Alexander Charles Auld (B.A.) – Minister of Colleges and Universities, 1974–75, Ontario Minister of the Environment, 1972–74
- Allen Bristol Aylesworth (B.A. 1874, M.A. 1875) – Minister of Justice, 1906–11, Minister of Labour, 1905–06, Postmaster General of Canada, 1905–06
- Reuben Baetz (LL.B.) – Ontario Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, 1985–87, Ontario Minister of Tourism and Recreation, 1982–85, Provincial Secretary for Justice of Ontario, 1985
- Carolyn Bennett (M.D. 1974) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for St. Paul's, 1997–, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- Christopher Bentley (LL.B. 1979) – Attorney General of Ontario, 2007–, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for London West, 2003–
- Lorenzo Berardinetti (B.A.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Scarborough Southwest, 2003–, member of the Ontario Liberal Party
- David Berger (B.A. 1971) – Canadian Ambassador to Israel, 1995–99, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Saint-Henri—Westmount, 1988–94
- Margarett Best (B.A. UTSC) – Ontario Minister of Health Promotion, 2007–, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Scarborough—Guildwood, 2007–
- John Bosley (B.A. 1968 Trin.) – Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons, 1984–86, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Don Valley West, 1979–93
- Marie Bountrogianni (M.Ed. 1980) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, 1999–2007, member of the Ontario Liberal Party
- Patrick Boyer (M.A., LL.B.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Etobicoke-Lakeshore, 1984–93, member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada
- Edmund James Bristol (B.A. 1883) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Toronto East Centre, 1925–26, and Toronto Centre, 1905–25
- Ed Broadbent (B.A. 1959 Trin.) - Leader of the New Democratic Party, 1975–89
- Patrick Brown (B.A.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Barrie, 2006–, President of the Progressive Conservative Youth Federation, 1998–2002
- René Brunelle (M.A.) – Provincial Secretary for Resources Development of Ontario, 1977–81, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Cochrane North, 1958–81
- Marion Bryden (M.A.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, 1975–90, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Beaches—Woodbine, 1975–90
- Sarmite Bulte (B.A. U.C.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Parkdale—High Park, 1997–2006
- Michael Cassidy (B.A. Trin.) - Leader of the Ontario New Democratic Party, 1978–82
- Mary Anne Chambers (B.Comm. 1988) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Scarborough East, 2003–07, member of the Ontario Liberal Party
- Thomas Chisholm (M.D. 1879) – Member of the Canadian House of Commons for Huron East, 1904–11, member of the Conservative Party of Canada
- Michael Chong (B.A. 1994 Trin.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Wellington—Halton Hills, 2004–, President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada, 2006
- Paul Christie (Ph.D.) – Chairman of the Toronto Transit Commission, 1994–98
- Alfred Henry Clarke (LL.B.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Essex South, 1904–17, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- Tony Clement (B.A. 1983, LL.B. 1986) – Minister of Industry, 2008–, Minister of Health, 2006–08, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Parry Sound—Muskoka, 2006–
- Henry John Cody (B.A.) – Ontario Minister of Education, 1918–19
- Joseph Cordiano (B.A.) – Ontario Minister for Economic Development and Trade, 2003–06, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for York South—Weston, 1999–2006
- Thomas Dixon Craig (B.A.) – Member of the Canadian House of Commons, 1891–1900, as an independent Conservative member
- Adam Crooks (LL.B.) – Treasurer of Ontario, 1872–77, Attorney General of Ontario, 1871–72, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Toronto West, 1871–74
- Bud Cullen (B.A. 1954) – Federal Court judge, Minister of National Revenue, 1975–76
- Morley Currie (M.D. 1895) – Member of the Canadian House of Commons, 1908–11, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Prince Edward, 1902–08
- Jason Dearborn (B.A. 1994 Trin., M.Div. 1996 Trin.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan for Kindersley, 2002–07, member of the Saskatchewan Party
- Bob Dechert (LL.B.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Mississauga—Erindale, 2008–, member of the Conservative Party of Canada
- Hartley Dewart (B.A.) – Leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, 1919–21
- Manning Doherty (B.Sc. 1895 OAC) – Leader of the United Farmers of Ontario, 1924–25, vice-president of the Toronto Stock Exchange, 1938
- Leona Dombrowsky (B.A. 1979) – Ontario Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, 2005–, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Prince Edward—Hastings, 2007–
- C. C. Downey (B.A.) – Chairman of the Toronto Transit Commission, 1960–63
- Ron Duhamel (M.A., Ph.D.) – Minister of Veterans Affairs, 2000–02, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Saint Boniface, 1988–2002
- Kirsty Duncan (B.A. 1988) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Etobicoke North, 2008–, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- William James Dunlop (B.A.) – Ontario Minister of Education, 1951–59, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Eglinton, 1951–61
- John Campbell Elliott (B.A. Trin.) – Minister of Public Works, 1926–30, Minister of Labour, 1926, Postmaster General of Canada, 1935–39
- Martha Hall Findlay (B.A.) – Lawyer, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Willowdale, 2008–
- Jesse Flis (B.A., M.Ed.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Parkdale—High Park, 1979–84, 1993–97, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- Connie Fogal (M.A.) - Leader of the Canadian Action Party, 2004–08
- James Joseph Foy (B.A. St.M.) – Attorney General of Ontario, 1905–14, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Toronto South, 1898–1916
- Graham Fraser (B.A. 1968, M.A. 1972) - Canada's 6th Commissioner of Official Languages
- Doug Frith (B.Pharm. 1968) – Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, 1984, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Sudbury, 1980–88
- Royce Frith (B.A.) – Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, 1994–96, Leader of the Opposition in the Senate of Canada, 1991–93
- Alastair Gillespie (M.Comm.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Etobicoke
- John Taylor Gilmour (M.D. Trin.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for York West, 1886–94
- John Godfrey (B.A. 1967 Trin.) - Member of the Canadian Parliament for Don Valley West, 1993–2008
- Bill Graham (B.A. 1961 Trin.) – Minister of Foreign Affairs, 2002–03; Minister of National Defence, 2004–06; Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, 2006
- Barbara Greene (B.A. 1966 St.M.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Don Valley North, 1988–93, member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada
- Joe Greene (B.A.) – Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources, 1968–72, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Niagara Falls, 1968–72
- Ruth Grier (B.A. 1958 Trin.) – Ontario Minister of the Environment 1990–93, Ontario Minister of Health 93–95, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Etobicoke—Lakeshore 1987–95
- Terry Grier (B.A. 1958 Trin.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Etobicoke–Lakeshore, 1972–74, President of Ryerson University, 1988–95
- Stanley Haidasz (M.B. 1951) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Parkdale, 1962–78, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Trinity, 1957–58
- Alfred Hales (B.Sc. 1934 OAC) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Wellington, 1968–74, and Wellington South, 1957–68
- Howard Hampton (B.Ed.) - Leader of the Ontario New Democratic Party, 1996–2009
- H.H. Hannam (B.Sc. 1926 OAC) – General Secretary of the United Farmers of Ontario, 1933–42, former President and managing director of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture
- Richard Harcourt (B.A.) – Treasurer of Ontario, 1890–99, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Monck, 1879–1908
- Hu Harries (M.A.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Edmonton-Strathcona
- Robert Alexander Harrison (B.C.L. 1855, D.C.L. 1859 Trin.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for West Toronto, 1867–72
- John Hastings (M.A. 1967) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Etobicoke North, 1999–2003, member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario
- Dan Hays (LL.B.) – Leader of the Opposition in the Senate of Canada, 2006–07, Speaker of the Canadian Senate, 2001–05, Senator Alberta, 1984–2007
- George Hees (B.A.) – Minister of Transport, 1957–60, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Broadview, 1950–62
- Paul Hellyer (B.A. 1949) - First leader of the Canadian Action Party, 1997–2004
- Daniel G. Hill (M.A., 1951; Ph.D., 1960, Sociology). - Founding head of the Ontario Human Rights Commission
- Alex Himelfarb (Ph.D.) – Canadian Ambassador to Italy, 2006–
- Mark Holland (B.A. 1996) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Ajax—Pickering, 2004–, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- Ross Hornby (M.A. 1976) – Canadian Ambassador to the European Union, 2006–
- Sam Hughes (B.A.) – Minister of Militia and Defence, 1911–16, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Victoria, 1904–21
- Tony Ianno (B.Sc.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Trinity-Spadina, 1993–2006, Minister of Families and Caregivers, 2004–06
- George Ignatieff (B.A. 1936 Trin.) – Canadian Ambassador to the United Nations, 1966–68; president of the United Nations Security Council, 1968–69
- Michael Ignatieff (B.A. 1969 Trin.) – Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, 2008–, director of Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at John F. Kennedy School of Government, 2000–05
- Ted Jolliffe (B.A. Vic.) - First leader of the Ontario Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, 1942–53, leader of the Official Opposition in the Ontario Legislature
- Thomas Erlin Kaiser (M.D. 1890) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Ontario, 1925–30
- Bob Kaplan (B.A. 1958) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for York Centre, 1974–93, and Don Valley, 1968–72
- Jim Karygiannis (B.ASc.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Scarborough—Agincourt, 1988–, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- Michael Kergin (B.A. 1965) – 19th Canadian Ambassador to the United States
- Judy LaMarsh (B.A. Vic.) – Secretary of State for Canada, 1965–68, Minister of National Health and Welfare, 1963–65
- Steven Langdon (B.A. 1969 Trin.) – Member of the Canadian House of Commons, 1984–93, member of the New Democratic Party
- Laurier LaPierre (B.A. 1955 St.M., M.A. 1957, Ph.D. 1962) - Senator, member of the Liberal Party of Canada, Officer of the Order of Canada
- Denis Lazure (B.A.) – Member of the National Assembly of Quebec for La Prairie, 1989–96, Bertrand, 1981–84, and Chambly, 1976–81
- Nick Leluk (B.A.) – Ontario Minister of Correctional Services, 1981–85, member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario
- Stephen Lewis (dropped out) - Leader of the Ontario New Democratic Party, 1970–78
- Charles Herbert Little (B.A. 1930 Trin.) – Director of Naval Intelligence during the Second World War, recipient of the Queen's Jubilee Medal
- Peter Van Loan (B.A. 1987, M.A. 1989, M.Sc. 1993) – Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, 2006–07, President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada, 2006–07
- James Alexander Lougheed (B.A.) – Leader of the Government in the Senate, 1911–21, Leader of the Opposition in the Senate, 1906–11, 1921–25
- William Lount (LL.B.) – Member of the Canadian House of Commons for Toronto Centre, 1896–97, former justice in the Common Pleas division of the Supreme Court of Ontario
- Isaac Benson Lucas (B.A.) – Attorney General of Ontario, 1914–19, Treasurer of Ontario, 1913–14
- Jeffrey S. Lyons (J.D.) – Chairman of the Toronto Transit Commission, 1987–89, former Chairman of Gray Coach and Trentway-Wagar
- John Kenneth Macalister (B.A. 1937 U.C.) – Special Operations Executive operative in the Second World War
- Donald S. Macdonald (B.A. 1952 Trin.) – Minister of National Defence, 1970–72; President of the Privy Council, 1968–70; Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, 1988–91
- Mark MacGuigan (Ph.D.) – Minister of Justice, 1982–84, Secretary of State for External Affairs, 1980–82, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Windsor—Walkerville, 1968–84
- Alexander Grant MacKay (M.B.A.) – Leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, 1907–11, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta for Athabasca, 1913–20
- Roy MacLaren (M.Div. 1991 Trin.) – Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, 1996–2000, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Etobicoke North, 1979–84, 1988–96
- William Findlay Maclean (B.A.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for York South, 1904–26, and York East, 1892–1904
- Rosario Marchese (B.A. 1978, B.Ed.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Trinity-Spadina, 1999–, member of the New Democratic Party of Ontario
- Shelley Martel (B.A.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Sudbury East, 1987–99, member of the Ontario New Democratic Party
- Paul Joseph James Martin (B.A. 1925) – Senator for Windsor-Walkerville, Ontario, 1968–74, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Essex East, 1935–68
- Gerry Martiniuk (M.A.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, 2007–, member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario
- Arthur Matheson (B.A. Trin.) – Treasurer of Ontario, 1905–13, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Lanark South, 1898–1913
- Bruce McCaffrey (B.A.) – Ontario Minister of Community and Social Services, 1983, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Armourdale, 1977–87
- Barbara McDougall (B.A. 1963) – Minister responsible for the Status of Women, 1986–90, Member of the Canadian Parliament for St. Paul's, 1984–93
- James Wellington McLaughlin (B.A.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Durham West, 1879–90
- Walter McLean (M.Div. Knox) – Secretary of State for Canada, 1984–85, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Waterloo, 1979–93
- Roy McMurtry (B.A. 1954 Trin.) – Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, 1985–88, Chief Justice of Ontario, 1996–, Chancellor of York University, 2008–
- James McNulty (B.A.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for St. Catharines, 1968–72, and Lincoln, 1962–68, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- William Ralph Meredith (LL.B. 1872) - Leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario, 1878–94
- Maria Minna (B.A.) – Minister for International Cooperation, 1999–2002, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Beaches—East York, 1997–
- William Henry Moore (B.A. 1894) – Former Member of the Canadian Parliament for Ontario, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- Ted Morton (M.A. 1975, Ph.D. 1981) – Minister of Sustainable Resource Development in the Alberta government, 2006–, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta, 2004–
- Thomas Moss (B.A. 1858, M.A. 1859) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for West Toronto, 1873–75, Chief Justice of Ontario, 1878–80
- Tim Murphy (LL.B.) – Chief of Staff of the Prime Minister's Office, 2003–06, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for St. George—St. David, 1993–95
- Peggy Nash (B.A.) – President of the New Democratic Party of Canada, 2009–, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Parkdale—High Park, 2006–08
- Dan Newman (B.A. 1987 U.C.) – Ontario Minister of Northern Development and Mines, 2001–02, Ontario Minister of the Environment, 2000–01
- Robert Nixon (B.Ed.) – Leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, 1967–75, 1990–91, Treasurer of Ontario, 1985–90
- E. Herbert Norman (B.A. Vic.) – Canadian Ambassador to Japan, 1946–50
- William Barton Northrup (B.A. 1877, M.A. 1878) – Clerk of the House of Commons, 1918–24, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Hastings East, 1892–96
- Martin O'Connell (M.A., Ph.D.) – Minister of Labour, 1972, 1978–79, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Scarborough East, 1968–72
- Bev Oda (B.A.) – Minister for International Cooperation, 2007–, Minister of Canadian Heritage, 2006–07, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Durham, 2004–
- Rob Oliphant (B.Comm. 1978) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Don Valley West, 2008–, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- John Oostrom (B.A. 1959, M.B.A.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Willowdale, 1984–88, member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada
- Harry Craig Parrott (D.D.S. 1947) – Ontario Minister of the Environment, 1978–81, Ontario Minister of Colleges and Universities, 1975–78
- Julian Porter (B.A.) – Chairman of the Toronto Transit Commission, 1979–87, former President of the Canadian National Exhibition
- William Herbert Price (B.A.) – Attorney General of Ontario, 1926–34, Treasurer of Ontario, 1923–26, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Parkdale, 1914–37
- Edmond Proulx (M.A. St.M.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Prescott, 1904–21, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Prescott, 1923–29
- Michael Prue (B.A.) – Toronto City Councillor, 1998–2001, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Beaches—East York, 2001–
- Robert Allan Pyne (B.A.) – Ontario Minister of Education, 1914–18, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Toronto Northeast, 1898–1918
- Shafiq Qaadri (M.D. 1988) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Etobicoke North, 2003–, member of the Ontario Liberal Party
- Saul Rae (B.A. 1936 U.C.) – Canadian Ambassador to the United Nations, 1972–76
- Victor Railton (M.B.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Welland, 1972–79, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- Escott Reid (B.A. 1927 Trin.) – Canadian High Commissioner to India, 1952–57, Director of the South-Asia and Middle Easter Department of the World Bank, 1962–65
- John Reimer (B.A.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Kitchener, 1979–80, 1984–93
- Frederick Robertson (M.D.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Northumberland, 1949–57, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- William James Roche (M.B. Trin.) – Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, 1912–17, Secretary of State for Canada, 1911–12
- James Rutherford (M.B.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Kent, 1926–39, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- Bill Saunderson (B.A. 1956 Trin.) – Ontario Minister of Economic Development, Trade and Tourism, 1995–97
- Ian Scott (B.A. St.M.) – Attorney General of Ontario, 1985–90, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for St. David, 1985–87, and St. George—St. David, 1987–92
- Morton Shulman (M.D. 1948) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, 1967–75, member of the New Democratic Party
- Yuri Shymko (B.A.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Parkdale—High Park, 1978–79, member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada
- Clifford Sifton (B.A. 1875 Vic.) – Minister of the Interior, 1896–1905
- Tony Silipo (B.A.) – Ontario Minister of Community and Social Services, 1993–95, Ontario Minister of Education, 1991–93, Chair of the Management Board, 1991–92
- W. E. N. Sinclair (LL.B.) – Leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, 1923–30
