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Spring, 2007
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Labour/Le Travail

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Contributors / Collaborateurs


Jonah Butovsky is Assistant Professor of Sociology and Labour Studies at Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario. He has written articles on the New Democratic Party and on Canadian political values.

 
Mike Davis is the author, most recently, of Buda's Wagon: A Brief History of the Car Bomb (2007), and the co-editor of Evil Paradises: Dreamworlds of Neoliberalism (2007). He lives in San Diego.

 
Tara Fenwick is Professor of Education and Head of the Department of Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia.

 
Michael Goldfield is Professor of Industrial Relations and Human Resources in the Department of Political Science, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan, and the author of The Decline of Organized Labor in the United States (1987) and The Color of Politics: Race and the Mainsprings of US Politics (1997). He is co-editor of the forthcoming Labour, Globalization, and the State (2007).

 
Wythe Holt is a retired teacher of law and legal history at the University of Alabama. He taught the history of American labour law for 25 years. He is currently at work on a history of the Whiskey Rebellion which occurred in the United States in 1794.

 
Margaret Hillyard Little is an anti-poverty activist and academic jointly appointed to Women's Studies and Political Studies at Queen's University. She is the author of If I Had a Hammer: Retraining that Really Works (2005) and the award-winning No Car, No Radio, No Liquor Permit: The Moral Regulation of Single Mothers in Ontario, 1920–1997 (1998).

 
Todd McCallum teaches in the History Department at Dalhousie University, where he has been known to sing hobo songs in his office late at night.

 
Joseph A. McCartin is Associate Professor of History at Georgetown University in Washington DC, author of Labor's Great War: The Struggle for Industrial Democracy and the Origins of Modern American Labor Relations (1997), co-editor with Melvyn Dubofsky of American Labor: A Documentary History (2004), and with Michael Kazin of Americanism: New Perspectives on the History of an Ideal (2005). He is currently writing a book on the Reagan-era PATCO strike and public sector unionism in the US since the 1960s.

 
Bryan D. Palmer is the Canada Research Chair, Canadian Studies Program, Trent University. His most recent book is James P. Cannon and the Origins of the American Revolutionary Left, 1890–1928 (2007) and he has recently completed a forthcoming study, Canada's 1960s: The Ironies of Identity.

 
Carmela Patrias teaches in the Department of History at Brock University. Her publications include Patriots and Proletarians: Politicizing Hungarian Immigrants in Interwar Canada (1994), and Discounted Labour: Women Workers in Canada, 1870–1939 (2006), co-authored with Ruth Frager.

 
Murray E.G. Smith is Professor and past Chair of Sociology at Brock University. He is the author of Invisible Leviathan (1994) and co-author of Culture of Prejudice (2003).

 
Peyman Vahabzadeh is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Victoria. He is the author of Articulated Experiences: Toward a Radical Phenomenology of Contemporary Social Movements (2003).  


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