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McGill-Queens University Press acknowledges with gratitude the assistance of the Associated Medical Services, the Association for

the Export of Canadian Books, the Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation, the Canada Council for the Arts, Carleton University, the Faculty of Arts of McGill University, the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program, the Humanities and Social Sciences Federation of Canada, the Jackman Foundation of Toronto, the Smallman Fund of the University of Western Ontario, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for their support of its publishing program. Above all, the Press is indebted to its two parent institutions, McGill and Queens universities, for generous, continuing support for the Press as an integral part of the universities research and teaching activities.

Contents
African history, African studies / 16, 24 Architecture / 9 Art history / 2, 3 Atlantic history / 18 Autobiography, biography, memoir / 1, 7, 10, 11, 39 Canadian history / 1, 5, 9, 10, 11, 12, 18, 19, 23, 40, 41 Communications studies, media studies / 20, 23 Conict studies / 24 Current affairs / 8 Economics / 21 Education / 34, 36 French history / 39 European history / 33 Geography / 19, 41 History / 33, 41 History of medicine / 40 Immigrant studies / 35 International development, international studies / 24, 25 Jewish studies / 39 Labour Studies / 38 Law / 32 Literary criticism, literary studies / 8, 20, 40 Management / 34 Migration studies / 21, 33 Military history / 17 Museology / 4 Music, musicology / 20, 31 Native studies / 4, 5, 15, 18 Natural history / 2, 3 North American history / 2, 3, 17, 19 Philosophy / 6, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 38 Policy studies / 36 Political science / 14, 15, 22, 23, 24, 25, 34, 35, 36, 37 Political theory / 32 Public administration, public policy / 15, 21, 23, 34, 37, 38 Quebec history / 22 Religious studies / 13, 22 Science / 6 Security studies / 35 Social sciences, sociology / 22, 33, 38 Travel writing / 16 Womens studies / 7, 25, 39

Series
Art of Living Series / 30 Carleton Library Series / 17, 21, 41 Central Problems of Philosophy / 30 Continental European Philosophy / 26 Fields of Governance: Policy Making in Canadian Municipalities / 14, 15 Footprints Series / 10 How Ottawa Spends / 34 Key Concepts / 27 McGill-Queens Native and Northern Series / 5 McGill-Queens Studies in Ethnic History / 20 McGill-Queens Studies in the History of Ideas / 20, 32, 33, 38, 39 McGill-Queens/Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation Studies in Art History / 2, 3, 4, 9 Ruperts Land Record Society Series / 19 This Way Up / 27 Understanding Movements in Modern Thought / 31

Editorial Offices
Montreal Philip Cercone, Executive Director & Editor John Zucchi, Senior Editor Mark Abley, Editor Jonathan Crago, Editor Kyla Madden, Editor Jacqueline Mason, Editor McGill-Queens University Press 1010 Sherbrooke Street West, Suite 1720 Montreal, QC H3A 2R7 Canada Kingston Donald H. Akenson, Senior Editor Jeffrey Brison, Deputy Senior Editor Mary-Lynne Ascough, Editor Joan Harcourt, Editor McGill-Queens University Press Queens University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 Canada

Agencies
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B I O G RA P HY CA N A D I A N H I STO RY

Thomas DArcy McGee, Volume 2


The Extreme Moderate, 18571868
davi d a. wi ls o n
A compelling and comprehensive biography of Thomas DArcy McGees political career in Canada.

After a tumultuous career as a revolutionary in Ireland and an ultra-conservative Catholic in the United States, Thomas DArcy McGee moved to Canada in 1857, where he became a force for moderation and the leading Irish Canadian politician in the country. Determined that Canada should avoid the ethno-religious strife that aficted Ireland, he articulated an inclusive, broad-minded nationalism based on generosity of spirit, a willingness to compromise, and a reasonable balance between order and liberty. To realize his vision, McGee became a strong supporter of the new northern nationality. A spellbinding orator who emerged as the youngest and most intellectually gifted of the Fathers of Confederation, he fought what he saw as the atavistic and intolerant elements of Canadian life the Orange Order, with its strident antiCatholicism; the opponents of separate schools, whom he viewed as enemies of minority rights; and above all the Fenian Brotherhood, with its dreams of revolutionizing Ireland and annexing Canada to the United States. Convinced that compromise with Fenianism was impossible, he set out to destroy the movement through a strategy of confrontation and polarization channeling his earlier extreme tendencies in the service of moderation and attempting to reduce the inuence of Fenianism within his own community. In the

