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260 Contributors Contributors Christina Cameron is educated as an historian of art and architectural history and has worked since 1970 with Parks Canada. She is Director General of National Historic Sites and represents Canada at the World Heritage Committee of UNESCO. Robert M. Campbell has recently been named Dean Of Arts at Wilfrid Laurier University. He is the author of The Politics of the Post: Canada's Postal Syste1n fro111 Public Setvice to Privatization (Broadview Press, 1994). He is presently completing a book that compares regulatory changes in 12 postal systems. George Elliott Clarke, PhD, LLD (Hon.), has edited two anthologies of AfricanCanadian literature (1991-1992, 1997), compiled its most comprehensive bibliography (1996) and published many essays in the field. He taught at Duke University (1994-1999), served as the Visiting Seagrams Chair in Canadian Studies at McGill University (1998-1999), and now teaches World Literature at the University of Toronto. He is also a poet, playwright, librettist and screenwriter. Kim Richard Nossal has been in the Department of Political Science since 1976, when he was hired to teach Canadian foreign policy; he received his doctorate from the University of Toronto in 1977. He is the author of a number of works on Canadian foreign policy and international relations, including Tile Politics ofCanadian Foreign Policy (1997) and The Patterns ofWorld Politics (1998). Enoch Padolsky teaches Canadian literature in the English Department at Carleton University. Co-editor (with Jean Burnet et al.) of Migration and the Transfonnation ofCultures (Multicultural History Society of Ontario, 1992), he has published extensively on Canadian minority literature and on interdisciplinary issues in Canadian literary theory and ethnic shtdies. Judy Rebick is the author of a new book bnagine De111ocracy (Stoddart, 2000). This article is based on some of the ideas in her book. She is also host of CBC Newsworld's Straight fro1n the Hip and the former president of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women John Richards teaches at Simon Fraser University and is a resident scholar at the C.D. Howe Institute. He has supervised much of the Institute's social policy work over the last several years. Donald J. Savoie holds the Clement-Cormier Chair in Economic Development at l'Universite de Moncton where he also teaches public administration. He has published widely in public policy and public administration. Volume 35 • No. 1 • (Printemps 2000 Spring) Journal of Canadian Studies • Revue d'etudes canadiennes Veronica Strong-Boag is a professor of Educational Studies and Women's Studies at the University of British Columbia and a former president of the Canadian Historical Association. The author or editor of many books and articles, she has most recently written, with Carole Gerson, Paddling Her Own Canoe: The Thnes and Texts ofE. Pauline Johnson (University of Toronto Press, 2000). John Wadland is director of the Frost Centre for Canadian Studies and Native Studies at Trent University. He is a former Editor of the Joun1al ofCanadian Studies. Reg Whitaker is Professor of Political Science at York University. His most recent books are Tile End ofPrivacy (The New Press 1999) and [with Gary Marcuse] Cold War Canada (University of Toronto Press, 1994). 261 ...

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