- Elizabeth Joan Smith (B.A. St.M.) – Solicitor General of Ontario, 1987–89, member of the Ontario Liberal Party
- Monique Smith (B.A.) – Ontario Minister of Tourism, 2008–, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Nipissing, 2003–
- Greg Sorbara (dropped out) – Ontario Minister of Finance, 2003–05, 2006–07, Ontario Minister of Labour, 1987–89
- Bette Stephenson (M.D. 1946) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for York Mills, 1975–87
- Christine Stewart (B.Sc.N.) – Minister of the Environment, 1997–99, Secretary of State (Latin America and Africa), 1993–97
- Alfred Stong (B.A.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for York Centre, 1975–81, judge in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice
- Robert Franklin Sutherland (B.A.) – Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons, 1905–09, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Essex North, 1900–09
- Carole Taylor (B.A. Vic.) – Minister of Finance of British Columbia, 2005–08, member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for Vancouver-Langara, 2005–08
- Andy Thompson (dropped out) – Leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, 1964–66
- Harold Timmins (B.A.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Parkdale, 1946–49, member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada
- Alan Tonks (M.Ed.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for York South-Weston, 2000–, 6th Metro Toronto Chairman, 1987–97
- John Tory (B.A. 1975 Trin.) – Leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario, 2005–07
- Garth Turner (B.A.) – Minister of National Revenue, 1993, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Halton, 2006–08, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Halton—Peel, 1988–93
- Joe Volpe (B.A. 1970, B.Ed. 1971, M.Ed. 1980) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Eglinton—Lawrence, 1988–
- Tom Wappel (B.A. 1971) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Scarborough Southwest, 1997–2008, and Scarborough West, 1988–97
- George Arthur Welsh (B.Ed.) – Provincial Secretary and Registrar of Ontario, 1949–55, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Muskoka—Ontario, 1945–55
- William Thomas White (B.A. 1895) – Minister of Finance and Receiver General, 1911–19, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Leeds, 1911–21
- Byron Wilfert (B.A., M.A., B.Ed.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Richmond Hill, 2004–, Member of the Canadian Parliament for Oak Ridges, 1997–2004
- Jim Wilson (B.A. St.M.) – Ontario Minister of Northern Development and Mines, 2002–03, Ontario Minister of Health, 1995–97
- Michael Wilson (B.A. 1959 Trin.) – 22nd Canadian Ambassador to the United States, 2006–09; Minister of Finance, 1984–91
- Jim Wiseman (B.A.) – Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Durham West, 1990–95, member of the Ontario New Democratic Party
- Bob Wong (B.A.) – Ontario Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, 1989–90, Ontario Minister of Energy, 1987–89
- J. S. Woodsworth (B.A. Vic.) - First leader of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (later became the New Democratic Party), 1932–42
- H. H. Wrong (B.A., professor of history) – Canadian Ambassador to the United States, 1946–53
- Borys Wrzesnewskyj (B.Comm. Trin.) – Member of the Canadian Parliament for Etobicoke Centre, 2004–, member of the Liberal Party of Canada
- Kathleen Wynne (M.A. 1980) – Ontario Minister of Education, 2006–, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Don Valley West, 2003–
- Max Yalden (B.A. 1952 Vic.) - Commissioner of Official Languages, 1977–1984
- John Yaremko (B.A.) – Provincial Secretary and Registrar of Ontario, 1960–66, Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Bellwoods, 1951–75
Natural sciences, mathematics, medicine and engineering
Mathematics and statistics
- James Arthur (B.Sc., M.Sc.) – Former President of the American Mathematical Society
- Samuel Beatty (Ph.D. 1915) – Mathematician and educator, Beatty sequence is named after him, 21st Chancellor of the University of Toronto
- John Benedetto (Ph.D. 1964) – Professor of mathematics at the University of Maryland, College Park, Director of the Norbert Wiener Center for Harmonic Analysis and Applications
- Eddy Campbell (Ph.D. 1981) - Mathematician, former President of the Canadian Mathematical Society, current President of the University of New Brunswick
- Robert H. Coats (B.A. 1896 U.C., visiting professor of statistics) – Canada's first Dominion Statistician
- John Charles Fields (B.A. 1884, professor of mathematics 1902–32) – Mathematician and founder of the Fields Medal
- John Friedlander (B.Sc. 1965) – Mathematician in analytic number theory
- Donald B. Gillies (B.A. 1950) – Mathematician and computer scientist known for his work in game theory, computer design, and minicomputer programming environments
- Israel Halperin (B.A. 1932 Vic.) – Mathematician, social activist, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Henry Marshall Tory Medal recipient
- Norman Johnson (Ph.D. 1966) – Mathematician, famous for Johnson solids
- Irving Kaplansky (B.A. 1938, M.A. 1940) - Mathematician, member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, former director of the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute and President of the American Mathematical Society
- Cecilia Krieger (B.A. 1924, M.A. 1925, Ph.D. 1930) – Mathematician, the first woman to earn a Ph.D. in mathematics
- Chia-Chiao Lin (M.Sc. 1941) – Applied mathematician, Institute Professor emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, former President of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
- J. Carson Mark (Ph.D. 1938) - Mathematician, noted for his work on developing nuclear weapons for the United States at Los Alamos National Laboratory
- Jerrold E. Marsden (B.Sc.) - American applied mathematician, the Carl F. Braun Professor of Engineering and Control & Dynamic Systems at the California Institute of Technology
- Herbert Marshall (B.A. 1915) - Statistician, academic, Canada's third Dominion Statistician
- Nathan Mendelsohn (B.A., M.A., Ph.D. 1941) - Mathematician, former President of the Canadian Mathematical Society, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, winner of the Henry Marshall Tory Medal
- Robert Moody (M.A. 1964, Ph.D. 1966) - Mathematician, co-discoverer of Kac-Moody algebra, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Cathleen Synge Morawetz (B.A. 1945) – Mathematician, Professor Emerita at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at the New York University, former President of the American Mathematical Society, the National Medal of Science winner
- Leo Moser (M.Sc. 1945) – Mathematician, best known for his Moser polygon notation
- Cecil J. Nesbitt (B.A. 1934, M.A. 1935, Ph.D. 1937) - Mathematician, co-discoverer of the Schuette-Nesbitt formula
- Gilbert de Beauregard Robinson (B.A. 1927) – Mathematician in combinatorics and representation theory of the symmetric groups, known for the Robinson-Schensted algorithm
- Laurent C. Siebenmann (B.Sc.) – Profesor of mathematics at the Université de Paris-Sud at Orsay, co-discoverer of the Kirby-Siebenmann class, winner of the Jeffery-Williams Prize
- Robert Steinberg (Ph.D. 1948) - Mathematician, professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of California, Los Angeles, winner of the Steele Prize and Jeffery-Williams Prize, member of the National Academy of Sciences
- James Stewart (Ph.D. 1967) - Mathematician and educator, professor emeritus of mathematics at McMaster University
- Albert W. Tucker (B.A. 1928) – Mathematician; co-discoverer of the Karush-Kuhn-Tucker conditions
- Ravi Vakil (B.Sc., M.Sc. 1992) – Four-time William Lowell Putnam Scholar, professor of mathematics at Stanford University
- Cem Yıldırım (Ph.D. 1990) – Turkish mathematician who specializes in number theory, professor of mathematics at Boğaziçi University
Medicine and dentistry
- Albert Ernest Archer (M.D.) – Physician and political activist, President of the Canadian Medical Association, 1942–43
- Elizabeth Bagshaw (M.B.) – Medical director of the first birth control clinic in Canada
- Michael Baker (M.D. 1966) – Physician and cancer researcher, Physician-in-Chief of the Toronto General Hospital, recipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal
- Frederick Banting (M.B. 1916) – Co-discoverer of insulin, with student Charles Best, co-researcher James Collip and professor of physiology John James Richard Macleod
- Henry J. M. Barnett (M.D. 1944) – Pioneer of the use of aspirin as a preventive therapy for heart attack and stroke
- Staff Barootes (M.D. 1943) – Physician and urologist, former treasurer and deputy president of the Canadian Medical Association
- John Basmajian (M.D. 1945) – Physician, noted for his work in rehabilitation science, taught at Queen's University, Emory University and McMaster University
- Sheela Basrur (M.D. 1982) – Chief Medical Officer of Health and Assistant Deputy Minister of Public Health in the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, 2004–06
- Charles Best (B.A. 1921, M.D. 1925) – Student of Frederick Banting in the discovery of insulin; later adviser to the medical research committee of the World Health Organization
- Norman Bethune (M.D. 1916) – Physician and humanitarian; developed the first blood transfusion service in the Spanish Civil War, doctor to Mao Zedong's army in the Second Sino-Japanese War
- Wilfred Gordon Bigelow (M.D. 1938) – Heart surgeon who developed the artificial pacemaker and the use of hypothermia in open heart surgery
- Francis John Blatherwick (D.PH. 1975) – One of Canada's trailblazing leaders in public health, the longest-serving medical health officer in Canada
- Susan Bradley (M.D. 1966) – Psychiatrist best known for her work in gender identity disorder in children, former Psychiatrist-in-Chief at the Hospital for Sick Children
- John Callaghan (M.D. 1946) – Cardiac surgeon who "pioneered open-heart surgery in Alberta"
- Kevin Chan (B.Sc.) – Emergency physician at the Hospital for Sick Children, expert in peadiatric population health
- Christopher Chetsanga (M.Sc. 1965, Ph.D. 1969) – Professor of the University of Zimbabwe who discovered two DNA repair enzymes
- Brock Chisholm (M.D. 1924) – Director-General of the World Health Organization, 1948–53
- Charles Kirk Clarke (M.D. 1879) – Psychiatrist who co-founded the Canadian National Committee for Mental Hygiene (now the Canadian Mental Health Association)
- James Collip (B.A. 1912 Trin., M.A. 1913, Ph.D. 1916) - Significant member of the research team that discovered insulin; later served as the Chair of the Department of Biochemistry at McGill University and Dean of Medicine at the University of Western Ontario
- Harold Copp (M.D. 1939) – Biochemist who discovered and named calcitonin, a hormone used in the treatment of treatment of hypercalcemia and osteoporosis
- Thomas Stephen Cullen (M.B. 1890) – Gynecologist associated with Johns Hopkins Hospital, Cullen's sign is named for him
- Robert Defries (M.D. 1913) – Physician, Former director of Connaught Medical Research Laboratories
- Theodore Drake (M.B. 1914) – Pediatrician and nutrition expert; inventor of the baby food Pablum with Frederick Tisdall at the Hospital for Sick Children
- Larry Goldenberg (M.D. 1978) – Pioneer in the role of MRI and focal therapy in the treatment of prostate cancer
- Brian Goldman (M.D. 1980) – Doctor and radio personality, practices at Mount Sinai Hospital, produces a radio documentary series, White Coat, Black Art
- Duncan Archibald Graham (M.B. 1905) - Physician and academic, Physician-in-Chief at the Toronto General Hospital until 1947
- Arthur Ham (M.B. 1927) - Prominent histologist, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, textbook Histology
- Raymond Heimbecker (M.D. 1947) – Cardiovascular surgeon who performed the world’s first complete heart valve transplant in 1962 and Canada’s first modern heart transplant in 1981
- Jack Hirsh (D.Sc.) – Clinician, and scientist specializing in anticoagulant therapy and thrombosis, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Harold E. Johns (M.A., Ph.D. 1939) – Medical physicist who developed of the use of ionizing radiation to treat cancer
- Benson Lau (B.A. 1975) – Family physician, member of the Canadian Medical Association and Ontario Medical Association, Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal recipient
- Victor Ling (B.Sc. 1966) – Medical researcher known for the discovery of P-glycoprotein
- John Joseph Mackenzie (B.Sc. 1886 U.C., professor of pathology and bacteriology) – Pathologist and bacteriologist, member of the Society of American Bacteriologists and the American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists
- Thomas McCrae (M.D. 1903) – Professor of Medicine at Jefferson Medical College, collaborated with William Osler on The Principles and Practice of Medicine
- Ernest McCulloch (M.D. 1948) – Cellular biologist and Lasker Award recipient credited with the discovery of the stem cell
- Robert McMurtry (M.D. 1965) – Physician, special advisor to the Canadian Royal Commission on the Future of Health Care
- Maud Menten (B.A. 1904, M.B. 1907, M.D. 1911) – Major contributor to enzyme kinetics and histochemistry, for whom the Michaelis-Menten equation is named
- Thomas Mills (B.A. 1871 U.C., M.A. 1872) – Physician and physiologist, taught at McGill University, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- James Fraser Mustard (M.D. 1953) – Physician and scientist, a founding member of the McMaster University's Faculty of Medicine, past Chairman of Ballard Power Systems
- William Thornton Mustard (M.D. 1937) – Physician and cardiac surgeon, one of the first to perform open-heart surgery, well-known for Mustard cardiovascular procedure
- Jack Newman (M.D. 1970) – Physician specializing in breastfeeding support and advocacy, consultant for Unicef's Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative
- Robert Noble (M.D. 1934) – Physician who was involved in the discovery of vinblastine, recipient of the Gairdner Foundation International Award
- James Orbinski (M.A. 1998, associate professor of medicine) – President of Médecins Sans Frontières; fellow at the Munk Centre for International Studies
- Oronhyatekha (M.D. 1866) - First Canadian Aboriginal medical graduate, former President of the Grand Council of Canadian Chiefs
- Jennie Smillie Robertson (M.B. 1909) – First female surgeon in Canada
- Anderson Ruffin Abbott (M.D. 1861) - First Black Canadian doctor, participated in the American Civil War
- Robert B. Salter (M.D. 1947) – Pediatric orthopaedic surgeon who originated the continuous passive motion (CPM) treatment to aid the recovery of joints after trauma
- Ricky Kanee Schachter (M.B. 1943, associate professor) – Renowned dermatologist, former president of the Canadian Dermatological Association
- Peter A. Singer (M.D. 1984) – Former director of the University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics and member of the scientific advisory board of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
- Elizabeth Stern (M.D. 1939) – Professor of epidemiology at the University of California, Los Angeles who published the first case report linking a virus to a cancer
- Augusta Stowe-Gullen (M.D. 1883) - First female Canadian doctor, awarded the Order of British Empire
- James Thorburn (M.B.) – Physician and university professor, consulting surgeon at the Toronto General Hospital, President of the Canadian Medical Association, 1895
- Stephen Ticktin (M.D. 1973) – Psychiatrist, therapist and lecturer, notable figure in the anti-psychiatry movement
- Ross Upshur (M.Sc. 1997) – Physician and researcher, Director of the Primary Care Research Unit at Sunnybrook Research Institute
- Paul Walfish (M.D. 1958) – Endocrinologist, noted for his research in thyroid physiology and pathology, worked at Mount Sinai Hospital
Physics, chemistry and astronomy
- Isaac Abella (B.A. 1957) – Physicist specializing in laser physics, quantom optics and spectroscopy, professor of physics at the University of Chicago
- Robert Ackman (B.A. 1950) – Chemist and pioneer in marine oils and Omega-3 fatty acid
- Nima Arkani-Hamed (B.Sc. 1993) – Theoretical physicist, former professor of physics at Harvard University and faculty of the Institute for Advanced Study
- Bertram Brockhouse (M.A. 1948, Ph.D. 1950) – Developer of neutron triple-axis spectrometry and other neutron scattering techniques for studies of condensed matter
- Eli Franklin Burton (B.Sc. 1901, Ph.D. 1910) – Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and member of the National Research Council, co-developer of the first practical electron microscope
- Clarence Chant (B.A. 1890) – Physicist and astronomer, president of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada and principal founder of the David Dunlap Observatory, considered the father of Canadian astronomy
- David Charbonneau (B.Sc.) – Thomas D. Cabot Associate Professor of Astronomy at Harvard University, recipient of the Robert J. Trumpler Award and the Alan T. Waterman Award
- Arthur Jeffrey Dempster (B.Sc. 1909, M.Sc. 1910) – Physicist who developed the world's first modern mass spectrometer and discovered uranium isotope U
- Walter Dorn (Ph.D. 1985) – Chemist and educator, Chair of the Canadian Pugwash Group, the Canadian branch of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs which received the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize
- Elagu V. Elaguppillai (M.Sc. 1968, Ph.D. 1970) – Nuclear scientist, former Senior Scientific Advisor of Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, member of the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, 1992–96
- Melissa Franklin (B.Sc. 1977 Innis) – Experimental particle physicist, professor of physics at Harvard University
- Ursula Franklin (Post-doctoral studies) - Metallurgist, research physicist, humanitarian, the first female professor in the University of Toronto's department of metallurgy and materials science, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- William Edmund Harper (B.Sc. 1906, M.Sc. 1907) – Astronomer, Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, member of staff at the Dominion Observatory
- Frank Scott Hogg (B.Sc.) – Astronomer who pioneered in the study of spectrophotometry of stars and of spectra of comets., the crater Hogg on the Moon is co-named for him
- William Frederick King (B.A. 1874) – Astronomer, founding director of the Dominion Observatory, President of the Royal Society of Canada, 1911–12
- Walter Kohn (B.A. 1945 U.C., M.A. 1946) – Pioneer of quantum chemistry and leading developer of the density functional theory
- Robert J. LeRoy (B.Sc. 1965, M.Sc. 1967) – Developer of the near-dissociation theory and the LeRoy Radius with Richard Barry Bernstein
- Donald MacRae (B.Sc. 1937) – Astronomer, Director of the David Dunlap Observatory, 1965–78, appeared in the Academy Award-nominated NFB documentary Universe
- John Cunningham McLennan (B.Sc. 1892, Ph.D. 1900) – Physicist of the Cavendish Laboratory and McLennan Laboratories, key founder of the National Research Council
- Don Misener (M.Sc. 1935) – Discoverer of the superfluid phase of matter together with Pyotr Leonidovich Kapitsa
- Joseph Algernon Pearce (B.Sc., M.Sc.) – Astrophysicist, director of the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, 1940–51, former president of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada and the Royal Society of Canada
- William Richard Peltier (M.Sc. 1969, Ph.D. 1971) – Physicist in atmospheric, oceanic and geophysical turbulence and fluid dynamics, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and the American Geophysical Union
- Harry Hemley Plaskett (B.A. 1916) – Astronomer who made significant contributions to the fields of solar physics, astronomical spectroscopy and spectrophotometry, taught at Oxford and won the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society.