process, he alienated many of his former supporters, who came to regard him as a traitor who sacriced the cause of Irish nationalism on the altar of personal ambition. On 7 April 1868, McGee was assassinated on the doorstep of his Ottawa boarding house. As someone who took an uncompromising stand against militants within his own ethno-religious community, and who attempted to balance core values with minority rights, McGee has become increasingly relevant in todays complex multicultural society. A magnificent achievement. The narrative has tension and momentum, even though we know the final tragic scene. This is the triumphant finale of years of scholarship and must rank as one of the great historical biographies of our time. Liam Kennedy, Queen's University, Belfast David A. Wilson is coordinator of the Celtic Studies Program and a professor in the Department of History at the University of Toronto.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S October 2011 978-0-7735-3903-7 $39.95T CDN, $39.95T US, 26.99 cloth 6.125 x 9.25 512pp 35 illustrations

Related interest Thomas DArcy McGee, Volume 1 Passion, Reason, and Politics, 18251857 978-0-7735-3357-8 $39.95T CDN, $39.95T US, 26.99 cloth Praise for Volume 1: a brilliant piece of scholarship: exhaustively researched, scrupulously fair, thoroughly documented. Roger Hall, The Globe & Mail both elegant and mature, a biographical tour de force. Victor Rabinovitch, Literary Review of Canada

MQU P FALL 2011

A RT H I STO RY N O RTH AM E R I CA N H I STO RY

The Codex Canadensis and the Writings of Louis Nicolas


The Natural History of the New World, Histoire Naturelle des Indes Occidentales
e d i t e d and wit h an int roduct ion by frano is-marc gagnon wi t h nancy seni or and ral ouel le t
f oreword by duane ki ng A natural history and illustrations of the New World in the seventeenth century.

Part art, part science, part anthropology, this ambitious project presents an early Canadian perspective on natural history that is as much artistic and fantastical as it is encyclopedic. Edited and introduced by Franois-Marc Gagnon, The Codex Canadensis and the Writings of Louis Nicolas showcases an intriguing attempt to document the life of the new world ora, fauna, and aboriginal. The book brings together for the rst time the illustrated Codex Canadensis and The Natural History of the New World, following Gagnons argument that both can be attributed to Louis Nicolas, a French Jesuit priest who travelled throughout Canada between 1664 and 1675. Histoire Naturelle des Indes Occidentales, originally written in classical French, has been put in modern French by Ral Ouellet and translated into English by Nancy Senior. The Natural

History presents a pre-Linnaean botany and pre-Darwinian account of living things, including hundreds of species of plants and vivid descriptions of wildlife. It is thoroughly annotated, focusing on the contemporary identication of species, as the result of a pan-Canadian collaboration of experts in elds from linguistics to biology and botany. The Codex Canadensis, currently in the collection of the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma, is reproduced in full and provides both a fascinating visual account of wildlife as Nicolas saw it and a rare example of early Canadian art. Gagnons introduction proles Louis Nicolas and analyses connections between his work and European examples of natural illustration from the period. The Codex Canadensis and the Writings of Louis Nicolas shows how the wildlife and native inhabitants of the new world were understood and

documented by a seventeenth-century European and makes available fundamental documents in the history and visual culture of early North America.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Published with the Gilcrease Museum, Tulsa, Oklahoma McGill-Queens/Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation Studies in Art History November 2011 978-07735-3876-4 $65.00T CDN, $55.00T US, 37.00 cloth 9 x 12 624pp 88 pages of colour images, 45 b&w drawings

