Laurisa Sastoque named Gates Cambridge Scholar
April 24, 2023

Laurisa Sastoque, a senior in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, has received a 2023 Gates Cambridge Scholarship. This award recognizes Sastoque and others in her cohort as not only accomplished academics, but also as emerging leaders who will be responding to today’s most pressing challenges facing the world. Gates Cambridge scholars are awarded the opportunity to complete a fully funded graduate degree at the University of Cambridge in the UK.
“The structure of the program allows me to build a digital output of my choice that will culminate my academic study,” said Sastoque, a native of Bogota, Colombia, who plans to study digital humanities. “I will be adapting my senior thesis into a GIS interactive map that analyses the complex relationships between Colombian identity and drug trafficking in the U.S. I am looking forward to learning more about what it means to use digital tools to answer human questions.”
Sastoque’s journey leading up to receiving the award has been multifaceted — a combination of humanitarian research and artistic ventures. While at Northwestern, she’s worked with the Posner Research Program, the Brady Scholars Program, the Kaplan Humanities Program and the Leopold Fellowship program. She also taught dance with the Dale Duro Latin Dance Group and produced a creative writing thesis comprised of short stories.
However, it was her participation in the Kaplan Humanities Program that first introduced Sastoque to the digital humanities.
“Laurisa is remarkable — a published novelist, an experienced museum curator, a choreographer, a historian and much more; her tireless work and her spectacular array of talents determined her success,” said Laurisa’s adviser Elizabeth Pardoe, director of Northwestern’s Office of Fellowships.
“Laurisa is our 17th Gates Cambridge Scholar, but she is our first international student to join the cohort,” Pardoe said. “I want to underscore the importance of Laurisa’s achievement as a signal to all our international students that your opportunities are not curtailed by your citizenship. Too frequently international students think — wrongly — that all fellowships require U.S. nationality. I hope our Wildcats from around the world read about Laurisa and allow their imaginations to take flight with expanded dreams for their own futures.”
Since the program was established in 2000 through a $210 million dollar donation from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Gates Cambridge has awarded 2,100 scholarships to students from 112 countries who represent more than 700 universities. This year’s class of 77 Gates Cambridge Scholars from 32 countries will begin their studies in October.
Awards & Honors

Weinberg College faculty and graduate students recognized for excellence in teaching
July 2, 2025
Each year, the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and the Office of the Provost recognizes members of the College’s tenure-line and teaching-track faculty for excellence in teaching. Weinberg College in addition recognizes the contributions…

Two Named Gates Cambridge Scholars, Will Study History and Machine Learning
May 2, 2025
Jane Clarke ’24 and Rachel C. Zhang ’24 MS have received 2025 Gates Cambridge Scholarships. Now celebrating its 25th year, the program identifies academically outstanding social leaders to pursue postgraduate study and research at the…

Northwestern Student Ethan Barnes Named a Truman Scholar
April 24, 2025
Northwestern student Ethan Barnes has been named a 2025 Truman Scholar in recognition of his academic achievement and commitment to public service leadership. A junior studying political science in the Weinberg College of Arts and…

Two Northwestern students receive Soros Fellowships for New Americans
April 9, 2025
JK Anowe, a graduate student in the English department at Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, and Devika Ranjan, a Ph.D. candidate in performance studies at the School of Communication, have each been awarded a…