- John Stanley Plaskett (B.Sc. 1899) – Astronomer who discovered the binary nature of Plaskett's star
- Lawrence V. Redman (B.A. 1908) – Chemist, a pioneer in the industrial applications of plastics, former president of the American Chemical Society
- Hugh Ross (M.Sc., Ph.D.) – Astronomer, astrophysicist, Old Earth creationist and Christian apologist, established his own ministry called Reasons To Believe
- Robert Fulford Ruttan (B.A. 1881) – Chemist and educator, former president of the Royal Society of Canada and the Royal Canadian Golf Association
- Arthur Leonard Schawlow (B.A. 1941 Vic., M.A., Ph.D. 1949) – Developer of laser spectroscopy
- Boris P. Stoicheff (B.Sc. 1947, Ph.D. 1950, professor of physics) – Physicist, former president of the Optical Society of America, recipient of the Frederic Ives Medal
- Thomas Timusk (B.A. 1957) – Physicist, professor emeritus of physics at McMaster University, co-winner of the Frank Isakson Prize for Optical Effects in Solids
- Mark B. Wise (B.Sc. 1976, M.Sc. 1977) – Theoretical physicist known for his role in the development of heavy quark effective theory, John A. McCone Professor of High Energy Physics at California Institute of Technology
Biology and ecology
- Cheryl Arrowsmith (Ph.D.) - Structural biologist, Chief Scientist at the Toronto lab of the Structural Genomics Consortium
- Jan Conn (Ph.D. 1987) - Geneticist and poet, her book South of the Tudo Bem Cafe shortlisted for the Pat Lowther Award
- C. S. Holling (B.A., M.Sc. 1952) – Ecologist and pioneer in ecological economics, director of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Vienna
- Archibald Gowanlock Huntsman (B.A. 1905, professor of marine zoology 1927–54) - Fisheries biologist, invented the fast freezing of fish fillets, recipient of the Flavelle Medal, former president of the Royal Society of Canada
- Sanford Jackson (B.Sc., M.Sc., Ph.D) – Prominent biochemist, former biochemist-in-chief at the Toronto Hospital for Sick Children, inventor of the bilirubinometer
- Archibald Macallum (B.A. 1880) – Biochemist and founder of the National Research Council of Canada
- J. Playfair McMurrich (M.A. 1881) – Zoologist and academic, winner of the Flavelle Medal, former president of the Royal Society of Canada and the American Association for the Advancement of Science
- William E. Rees (Ph.D.) - Ecologist, professor of ecology at the University of British Columbia, origininated the ecological footprint concept and co-developed the method
- Helen Rodd (M.Sc. 1982, associate professor 1998–) - Zoologist, recipient of the Premier's Research Excellence Award
- Charles E. Saunders (B.A. 1888) – Agronomist and inventor of Marquis wheat
- Anne Zeller (M.A. 1971, Ph.D. 1978) – Physical anthropologist specialized in the study of primates
Engineering and computer science
- Alfred Aho (B.A.Sc. 1963) – Co-creator of the AWK programming language, co-author of Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools and several other textbooks on computer science
- Frederick Walker Baldwin (B.A.Sc. 1906) – Hydrofoil and aviation pioneer, designer and builder of the Silver Dart, White Wing and Red Wing aircrafts
- Roberta Bondar (Ph.D. 1974) – First neurologist in space and Canada’s first female astronaut; former head of space medicine research at NASA
- Thomas Brzustowski (B.A.Sc. 1958) – Former president of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, taught mechanical engineering at the University of Waterloo
- Gerald Bull (B.A.Sc. 1944, M.A.Sc. 1948, Ph.D. 1951) – Ballistics engineer and developer of long-range superguns, headed Project HARP for the United States Department of Defence and later Project Babylon for Saddam Hussein's Iraqi government
- Jim Chamberlin (B.A.Sc. 1936) – Aerodynamicist and chief designer of the Avro Arrow, major designer for the Gemini space capsule and Apollo Lunar Module
- Richard Cleve (Ph.D. 1989) – Professor of computer science at the David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science at the University of Waterloo, associate member of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
- Gregory Dudek (M.Sc., Ph.D.) – Professor of computer science and Director of the McGill University School of Computer Science at McGill University
- Bernard Etkin (B.A.Sc. 1941, M.A.Sc. 1947) – Authority on aircraft guidance and control
- Wilbur R. Franks (M.B. 1928) – Aviation medical scientist and inventor of the G-suit, awarded the Legion of Merit
- Keith Geddes (M.Sc. 1970, Ph.D. 1973) - Professor Emeritus in the David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science at the University of Waterloo, member of the Association for Computing Machinery
- Calvin Gotlieb (B.Sc. 1942, M.Sc. 1944, Ph.D. 1947, professor of computer science) – Computer scientist who has been called the "Father of Computing" in Canada, former president of the Canadian Information Processing Society
- James Milton Ham (B.A.Sc. 1943, professor of electrical engineering) – Founding fellow and former president of the Canadian Academy of Engineering
- D. W. Harvey (B.A.Sc.) – General Manager of the Toronto Transit Commission, 1924–38, played a key role in its early development
- H. E. T. Haultain (B.A.Sc. 1889) – Mining engineer who began The Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer; inventor of the Superpanner and Infrasizer, instruments used in dressing ore
- Eric Hehner (Ph.D. 1974, professor of computer science) – Influential computer scientist who focuses on formal methods, particularly for programming
- James Hillier (B.A. 1937, M.A. 1938, Ph.D. 1941) – Scientist and inventor who designed and built the first practical electron microscope with Cecil Hall and Albert Prebus
- John G. Inglis (B.A.Sc. 1923) – General Manager – Operations of the Toronto Transit Commission, 1959–68
- William Kahan (B.A. 1954, M.A. 1956, Ph.D. 1958) – Architect of the IEEE 754 standard for floating-point computation, developer of the Kahan summation algorithm, recipient of the Turing Award in 1989
- Brian Kernighan (B.A.Sc. 1964) – Bell Labs computer scientist who co-authored The C Programming Language and The UNIX Programming Environment
- Elsie MacGill (B.A.Sc. 1927) – The world's first female aircraft designer, "Queen of the Hurricanes", commissioner on the Royal Commission on the Status of Women of 1967
- Tom Maibaum (B.A. 1970) – Computer scientist concentrating on the theory of specification, taught at Imperial College London, King's College London and McMaster University
- David Megginson – Computer software consultant and developer, the lead developer and original maintainer of the Simple API for XML
- Kenneth Money (B.Sc. 1958, M.Sc. 1959, Ph.D. 1961, professor of physiology) – Retired NRC/CSA Astronaut, Spacelab Payload Operations Controller for a Spacelab mission in 1992
- Julie Payette (M.A.Sc. 1990) – Chief astronaut of the Canadian Space Agency, 2000–07; former research engineer at IBM and Bell-Northern Research
- Olaf von Ramm (B.Sc. 1968, M.Sc. 1970) – Thomas Lord Professor of Engineering at Duke University and holder of the first patent on three-dimensional ultrasound
- Jonathan Schaeffer (B.Sc. 1979) – Developer of Chinook, the world's strongest checkers-playing computer program, and Polaris, a program that plays Texas hold 'em
- Leslie Shemilt (B.A.Sc. 1941) – Dean of engineering at McMaster University, 1969–79, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, recipient of the Canadian Centennial Medal
- Gordon Slemon (M.A.Sc. 1948, professor of engineering) – Electrical engineer, the IEEE Nikola Tesla Award winner, wrote Magnetoelectric Devices and Electric Machines and Drives
- Lewis Urry (B.A.Sc. 1950) – Inventor of the alkaline battery and the lithium battery
- Zvonko Vranesic (B.Eng., M.Eng., Ph.D) – Electrical engineer, International Master of chess and developer of computer chess software
- Arthur Whitney (M.A.) – Computer scientist most notable for developing the APL-inspired programming languages A+ and K., CEO and co-founder of Kx Systems
Earth science
- Roger Blais (Ph.D. 1954) – Geological engineer who helped develop a number of prospecting and exploration technologies, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Philip J. Currie (B.Sc. 1972) – Paleontologist, museum curator who helped found the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology, teaches at the University of Alberta
- Duncan R. Derry (M.A. Ph.D.) – Economic geologist, creator of the World Atlas of Geological and Mineral Deposits
- Elwood S. Moore (B.A. 1904, M.A. 1908) – Economic geologist, former president of the Society of Economic Geologists, Royal Society of Canada and Royal Canadian Institute
- Lawrence Morley (B.Sc. 1946, M.Sc., Ph.D.) – Geophysicist known for his study of magnetic properties of ocean crust, founder of the Canada Centre for Remote Sensing
- Eric W. Mountjoy (Ph.D. 1960) – Award-winning geologist, professor emeritus of geology at McGill University, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- William Parks (B.A. 1892, Ph.D. 1900) – Geologist and paleontologist, following in the tradition of Lawrence Lambe, Parksosaurus was named for him
- George Sherwood Hume (B.Sc.) – Geologist, former president of the Geological Association of Canada, the Royal Society of Canada and the Geological Society of America
- Raymond Thorsteinsson (M.Sc.) – Award-winning geologist, noted for his contribution to the geology of the Proterozoic and Paleozoic rocks
- Joseph Tyrrell (LL.B. 1880) – Geologist and mining consultant who discovered dinosaur bones in Alberta's Badlands and coal around Drumheller
- Harold Williams (Ph.D. 1961) – Geologist and expert on the Appalachian Mountains and tectonic development of mountain belts, advanced the theory of colliding super-continents
- John Tuzo Wilson (B.Sc. 1930 Trin.) – Geologist, geophysicist and pioneer in the theory of plate tectonics who conceived of the transform fault concept, the Wollaston Medal winner
- C. S. Wright (B.Sc. 1908) – Glaciologist and member of the British Antarctic Expedition led by Robert Falcon Scott, navigator of the sledge team that found Scott's perished body
Social sciences
Anthropology, geography and archaeology
- Shabir Ally (M.A.) – President of the Islamic Information & Dawah Centre International in Toronto
- Robert Bateman (B.A. 1954 Vic.) - Naturalist, painter
- Davidson Black (M.A. 1906, M.D. 1909) – Paleoanthropologist who identified and named Sinanthropus pekinensis, better known as Peking Man
- Peter J. Brand (Ph.D. 1998) – Egyptologist, Field Director of the Karnak Great Hypostyle Hall Project of the University of Memphis, 2001–
- Charles Trick Currelly (B.A. 1898 Vic., M.A. 1902) – First director of the Royal Ontario Museum, member of the staff of the Egypt Exploration Fund which was conducting excavations at Abydos in Upper Egypt
- Arthur Custance (M.A., Ph.D.) – Anthropologist, scientist and author specializing on science and Christianity.
