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  • Contributors • Collaborateurs

Christopher Alcantara is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Wilfrid Laurier University. His main research interests are in the fields of Indigenous–settler relations and politics, territorial governance in the Canadian North, federalism and multi-level governance, public policy and administration, and more recently Canadian voting behaviour.

Clark Banack is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at York University. His teaching and research focus on religion and politics in Canada and the United States, Canadian political thought, Western Canadian populism, and education policy across the provinces.

Ted Binnema is a professor of history at the University of Northern British Columbia. His most recent books include “Enlightened Zeal”: The Hudson’s Bay Company and Scientific Networks, 1670 to 1870 (University of Toronto Press, 2014), and, with Gerhard Ens, The Hudson’s Bay Company Edmonton House Journals, Correspondence, and Reports: 1806-1821 (Historical Society of Alberta, 2012). He also co-authored, with Kevin Hutchings, “The Emigrant and the Noble Savage: Sir Francis Bond Head’s Romantic Approach to Aboriginal Policy in Upper Canada, 1836-38” in 2005 (Journal of Canadian Studies 39.1: 115-38).

Anne Dance recently completed her doctorate at the University of Stirling, where she was a Commonwealth Scholar. She is currently writing an environmental history of Winnipeg Free Press agriculture editor E. Cora Hind and completing a book on the reclamation of the Athabasca oil sands and the Sydney tar ponds.

Patrick Fournier is a professor in the Department of Political Science at the Université de Montréal. He is principal investigator of the Canadian Election Study for the elections of 2011 and 2015. His research interests include political behaviour, political psychology, citizen competence, opinion change, and survey methodology.

Dirk Gindt holds a doctorate in theatre studies from Stockholm University and is an artist-in-residence at the Department of Theatre at Concordia University. His research on the international reception of Tennessee Williams’s plays has been published in Theatre Research in Canada, Theatre Journal, Theatre Survey, and Nordic Theatre Studies, as well as several book chapters. Gindt is the associate editor and book review editor of alt.theatre: cultural diversity and the stage. His current research critically analyzes how theatre artists have reacted to and continue to respond to the HIV/AIDS crisis in Sweden and Canada. [End Page 255]

Kirk W. Goodlet is a SSHRC-funded doctoral candidate at the University of Waterloo. His dissertation explores ideas of occupation and liberation in Zeeland province, the Netherlands, during the Second World War.

Geoffrey Hayes is an associate professor of history at the University of Waterloo. He is a co-editor of Vimy Ridge: A Canadian Reassessment (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2007) and Canada and the Second World War: Essays in Honour of Terry Copp (Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2012).

Renan Levine is a lecturer in the Department of Political Science, University of Toronto Scarborough, where he teaches comparative politics and research methods. His research focusses on political strategy and voting behaviour.

Mike Medeiros is a doctoral candidate from the Department of Political Science of the Université de Montréal. His research concentrates on the influence of social identity on political behaviour. His research interests include identity politics, political psychology, electoral politics, sub-state nationalism, and ethnic conflicts. His doctoral research focusses on the impact of linguistic vitality on linguistic group tensions.

Madeleine Stratford est poète, traductrice littéraire et professeure à l’Université du Québec en Outaouais. Elle a publié plusieurs articles dans des revues savantes telles que TTR et Meta et a notamment contribué aux monographies Translating Women (University of Ottawa Press, 2011) and Translation Peripheries: Paratextual Elements in Translation (Lang, 2011). Sa traduction française de la poète uruguayenne Tatiana Oroño, Ce qu’il faut dire a des fissures (L’Oreille du Loup, 2012) a remporté en 2013 le prix John-Glassco de l’Association des traducteurs et traductrices littéraires du Canada.

Luc Turgeon is an assistant professor in the School of Political Studies, University of Ottawa. He...

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