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180 Contributors Contributors Kate Bezanson is an aSsistant professor in the department of sociology and in the social justice and equity studies program at Brock University. She works in the areas of political economy, gender, work and social policy. Claire Campbell is a Killam postdoctoral fellow at the University of Alberta in the Department of History and Classics. This article is based on her dissertation, "Shaped by the West Wind: Nature and History in the Eastern Georgian Bay" (University of Western Ontario, 2001), while her current research examines national and provincial historic sites in the prairie provinces. Kyle Conway a obtenu sa maitrise en etudes franc;aises al'Universite York et est actuellement inscrit au programme de doctorat en etudes des medias et des cultures au departement de communication al'Universite du Wisconsin aMadison. Ryan Edwardson is a doctoral candidate in History at Queen's University. His thesis explores cultural intervention and the Canadianization of culture in the postSecond World War period. Luann Good Gingrich is a doctoral candidate in the Faculty of Social work at the University of Toronto. She is currently working on her dissertation that explores social inclusion among migratory workers in Ontario. Ruth Panofsky is a member of the Department of English at Ryerson University where she teaches Canadian Literature. Her most recent publications include Adele Wiseman: Essays on Her Works (ed., Guernica Editions, 2001) and Lifeline (Guernica Editions, 2001), a volume of poetry. Douglas House is currently Professor of Sociology at Memorial University of Newfoundland, having served in the past as Head of the Department and Research Director of the Institute of Social and Economic Research. He is a member of the National Advisory Board of the bi-coastal Coasts Under Stress interdisciplinary research project, and is a co-investigator in the Linking Science and Local Knowledge node of the Ocean Management Research Network based in the Centre for Coastal Studies at Simon Fraser University. Adrian van den Hoven received his doctorate in political science from the Universite de Nice-Sophia Antipolis and has worked as an adjunct professor at the Universite de Nice-Sophia Antipolis, the CERAM Sophia Antipolis Grande Ecole de Commerce and the Centro di analisi delle politiche pubbliche of the Universita di Bologna (Sede di Forli). He is currently a policy advisor at the University of Industrial and Employers' Confederations of Europe in Brussels. His research interests include trade policy, lobbying at the European Union and comparative economic policy studies at the national and regional level. ...

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