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Journal of Canadian Studies • Revue d'ftudes canadiennes Contributors Daniel Coleman teaches Canadian Literature in the Department of English at McMaster University. He holds a Canada Research Chair, has published "Masculine Migrations: Reading the Postcolonial Male" in "New Canadian" Narratives, and has edited four scholarly collections, in addition to publishing articles in Essays on Canadian Writing, Canadian Literature, Studies in Canadian Literature, The New Quarterly and Textual Studies in Canada. Misao Dean teaches English at the University of Victoria, and has published articles and books on Canadian women writers and on gender in Canadian literature. She is working on a study of canoes and cultural appropriation. Karen Fox, Ph.D., is a leisure specialist interested in ethics related to the environment, leadership, women and children. Her work also includes themes regarding indigenous leisure and equity. She is an Associate Professor at the University of Alberta, Faculty of PE and Recreation. R. Brian Howe is a political science professor and co-director of the Children's Rights Centre at the University College of Cape Breton. He is the author of numerous articles on human rights and children's rights and the co-author of two recent books on rights, The Challenge ofChildren~ Rights for Canada (with Katherine Covell) and RestrainingEquality: Human Rights Commission in Canada (with David Johnson). His most recent research deals with children's rights education as moral and political education. Michael Howlett is a Professor of Political Science at Simon Fraser University. He specializes in public policy analysis, Canadian political economy, and Canadian resource and environmental policy. He is the co-author of In Search of Sustainability: British Columbia Forest Policy in the 1990s (2001). Arn Keeling is a PhD candidate in historical geography/environmental history in the Department of Geography, University of British Columbia. His research and publications focus on the history of conservation, pollution and environmental conflicts in Western Canada. Marc James Leger is a doctoral candidate in the Program in Visual & Cultural Studies at the University of Rochester. His current research is concerned with questions of visuality, subjectivity and social space in critical public art. Volume 36 • No. 3 • (Automne 2001 Fall) 179 180 Contributors Robert McDonald, an Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of British Columbia, has published Making Vancouver: Class, Status, and Social Boundaries, 1863-1913 and is the incoming editor of BC Studies. He is currently studying the relationship between populism and modernity in the political culture of British Columbia. PearlAnn Reichwein, Ph.D., is a historian and heritage specialist working on research related to the history of national parks, recreation, conservation, tourism and cultural resources in the Canadian Rockies. She is an Assistant Professor at the University of Alberta, Faculty of PE and Recreation. R. Steven Turner teaches the history of science and science and technology studies in the History Department of the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton. His current work focusses on the social, political and regulatory impact of biotechnology on agricultural research and policy in Canada. ...

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