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Spring, 2004
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Labour/Le Travail

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Contributors / Collaborateurs


Dimitry Anastakis received his PhD from the Department of History at York University in 2001, and holds a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Toronto.

 
Rosemary Gagan is the author of A Sensitive Independence: Canadian Methodist Women Missionaries in Canada and the Orient, 1881–1925 and has co-authored, with David Gagan, For Patients of Moderate Means: A Social History of the Voluntary General Hospital in Canada 1890–1950. She has taught most recently in the Women's Studies Department at Simon Fraser University and is currently working on a study of Canadian Methodist "Mothers in Israel."

 
Stefan Jensen is a doctoral candidate in the Department of History at Memorial University of Newfoundland. His dissertation focuses on faculty unions in Atlantic Canadian universities.

 
Tom Mitchell is the University Archivist at Brandon University. He also teaches Canadian history under the auspices of the History Department. With Reinhold Kramer, he is author of Walk Towards The Gallows: The Tragedy of Hilda Blake — Hanged 1899.

 
Sherry Olson is Professor of Geography at McGill University, author of The Building of An American City, and a partner in creation of the H-GIS "Montréal l'avenir du passé" for mapping change in the 19th-century city.

 
Rosemary E. Ommer is Director of Special Projects and Principal Investigator for Coasts Under Stress at University of Victoria.

 
Eva St. Jean is a PhD candidate in history at the University of Victoria. Her research centres on how Swedish immigrants' experiences in their country of origin shaped their roles in and reactions to social, political, and economic life in Canada.

 
Joan Sangster teaches working-class and women's history at Trent University, where she is Director of the Frost Centre for Canadian Studies and Native Studies. Her most recent book is Girl Trouble: Female Delinquency in English Canada and she is currently researching a history of women and wage labour after World War II.

 
Nancy J. Turner is a Professor at the School of Environmental Studies, University of Victoria.

 


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