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  • Contributors

Dan Buchanan is president of Sigma-3 Policy Research Inc. in Toronto. He has extensive public sector experience in social program delivery, development, implementation and evaluation, as well as policy analysis with the governments of Manitoba and Ontario.

Graham Carr is an associate professor of History and Associate Dean, Research and Graduate Studies in the Faculty of Arts and Science at Concordia University in Montreal. His recent publications include, “Rules of Engagement: Public History and the Drama of Legitimation,” Canadian Historical Review 86:2 (awarded CHR Prize for 2005); and “Diplomatic Notes: American Music and Cold War Politics in the Near and Middle East, 1954-60,” Popular Music History (UK), 1:1 (Apr. 2004). He is currently doing research on East-West Cold War cultural exchanges involving musicians and dancers.

C.P. Champion is a PhD candidate at McGill University and teaches at McGill and Concordia Universities.

Misao Dean is the author of books and articles on early Canadian literature. Her most recent publication is a critical edition of Sara Jeannette Duncan’s 1904 novel, The Imperialist, published by Broadview Press. She is a professor in the English Department at the University of Victoria.

Thomas R. Klassen is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science, and in the School of Public Policy and Administration, at York University. He spent 10 years as a policy advisor with the Ontario government prior to joining academia.

Heather Macfarlane is a PhD candidate in Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto. Conceived in 1967, she herself is a by-product of Centennial optimism.

Ian J. MacRae has recently defended his dissertation in Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto. A documentary filmmaker and engineer who has worked in Mexico, Colombia, Brazil, Argentina, and across the Canadian Arctic and Alaska, he will teach American and Postmodern literatures at University of Toronto at Scarborough this fall.

Ged Martin was formerly Professor of Canadian Studies at the University of Edinburgh. He now lives in County Waterford, Ireland.

Dennis Pilon is an assistant professor of Political Science at University of Victoria where he specializes in Canadian politics and comparative electoral systems. Recently, he was a CRC postdoctoral fellow in Canadian Studies at Trent University in Peterborough, Ontario.

David Tough is a recent graduate of Trent University’s Frost Centre for Canadian Studies and Native Studies. His research is in the intellectual history of citizenship and politics.

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