In this Issue
The Canadian Historical Review offers an analysis of the ideas, people, and events that have molded Canadian society and institutions into their present state. Canada's past is examined from a vast and multicultural perspective to provide a thorough assessment of all influences.
As a source for penetrating, authoritative scholarship, giving the sort of in-depth background necessary for understanding the course of daily events both for Canadians themselves and for those with an interest in the nation s affairs the CHR is without rival. Indeed, there are good reasons for everyone to read the CHR everyone from business executives to bankers, from theorists to policy makers, scholars and laypeople, too.
published by
University of Toronto Pressviewing issue
Volume 91, Number 2, June 2010Editorial Board
Co-editors
Sarah Carter
Cecillia Morgan
Editorial Board
Stéphane Castonguay
Phyllis LeBlanc
Jeffrey L. McNairn
Mary-Ellen Kelm
Erika Dyck
Advisory Board
Peter Baskerville, University of Alberta
Margaret Conrad, University of New Brunswick
Michèle Dagenais, Université du Montreal
Marlene Epp, University of Waterloo
Philip Girard, Dalhousie University
Rhonda Hinther, Canadian Museum of Civilization
Ollivier Hubert, Université du Montreal
Christine Hudon, Université de Sherbrooke
Alan MacEachern, University of Western Ontario
Mary Jane Logan McCallum, University of Winnipeg
Lianne McTavish, University of Alberta
Sarah-Jane (Saje) Mathieu, University of Minnesota
Lynne Marks, University of Victoria
Marcel Martel, York University
J.R. (Jim) Miller, University of Saskatchewan
Suzanne Morton, McGill University
Galen Rogers Perras, University of Ottawa
Joan Sangster, Trent University
Elizabeth Vibert, University of Victoria
Robert Wardhaugh, University of Western Ontario
Catharine Wilson, University of Guelph