- J. Keith Fraser (M.A. 1955) – Physical geographer, former president of the Canadian Association of Geographers and the executive secretary, publisher and general manager of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society
- Richard Borshay Lee (B.A., M.A.) – Anthropologist studying indigenous people in hunting and gathering societies, best known for his work on the Ju'/hoansi
- George F. MacDonald (B.A. 1961) – Anthropologist and director of the Canadian Museum of Civilization, 1983–98, member of UNESCO's drafting committee on the protection of world cultural and natural heritage
- Robert John McGhee (B.A. 1964, M.A. 1966) – Author and specialist in Arctic archaeology, former president of the Canadian Archaeological Association, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Donald B. Redford (B.A., M.A., Ph.D.) – Egyptologist and archaeologist, editor of the The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, director of the Akhenaten Temple Project
Sociology
- Himani Bannerji (Ph.D.) - Writer, academic, professor of sociology at York University, known for her activist work and poetry
- Jean Burnet (B.A. Vic.) – Sociologist specializing in ethnic studies, founder of the Glendon Sociology Department at York University
- Samuel Delbert Clark (Ph.D. 1938; professor of sociology, 1938–76) – Sociologist known for studies on Canadian social development and political economics
- Erving Goffman (B.A. 1945) – Sociologist, author of The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, taught at Cal and UPenn, 73rd president of the American Sociological Association
- Daniel G. Hill (M.A. 1951, Ph.D. 1960) – Sociologist, human rights specialist and Black Candian historian, Ontario Ombudsman, 1984–89, founder of the Ontario Black History Society
- Jesse Hirsh (B.Sc.) – information scientist, Canadian Broadcasting Company broadcaster and writer about new technologies
- Elliott Leyton (Ph.D. 1972) – Sociologist, educator and author on serial homicide and juvenile delinquency
- Livy A. Visano (B.A. 1973, M.A. 1974, Ph.D. 1986) – Professor of sociology and criminology at York University, associate editor of the International Journal of Comparative Sociology
- Barry Wellman (Ph.D. 1969) Director of NetLab and S.D. Clark Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto, Fellow Royal Society of Canada
Psychology and linguistics
- Ellen Bialystok (Ph.D. 1976) – Psychologist, Distinguished Research Professor of Psychology at York University, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Albert Bregman (B.A. 1957. M.A. 1959) – Psychologist, known for coining the term Auditory scene analysis, taught at McGill University, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- David Brodbeck (M.A. 1989, Ph.D. 1994) – Psychologist specializing in cognitive psychology in humans and non-human animals
- Andrew Carnie (B.A. 1991 St.M.) – Linguist, professor of linguistics at the University of Arizona, known for his research on syntactic theory
- Rachel Sarah Herz (Ph.D. 1992) – Researcher, writer and consultant on the psychology of olfaction
- Abram Hoffer (M.D. 1949) – Psychiatrist; proposed controversial megavitamin therapies for the treatment of schizophrenia
- Gurion Hyman (B.Pharm. 1946) – Jewish linguist, anthropologist, pharmacist, composer, artist, and translator, proprietor of the second branch of Hyman's Book and Art Shoppe
- Elliott Jaques (B.A. 1935) – Psychoanalyst and organizational psychologist who developed the notion of requisite organization
- Arlette Lefebvre (M.D. 1970) – Child psychiatrist at the Hospital for Sick Children and founder of Ability Online
- Diane Massam (B.A. 1980, professoer of linguistics) – Linguist specializing in the syntax of Niuean, developed an analysis of noun incorporation
- Daniel Schacter (M.A. 1977, Ph.D. 1981, assistant professor of psychology, 1981–87) – Psychologist, William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Psychology at Harvard University, 2002–, author of The Seven Sins of Memory, Guggenheim Fellow
- Patricia Alice Shaw (M.A. 1973, Ph.D. 1976) – Linguist, noted for her work on First Nations languages, associate professor of linguistics at the University of British Columbia
- Endel Tulving (B.A. 1953 U.C., M.A. 1954, professor emeritus) – Neuroscientist whose research developed the distinction between episodic and Semantic memory; famously worked with patient KC; fellow of the Royal Societies of Canada and London
Economics, management and political science
- Dwayne Benjamin (B.Sc. 1984, professor of economics) - Economist, managing editor of Canadian Journal of Economics, editor of Economic Development and Cultural Change
- Alan Cairns (B.A., 1953, M.A. 1957) – Political scientist, professor emeritus of political science at the University of British Columbia, recipient of the Molson Prize
- Gerald Caplan (M.A.) – Canadian academic, public policy analyst, commentator and political activist, former political organizer for the New Democratic Party of Canada
- Mel Cappe (B.A. 1971 New) - President and CEO of the Institute for Research on Public Policy, 2006–, Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, 2002–06
- Denise Chong (M.A. 1978) - Chinese Canadian economist and writer, author of Egg on Mao: The Story of an Ordinary Man Who Defaced an Icon and Unmasked a Dictatorship
- William Christian (B.A. 1966, M.A.) – Professor of political science at the University of Guelph, author of biography on George Grant and Political Parties and Ideologies in Canada
- Stephen Clarkson (B.A. Trin., professor of political economy) – Political scientist, Senior Fellow at the CIGI, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Sedley Cudmore (B.A. 1905, professor of political economy 1908–45) - Economist, academic, civil servant, Canada's second Dominion Statistician
- David Easton (B.A. 1939) – Political scientist, renowned for his application of systems theory to political science, former President of the American Political Science Association, active member in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, A Framework for Political Analysis, A Systems Analysis of Political Life
- John Kenneth Galbraith (B.Sc. 1931 OAC) – Economist, former professor of economics at Harvard, former United States Ambassador to India, former president of the American Economic Association, recipient of two U.S. Presidential Medals of Freedom, The Great Crash, 1929, The Affluent Society, The Age of Uncertainty, The Anatomy of Power
- William Thomas Gould Hackett (B.A.Sc.) - Economist, economic adviser for the Bank of Montreal
- John Hodgetts (B.A.) – Political scientist who is regarded as the father of public administration studies in Canada
- Harry Gordon Johnson (M.A. 1943) - Economist who focused on international trade and international finance, distinguished fellow of the American Economic Association
- John Kirton (B.A. 1971) – Political scientist specializing in Canadin foreign policy, the director and co-founder of the G8 Research Group, Canadian Foreign Policy in a Changing World
- Malcolm Knight (B.A. 1967, professor of economics 1971–75) – Economist, vice-chairman of Deutsche Bank, visiting professor of finance at the London School of Economics, former General Manager of the Bank for International Settlements, former Senior Deputy Governor of the Bank of Canada
- Richard Lipsey (M.A. 1953) - Economist and educator, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and the Econometric Society, winner of the Schumpeter Prize, wrote Positive Economics, Theory of the Second Best
- C. B. Macpherson (B.A. 1933, professor of political economy 1956–87) – Political scientist who contributed to the theory of possessive individualism, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, officer of the Order of Canada, The Life and Times of Liberal Democracy
- Maris Martinsons (B.A.Sc. 1982, M.B.A. 1984) - professor of management; government advisor; international business consultant
- John Meisel (B.A., M.A.) – Political scientist, 103rd Presient of the Royal Society of Canada, former Chairman of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission
- Andrew Pyle (B.A. 1987, M.A. 1988) - Economist, adviser with ScotiaMcLeod, former ABN AMRO's Chief Canadian Strategist
- Louis Rasminsky (B.A.) – 3rd Governor of the Bank of Canada, 1961–73, who helped form the postwar international finance system; executive director at the International Monetary Fund and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
- Douglas A. Ross (B.A., M.A., Ph.D.) – Political scientist specializing in international relations, author of In the Interests of Peace: Canada and Vietnam, 1954-1973
- Jeff Rubin (B.A.) - Economist and author, former chief economist at CIBC World Markets
- Shouyong Shi (M.A. 1988, Ph.D. 1991) - Economist, tier 1 Canada Research Chair, research fellow at the Bank of Canada
- Martin Shubik (B.A. 1947, M.Sc. 1949) – Mathematical economist in game theory, Seymour H. Knox Professor Emeritus of Mathematical Institutional Economics at Yale University
- Lorie Tarshis (B.A.) - Economist and educator, professor of economics at Stanford University, 1946–1970
- Daniel Trefler (B.A. 1982, professor of economics 1997–) – Economist specializing in international economics, known for empirical research on patterns of trade
- Bernard Yack (B.A.) - American political theorist, The Problems of a Political Animal
- Stanley E. Zin (Ph.D. 1987) – Cyert and DeGroot Professor of Economics and Statistics at Carnegie Mellon University, research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research Frisch Medal recipient
Humanities
Philosophy
- Howard Adelman (B.A. 1960, M.A. 1963, Ph.D. 1971) - Philosopher, retire Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at York University
- Charles Blattberg (B.A.) - Professor of political philosophy at the Université de Montréal
- George Blewett (B.A. 1897 Vic.) – First native-born philosopher in English Canada, authored The Study of Nature and The Vision of God
- John N. Deck (Ph.D. 1960) - Philosopher, known for Nature, Contemplation and the One
- Emil Fackenheim (Ph.D. 1945) – Jewish philosopher and Reform rabbi
- David Gauthier (B.A. 1954) – Philosopher known for his social contract theory of morality, author of Morals by Agreement
- Peter Glassen (B.A. 1944, M.A. 1945) - Philosopher, noted for his arguments against metaphysical materialism
- Dan Goldstick (B.A. 1962, professor of philosophy) – Long-time member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Canada, Professor Emeritus in philosophy at Toronto
- T. A. Goudge (Ph.D. 1937) - Philosopher, member of the American Philosophical Association, President of the Canadian Philosophy Association in 1964, President of the Charles S. Peirce Society 1957 59, wrote The Ascent of Life, which won the Governor General's Award
- William Hare (Ph.D. 1971) – Philosopher, noted for his work in philosophy of education, Professor Emeritus of Mount Saint Vincent University
- Ted Honderich (B.A. 1959) – Grote Professor Emeritus of the Philosophy of Mind and Logic at University College London
- Mark Kingwell (B.A. 1985 St. M., professor of philosophy) – Philosopher, winner of the Spitz Prize, contributing editor to Harper's Magazine and The Globe and Mail
- Michael Neumann (Ph.D. 1975) - Political philosopher, What's Left?, The Rule of Law
- Joseph Owens (Ph.D. 1951) - Roman Catholic priest, scholar in medieval philosophy, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- James Robb (M.A., Ph.D. 1953) – Professor of philosophy at Marquette University, expert in Medieval philosophy
- John Russon (Ph.D. 1990) - Philosopher, known for his interpretations of G. W. F. Hegel, author of Human Experience and Bearing Witness to Epiphany.
- Barry Stroud (B.A.) - Willis S. and Mario Slusser Professor of Philosophy at the University of California at Berkeley
- L. W. Sumner (B.A. 1962) – Philosopher in normative and applied ethics and political philosophy, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- David Sztybel (Ph.D. 2000) - Ethicist specializing in animal ethics
- Paul Thagard (Ph.D. 1977) - Philosopher, former Chair of the Governing Board of the Cognitive Science Society, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Jan Zwicky (Ph.D. 1981) - Philosopher, poet, essayist, winner of two Governor General's Awards
Literature
- Marianne Ackerman (M.A. 1981) - Playwright, novelist, journalist, theatre critic for Montreal Gazette, the Nathan Cohen Award winner
- Ken Adachi (B.A., M.A., professor of English 1958–71) - Writer and literary critic, The Enemy That Never Was
- Rod Anderson (B.Sc. 1956) - Poet, musician and chartered accountant, member of the Canadian League of Poets
- Bert Archer (B.A. St.M.) - Author, journalist, and critic, former editor of Toronto Star, The Globe and Mail, columnist of Toronto Life
- Margaret Atwood (B.A. 1961 Vic.) – Writer, poet and novelist; The Handmaid's Tale, The Blind Assassin; recipient of one Prince of Asturias Award, one Arthur C. Clarke Award, five Booker Prizes and two Governor General's Awards
- Margaret Avison (B.A. 1940, M.A. 1965) – Poet, Griffin Poetry Prize recipient
- Earle Birney (M.A., professor of English, 1936–41) - Poet, winner of two Governor General's Awards
- Arthur Bourinot (B.A. 1915 U.C.) - Poet, lawyer, won the Governor General's Award for Under the Sun
- Elizabeth Brewster (B.LSc.) - Poet and academic, member of the Order of Canada
- Dionne Brand (B.A., M.A., Ph.D) - Poet, novelist, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Poet Laureate of Toronto for a three-year term
- Di Brandt (M.A.) - Poet and literary critic, recipient of the Gerald Lampert Award, juror of the 2008 Governor General's Awards
- Ernest Buckler (M.A. 1930) - Novelist and short story writer, awarded the Canadian Centennial Medal, The Mountain and the Valley
- Barry Callaghan (B.A. 1960 St.M., M.A. 1962) - Author, poet, son of Morley Callaghan
- Morley Callaghan (B.A. 1925) – Novelist, writer and playwright
- Wilfred Campbell (B.A. 1882 U.C., M.A. 1883 Wyc.) - Poet
- Anne Carson (B.A. 1974 St.M., M.A. 1975, Ph.D. 1981) – Poet, essayist and translator; professor of classics at the University of Michigan
- Austin Clarke (B.A.) - Novelist, essayist and short story writer, Giller Prize and Commonwealth Writers Prize winner, The Polished Hoe
- Matt Cohen (B.A. 1964, M.A. 1965) - Writer, recipient of the Governor General's Award, Elizabeth and After, Emotional Arithmetic
- Norma Cole (M.A.) – Contemporary American poet, visual artist and frequent translator, Mace Hill Remap, Do the Monkey
- Don Coles (B.A. 1949, M.A. 1952) - Poet, received the Governor General's Award and the Trillium Book Award
- John Robert Colombo (B.A. 1959) - Poet, anthologist, editor, essayist, Mysterious Canada, Richard Maurice Bucke
- Ralph Connor (B.A. 1883, D.Th. Knox) - Novelist
- Lynn Crosbie (Ph.D., professor of literature) - Poet and novelist, columnist for The Globe and Mail
- George Elliott (B.A.) - Short Story writer, reporter and editor of the Timmins Daily Press
- Joy Fielding (B.A. 1966) – Novelist and actress, Kiss Mommy Goodbye, See Jane Run
- Charles Foran (B.A. St.M.) – Novelist and non-fiction writer, contributin editor to The Walrus, contributing reviewer for The Globe and Mail
- Barbara Fradkin (M.A.) - Mystery writer, two-time winner of the Arthur Ellis Award for Best Novel, past president of Crime Writers of Canada
