Civic Parties in Divided Societies explores how societies transition from armed conflict to issue-based democracies.
Surveying products and practices across a half century, in Needy Media Stephen Monteiro argues that the appeal of portable, networked personal media devices lies as much in how they behave as it does in the information they convey.
A comprehensive and groundbreaking collection, Canada and the Great Irish Famine examines how Ireland’s famine migration was confronted, experienced, and remembered in a receiving country.
Between 1975 and 1997 some three million Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Laotians fled atrocities in their home countries, with over 210,000 resettling... Læs mere
Settler Colonial Sovereignty examines what processes and understandings make Crown sovereignty seem natural and inevitable, particularly with respect to Indigenous Peoples who hold their own notions of political authority.
The Making of Cossack Ukraine traces the evolution of Ukrainian political thought and culture from the sixteenth... Læs mere
Huda Mukbil shares her experiences as a Black Arab-Canadian Muslim intelligence officer with the Canadian Security Intelligence... Læs mere
Drawing on a range of thinkers from John Locke to John Rawls, Liberalism in Time contributes to current debates within and about liberal politics and shows how liberal patterns of thought have been characterized by temporal paradoxes throughout history.
Wilful Neglect explores the devastating consequences of the Department of Indian Affairs’ responses to tuberculosis among First Nations in Canada from 1867 to 1945, demonstrating a direct link between historic health policies and modern disparities.
Students by Day is a history of the Curve Lake Indian Day School. A story of Indigenous resilience, activism, and hope in the face of educational injustice, Students by Day not only recovers the archive, written and oral, but builds on files repatriated to the community.
The Darkest Night Brings Longer Days is Sirous Houshmand’s eyewitness testimony of Tehran’s Evin Prison and the 1988 mass... Læs mere
In poems of loss and hope, Robin Durnford dares to pause for a moment, finding meaning in the metaphor of the life and work of Irish playwright Samuel Beckett.