MQU P FALL 2011

The Codex Canadensis and the Writings of Louis Nicolas is a treasure trove for a host of readers with wide-ranging interests in the history, culture, and natural history of Canada, or in the makeup of the scientic eld in France at the time. The lively style for which Franois-Marc Gagnon is well known to French readers as well as the volumes mature and insightful scholarship make this a captivating, rich, and profoundly knowledgeable text.
Laurier Lacroix, dpartement dhistoire de lart, Universit du Qubec Montral

N AT I V E S T U D I E S M U S E O L O G Y

Museum Pieces
Toward the Indigenization of Canadian Museums
rut h b. p h il lip s
Ruth Phillips is one of the most well-respected and senior gures working in the domain of contemporary museum anthropology and critical museum studies. The great strengths of this volume are the authors careful research, her unique position within the events described, and the temporal depth of the analysis that traces important questions of indigenous representation in detail over decades This broad and extremely rich book presents a sustained argument for an interdisciplinary approach to the study of representational politics in museums. Haidy Geismar, anthropology and museum studies, New York University

The ways in which Aboriginal people and museums work together have changed drastically in recent decades. This historic process of decolonization, including distinctive attempts to institutionalize multiculturalism, has pushed Canadian museums to pioneer new practices that can accommodate both difference and inclusivity. Ruth Phillips argues that these practices are indigenous not only because they originate in Aboriginal activism but because they draw on a distinctively Canadian preference for compromise and tolerance for ambiguity. Phillips dissects seminal exhibitions of Indigenous art to show how changes in display, curatorial voice, and authority stem from broad social, economic, and political forces outside the museum and moves beyond Canadian institutions and practices to discuss historically interrelated developments and exhi-

bitions in the United States, Britain, Australia, and elsewhere. Drawing on forty years of experience as an art historian, curator, exhibition critic, and museum director, she emphasizes the complex and situated nature of the problems that face museums, introducing new perspectives on controversial exhibitions and moments of contestation. A manifesto that calls on us to re-imagine the museum as a place to embrace global interconnectedness, Museum Pieces emphasizes the transformative power of museum controversy and analyses shifting ideas about art, authenticity, and power in the modern museum. Ruth B. Phillips is an art historian specializing in North American Aboriginal art and a former director of the University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S McGill-Queens/Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation Studies in Art History January 2012 978-0-7735-3906-8 $39.95A CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 978-0-7735-3905-1 $110.00S CDN, $110.00S US, 82.00 cloth 6.5 x 9.75 400pp 60 colour photos, 11 drawings

MQU P FALL 2011

N AT I V E S T U D I E S C A N A D I A N H I S TO R Y

Telling It to the Judge


Taking Native History to Court
art hur j. ray
An expert witnesss account of using Native history to make Native law.

In 1973, the Supreme Courts historic Calder decision on the Nisgaa communitys title suit in British Columbia launched the Native rights litigation era in Canada. Legal claims have raised questions with signicant historical implications, such as, What treaty rights have survived in various parts of Canada? What is the scope of Aboriginal title? Who are the Mtis, where do they live, and what is the nature of their culture and their rights? Arthur Rays extensive knowledge in the history of the fur trade and Native economic history brought him into the courts as an expert witness in the mid-1980s. For over twenty-ve years he has been a part of landmark litigation concerning treaty rights, Aboriginal title, and Mtis rights. In Telling It to the Judge, Ray recalls lengthy courtroom battles over lines of evidence, historical interpretation, and philosophies of history, reecting on the problems inherent in teaching history in the adversarial courtroom setting.

Told with charm and based on extensive experience, Telling It to the Judge is a unique narrative of courtroom strategy in the effort to obtain constitutional recognition of Aboriginal and treaty rights. Arthur J. Ray is professor emeritus of history at the University of British Columbia and author of I Have Lived Here Since the World Began: An Illustrated History of Canadas Native People.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S McGill-Queens Native and Northern Series November 2011 978-0-7735-3952-5 $34.95T CDN, $34.95T US, 22.99 cloth 6 x 9 224pp 16 b&w photos, 9 maps, 15 diagrams, 3 drawings, 5 tables

MQU P FALL 2011

PHILOSOPHY SCIENCE

Aping Mankind
Neuromania, Darwinitis and the Misrepresentation of Humanity
raymond tal lis
A devastating critique of biologism and its misrepresentation of human life.

