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  • Contributors

Helen Forsey is a writer, translator, and activist based in rural eastern Ontario and Newfoundland’s Avalon Peninsula. She is currently working on a book about Eugene Forsey’s legacy to Canadians.

Lisa Helps is a Trudeau Scholar and a doctoral candidate in the Department of History at the University of Toronto. Her doctoral dissertation focusses on the history of homelessness in British Columbia and California over the course of the twentieth century.

Bonny Ibhawoh is an assistant professor in the Department of History at McMaster University and an adjunct professor in Social Justice and Equity Studies at Brock University. His research interests include Nineteenth and Twentieth Century African history, human rights and imperialism. He is the author of Imperialism and Human Rights: Discourses of Rights and Liberties in African History (2007).

Dan Malleck is an assistant professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences at Brock University, specializing in the history of medicine and health. He is also the editor-in-chief of the Social History of Alcohol and Drugs: An Interdisciplinary Journal. He researches alcohol and drug control and prohibition.

Geoffrey Martin earned his PhD from York University in 1993 and is an adjunct professor in Political Science at Dalhousie University, Halifax. He can be reached at gmartin@mta.ca.

Peter McKenna is an associate professor in the Department of Political Studies at the University of Prince Edward Island in Charlottetown. He has published widely on PEI Politics, Canadian Foreign Policy and Canada-U.S. Relations.

Lorna R. McLean is an associate professor in the Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa. Her research interests include citizenship, gender, “race,” and education.

Kirk Niergarth is a doctoral candidate in History at the University of New Brunswick. His dissertation is entitled “Art and Democracy: New Brunswick Artists and Canadian Culture between the Depression and the Cold War.”

Wendy Roy is an assistant professor in the Department of English at the University of Saskatchewan. She is the author of Maps of Difference: Canada, Women, and Travel and has published essays on narratives of travel by writers such as Anna Jameson, Mina Hubbard, Agnes Deans Cameron, and Margaret Laurence. [End Page 229]

Ian Stewart is a professor of Political Science at Acadia University where he has taught since 1982. His major research interests are in the party politics and political culture of the Maritime provinces. He is the author of Roasting Chestnuts: The Mythology of Maritime Political Culture (UBC Press, 1994).

L.S. Tossutti is an associate professor of Political Science at Brock University. She has published articles on political parties, political behaviour, or public opinion in Party Politics, Canadian Ethnic Studies/ Études canadiennes ethniques au Canada, Canadian Issues/Thèmes Canadiens, West European Politics, and Mediterranean Politics. [End Page 230]

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