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  • Contributors

James D. Cameron is an associate professor and chair of the Department of History at St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia. His specialities are Canadian immigration and ethnic history, the history of Canadian higher education, and business history. He has published two monographs and a number of articles on these themes.

Christina Keppie is an assistant professor of French and Sociolinguistics at Western Washington University. Her research focus is Acadian language and identity.

Mark Kuhlberg is an associate professor of History at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario. His field of specialization is forest history, and he has worked on behalf of several First Nations in substantiating their natural resource claims.

Jennifer J. Nelson is affiliated with the Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Toronto as an assistant professor. She works as an independent research consultant in Toronto.

Julie Robert teaches French and Québécois cultural studies at the University of Technology, Sydney (Australia). Her research interests include literature and medicine, political writing, rurality, and representations of alcohol.

Eric Ronis currently serves as the Assistant Dean for the Communication and Creative Media Division at Champlain College in Burlington, Vermont (USA). His research focusses on protest groups and their use of street theatre techniques.

Scott Staring is a lecturer with Harvard University's Committee on Degrees in Social Studies. He is currently writing a book exploring George Grant's views on Canadian foreign policy and modern cosmopolitanism.

Robert J. Talbot is a doctoral candidate in History at the University of Ottawa. He is the author of Negotiating the Numbered Treaties: An Intellectual and Political Biography of Alexander Morris (Saskatoon: Purich, 2009).

Jared J. Wesley is an assistant professor of Political Studies at the University of Manitoba. His research interests surround politics and elections in the Canadian provinces, and his forthcoming book, Code Politics: Campaigns and Cultures on the Canadian Prairies (2011), examines the persistence of the region's three distinct political worlds.

Jean-Philippe Warren, PhD, holds a Chair for the Study of Quebec at Concordia University. He has published extensively on Quebec society. His latest books include Une douce anarchie (2008), Ils voulaient changer le monde (2007), and Edmond de Nevers (2006). [End Page 248]

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