A major and erudite statement of a position that is intellectually, morally, and spiritually of the rst importance to those of us living now. Roger Scruton, author of numerous books including A Political Philosophy: Arguments For Conservatism In Aping Mankind, Raymond Tallis exposes the exaggerated claims made about the ability of neuroscience and evolutionary theory to explain human consciousness, behaviour, culture, and society and shows that human beings are innitely more interesting and complex than they appear in the mirror of biologism. Tallis argues that the rise of biologism has serious consequences and demonstrates that, by denying human uniqueness and minimizing the differences between humans and their nearest animal kin, it misrepresents what we are, offering a grotesquely simplied and degrading account of humanity. He suggests that seeing ourselves as animals may lead us to nd reasons for treating others as less than human.

A splendid book. Tallis is right to say that current attempts to explain major elements of human life by brain-talk are fearfully misguided. Tallis is exceptional in having both the philosophical grasp to understand what is wrong here and the scientic knowledge to expose it fully. He documents the gravity of this menace in a clear, vigorous style, with real re, venom, and humour. Mary Midgley, author of The Owl of Minerva: A Memoir and The Solitary Self: Darwin and the Selsh Gene A wonderful book and an important book, one that all neuroscientists should read. Talliss fearless criticism of the work of some distinguished contemporary academics and scientists and the rather ludicrous experimental paradigms of mri work needs to be made. Simon Shorvon, ucl Institute of Neurology Raymond Tallis trained as a doctor before becoming a professor of geriatric medicine at the University of Manchester. In 2006 he retired from medicine to become a full-time writer. His most recent works include The Kingdom of Innite Space, Hunger, and Michelangelos Finger.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Acumen Publishing July 2011 978-1-84465-272-3 $32.95T CDN, $29.95T US cloth 6.125 x 9.125 416pp North American rights 978-1-84465-272-3 6.125 x 9.125 416pp North American rights cloth

MQU P FALL 2011

WOMENS STU DI ES MEMOI R

Outside the Box


The Life and Legacy of Writer Mona Gould, the Grandmother I Thought I Knew
mari a meind l
A moving portrait of a Canadian writer and broadcaster that raises questions about how we shape and are shaped by the past.
When poet and broadcaster Mona Gould died in 1999, she left behind thirty-eight boxes of papers. Her war poem, This Was My Brother, was still a staple of textbooks and anthologies, yet Mona well known in her youth had fallen into obscurity in the 1960s. Born at the very time Monas career was faltering, Maria Meindl became a captive audience for her grandmothers extravagant stories of the past. Years later, Maria took on the daunting task of sorting through Monas mountain of papers to create an archive for the University of Torontos Fisher Rare Book Library. The chaotic state of the boxes reected Monas amboyant and demanding personality, yet they also drew an important picture of the life of a Canadian freelancer in the twentieth century. Mona had begun publishing poetry and features in newspapers in the 1920s and published three books of poetry in the 1940s. In the 1950s, at a time when many women were retreating from the public sphere, she had a successful radio career. Her later journals and letters recount, in agonizing detail, a downward spiral into self-doubt, poverty, and addiction. Maria soon discovered that the truth of Monas life was even more fascinating than her stories. Outside the Box brings to life a thinly documented era in Canadian letters through the story of one passionate and conicted woman. It also charts the journey of an unwilling archivist, coming to terms with family secrets, forgotten history, and the stories that are never told. Not content merely to provide an account of Goulds life and times, Maria Meindl probes the complexities of her own relationship with this remarkable woman. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and found it rewarding on multiple levels. Susan Olding, author of Pathologies: A Life in Essays Encompassing literary, social, and womens history, personal memoir, and media studies, Outside the Box is honest, revealing, and original. Elaine Kalman Naves, author of Shoshannas Story Maria Meindl writes about health care and the arts and has created series for cbc Radios Ideas. She lives in Toronto and this is her rst book.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S September 2011 978-0-7735-3911-2 $34.95T CDN, $34.95T US, 22.99 cloth 6 x 9 312pp 20 b&w photos

MQU P FALL 2011

L I T E R A RY C R I T I C I S M C U R R E N T A F FA I R S

Reading the 21st Century


Books of the Decade, 20002009
s tan p ersky
The state of the world, books, and reading.