- Northrop Frye (B.A. 1933 Vic.; professor of English 1939–91) – Literary critic and theorist; author, Fearful Symmetry, Anatomy of Criticism, The Well-Tempered Critic
- Camilla Gibb (B.A. 1991 U.C.) – Author, Mouthing the Words and Sweetness in the Belly
- Sky Gilbert (M.A. 2000) – Writer, actor, academic and drag performer, appeared in Too Much Sex
- David Gilmour (B.A. 1972, B.Ed., M.A. Vic.) - Novelist and television journalist, winner of the Governor General's Award, A Perfect Night to Go to China, The Film Club
- Susan Glickman (Ph.D., professor of English, –1993) - Writer and critic, received several prizes such as the Gabrielle Roy Prize
- Dave Godfrey (B.A. Trin.) - Writer and publisher, won the Governor General's Award for his novel The New Ancestors
- Phyllis Gotlieb (B.A. 1948, M.A. 1950) - Science fiction novelist and poet, winner of the Aurora Award
- David Helwig (B.A. 1960) - Poet, novelist and essayist, professor of literature at Queen's University, member of the Order of Canada
- Sheila Heti (B.A.) - Writer, Ticknor, The Middle Stories
- Paul Hiebert (M.A.) - Writer and humorist, Stephen Leacock Medal for Humour recipient, Sarah Binks
- Greg Hollingshead (B.A.) - Novelist, winner of the Governor General's Award for his short fiction The Roaring Girl
- Linda Hutcheon (B.A. 1969, Ph.D. 1975; professor of literature, 1988–) – Former president of the Modern Language Association
- Guy Gavriel Kay (LL.B. 1978) - Author of fantasy fiction, winner of Aurora Award, The Wandering Fire, Tigana, The Last Light of the Sun
- M. T. Kelly (M.A.) - Novelist, poet and playwright, the Governor General's Award recipient, A Dream Like Mine
- Hugh Kenner (B.A. 1945, M.A. 1946) – Literary scholar, critic and professor, taught at UC Santa Barbara, Johns Hopkins and Georgia, Dublin's Joyce, The Poetry of Ezra Pound
- Derrick de Kerckhove (Ph.D. 1975, professor of French) – Theorist on Western civilization, literacy and society; former Director, Marshall McLuhan Program; The Skin of Culture
- Raymond Knister (B.A. Vic.) - Novelist, short story writer anc critic, My Star Predominant
- Henry Kreisel (B.A. 1946, M.A. 1947) - Writer, officer of the Order of Canada, The Rich Man
- Vincent Lam (M.D. 1999) - Writer and medical doctor, recipient of the Giller Prize, Bloodletting and Miraculous Cures
- Archibald Lampman (B.A. 1882 Trin.) – Early Canadian poet belonging to the Confederation Poets group
- Stephen Leacock (B.A. 1891 U.C.) – Humorist, writer and political economist, Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town
- Dennis Lee (B.A. 1962, M.A. 1965) – Children's writer and poet, Alligator Pie
- Douglas LePan (B.A. 1935) - Poet, novelist and academic, won two Governor General's Awards, one Lorne Pierce Medal, Guggenheim Fellow, The Deserter, The Net and the Sword
- Dorothy Livesay (B.A. 1931 Trin.) - Poet, winner of the Governor General's Award for Day and Night and Poems for People
- Douglas Lochhead (M.A. 1947) - Poet, the Carlo Betocchi Poetry Prize recipient, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Jay Macpherson (M.A. 1955, Ph.D. 1964, professor of literature, 1957–96) – Lyric poet and scholar, winner of the Governor General's Award, The boatman
- Eli Mandel (Ph.D. 1957) - Poet and literary academic, winner of the Governor General's Award, An Idiot Joy
- David Manicom (B.A.) - Poet, novelist and diplomat, a finalist for the 2004 Governor General's Award for English language poetry
- John McCrae (B.A. 1894, M.B. 1898) – Poet, physician and soldier; In Flanders Fields
- Anne Michaels (B.A. 1980) – Poet and novelist; Commonwealth Prize, Orange Prize recipient
- John Mighton (B.A. 1978 Vic., Ph.D. 2000) - Author and mathematician, winner of two Governor General's Awards, Possible Worlds
- Rohinton Mistry (B.A. 1982) – Author, Governor General's Award, Commonwealth Writers Prize and Giller Prize recipient, Such a Long Journey and A Fine Balance
- Hal Niedzviecki (B.A.) - Novelist and cultural critic, co-founder of the magazine Broken Pencil
- Michael Ondaatje (B.A. 1965 U.C.) – Poet and novelist, The English Patient; recipient of the Booker Prize
- Kenneth Oppel (B.A. Trin.) - Author, the Governor General's Literary Award recipient, Silverwing, Airborn, Skybreaker
- Richard Outram (B.A. 1953 Vic.) - Poet
- B. W. Powe (M.A. 1981) - Author, poet, essayist
- Claire Pratt (B.A. Vic.) - Poet, artist, editor, senior editor of McClelland & Stewart
- E. J. Pratt (B.A. 1911 Vic., M.A. 1912, B.D. 1913) - Poet, the Royal Society of Canada member, three Governor General's Awards, one Lorne Pierce Medal, Towards the Last Spike
- Andrew Pyper (LL.B.) - Writer of fiction, winner of the Arthur Ellis Award for Lost Girls
- Paul Quarrington (B.A.) - Novelist and playwright, winner of Stephen Leacock Award, Governor General's Award and Matt Cohen Prize, King Leary, Whale Music, The Spirit Cabinet
- Michael Redhill (B.A.) - Poet, playwright, novelist, publisher and editor of Brick
- Rebecca Rosenblum (M.A. 2007) - Author, a Journey Prize finalist
- Elizabeth Ruth (B.A., M.A.) - Novelist, Ten Good Seconds of Silence
- Edna Staebler (B.A. 1929, B.Ed. 1931) - Author, best known for a series of cookbooks, awarded the Order of Canada
- David Staines (B.A. 1967) – Literary critic and university professor, taught at several institutions including Harvard, Lorne Pierce Medal recipient, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- John Steffler (B.A. 1971) - Poet and novelist, recipient of the Thomas Head Raddall Award and the Atlantic Poetry Prize, former Canadian Parliamentary Poet Laureate
- Walter Stewart (dropped out, 1953) - Writer, editor and educator of journalism
- Scott Symons (B.A.) - Writer, Place d'Armes
- Wayne Tefs (M.A.) - Novelist, critic and anthologist, recipient of the Canadian Magazine Fiction Prize for Red Rock and After
- Margaret Visser (Ph.D.) – Writer, broadcaster, Glenfiddich Award and Jane Grigson Award recipient, The Geometry of Love: Space, Time, Mystery and Meaning in an Ordinary Church
- Miriam Waddington (B.A. 1939) - Poet, her poem Jacques Cartier in Toronto is on the back of the Canadian $100 bill released in 2004
- Sheila Watson (Ph.D. 1961 St.M.) - Novelist, critic and educator, the Lorne Pierce Medal recipient, The Double Hook
- Susan Wood (B.A. 1969, M.A. 1970, Ph.D. 1975) – Author and critic, recipient of three Hugo Awards for Best Fan Writer, co-publisher of Energumen
- Eric Wright (M.A. 1963) - Writer of mystery novels, Arthur Ellis Award, City of Toronto Book Award and Derrick Murdoch Award recipient
History
- Irving Abella (B.A. 1963, M.A. 1964, Ph.D. 1969) - Historian, writer, None is Too Many: Canada and the Jews of Europe 1933-1948, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Alfred Bailey (Ph.D. 1934) – Ethno-historian and educator, former assistant director and associate curator of the New Brunswick Museum, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Kenneth R. Bartlett (Ph.D. 1978, professor of history) – Renaissance historian, president of the Canadian Society for Renaissance Studies
- David Bercuson (M.A. 1967, Ph.D. 1971) - Labour, military and political historian, Vimy Award winner, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, Deconfederation: Canada without Quebec
- Michael Bliss (B.A., M.A., Ph.D., professor) – Medical, business and political historian, author of The Discovery of Insulin, William Osler: A Life in Medicine and Harvey Cushing: A Life in Surgery
- Robert Bothwell (B.A., professor of Canadian history 1981–) – Historian, best known for his work on Canadian Cold War participation
- John George Bourinot (dropped out) – Historian and civil servant, founding member of the Royal Society of Canada, creator of the Bourinot's Rules of Order
- Nick Brune (B.A. 1975, M.A. 1976, B.Ed. 1977) - Educator, historian and author, winner of the Governor General's Award for Excellence in Teaching Canadian History
- J. M. S. Careless (B.A. 1940) – Historian and biographer, two-time winner of the Governor General's Award
- Stephen Clarkson (B.A. 1959 Trin.) – Political scientist specializing in foreign policy, neoconservatism, globalization and North American integration; Governor General's Award winner
- Margaret Conrad (M.A. 1968, Ph.D. 1979) – Historian specializing in Atlantic Canada and Women's history, recipient of the Queen's Golden Jubilee Medal, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Afua Cooper (Ph.D.) – Historian and dub poet, Memories Have Tongue, The Hanging of Angelique
- Donald Creighton (B.A. 1925 Vic.; professor of history, 1945–79) – Historian, novelist and noted anglophile, author of Commercial Empire of the St. Lawrence
- Modris Eksteins (B.A. Trin., professor of history 1970–) – Historian, winner of the Trillium Book Award and the Pearson Writers' Trust Non-Fiction Prize, Rites of Spring: The Great War, The Birth of Modern Age
- George R. D. Goulet (LL.M.) - Métis best-selling author and retired lawyer
- Jack Granatstein (M.A. 1962) - Historian, winner of the J.B. Tyrrell Historical Medal, Vimy Award
- Norman Hillmer (B.A. 1966, M.A. 1967) – Historian and educator, For Better or For Worse: Canada and the United States to the l990s
- John Wendell Holmes (M.A. 1933) – Historian and diplomat, former president of the Canadian Institute of International Affairs, recipient of the J. B. Tyrrell Historical Medal
- Michiel Horn (M.A., Ph.D.) – Historian and educator, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Joseph Imre (B.A. 2005) – Historian, political scientist and public servant at the National Research Council of Canada
- William Kilbourn (B.A. Trin. 1948) – Historian, member of the executives of the Canada Council and the Canadian commission for UNESCO, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Victor Lange (M.A. 1931 U.C.) – Renowned Germanist; president of the International Society of Germanists, John M. Woodhull Professor of Modern Languages at Princeton University
- Arthur R. M. Lower (B.A.) – Historian, recipient of two Governor General's Awards, former president of the Royal Society of Canada
- Roger Sarty (B.A.) – Historian specializing in the history of Canada's navy and coastal defence
- James T. Shotwell (B.A. 1898) – History professor at Columbia University, president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, member of the San Francisco Conference that drafted the United Nations Charter
- C. P. Stacey (B.A. 1924) – Official historian of the Canadian Army in the Second World War; contributor to the study of the Dieppe Raid and Operation Spring
- Veronica Strong-Boag (B.A. 1970, Ph.D. 1975) – Historian, former president of the Canadian Historical Association, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Alastair Sweeny (B.A. Trin.) - Historian, author and publisher, wrote George-Étienne Cartier: A Biography
- Frank Underhill (M.A., professor of history) – Historian, social critic and political thinker, a founder of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, In Search of Canadian Liberalism
Law (excluding the Supreme Court judges mentioned above)
- John Arnup (B.A. 1932 Vic.) – Judge of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, 1970–85, best known for having pioneered universal legal aid in Ontario
- Anne Bayefsky (B.A., M.A., LL.B.) – Human rghts scholar and activist, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, teaches at York University
- Charles Dubin (B.A. 1941) – Chief Justice of Ontario, 1990–96, best known for leading the Dubin Inquiry into the use of steroids by athletes
- Todd Ducharme (LL.B. 1986) – First Métis to be appointed to the Ontario Superior Court of Justice
- William Glenholme Falconbridge (B.A. 1866 U.C., M.A. 1870) – Chief Justice of Ontario Superior Court of Justice, 1900–20
- Martin Friedland (B.Comm. 1955, LL.B. 1958) – Lawyer, academic and author; recipient of the Molson Prize in 1994
- George Alexander Gale (B.A. 1929) – Chief Justice of Ontario, 1964–76
- Bernard Hibbitts (LL.M. 1986) – Lawyer, professor and publisher, founder and publisher of JURIST, teaches at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law
- William Goldwin Carrington Howland (B.A. 1936) – Chief Justice of Ontario, 1977–92
- William Kaplan (B.A. 1980) – Lawyer and writer, professor of law at the University of Ottawa Law School, 1989–2001
- Mayo Moran (S.J.D. 1999, dean of the faculty of law, 2006–) – Law professor who published extensively in comparative constitutional law, private law, and legal and feminist theory
- Kent Roach (B.A. 1984 Vic., LL.B. 1987, professor of law) – Legal academic noted for his writings on criminal law, former law clerk to Justice Bertha Wilson of the Supreme Court
- Robert Sharpe (LL.B. 1970, dean of the faculty of law, 1990–95) – Judge of the Court of Appeal for Ontario., 1999–, patron of the Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal.
- John A. Tory (B.A., LL.B. 1952) – Co-founder of the law firm, Tory, Tory, Deslauriers, a director of Rogers Communications
- James Marshall Tory (B.A.) – Chair Emeritus and Counsel at Torys LLP
- John S. D. Tory – Founder of Torys LLP, a director of A.V. Roe Canada
- Stephen Waddams (B.A., professor of law) – Legal academic specializing in contract law, former Visiting Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
Theology
- Nathanael Burwash (B.A. 1859 Vic.) – Methodist minister and university administrator
- Charles Coughlin (B.A. 1911 St.M.) – Religious and political speaker, noted radio opponent of Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Tom Harpur (B.A. 1951 U.C., D.Th. 1956 Wyc.) – Theologian, author and columnist, former religion editor of the Toronto Star, recipient of a State of Israel Silver Medal for Outstanding Journalism, fellow of the American Religious Public Relations Council
- Andrew Hutchison (L.Th. 1969 Trin.) – Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, 2004–07, Bishop of Montreal, 1990–2004
- Mary Jo Leddy (Ph.D.) – Theologian, writer and social activist, founding editor of the Catholic New Times, former member of the Roman Catholic Sisters of Our Lady of Sion
- Robert Baird McClure (M.B. 1922) – 23rd Moderator of the United Church of Canada, 1968–71
- A. James Reimer (M.A., Ph.D. St.M.) – Mennonite theologian, Mennonites and Classical Theology
- Adele Reinhartz (B.A. 1975, M.A. 1977) – Theologian, former president of the Canadian Society of Biblical Studies, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Thomas Rosica (D.Th. 1985 Regis) – Catholic priest and Basilian Father, CEO of Canadian Catholic Salt + Light Television network
- Albert Benjamin Simpson (B.Th. 1865 Knox) – Preacher, theologian and author, founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance
- Lucian Turcescu (Ph.D. 1999) – Theologian, professor of theology at Concordia University
Media and arts
Journalism and publishing
- Barbara Amiel (B.A. 1963 U.C.) – British journalist, socialite, spouse of publishing mogul Conrad Black
- Andrew Coyne (B.A. Trin.) – National editor for Maclean's, former columnist with the National Post
- Matthew Fraser (B.A. 1981 Vic.) – Editor-in-chief, National Post
- Barbara Frum (B.A. 1959) – Prolific journalist and interviewer for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, host of The Journal
- Bonnie Fuller (B.A. 1977 U.C.) – Media executive, editorial director of American Media and editor of Flare, Cosmopolitan, YM, Marie Claire, Glamour and Us Weekly.
