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Spring, 2008
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Labour/Le Travail

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CONTRIBUTORS / COLLABORATEURS


Jim Barrett teaches courses in labor, race and ethnicity at the University of Illinois at Urbana. He is completing a book on relations between Irish Americans and other racial and ethnic groups in American cities.

Robin Jarvis Brownlie teaches History at the University of Manitoba and is the author of articles on Aboriginal rights, Aboriginal-government relations, and Aboriginal historical perspectives, as well as the book A Fatherly Eye: Indian Agents, Government Power, and Aboriginal Resistance in Ontario, 1918–1939 (Oxford, 2003).

Caroline Butler did her graduate work in anthropology at UBC and is currently an Adjunct Professor at UNBC. She lives in Prince Rupert where she has conducted research with Indigenous and non- Indigenous fishermen and loggers.

Diane P. Koenker is a professor of history at the University of Illinois, Urbana- Champaign. She is currently working on a history of tourism and vacations in the Soviet Union from the 1920s to the 1970s.

Brenda Macdougall PhD (University of Saskatchewan), Assistant Professor Department of Native Studies. Currently teaching in the Department of Native Studies at the University of Saskatchewan, Brenda Macdougall is collaborating with researchers from the Universities of Alberta and Saskatchewan as well as the Northwest Saskatchewan Metis Council to produce an atlas of the Metis experience in northwestern Saskatchewan.

Shiling McQuaide is Assistant Professor of History at Athabasca University. Her research focuses on Modern China, especially Chinese Labour and Women.

Charles Menzies is a faculty member in Anthropology at UBC. His primary research interests are natural resource management (primarily fisheries related), political economy, contemporary First Nations' issues, and maritime anthropology.

Andrew Parnaby is an associate professor in the Department of History at Cape Breton University. He is the author of Citizen Docker: Making a New Deal on the Vancouver Waterfront, 1919–1939 (Toronto 2007).

William Robbins is Emeritus Distinguished Professor of History at Oregon State University and the author and editor of eleven books. He is presently working on a twentieth-century history of the greater Pacific Northwest.

Eric Tucker teaches at Osgoode Hall Law School, York University and has written extensively on the history of Canadian labour and employment law.

Geoffrey Wood is Professor in the School of Management, and Associate Dean, University of Sheffield, England. His current research interests include union renewal in the developing world, and advances in heterodox institutional theory.

Miriam Wright teaches history at University of Windsor, and is the author of A Fishery for Modern Times: The State and the Industrialization of the Newfoundland Fishery, 1934–1968.


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