The rst decade of the twenty-rst century was noteworthy for war, terror, religious revival, economic collapse, and a technological revolution that prompted countless critical responses and gave rise to a paradox: writing ourished, but reading declined. Reading the 21st Century investigates the urgent themes, major works, and crisis of reading in an era of instant communication. In wide-ranging and innovative criticism, Stan Persky examines international non-ction and ction to engage with both the triumphs and tensions of reading and writing today. Evaluating works by established authors Philip Roth, Orhan Pamuk, J.M. Coetzee, and Jos Saramago, as well as emerging writers like Naomi Klein, Javier Cercas, and Chimamanda Adichie, Persky also showcases a remarkable group of reporters Steve Coll, Dexter Filkins, and Rajiv Chandrasekaran who have written essential books about global issues.

An illuminating and accessible work about the present age, Reading the 21st Century introduces new ways of thinking about the worlds most signicant cultural, political, and moral problems. There are many good things to say about Reading the 21st Century. It is personable, thoughtful, lively, cleanly and clearly written, amusing, and insightful. It is also up-to-date and serious. David Helwig, winner of the cbc Poetry Prize and the Atlantic Poetry Prize Stan Persky is the author of numerous books, including the Hubert Evans Prize-winning The Short Version: An ABC Book. He teaches philosophy at Capilano University in North Vancouver.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S October 2011 978-0-7735-3909-9 $34.95T CDN, $29.95T US, 19.99 cloth 6 x 9 264pp

MQU P FALL 2011

A RC H I TE C TU R E CA N A D I A N H I STO RY

Newfoundland Modern
Architecture in the Smallwood Years, 19491972
robe rt mel lin
The enthusiastic adoption of modern architecture in Newfoundland and the Smallwood administrations inuence on the provinces cultural landscape.

The architecture of Newfoundland typically evokes images of spare but colourful houses and outbuildings by the sea. Newfoundland Modern reveals another dimension that challenges this impression. In over 220 drawings and photographs, Robert Mellin presents the development of architecture in the decades immediately following Newfoundlands 1949 union with Canada. Newfoundlands wholehearted embrace of modern architecture in this era affected planning as well as the design of cultural facilities, commercial and public buildings, housing, recreation, educational facilities, and places of worship, and Premier Joseph Smallwood often relied on modern architecture to demonstrate the progress made by his administration. Mellin explores the links between Smallwood and modern architecture, revealing how Smallwood guided the development of numerous architectural projects. He also looks at the work of two innovative local architects, Frederick A. Colbourne and Angus J. Campbell, showing how their architecture was inuenced by their life-long interest in art.

The rst comprehensive work on an important period of architectural development in urban and rural Newfoundland, Newfoundland Modern complements Mellins awardwinning book on the outport of Tilting, Fogo Island. Original and richly illustrated, Newfoundland Modern is a comprehensive and insightful tour dhorizon that will make St. Johns the envy of other Canadian cities in terms of architectural history. Peter Neary, University of Western Ontario Weaving together comprehensive research and thoughtful observation, Newfoundland Modern makes a strong case in favour of protection and preservation and provides ample justication of the importance of modern works. George Thomas Kapelos, Ryerson University Robert Mellin is associate professor in the School of Architecture, McGill University, and the author of Tilting: House Launching, Slide Hauling, Potato Trenching, and Other Tales from a Newfoundland Fishing Village.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S McGill-Queens/Beaverbrook Canadian Foundation Studies in Art History November 2011 978-0-7735-3902-0 $59.95T CDN, $59.95T US, 40.00 cloth 9 x 9 320pp 225 illustrations, colour throughout

MQU P FALL 2011

B I O G RA P HY CA N A D I A N H I STO RY

Georges and Pauline Vanier


Portrait of a Couple
mary f rance s coady
The dramatic personal and professional story of Canadas most inuential married couple.

