Dreams Tonite. Highway Reflection, The Eraser, 2020.
By Kriss Munsya
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022
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In This Issue
Dreams Tonite. Highway Reflection, The Eraser, 2020.
By Kriss Munsya
Celebrated Canadian Artist Targets $100,000 Goal for Ukraine Aid
By Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 p. 7-8
Municipalities Matter: Public Funding for the Nonprofit Sector, 1960 to 2017
By Dominique Clement, Takara Ketchell and Matthew Arkinstall
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 9-34
By R. Blake Brown and Rudy Bartlett
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 35-60
By Benjamin Klassen
By J.I. Little
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 87-120
An Occasional Distant Rumble of Guns: The Second World War in British Columbia’s Historiography
By Scott Sheffield
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 121-140
Below the Radar: An Engaged Knowledge Democracy
By Brian Davenport
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 141-143
Making and Breaking Settler Space: Five Centuries of Colonization in North America
By Coll Thrush
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 149-150
Beyond Rights: The Nisga’a Final Agreement and the Challenges of Modern Treaty Relationships
By Joshua Nichols
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 150-151
Joseph William McKay: A Métis Business Leader in Colonial British Columbia
By Carla A. Osborne
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 152-153
What Was Said to Me: The Life of Sti’tum’atul’wut, a Cowichan Woman
By Georgia Sitara
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 153-154
Following the Good River: The Life and Times of Wa’xaid
By Theresa Warburton
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 154-155
Carrying the Burden of Peace: Reimagining Indigenous Masculinities Through Story
By Josh Cerretti
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 155-156
By Andrea Geiger
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 156-158
A Liberal-Labour Lady: The Times and Life of Mary Ellen Spear Smith
By P. E. Bryden
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 158-160
A Great Revolutionary Wave: Women and the Vote in British Columbia
By Barbara J. Messamore
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 160-162
The Bomb in the Wilderness: Photography and the Nuclear Era in Canada
By Karla McManus
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 163-164
Quietly Shrinking Cities: Canadian Urban Population Loss in an Age of Growth
By John Douglas Belshaw
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 164-166
Luschiim’s Plants: Traditional Indigenous Foods, Materials and Medicines
By Agnieszka Pawlowska-Mainville
BC Studies no. 213 Spring 2022 pp. 166-167
Matthew Arkinstall is pursuing a PhD in sociology at the University of Western Ontario. He completed his master’s degree in sociology at the University of Alberta in 2021. His master’s thesis entitled “On the Right(s) Path: A Study of Human Rights Law and Practice in British Columbia” compared the commission model and direct access model for adjudicating human rights complaints to determine which model was more accessible to marginalized people. His research interests include discrimination, human rights, and social inequality. He hopes to continue in academia and become a professor in sociology in the future.
Rudy Bartlett is an undergraduate student in the Department of History at Saint Mary’s University. He is currently completing an Honours thesis on public commemoration of the First World War at The Rooms Provincial Museum in St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador.
R. Blake Brown is a professor and department chair at Saint Mary’s University. His research examines Canadian legal history. He is the author or co-author of three books published by the University of Toronto Press and the Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History: A Trying Question: The Jury in Nineteenth-Century Canada (2009), Arming and Disarming: A History of Gun Control in Canada (2012), and A History of Law in Canada, Volume 1: Beginnings to 1866 (2018).
Dominique Clément is a professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Alberta and a member of the Royal Society of Canada (CNSAS). He is a historical sociologist who specializes in the study of human rights and social movements. His websites, HistoryOfRights.ca and statefunding.ca, serve as research and teaching portals on the history of human rights law and movements as well as the nonproft sector in Canada.
Takara Ketchell is currently pursuing a PhD in sociology at the University of Alberta. Research interests are primarily focused around identity, culture, and community and are deeply informed by questions of intersectionality, memory, and affect.
Ben Klassen is a white queer settler living and working on the unceded and ancestral territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples. He is a research manager at Community-Based Research Centre (CBRC), where he works on several 2SLGBTQ+ research studies. Ben holds an MA in history from Simon Fraser University, where he studied oral history narratives of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Vancouver. He has experience in community-based research, qualitative methods, and applied ethics and has co-authored papers and reports on a range of queer health topics, including blood donation policy and HIV treatment and prevention.
Jack Little is a professor emeritus in the History Department of Simon Fraser University. His most recent books are At the Wilderness Edge: The Rise of the Antidevelopment Movement on Canada’s West Coast (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2019) and Reading the Diaries of Henry Trent: The Everyday Life of a Canadian Englishman, 1842–1898 (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2021).
R. Scott Sheffield is an associate professor of history at the University of the Fraser Valley currently researching British Columbians and the Second World War. His previous research examined Indigenous military service and he is the author of The Red Man’s on the Warpath: The Image of the “Indian” and the Second World War (UBC Press, 2004), and (with Noah Riseman) Indigenous Peoples and the Second World War: The Politics, Experiences and Legacies of War in the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand (Cambridge University Press, 2019), as well as numerous articles and book chapters.
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