- Malcolm Gladwell (B.A. 1984 Trin.) – Journalist; staff writer for The Washington Post and The New Yorker; author of The Tipping Point, Blink and Outliers
- Henry Albert Harper (B.A. 1895) – Journalist and civil servant, the statue of Sir Galahad at Parliament Hill was built in honour of him
- John Honderich (B.A.) - Publisher of the Toronto Star, 1994–2004
- John Ibbitson (B.A. 1979) - Writer and journalist, columnist for The Globe and Mail
- Benjamin Joffe-Walt (B.Ed. 2003) - Writer, CNN Africa Print Journalist of the Year
- Michael Kesterton (B.A.) - Columnist for The Globe and Mail
- Naomi Klein (B.A. 1995) – Journalist and activist; author, No Logo; contributor to The Nation, The Globe and Mail and The Guardian
- Michele Landsberg (B.A. 1952) - Writer, social activist and feminist, columnist for the Toronto Star, recipient of the Governor General's Award
- Heather Mallick (B.A. U.C., M.A.) – Columnist for Chatelaine, The Guardian and The Globe and Mail
- Christina McCall (B.A. 1956 Vic.) – Journalist and political writer, journalist at The Globe and Mail, Saturday Night and Maclean's, senior editor at Chatelaine
- Linda McQuaig (B.A.) - Journalist, columnist and non-fiction author, business reporter at The Globe and Mail, columnist for the Toronto Star
- Ryan North (M.Sc. 2005) – Webcomic author
- Peter C. Newman (B.A. 1950 Vic., M.Comm. 1954) – Journalist; former editor, Maclean's and Toronto Star; author, The Canadian Establishment, The Secret Mulroney Tapes
- Jagoda Pike (B.A. Trin.) - Publisher of the Toronto Star 2006–08, President of Star Media Group
- Simon Pulsifer (B.A. 2004 Vic.) – Prolific contributor to Misplaced Pages under the username SimonP
- Marc Dillon Riddell (B.A. 1997 St.M.) - Gemini Award winning Broadcast Journalist
- James Ross (B.A. 1857, M.A. 1865) - Journalist, lawyer, member of the provisional government established by Louis Riel during the Red River Rebellion of 1869–1870
- Walter Stewart (dropped out) – Writer, editor and journalism educator, "Canada's conscience"
- Ellie Tesher (B.A.) - Journalist and advice columnist for the Toronto Star
- Isabel Vincent (B.A.) – Investigative journalist for the National Post
- Margaret Wente (M.A.) - Columnist for The Globe and Mail, winner of two National Newspaper Awards for column
Film, television and theatre
- Lin Chi-ling (B.A.) – Taiwanese actress and model, Red Cliff
- David Cronenberg (B.A. 1967 U.C.) – Film director, Videodrome, The Fly, A History of Violence
- William B. Davis (B.A. 1959) - Actor, known for his role as the Cigarette Smoking Man on The X-Files
- Atom Egoyan (B.A. 1982 Trin.) – Film director, The Sweet Hereafter, Where the Truth Lies
- Peter Gzowski (dropped out) - Broadcaster, writer and reporter, the CBS radio show Morningside
- Hart Hanson (B.A.) – American television writer and producer, Bones, Joan of Arcadia
- Arthur Hiller (B.A. 1947 U.C., M.A. 1950) – Film director, The Man in the Glass Booth, Silver Streak
- Heather Hiscox (B.A. 1986) – News anchor who works for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, host of CBC News: Morning
- William Hutt (B.A. 1948 Trin.) – Actor of stage, television and film, King Lear, Long Day's Journey into Night, Sam Wanamaker Prize recipient
- Norman Jewison (B.A. 1949 Vic.) – Film director, In the Heat of the Night, Fiddler on the Roof, Moonstruck
- Albert Wesley Johnson (M.PA.) – President of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1975–1982
- Ted Kotcheff (B.A. 1952) – Film and television director, First Blood, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
- Tim Long (B.A. 1992 U.C.) – Comedy screenwriter, The Simpsons, Politically Incorrect, Spy Magazine, The Late Show with David Letterman
- Leon Major (B.A. 1955) - Opera and theatre director, artistic director of Boston Lyric Opera, 1998–2003
- Ron Mann (B.A. 1980 Innis) – Documentary filmmaker, Imagine the Sound, Grass
- Lorne Michaels (B.A. 1966 U.C.) – Creator and producer of Saturday Night Live
- Mark Rowswell (B.A. 1988 U.C.) – Media personality, one of the best-known Western performers in China
- David Shore (LL.B. 1982) – Television screenwriter, House, Law & Order
- Frank Shuster (B.A. 1939 U.C.) – Comedian, member of the comedy duo Wayne & Shuster
- Hannah Sung (B.A. 2000 Trin.) – Television and radio broadcaster, journalist, a former MuchMusic VJ
- Donald Sutherland (B.A. 1958 Vic.) – Actor, The Dirty Dozen, M*A*S*H (film), Ordinary People, JFK
- Patrick Watson (M.A.) – Broadcaster and television writer, Titans, The Watson Report, The Canadian Establishment, Heritage Minutes
- Johnny Wayne (B.A. 1940 U.C.) – Comedian, member of the comedy duo Wayne & Shuster
- Elwy Yost (B.A. 1948) - Television host, hosted Passport to Adventure series, Magic Shadows and Saturday Night at the Movies
- Graham Yost (B.A. 1980 Trin.) – Screenwriter, Speed, Mission to Mars
Music, fine arts and architecture
- Isabel Bayrakdarian (B.A.Sc. 1997) – Opera singer
- John Beckwith (B.Mus. 1947, M.Mus 1961, professor of music) – Composer, writer and pianist, written over 130 compositions, Member of the Order of Canada
- Liona Boyd (B.Mus. 1972) – Classical guitarist
- Measha Brueggergosman (B.Mus. 1999) – Concert artist and opera singer
- Mychael Danna (B.Mus. 1986, B.Ed. 1987) – Film composer, Hearts in Atlantis, Capote
- David J. Elliott (B.Mus., M.Mus., B.Ed.) – Professor of music at New York University, Music Matters: A New Philosophy of Music Education
- Elmer Iseler (B.Mus. 1950) - Conductor of the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir and founder of the Festival Singers of Canada
- Bruce Kuwabara (B.Arch. 1972) – Architect, partner in the firm Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects (KPMB), recipient of the RAIC 2006 Gold Medal
- Raine Maida (dropped out) - Vocalist of the Canadian rock band Our Lady Peace
- Maggie MacDonald (B.A. U.C.) - Playwright, musician and writer, member of the indie pop band The Hidden Cameras
- Doris McCarthy (B.A. 1989 UTSC) - Artist, known for her landscape paintings
- Raymond Moriyama (B.Arch. 1954) - Architect, winner of the Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts
- Ross Parmenter (B.A. 1933 Trin.) – Music editor for The New York Times, expert on indigenous Mexican culture
- Paul Shaffer (B.A. 1971 U.C.) – Leader of the CBS Orchestra for The Late Show with David Letterman, former musical director of Saturday Night Live, co-writer of "It's Raining Men"
- Amy Sky (B.Mus. 1982) – Singer, songwriter and actor
- Teresa Stratas (Art Dip. Mus. 1959) – Soprano opera singer with the Metropolitan Opera
Education
- Harry Arthurs (B.A. 1955, LL.B. 1958) – President of York University, 1985–92
- Edward Wentworth Beatty (B.A.) – Chancellor of McGill University, 1921–42, Chancellor of Queen's University, 1918–23
- Robert Birgeneau (B.Sc. 1963) – Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, 2004–
- Joseph Cassidy (S.T.B., M.Div. Regis) – Principal of St Chad's College, Durham, 1997–
- George Connell (B.A. 1951, Ph.D. 1955) – President of the University of Western Ontario, 1977–84
- Arthur Currie (dropped out) – President and Vice Chancellor of McGill University, 1920–33
- Ronald J. Daniels (B.A. 1982, J.D. 1986; dean of law) – President of Johns Hopkins University, 2009–; Provost of the University of Pennsylvania, 2005–09
- Paul Davenport (M.A. 1970, Ph.D. 1976) – President of the University of Western Ontario, 1994–
- Donald Forster (B.A.) – President of the University of Guelph, 1975–83
- Peter George (B.A. 1962, M.A. 1963, Ph.D. 1967) – President of McMaster University, 1995–
- Harry Gunning (B.A., M.A., Ph.D. 1942) – President of the University of Alberta, 1974–79
- Michael W. Higgins (B.Ed. 1973) – President of St Thomas University
- Josef Kates (B.A. 1948, M.A. 1949, Ph.D. 1951) – Chancellor of the University of Waterloo, 1979–85
- Howard Hillen Kerr (B.A.Sc. 1926) – President of Ryerson University, 1948–66
- William Alexander Robb Kerr (B.A. 1899, M.A. 1901) – President of the University of Alberta, 1936–41
- John Lowe (B.A. 1922 Trin.) – Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, 1948–51, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, 1939–59
- H. Ian Macdonald (B.Comm. 1952) - President of York University, 1974–84
- P. E. MacKenzie (B.A., LL.B. 1893) – Chancellor of the University of Saskatchewan, 1940–46
- Margaret MacMillan (B.A. 1966 Trin.) – Warden of St Antony's College, Oxford, 2007–
- Susan Mann (B.A. 1963) – President of York University, 1992–97
- Lorna Marsden (B.A. 1968) – President of York University, 1997–2007, President of Wilfrid Laurier University, 1992–97
- Burt Matthews (B.A.Sc. 1947) – President of the University of Guelph, 1983–88, President of the University of Waterloo, 1970–81
- Abraham Lincoln McCrimmon (B.A. 1890) – Chancellor of McMaster University, 1911–22
- Doug Owram (Ph.D. 1976) – Provost and Vice-President of the University of Alberta, 1998–2003
- Walter Pitman (B.A. 1952, M.A. 1954) – President of Ryerson University, 1975–80
- Carl Pollock (B.Eng.) – Chancellor of the University of Waterloo, 1975–78
- Dana Porter (B.A. 1921) – Chancellor of the University of Waterloo, 1960–66
- John Josiah Robinette (B.A. 1926) – Chancellor of Trent University, 1984–87
- Murray G. Ross (M.A. 1938) – President of York University, 1959–70
- Gordon Shrum (B.A. 1919 Vic., M.A. 1921, Ph.D. 1923) – Chancellor of Simon Fraser University, 1964–68
- David Strangway (B.A. 1956, M.A., Ph.D. 1960, 11th President) – President of Quest University, 2002–07, President of the University of British Columbia, 1985–97
- Thomas Symons (B.A. 1951) – President and vice-chancellor of Trent University, 1961–72
- Emőke Szathmáry (B.A. St.M., Ph.D.) – President of the University of Manitoba, 1997–2008
- Walter P. Thompson (B.A. 1910) – President of the University of Saskatchewan, 1949–59
- Norman Wagner (M.A. 1960, Ph.D. 1965) – President of the University of Calgary, 1978–88
- Ronald Lampman Watts (B.A. 1952 Trin.) – Principal of Queen's University, 1974–84
- Chien Wei-zang (Ph.D. 1942) – President of Shanghai University, 1982–
- William Winegard (Ph.D. 1952) – President of the University of Guelph, 1967–75
- Douglas Tyndall Wright (B.A.Sc. 1949) – President of the University of Waterloo, 1981–93
Business
- Leonard Asper (LL.B. 1989) – President and chief executive of Canwest Global Communications
- A. Charles Baillie (B.A. 1962 Trin.) – Chief executive of Toronto-Dominion Bank, 1997–2002, President of Queen's University, 2002–08
- Jim Balsillie (B.Comm. 1984 Trin.) – Co-chief executive of Research In Motion, 1992–
- W. Edmund Clark (B.A. 1969) – President and CEO of Toronto-Dominion Bank, 2002–
- William Arthur Cochrane (M.D. 1949) – Chairman, President and CEO of Connaught Laboratories Limited, 1978–89, President of the University of Calgary, 1974–78
- Marshall A. Cohen (B.A.) – President and CEO of Molson, 1988–96
- F. Anthony Comper (B.A. 1966 St.M.) – President and CEO of Bank of Montreal, 1990–2007
- Simon Cooper (M.B.A. 1988) – President and COO of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company
- Leslie Dan (B.Sc. 1954) – Founder of Novopharm
- Maureen Kempston Darkes (B.A. 1970 Vic., LL.B. 1973) - President of General Motors Latin America, Africa and Middle East
- Bill Downe (M.B.A. 1978) – President and CEO of Bank of Montreal, 2007–
- John Robert Evans (M.D. 1952) - Former President of Torstar
- Charles Foster (M.B.A. 1989) – Managing director of Barclays Capital
- David A. Galloway (B.A. 1966) – Chairman of Bank of Montreal, 2004–, President and CEO of Torstar, 1988–2002, President and CEO of Harlequin Enterprises, 1983–88
- Peter Godsoe (B.Sc. 1961 Vic.) – President and CEO of Bank of Nova Scotia, 1992–2003; Chairman of Fairmont Hotels and Resorts and Sobeys, Chancellor of the University of Western Ontario, 1996–2000
- Murray Koffler (Phm.B. 1946) – Founder of Shoppers Drug Mart
- H. R. MacMillan (B.Sc. 1906 OAC) – Founder of the H.R. MacMillan Export Company, Ltd, Chairman of the Vancouver Board of Trade, 1933
- Sergio Marchionne (B.A. U.C.) – CEO of Fiat S.p.A. and Chrysler Group, 2009–, Chairman of European Automobile Manufacturers Association, 2006–
- Peter Munk (B.A.Sc. 1952) – Founder and Chairman of Barrick Gold
- Richard Nesbitt (M.B.A. 1985) – CEO of CIBC World Markets, 2008–, CEO of the TSX Group, which operates the Toronto Stock Exchange and the TSX Venture Exchange, 2004–08;
- Philip Orsino (B.A. 1976 Vic.) – President and CEO of Masonite International Corporation, 1989–2005
- Bill Peters (M.A. 1977) - CEO of Calgary Science Centre, 2000–
- Robert Prichard (LL.B. 1975) - President of Torstar, 2001– (13th President of the University of Toronto as well)
- Edward Samuel Rogers (B.A. 1956 Trin.) – Former President and CEO of Rogers Communications
- Bernard Sherman (B.A.Sc. 1964) – Founder, Chairman and CEO of Apotex Inc., 1974–
- Jeffrey Skoll (B.A.Sc. 1987) – First President of eBay, philanthropist
- Catherine Swift (B.A. 1977) – President and CEO of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, 1995–
- Richard M. Thomson (B.A.Sc.) - Chairman and CEO of Toronto-Dominion Bank, 1978–97
Humanitarianism, social work and others
- Martha Cohen (M.A. 1945) - Community builder and philanthropist, member of the Order of Canada
- Hershell Ezrin (B.A.) – Chief Executive Officer of the Canadian Council for Israel and Jewish Advocacy
- Mark Freiman (B.A. 1969, J.D. 1983) – President of the Canadian Jewish Congress, Deputy Attorney-General of Ontario and Deputy Minister Responsible for Native Affairs, 2000–04
- Paul Fromm (B.A. St.M., B.Ed., M.A.) – Activist, an alleged Canadian neo-Nazi leader with ties to the Ku Klux Klan
- Anne Golden (B.A. 1962 U.C.) – Administrator, President of the United Way of Canada, 1987–2001, former President and CEO of the Conference Board of Canada
- Kamala-Jean Gopie (B.A. 1975, M.Ed. 1990) – Political activist best known for her community activism in Toronto, president of the Jamaican Canadian Association, 1979–80
- Rudyard Griffiths (B.A. 1993 Trin.) – Public commentator and adviser, co-founder of the Dominion Institute, author of Who We Are: A Citizen's Manifesto
- Craig Kielburger (B.A. 2006 Trin.) – Children's rights advocate; founder and chair of Free The Children
- Peter McLaren (B.Ed., Ph.D.) – One of the key figures in critical pedagogy, professor of education at the University of California at Los Angeles
- Jaggi Singh (attended Trin.) – Anti-globalization and social justice activist
- Omond Solandt (M.D.) – First Chairman of the Canadian Defence Research Board, 1947–56, vice president for research and development at Canadian National Railways, 1956–63
- David Weinberger (Ph.D.) – American technologist, professional speaker and commentator, co-author of The Cluetrain Manifesto and author of Small Pieces Loosely Joined
- Rose Wolfe (B.A. 1938, diploma in social work 1939) - Member of the Order of Ontario since 1992, and of the Order of Canada since 1999
Athletics
- Stan Brown (D.M.D. 1922) – Defenceman for the New York Rangers and the Detroit Cougars
- Jeffrey Buttle (B.Eng. on hiatus) – Figure skater, 2008 World Figure Skating Champion and 2006 Winter Olympics bronze medalist
- Lori Dupuis (B.A. St.M.) – Ice hockey player on gold medal winning 2002 Winter Olympics team
- Bruce Kidd (B.A. 1965) – Medalist in the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games and competitor in the 1964 Summer Olympics
- Conn Smythe (B.A.Sc. 1920) – NHL builder; principal owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs, 1927–61; builder of the Maple Leaf Gardens
- Joseph Albert Sullivan (M.D. 1926) – Ice hockey player, surgeon and politician; goaltender on the gold medalist hockey team at the 1928 Winter Olympics
Faculty
To avoid redundancy, alumni who hold or have held faculty positions in the University of Toronto are placed on the list of alumni, and do not appear on this list of faculty.