Few gures have had as lasting an inuence on Canadian institutions, history, politics, and culture as Georges and Pauline Vanier. Georges (1888 1967), a decorated military ofcer, became a professional diplomat, the rst Canadian ambassador to France, and the rst FrenchCanadian governor general of Canada. Pauline (18981991), a respected humanitarian, Privy Council member, and university chancellor, shared her husbands responsibilities and helped shape his thoughts on foreign and domestic affairs. Georges and Pauline Vanier follows their lives and travels across the world from Canadian military life to the League of Nations, from the inner circles of British government to their harrowing escape from Nazi-occupied France detailing their disappointments and triumphs during social and political turbulence. With insight and sympathy, Mary Frances Coady tells their dramatic personal story. Revealing their remarkably vibrant personalities, she details the couples support of the French resistance as well as Georges Vaniers pleas for the Canadian government to accept refugees eeing Hitlers horrors and his effort to broaden immigration policy. She also recounts the importance of their

religious convictions, their controversial standing among Quebecers, and their early advocacy of ofcial bilingualism. An invigorating and well-told tale of their lasting legacies, Georges and Pauline Vanier is the denitive account of the enduring contributions the Vaniers made to the world and to their country. This double biography is a careful, thorough work which lls a gap in Canadian history. Coadys insights into each partner are sympathetic and convincing, and her writing is accessible and thoughtful. Charlotte Gray, author of Gold Diggers: Striking it Rich in the Klondike Mary Frances Coady is an instructor of professional communication at Ryerson University in Toronto and author of With Bound Hands: A Jesuit in Nazi Germany: The Life and Selected Prison Letters of Alfred Delp.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Footprints Series August 2011 978-0-7735-3883-2 $34.95T CDN, $34.95S US, 22.99 cloth 6 x 9 296pp 24 b&w photos

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B I O G RA P HY CA N A D I A N H I STO RY

In Search of R.B. Bennett


p.b. wai t e
An intriguing look at one of Canadas least-known Conservative leaders.

No Canadian prime minister has a legacy as uncertain as that of R.B. Bennett (18701947). Leader of the country during the worst years of the Great Depression, Bennetts fortune and ascension to the British House of Lords distanced him from the Canadian people during his lifetime, while his burial in England kept him aloof from his country even in death. In Search of R.B. Bennett explores the statesmanship, ideas, and temperament of Canadas eleventh prime minister, presenting an enigmatic portrait of a difcult and fascinating man. Writing a life of Bennett, who reportedly destroyed his correspondence every seven years, presents challenges for the biographer. Yet, as P.B. Waite shows, Bennetts lasting contributions to Canada are beyond doubt. He describes Bennetts bold initiatives, including his attempt to introduce unemployment insurance and a minimum wage, as well as his founding of the Bank of Canada and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation achieved in the teeth of opposition from banking and media magnates. Waite also contemplates Bennetts friendships, his relationships, and his lifelong bachelorhood, shedding new light on his life and personality.

With warmth, wit, and a deep knowledge of its subject, In Search of R.B. Bennett brings Bennett the man his penchants, prejudices, weaknesses, and strengths before the reader. A traditional biography, with the focus on Bennett's character, his motives, and underlying values, In Search of R.B. Bennett is superbly written and a great pleasure to read. John MacFarlane, Directorate of History and Heritage P.B. Waite is professor emeritus of history at Dalhousie University and the author of numerous books on Canadian history.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S November 2011 978-0-7735-3908-2 $34.95T CDN, $34.95S US, 22.99 cloth 6 x 9 344pp 13 b&w photos

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CA N A D I A N H I STO RY

This Great National Object


Building the Nineteenth-Century Welland Canals
robe rta m. st yran and ro bert r. tayl or
How Mr. Merritts Ditch became a link in the chain of inland waterways between the Atlantic Ocean and North Americas heartland.

