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  • Contributors

Heidi Bohaker is an assistant professor of Aboriginal history in the Department of History at the University of Toronto, with research interests in the northeast and Great Lakes regions, material culture, writing systems, and ethnohistorical research methodologies. Her 2006 article ‘Nindoodemag: The Significance of Algonquian Kinship Networks in the Eastern Great Lakes Region, 1600–1701,’ William and Mary Quarterly 63, no. 1 (2006): 23–52 won the American Society for Ethnohistory’s 2007 Robert F. Heizer Prize for best article in the field of ethnohistory. Her current project is a book about the political history of the Anishinaabeg in the eastern Great Lakes from 1600 to 1850.

Terry Cook teaches in the Archival Studies program, Department of History, University of Manitoba, following a long career at the National Archives of Canada. He has conducted institutes and workshops on archival appraisal, electronic records, the postmodern archive, and archival ethics nationally and internationally; published and lectured extensively on archival theory and strategy, including on every continent; and served as editor of Archivaria, as well as of the Canadian Historical Association’s Historical Papers and its Historical Booklets series.

Steve Hewitt is a senior lecturer in the Department of American and Canadian Studies at the University of Birmingham and is the author of several articles and books related to security and intelligence. His next book will be Snitch: A History of the Modern Intelligence Informer (Continuum, 2009).

Franca Iacovetta is professor of history, University of Toronto, and co-editor of the Studies in Gender and History book series at University of Toronto Press. She is a Canadian social and feminist historian whose research interests include women’s and gender history, immigrants and racialized populations, working-class history, transnational labour migration and radicalism, and moral regulation and citizenship in Cold War Canada. She is author or co-editor of nine books, most recently Gatekeepers: Reshaping Immigrant Lives in Cold Ward Canada (Toronto, 2006), which won the Canadian Historical Association’s Sir John A. Macdonald prize for the best book in Canadian history (2008). A Research Fellow at the Immigration History Research Centre, University of Minnesota for 2008–9, her current book projects include a sshrc-funded study of cultural pluralism in Canada [End Page 605] (set within a North American context) and research on women radical exiles from Italy.

Christabelle Sethna is an associate professor at the Institute of Women’s Studies and Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa. She researches and publishes on sex education, contraception, and abortion history in Canada. As principal investigator she recently completed a sshrc-funded study on the impact of the birth control pill on single Canadian university women students between 1960 and 1980. With Steve Hewitt from the University of Birmingham, she has conducted an investigation of rcmp spying on women’s liberation groups in Canada during the 1960s and 1970s. She is currently principal investigator for another sshrc-funded research project on the travel Canadian women undertake to access services at abortion clinics, past and present.

Shirley Tillotson is a professor in the Department of History at Dalhousie University.

Heidi Bohaker est professeure adjointe d’histoire amérindienne au département d’histoire de l’Université de Toronto. Ses recherches portent sur l’Amérique du Nord-Est et les Grands Lacs, la culture matérielle, les systémes d’écriture et les méthodes de recherche ethno-historiques. Pour son article « Nindoodemag: The Significance of Algonquian Kinship Networks in the Eastern Great Lakes Region, 1600–1701 » (paru en 2006 dans le William and Mary Quarterly), elle a remporté le prix Robert F. Heizer du meilleur article en ethnohistoire. Elle prépare un livre sur l’histoire politique des Anishinaabeg de l’est des Grands Lacs entre 1600 et 1850.

Terry Cook enseigne au programme d’études archivistiques du département d’histoire de l’Université du Manitoba. Il a eu une longue carriére aux Archives nationales du Canada. Tant au pays qu’à l’étranger, il a publié abondamment sur la théorie et la stratégie archivistique, et dirigé des instituts et des ateliers sur l’évaluation archivistique les enregistrement électroniques, l’archive postmoderne et l’éthique en archives. Il a dirig...

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