Dick Bourgeois-Doyle
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Richard (Dick) Bourgeois-Doyle (formerly Doyle, born 1952)[1][2] is a Canadian writer and science administrator whose works have focused on innovation history, research ethics, and gender issues in technology. His books include Her Daughter the Engineer,[3] the first full biography of aeronautical engineer Elsie Gregory MacGill and George J. Klein: The Great Inventor,[4] the official biography of the design engineer dubbed Canada’s most productive inventor in the 20th century. Bourgeois-Doyle was also lead writer and editor of Renaissance II, an account of the Millennium Conferences on Creativity and Innovation.[1]