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  • Contributors • Collaborateurs

Michael Camp is an associate professor in the Journalism program at St. Thomas University in Fredericton, New Brunswick. Prior to becoming a professor, Camp spent more than 20 years at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), during which time he served in a number of roles, including reporter, program host, network producer, and editor of online news cbc.ca). He is a frequent commentator on political issues and a member of CBC Radio’s weekly political panel on New Brunswick politics.

David S. Churchill is an associate professor of American History at the University of Manitoba, where he teaches and researches on the history of gender, sexuality and social movements in the United States and Canada.

Jason B. Crawford teaches at Champlain College in Saint-Lambert, Quebec. He holds a doctorate in Humanities from Concordia University in Montreal and researches the histories and geographies of queer cultures. He has been involved in HIV/AIDS activism, labour union organizing, and the promotion of safer-sex education programs. He is currently a novice in the Order of Perpetual Indulgence, an order of twenty-first-century queer nuns who work for social justice and community advocacy.

Lyle Dick is the author of the books Muskox Land: Ellesmere Island in the Age of Contact (2001; Innis Prize, 2003), Farmers “Making Good”: The Development of Abernethy District, Saskatchewan, 1880-1920 (Clio Prize, 1990; rev. ed., 2008), and, with Norm Sloan, Sea Otters of Haida Gwaii: Icons in Human–Ocean Relations (2013), as well as 35 refereed historical articles published in Canada and the United States. He was the president of the Canadian Historical Association from 2011 to 2013.

Joanna Everitt is a professor of Political Science and dean of the Faculty of Arts at the University of New Brunswick in Saint John. She specializes in Canadian politics, gender and politics, and political behaviour.

Karen Herland lectures in women’s and sexuality studies at Concordia University. She researches alternative histories in Montreal and the location of the marginal in the community and media. She has been a community worker, AIDS educator, and activist since the 1980s. She has also developed health and safety strategies with sex workers as the founding co-ordinator of Stella, a community development organization supporting sex workers’ rights.

Thomas Hooper is a doctoral candidate in History at York University. His dissertation is on the Right to Privacy Committee and the 1981 Toronto bathhouse raids. [End Page 276]

David A.B. Murray is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Sexuality Studies Program at York University, Toronto. His most recent book, Flaming Souls: Homosexuality, Homophobia and Social Change, was published by the University of Toronto Press in 2012.

Catherine J. Nash is an associate professor in the Department of Geography at Brock University. Her research interests are in feminist and queer geographies, urban studies and planning, international LGBT human rights, and LGBT urban mobilities. She has published widely in a variety of journals, including Gender, Place and Culture, Antipode, Area, Canadian Geographer, International Journal of Urban Studies, and Geoforum. She is the co-author along with Kath Browne of Queer Methods and Methodologies and the Canadian contributor of Wiley’s Human Geography: People, Place and Culture (first Canadian edition).

David Rayside is a professor emeritus of Political Science, and has long been associated with the Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies at the University of Toronto. His published work includes Queer Inclusions, Continental Divisions: Public Recognition of Sexual Diversity in Canada and the United States (2008), and the co-edited volumes Equity, Diversity, and Canadian Labour (with Gerald Hunt, 2007), Faith, Politics, and Sexual Diversity in Canada and the United States (with Clyde Wilcox, 2011), and Conservatism in Canada (with Jim Farney, 2013).

Miriam Smith is a professor in the Department of Social Science at York University. Her areas of interest are Canadian and comparative politics, social movements and LGBTQ politics. Among other works, she is the author of Lesbian and Gay Rights in Canada: Social Movements and Equality-Seeking, 1971-1995 (University of Toronto Press, 1999), A Civil Society? Collective Actors in Canadian Political Life (Broadview, 2005), Political Institutions and Lesbian and Gay Rights in the United...

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