Natural sciences and mathematics
Mathematics
- Dror Bar-Natan (professor of mathematics, 2002–) – Researcher in knot theory, finite type invariants and Khovanov homology
- Lionel Cooper (professor of mathematics, 1965–66) – South African mathematician who worked in various fields including operator theory, transform theory and differential equations
- Harold Scott MacDonald Coxeter (professor of mathematics, 1936–80) – Geometer with major contributions in polytopes, non-Euclidean geometry, group theory and combinatorial theory, for whom the Coxeter group is named
- Chandler Davis (professor of mathematics, 1962–) – Mathematician, writer and educator, one of the co-Editors-in-Chief of the Mathematical Intelligencer
- Hans Heilbronn (professor of mathematics, 1964–75) – Mathematician who devised the Davenport-Heilbronn method
- Maria Klawe (professor of mathematics) - Mathematician, Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery
- Pierre Milman (professor of mathematics, 1986–) - Mathematician, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, recipient of the Jeffery-Williams Prize
- Abraham Robinson (professor of mathematics, 1951–57) – Mathematician who developed non-standard analysis
- Walter Warwick Sawyer (professor of mathematics, 1965–76) – Mathematician, known for his semi-popular works in Mathematician's Delight
- John Lighton Synge (assistant professor of mathematics, 1920–25) – Irish mathematician, member of the London Mathematical Society, former treasurer of the Royal Irish Academy
- W. T. Tutte (professor of mathematics, 1948–62) – Mathematician and cryptographer who deduced the German Lorenz SZ 40/42 (Tunny) machine; namesake of the Tutte theorem, Tutte matrix, Tutte graph, Tutte–Coxeter graph, Tutte 12-cage and Tutte fragment.
Medicine and dentistry
- John James Richard Macleod (professor of physiology, 1918–28) – Physician and physiologist; recipient of the Nobel Prize for the discovery of insulin
- Harry Botterell (professor of neurophysiology, 1936–39) – Neurosurgeon, Head of neurosurgery at the Toronto General Hospital, 1953–62
- Louis Siminovitch (professor of medical genetics and microbiology, 1956–85) – Molecular biologist; founding director of research at Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute; foreign associate to the National Academy of Sciences
- James Till (professor of medical biophysics, 1958–97) – Biophysicist; academic on Internet research ethics and the Open Access movement
- Charles Hollenberg (professor of medicine, 1970–81) – Physician, educator and resarcher, former Physician-in-Chief of the Toronto General Hospital
- Saul V. Levine (professor of psychiatry, 1970–93) – Psychiatrist, former Senior Psychiatrist at the Hospital for Sick Children
- Manuel Buchwald (professor of molecular and medical genetics, 1973–86) – Geneticist who identified the gene that causes Fanconi anemia and, with Lap-Chee Tsui, that which causes cystic fibrosis
- David MacLennan (professor of medicine, 1974–) – Biochemist who made fundamental contributions to our understanding of the mechanism of ion transport by SR calcium pumps
- Tak Wah Mak (professor of medical biophysics, 1975–) – Immunologist who discovered the T-Cell receptor, and was the first to clone the genes for the receptor
- Jack Greenblatt (professor of molecular medicine, 1977–) – Pioneer in research on protein-protein interactions and on mechanisms that regulate gene expression
- Tirone E. David (professor of surgery, 1980–) – Cardiovascular surgeon who developed the reimplantation technique for valve-sparing aortic root replacement
- Rob Buckman (professor of medicine, 1985–) – Medical oncologist and comedian; president of the Humanist Association of Canada
- Janet Rossant (professor of medical genetics, 1985–) – Developmental biologist known for research in the role of genes in early embryo development
- Anthony Pawson (professor of molecular and medical genetics, 1985–) – Microbiologist specializing in mechanisms for protein-protein interactions in intracellular signal transduction
- John E. Dick (professor of molecular genetics) – Scientist who first identified the cancer stem cell in leukemia and later colorectal cancer; also known for demonstrations with blood stem cells in mice
- Peter St. George-Hyslop (professor of medicine, 1991–) – Geneticist who isolated the key genes linked to inherited and early-onset forms of Alzheimer's disease
- Morton Beiser (professor of cultural pluralism and health, 1991–2009) – Psychiatrist and epidemiologist, noted for his research in immigration and resettlement
- Ahmad Teebi (professor of pediatrics and medical genetics, 1998–) – Head of the Section of Clinical Genetics & Dysmorphology at the Hospital for Sick Children
- Benjamin Alman (professor of surgery) – Orthopaedic surgeon and researcher in developmental signaling pathways in musculoskeletal tumours
- Frederick J. Conboy (professor of dentistry) – 47th Mayor of Toronto, secretary of the Ontario Dental Association and editor of the association's journal
- David Jaffray (associate professor of radiation physics) – Medical physicist, Senior Scientist in the Division of Biophysics and Bioimaging at the Ontario Cancer Institute
- Gideon Koren (professor of pediatrics, pharmacology and pharmacy) – Pediatrician, clinical pharmacologist and toxicologist, Senior Scientist of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research
- John W. Semple (professor of pharmacology) – Medical researcher at St. Michael's Hospital, co-discoverer of immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP)
- Harvey Skinner (former professor and dean of public health sciences) – Psychologist. Dean of Health, York University since 2006. One of the first to link behavior change, organizational improvement and information technology (e-health)
Physics, chemistry and astronomy
- Helen Sawyer Hogg (professor of astronomy, 1936–76) – Astronomer; authority in the field of variable stars within globular clusters
- Leopold Infeld (professor of physics, 1939–50) – Physicist and peace activist; co-formulated the equation describing star movements and co-author of The Evolution of Physics with Albert Einstein
- Lloyd Montgomery Pidgeon (professor of metallurgy, 1943–69) – Chemist who developed the Pidgeon process of magnesium metal production via a silicothermic reduction
- Andrew McKellar (visiting professor of physics, 1952–53) – Astronomer noted for his work in molecular spectroscopy, former president of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific and the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada
- John Charles Polanyi (professor of chemistry, 1956–) – Physical chemist credited with developing the technique of infrared chemiluminescence to explain energy relationships in chemical reactions
- Sidney van den Bergh (professor of astronomy, 1958–77) – Astronomer who discovered Andromeda II; former president of the Canadian Astronomical Society
- Alan West Brewer (professor of physics, 1962–77) – Physicist and climatologist, whose observation of the stratosphere resulted in the Brewer-Dobson circulation model
- Ursula Franklin (professor of metallurgy and materials science, 1965–89) – Physicist who pioneered use of modern techniques of material analysis in archaeometry; pacifist and humanitarian since retirement
- Eduard Prugovecki (professor of physics, 1967–97) – Mathematical physicist in geometro-stochastic theory
- Robert K. Logan (professor of physics, 1968–2005) – Physicist and media ecologist, best known for his research in media ecology and the evolution of language, The Alphabet Effect
- Charles Thomas Bolton (professor of astronomy, 1973–) – Astronomer who was the first to present evidence of a black hole's existence in Cygnus X-1, later confirmed as the first black hole candidate
- Scott Tremaine (professor of astronomy, 1985–97) – Astrophysicist and contributor to the theory of solar system and galactic dynamics; first director of the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics
- Sajeev John (professor of physics, 1989–) – Together with Eli Yablonovitch, identified photonic crystals as a class of materials designed to affect the motion of photons
- Daniel Lidar (associate professor of chemistry, 2000–05) – Chemist and physicist, known for his research on control of quantum systems and quantum information processing
- John Moffat (professor of physics, retired) – Physicist, noted for his work on gravity and cosmology suggesting that the speed of light has varied in the past
- Ray Jayawardhana (professor of astronomy, 2005–) – Astronomer and Holder of the Canada Research Chair in observational astrophysics who reported the first direct image and spectroscopy of a likely extra-solar planet around a normal star
- Roberto Abraham (professor of astronomy) – Astronomer best known for his work on high-redshift galaxy morphology
Biology and ecology
- Bernhard Fernow (dean of forestry, 1907–19) – American conservationist; chief of forestry in the United States Department of Agriculture, 1886–98; editor-in-chief of the Journal of Forestry
- Charles Caccia (professor of forestry, 1955–68) - Politician, member of Parliament for Davenport, 1968–2004
- Tak Wah Mak (professor of biophysics and immunology, 1984–) – Award-winning biochemist and geneticist, widely known for his pioneering work in the genetics of immunology
- Anthony Pawson (professor of molecular genetics, 1985–) – Geneticist whose research has revolutionized the understanding of signal transduction
- Sara Shettleworth (professor of ecology, evolutionary biology and psychology) - Zoologist and psychologist, Guggenheim Fellow, American Psychological Association Distinguished Scientist Lecturer
Engineering and computer science
- Robert Legget (professor of engineering, 1936–47) – Civil engineer, historian and non-fiction writer, founding President of the Canadian Academy of Engineering
- Allan Borodin (professor of computer science, 1969–) – Mathematician and computational theorist in computational complexity theory and algorithms
- Michael P. Collins (professor of civil engineering, 1969–) – Structural engineer; expert on the design and evaluation of reinforced and prestressed concrete under shear stress
- Stephen Cook (professor of computer science, 1970–) – Recipient of the Turing Award for formalizing the notion of NP-completeness through Cook's theorem
- Charles Rackoff (professor of computer science) - Noted modern cryptologist, won the Godel Prize for his work on interactive proof systems and zero-knowledge proofs.
- Geoffrey Hinton (professor of computer science, 1987–) – Informatician who co-introduced the backpropagation algorithm, the Boltzmann machine and the Helmholtz machine
- Steve Mann (professor of computer engineeing) – Researcher in chirplet transform, comparametric equations and sousveillance; pioneer in wearable computers
- Mark Chignell (professor of mechanical and industrial engineering, 1990–) – Researcher who co-introduced the concept of Intelligent Databases
- Ric Holt (professor of computer science, –1997) – One of the original developers of the Turing programming language, Euclid programming language, SP/k, and of the S/SL programming language
- Gregory V. Wilson (assistant professor of computer science, 2006–) – Computer scientist, an editor for Computing in Science and Engineering and Dr. Dobb's Journal
Earth science
- Arthur Philemon Coleman (professor of geology, 1901–22) – Geologist, former President of the Geological Society of America, recipient of the Murchison Medal, Flavelle Medal and Penrose Medal, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Cole Harris (professor of geography, 1964–71) – Former president of the Canadian Association of Geographers and recipient of the Massey Medal
- Anthony J. Naldrett (professor of geology, 1967–98) – Former President of the Society of Economic Geologists, the International Mineralogical Association and the Geological Society of America
- Thomas Edvard Krogh (professor of geology, 1976–96) – Geochronologist who developed new techniques of radiometric uranium-lead dating for Precambrian rocks
- Petr Vaníček (professor of geodesy) – Geodesist and theoretical geophysicist, made significant breakthroughs in theory of spectral analysis and geoid computation
Social sciences
Anthropology and geography
- Edmund Snow Carpenter (professor of anthropology, 1948–57) – Anthropologist known for his work on tribal art and visual media
- Isaac Schapera (visiting professor of anthropology, 1953) – Academic from the London School of Economics and leading scholar in the anthropology of South African tribesmen
- George Michael Wickens (professor of Middle Eastern studies, 1957–84) – Prolific Iranologist and translator of Persian literature; founding chair of the university's department of Near and Middle Eastern civilizations
- Cole Harris (assistant professor of geography, 1964–71) – Geographer, winner of the Massey Medal, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Robert J. Zydenbos (professor of South Asian studies) - Dutch-Canadian scholar
- Lee Maracle (professor of Aboriginal studies) - First Nations poet and author, recipient of the American Book Award
- Marcel Danesi (professor of semiotics and linguistic anthropology) - Italian-Canadian semiotician
- David H. Turner (professor of anthropology) – Anthropologist who focuses on comparative religion and the role of music in the indigenous societies of Australia, North America, Africa, and India
Sociology and psychology
- Seymour Martin Lipset (lecturer of sociology, 1946–48) – American political sociologist; senior fellow at the Hoover Institution
- Dennis Wrong (professor of sociology) – American sociologist, Power: Its Forms, Bases and Uses, annual award for the best graduate paper in sociology at NYU is named after him
- Barry Wellman (professor of sociology, 1967–) – Sociologist; founder of the International Network for Social Network Analysis, former president of the Sociological Research Association
- Anatol Rapoport (professor of mathematics and psychology, 1970–79) – Mathematical psychologist; founding professor of the Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies
- Fergus I. M. Craik (professor of psychology, 1971–) – Cognitive psychologist known for research on levels of processing in memory
- Morris Moscovitch (professor of psychology, 1971–) – Leading neuropsychologist, Senior Scientist at the Rotman Research Institute of Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care
- Dorothy E. Smith (professor of sociology, retired) – Sociologist, founder of the sociological sub-disciplines of feminist Standpoint theory and Institutional Ethnography
- William Johnson (professor of sociology) – Academic, journalist and author, former parliamentary correspondent for The Globe and Mail and journalist for the Montreal Gazette
- John Hagan (professor of law and sociology, 1982–96) – Senior research fellow of the American Bar Foundation; former president of the American Society of Criminology; visiting John D. MacArthur Professor of Sociology and Law at Northwestern University
- Rinaldo Walcott (associate professor, 2002–) - Academic, writer, Canada Research Chair of Social Justic and Cultural Studies
Economics, management and political science
- James Mavor (professor of political economy, 1892–1923) – Political economist and activist who was instrumental in assisting the emigration of the Doukhobors to Canada, and the establishment of the Royal Ontario Museum
- Harold Innis (professor of political economy, 1920–52) – Political economist and communication theorist who developed the Staples thesis and time- and space-bias; former president of the American Economic Association
- James Mallory (lecturer of political economy, 1943–44) – Academic and constitutional expert, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal winner
- Peter H. Russell (professor of political science, 1958–96) – Scholar on aboriginal peoples, constitutional politics and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms; president of the Canadian Law and Society Association
- Samuel Hollander (professor of economics, 1963–98) – Scholar and author on the history of economic thought and classical economics
- Jean Edward Smith (professor of political economy, 1965–99) – Noted biographer of Ulysses S. Grant and Franklin D. Roosevelt; John Marshall Professor of Political Science at Marshall University
- Jerry F. Hough (professor of political science, 1968–73) – Researcher on American politics, the Soviet Union and the democratization of Russia
- John E. Floyd (professor of economics, 1970–) – Scholar in international monetary economics
- Michael Trebilcock (professor of law, 1972–) – Scholar specializing in law and economics, international trade law and competition law; president of the American Law and Economics Association
- Thomas Pangle (professor of political science, 1979–2004) – Political scientist; holder of the Joe R. Long Chair in Democratic Studies at the University of Texas at Austin
- Janice Stein (professor of political science, 1983–) – Director of the Munk Centre for International Studies
- Joseph Carens (professor of political science, 1985–) – Political scientist who focuses on contemporary political theory, Culture, Citizenship and Community, A Contextual Exploration of Justice as Evenhandedness
- David Foot (professor of economics) – Economist and demographer; author of Boom, Bust & Echo
- John C. Hull (professor of finance, 1988–) – Prominent researcher in quantitative finance and co-developer of the Hull-White model
- Ronald Deibert (professor of political science) – Researcher in Internet and human rights; director of the Citizen Lab and co-founder of the OpenNet Initiative
- David Rayside (professor of political science, 1974–present) - Academic and activisit; a member of the Right to Privacy Committee and co-founder of the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Studies Association.
