This book critically examines how experiential learning challenges traditional university teaching by reshaping curricula and pedagogies through community engagement.
Drawing on interviews, observational research, and primary source documents, this book examines the dynamics of cooperation, conflict, and divergence between local campaigns and central party headquarters in Canadian elections.
Revealing how militarized masculinity inextricably intersects with political repression, this book examines the dictatorial regimes of Francisco Franco and Augusto Pinochet to offer arresting examples of the implications of these links.
This book examines the emergence and growth of Canada’s International Mobility Program in relation to its longstanding Temporary Foreign Worker Program, revealing how several of its foremost streams foster precarity through differential inclusion.
This collection celebrates emerging scholars in Indigenous studies, featuring student essays that explore Indigenous justice, ethics, and environmental justice, while highlighting a decade of collaboration with RAVEN, a legal defence organization.
This book traces journalist Aron Heller’s decade-long journey to uncover his Jewish Canadian grandfather’s World War II service, revealing the remarkable individuals and storylines he encountered along the way.
Subscribing to Sovietdom explores the multifaceted history of literary journals in the Soviet Union and other socialist countries, highlighting their role as cultural and literary institutions and visual objects from the revolutionary era to the end of socialism.
Atomic Collective presents an ethnographic study of a community living on the border of the Soviet-era nuclear test site in Kazakhstan.
Atomic Collective presents an ethnographic study of a community living on the border of the Soviet-era nuclear test site in Kazakhstan.
The Rise of Americanism in Italy, 1889–1919 explores the political, industrial, and military expansion of the United States at the turn of the twentieth century from the viewpoint of Italian culture.
This interdisciplinary collection, this book examines institutional relationships in relation to rights and the actors, laws, and constitutional structures that serve to protect them.
Originally published in 1894, Antisemitism features a series of interviews with prominent figures across Europe, revealing attitudes towards anti-Jewish hatred during a pivotal moment in its pre-Nazi development.