Kwame Julius McKenzie is a British-Canadian psychiatrist employed as the CEO of Wellesley Institute, a policy think tank based in Toronto, Ontario. McKenzie is a full professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto. He has worked as physician, researcher, policy advisor, journalist and broadcaster.
McKenzie was appointed as the CEO of the Wellesley Institute in May 2014.[1] He has worked a policy advisor across various levels of government, including provincial, federal and international.
McKenzie was Chair of the Research and Evaluation Advisory Committee for the universal basic income pilot program in Ontario in 2017.[9] He has been a member of the board for United Way Toronto.[10]
In addition to his academic, policy and clinical work, Kwame has engaged in written media and radio programming.
McKenzie was also a presenter on All in the Mind on BBC Radio 4, and has previously been a columnist for The Times and The Guardian newspapers in the UK, writing on issues of health, racism and equity,[17] as well as being a frequent guest on Canadian radio and television.
In 2005 McKenzie wrote an article in The Times, UK about racial stereotyping in the 2005 film King Kong, co-written, produced, and directed by Peter Jackson. In the piece titled, "Big black and bad stereotyping", McKenzie described it as feeding "into all the colonial hysteria about Black hyper-sexuality."[18] The article received such a strong response from readers that McKenzie and The Times issued a challenge asking the public to find positive Black images on television during the holiday season.[19]
In December 2021, McKenzie wrote an opinion piece in the Toronto Star calling for a strategy to avert vaccine inequity in racialized children.[20]
Awards and recognition
2018: Harry Jerome Trailblazer Award
2017: CAMH 150 Difference Makers in Mental Health
2017: Honorary Diploma Liberal Arts – George Brown College
2015: Don Wasylenski Award for Global Health
2015: Fred Fallis Award for Excellence in Online Education
2011: African Canadian Achievement Award for Science
2011: Dominican of Distinction Award
Published works
Kidd, Madan, Rallabandi, Cole, Muskat, Raja, Wiljer, McKenzie. Social entrepreneurship and mental health in low- and middle-income countries. CAMH, Toronto, Canada 2016 ISBN978-1-77114-329-5 (paperback) ISBN978-1-77114-330-1 (pdf)[21]
Morgan, Fearon, McKenzie. Society and Psychosis. Cambridge University Press. 2008[22]
McKenzie K: Understanding Depression. British Medical Association and Family Doctor Publications 1998 reprinted 1999/ 2000/2001/2002/2003/2004/2005/2006/2009/2012[23]
McKenzie K: Understanding Anxiety. British Medical Association and Family Doctor Publication (2006)[24]
McKenzie K: "Social capital and mental illness". British Journal of Psychiatry (2002)[25]
^"Kwame McKenzie | ISPS UK 2017". International Society for Psychological and Social Approaches to Psychosis. 2016. Archived from the original on 2022-01-23. Retrieved 2022-05-20.