- Ramin Jahanbegloo (professor of political science, 1997–2001, 2008–present) - Iranian intellectual and academic; recipient of the Peace Prize from the United Nations Association
- Allan S. Detsky (professor of public health policy, management and evaluation) - Physician and health policy expert, Physician-in-Chief at Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto
- Mel Watkins (professor of economics and political science, retired) – Political economist and activist, founder and co-leader of the Waffle
- Gad Horowitz (professor of political science) – Political scientist who specialized in labour theory, most notably cointed the appellation "Red Tory"
- Clifford Orwin (professor of political science) – Political scientist of ancient, modern, contemporary and Jewish political thought, a Guggenheim Fellow
Humanities
Philosophy and classics
- James Mark Baldwin (chair of logic and metaphysics, 1889–92) – American philosopher and psychologist, important contributer to psychology, psychiatry and the theory of evolution
- Eric A. Havelock (professor of classics, 1929–47) – British classicist; author, History of the Greek Mind
- Paul Churchland (lecturer of philosophy, 1967–69) - Philosopher, noted for his works in neurophilosophy and the philosophy of mind, major proponent of eliminative materialism.
- Timothy Barnes (professor of classics, 1970–2007) – Classicist specializing in Christianity in the Later Roman Empire
- Allan Bloom (professor of political science, 1970–79) – American philosopher and critic of contemporary higher education, best known for authoring The Closing of the American Mind
- James Allen Graff (professor of philosophy and ethics, 1970–2002) – Founder of the Near East Cultural and Educational Foundation of Canada (NECEF), former vice-chair of the North American Co-ordinating Committee for NGOs on the Question of Palestine
- Ronald de Sousa (professor of philosophy, 1971–2005) – Scholar in the philosophy of emotions, mind and biology
- Ian Hacking (professor of philosophy, 1982–) – Noted member of the Stanford School of philosophers, known for bringing a historical approach to the philosophy of science
- Joseph Heath (professor of philosophy) – Philosopher and author, The Rebel Sell
- James Tully (professor of philosophy, 2001–03) - Distinguished political philosopher, fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- James Robert Brown (professor of philosophy) - Philosopher of science, Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada since 2007
- Bas van Fraassen (professor of philosophy) – Philosopher, specializing in the philosophy of science, Laws and Symmetry, The Scientific Image
- Peter Ludlow (professor of philosophy) – Philosopher, noted for his research in cyberspace, High Noon on the Electronic Frontier and Crypto Anarchy, Cyberstates, and Pirate Utopias
- Colin Howson (professor of philosophy, 2008–) - British philosopher, Scientific Reasoning: the Bayesian Approach
Literature and linguistics
- Marshall McLuhan (professor of English literature, 1946–79) – Influential literary critic and communications theorist, known for coining the expressions "the medium is the message" and "global village"
- Robertson Davies (professor of literature, 1960–81) – Novelist and playwright; founding master of Massey College; author of The Deptford Trilogy
- Angus Cameron (professor of literature, 1968–83) – Linguist and lexicographer who initiated the Dictionary of Old English
- Josef Škvorecký (professor of literature, 1968–90) - Leading contemporary Czech writer, winner of the Neustadt International Prize for Literature, Governor General's Award, a Guggenheim Fellow and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
- Jack Chambers (professor of linguistic, 1970–) – Linguist, expert on language variation and change, pioneered research on Canadian English and coined the term "Canadian raising"
- Christina Kramer (professor of Slavic languages, 1986–) – Specialist on Balkan languages and semantics; former translator for the Berlitz Translation Service
- Suniti Namjoshi (professor of literature, 1972–mid 90s) - Indian writer
- George Elliott Clarke (professor of literature, 1999–) - Poet, playwright, Whylah Falls
- Sonnet L'Abbe (professor of creative writing) – Poet and critic, reviewer for The Globe and Mail, Bronwen Wallace Memorial Award recipient
- Michael Wex (professor of literature) - Novelist, playwright, translator and performer, Born to Kvetch
- Elizabeth Cowper (professor of linguistics, 2004–) – Linguist, specializing in tense and aspect in English and Spanish
History
- George MacKinnon Wrong (professor of history, 1894–1927) – Historian and Anglican priest, Canada and the American Revolution: The Disruption of the First British Empire
- John Saywell (professor of history, 1954–62) – Historian specializing in the fields of politics and constitution
- Fritz Heichelheim (professor of Greek and Roman history, 1962–68) – Ancient historian who specialized in ancient economic history
- Jill Ker Conway (professor of history, 1964–75) – Australian-American author, The Road from Coorain, True North; president of Smith College, 1975–85
- Ram Sharan Sharma (professor of history, 1965–66) - Eminent historian of Ancient India who has been a historian of international repute and the founding chairperson of Indian Council of Historical Research.
- Walter Goffart (professor of history, 1960–99) – Historian who specializes in late Roman Empire, early Middle Ages and barbarian kingdoms
- Archibald Paton Thornton (professor of history, 1960–87) – Academic and historian, author of The Imperial idea and its enemies: a study in British power
- Rick Salutin (professor of Canadian studies, 1978–) - Novelist, playwright and critic, columnist for The Globe and Mail
- Natalie Zemon Davis (professor of history) - Canadian and American historian of early period; first woman president of the American Historical Association
- Derek Penslar (professor of Jewish history) – Historian specializing in Jewish history, Contemporary Antisemitism
Law
- Ron Atkey (professor of law) – Legal academic and Member of the Canadian Parliament for St. Paul's, 1972–74, 1979–80
- Aharon Barak (professor of law) – President of the Supreme Court of Israel, 1995–2006, Attorney General of Israel, 1975–78
- Charles Dalfen (professor of law, 1972–74) – Chairperson of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, 2002–06, legal advisor for the Government of Canada's Department of Communications, 1970–72
- Allan Leal (professor of law, 1972–77) – Chancellor of McMaster University, 1977–86, Deputy Attorney General of Ontario, 1977–81, Dean of Osgoode Hall Law School, 1958–66
- Frank Iacobucci (professor of law, 1967–82) – Puisne Justice, 1991–2004
- Ronald St. John Macdonald (professor of law, 1961–72) – Legal academic and jurist, founding President of the Canadian Council on International Law, President of the World Academy of Art and Science, 1983–87
- Michael Mandel (professor of law) – Legal academic specializing in criminal law, noted critic of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
- Caesar Wright (dean of the faculty of law, 1949–67) – Prominent figure in the Canadian legal education reform, one of the first law professors to import the Harvard case method into Canadian legal education
Theology
- Donald Coggan (professor of theology, 1937–44) – 101st Archbishop of Canterbury, 1974–80
- Gregory Baum (professor of theology and sociology, 1959–86) – Roman Catholic theologian, Religion and Alienation, Officer of the Order of Canada
- Jakób Jocz (professor of theology, 1960–76) – Hebrew Christian theologist; author, The Jewish People and Jesus Christ, The Jewish People and Jesus Christ After Auschwitz
- Bernard Lonergan (professor of theology, 1965–75) - Jesuit priest, economist, Insight: A Study of Human Understanding
- Mary Jo Leddy (professor of theology, Regis College). Writer, theologian, social activist, founder of Catholic New Times
- Willard G. Oxtoby (professor of comparative religion, 1971–99) – Founding director of the graduate centre for religious studies; author, World Religions: Western Traditions, World Religions: Eastern Traditions
- Julia Ching (professor of religion and philosophy, 1978–2001) – Expert on the neo-Confucian philosophy of China
Fine arts, music, drama and architecture
- Charles William Jefferys (professor of architecture, 1912–39) – Painter and historical illustrator; co-founder of the Canadian Society of Graphic Art with Ivor Lewis
- Eric Arthur (professor of architecture 1923–66) - Architect, member of the "Toronto's Hundred Years" Publication Committee, which published Toronto's 100 Years.
- H. Allen Brooks (professor of the history of art) – Architectural historian known for research on Frank Lloyd Wright, the Prairie School and Le Corbusier
- Djanet Sears (professor of drama, 2000–) - Playwright, actor and director, won four Dora Mavor Moore Awards and one Governor General's Award
Education
- Norman MacKenzie (professor of law, 1927–40) – President of the University of New Brunswick, 1940–44; president of the University of British Columbia, 1944–62
- David Lloyd Johnston (professor of law, 1968–74) – Principal of McGill University, 1979–94; president of the University of Waterloo, 1999–; dean of law at the University of Western Ontario, 1974–79
- Kenneth Hare (professor of geography and physics, 1969–88) – President of the University of British Columbia, 1968–69; chancellor of Trent University, 1988–95
- Thomas R. Williams (professor of education, 1970–77) – Principal of Queen's University, 2008–
- Allan Leal (lecturer in property law, 1972–77) – Chancellor of McMaster University, 1977–86
- Donald Forster (professor of economics) – President of the University of Guelph, 1975–83
- Frederick Lowy (professor of psychiatry, 1974–80; dean of medicine, 1980–87) – President and vice-chancellor of Concordia University, 1995–2005
- Maria Klawe (professor of computer science, 1978–80) – President of Harvey Mudd College, 2006– ; dean of engineering and applied science at Princeton University, 2002–06; dean of science at the University of British Columbia, 1998–02
- Lap-Chee Tsui (professor of molecular and medical genetics, 1983–2002) – Vice-chancellor of the University of Hong Kong, 2002–
- Heather Munroe-Blum (professor and dean of social work, 1994–2002) – Principal of McGill University, 2003–
Business and public policy
- Harry Cassidy (professor of social work, 1929–34) – Social reformer and civil servant who was infliential in the creation of the Canadian welfare state
- Charles Dalfen (professor of law, 1972–74) – Chairman of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, 2002–06
- James Fleck (professor of business-government relations, 1979–) – Businessman and philanthropist; former chairman of ATI Technologies, director of AMD and Certicom
- Deborah Coyne (professor of law, 1986–88) – Constitutional lawyer who had worked in the Office of the Prime Minister, Business Council on National Issues and Ontario Human Rights Commission
- Roger Martin (professor of strategic management, 1998–) – Former director of Monitor Group; dean of the Rotman School of Management
- Gunther Eysenbach (professor of health policy, 2002–) – Researcher on Open access, health policy, eHealth and consumer health informatics
- Richard Florida (professor of business, 2007–) – Economist and urban studies theorist who introduced the concept of the creative class
- Don Tapscott (professor of management) – Business executive and consultant; author of Wikinomics
Nobel Laureates
- Frederick Banting (alumnus and former faculty) – Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1923
- John James Richard Macleod (former faculty) – Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1923
- Lester B. Pearson (alumnus and former faculty) – Nobel Peace Prize, 1957
- Arthur Leonard Schawlow (alumnus) – Nobel Prize in Physics, 1981
- John Charles Polanyi (faculty) – Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1986
- Bertram Brockhouse (alumnus) – Nobel Prize in Physics, 1994
- Walter Kohn (alumnus) – Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1998
- James Orbinski (alumnus and faculty) – Nobel Peace Prize, 1999
- Oliver Smithies (former faculty) – Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 2007
Chancellors
Presidents
Order | Name | Years in office | Title |
---|---|---|---|
1 | John Strachan | 1827–1848 | President of King's College |
2 | John McCaul | 1848–1850 | President of King's College |
1850–1853 | President of the University of Toronto | ||
1853–1880 | Principal of University College | ||
3 | Sir Daniel Wilson | 1880–1889 | Principal of University College |
1889–1892 | President of the University of Toronto | ||
4 | James Loudon | 1892–1906 | President of the University of Toronto |
5 | Sir Robert Falconer | 1907–1932 | President of the University of Toronto |
6 | Henry John Cody | 1932–1945 | President of the University of Toronto |
7 | Sidney Earle Smith | 1945–1957 | President of the University of Toronto |
8 | Claude Bissell | 1958–1971 | President of the University of Toronto |
9 | John Robert Evans | 1972–1978 | President of the University of Toronto |
10 | James Milton Ham | 1978–1983 | President of the University of Toronto |
11 | David Strangway | 1983–1984 | President of the University of Toronto |
12 | George Connell | 1984–1990 | President of the University of Toronto |
13 | Robert Prichard | 1990–2000 | President of the University of Toronto |
14 | Robert Birgeneau | 2000–2004 | President of the University of Toronto |
interim | Frank Iacobucci | 2004–2005 | President of the University of Toronto |
15 | David Naylor | 2005– | President of the University of Toronto |
References
- "Fields biography". www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
- "Order of Canada citation". Retrieved May 12, 2006.
- "exco5_sc_candidate_shortcv.pdf" (PDF). Consultive Group on International Agricultural Research. p. 18. Retrieved 2008-06-02.
- "Brockhouse and the Nobel Prize – Canadian Neutron Beam Centre". neutron.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca. Retrieved 2008-06-02.
- "Canadian Astronomers who Earned the Ph.D. at Harvard in the Shapley Era" (PDF). Hoffleit, Dorrit. Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. December 1999, Volume No. 3, Number 6. 262-271. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
- Adams, M.G. (1980). "Obituary - Plaskett, Harry-Hemley". QJRAS. 21: 486.
- An Interview with Arthur Whitney, Kx CEO and Developer of Kx Technology, [http://kx.com/ Kx Systems, January 4, 2004.
- "History Of Derry House". www.mssociety.ca. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
- "Davidson Black". www.mnsu.edu. Retrieved 2008-06-02.
- "Biography of Arthur Custance". Retrieved 2009-11-13.
- Blackwood, B. Diane. "Erving Goffman". www.blackwood.org. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
- "Rachel Sarah Herz" (PDF). Brown University. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
- "Department of Political Science". www.polisci.uoguelph.ca. Retrieved 2008-06-03.
- "John Kenneth Galbraith". Britannica Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
- "Brief Biographical Note of Justice Robert J. Sharpe".
- "Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal - Board of Patrons". Retrieved 2009-03-19.
- "ROBERT J. BIRGENEAU APPOINTED UC BERKELEY CHANCELLOR". University of California. Retrieved 2008-06-02.
- "President Paul Davenport". www.uwo.ca. Retrieved 2008-06-03.
- http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman/vita/index.html; www.urbancentre.utoronto.ca/about/aboutcucshistory.htm; www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman/publications/networkingnetwork/networkingnetwork.pdf
- Jha, D.N. (1996). Society and Ideology in India: Essays in Honour of Prof. R.S. Sharma. New Delhi, India: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 978-8121506397.
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(help)CS1 maint: year (link) - Srivastava, N.M.P. (2005). Professor R.S. Sharma: The Man With Mission; Prajna-Bharati Vol XI, In honour of Professor Ram Sharan Sharma. Patna, India: K.P. Jayaswal Research Institute.
- Lal, Vinay (2005). The History of History: Politics and Scholarship in Modern India. New Delhi, India: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195672442.
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(help)CS1 maint: year (link) - T.K. RAJALAKSHMI (Volume 16 - Issue 24, Nov. 13 - 26, 1999). "Agendas and appointments". Frontline. Retrieved 2009-04-05.
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http://www.research.utoronto.ca/about/nobels.html
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