In This Great National Object, Roberta Styran and Robert Taylor the unparalleled experts on the subject recount the story of the canals, with particular emphasis on the experiences of the engineers, contractors, and labourers who built the inland waterways between 1824 and 1889. Making extensive use of the National Archives and the Archives of Ontario, Styran and Taylor unveil previously unpublished information about the construction of the canals, including technical plans and drawings from a wide variety of sources. They illustrate the technical and management intricacies of building a navigational trade and commerce lifeline while also revealing the vivid characters from businessman William Hamilton Merritt to engineer John Page who inspired the project and drove it to completion. The history of the Welland Canals is a gripping tale of epic proportions. Given the ongoing importance of the Great Lakes in the North American economy, interest in the St. Lawrence Seaway of which the Welland is the Great Swivel Link and the relevance of labour history, This Great National Object will be of interest to enthusiasts and historians alike.

Roberta M. Styran, retired assistant professor of history at Brock University, is co-author of The Great Swivel Link: Canadas Welland Canal. Robert R. Taylor is professor emeritus of history at Brock University and the author of several books on architecture, local history, and, with Roberta Styran, the Welland Canals.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S January 2012 978-0-7735-3893-1 $44.95T CDN, $44.95T US, 29.99 cloth 6 x 9 400pp 74 b&w photos

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R ELIGIOUS STU DI ES

Rediscovering Reverence
The Meaning of Faith in a Secular World
ral p h h ei ntzman
A new look at the place of religion in the modern age.

A surprising and insightful work, Rediscovering Reverence offers a rational explanation of what the modern western world calls religion and argues that it is not what most people assume. Questioning western cultures evolving use of the word religion over the last ve centuries, Ralph Heintzman strips away misunderstandings to demonstrate that faith is not the same as belief. He shows how faith is not something one has but something one does, leading the reader to a deeper understanding of religious practice and its necessary place in human life. Drawing on familiar experiences as well as aspects of western and eastern spiritual traditions, Heintzman argues that religious practice is rooted in two basic ways human beings act in the world. It is therefore an element in the structure of the human spirit, not a phase in its history. Explaining the meaning of religious practice in contemporary language, Rediscovering Reverence is addressed to anyone who wants to explore the meaning and promise of a religious life. A unique and thoughtful meditation on the role of reverence in everyday life, Rediscovering Reverence presents new perspectives on modern faith, religion, and both personal and societal well-being.

Ralph Heintzman is an adjunct research professor in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa and a senior fellow of Massey College in the University of Toronto.

From the book

The question, for all of us, is: how shall I lead my life? This is not an academic question. It is not an abstract or intellectual one. Its personal, immediate and urgent. Its the old joke about the meaning of life. But its no joke, when your own life is at stake. Its the question that keeps us awake at night. Or gnaws away at the back of our minds, no matter how comfortable or successful we are. And its a question most of us have to answer, somehow.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S September 2011 978-0-7735-3897-9 $34.95T CDN, $29.95T, US 19.99 cloth 6 x 9 296pp

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INTRODUCING A NEW SERIES


Fields of Governance: Policy Making in Canadian Municipalities
s e ri e s e d i to r: ro bert young

Policy making in the modern world has become a complex matter. Much policy is formed through negotiations between governments at several different levels, because each has particular resources that can be brought to bear on problems. At the same time, non-governmental organizations make demands about policy and can help in policy formation and implementation. In this context, works in this series explore how policy is made within municipalities through processes of intergovernmental relations and with the involvement of social forces of all kinds. The Fields of Governance series arises from a large research project, funded mainly by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, entitled Multilevel Governance and Public Policy in Canadian Municipalities. This project has involved more than eighty scholars and a large number of student assistants. At its core are studies of several policy elds, each of which was examined in a variety of municipalities. Our objectives are not only to account for the nature of the policies but also to assess their quality and to suggest improvements in policy and in the policy-making process. The Fields of Governance series is designed for scholars, practitioners, and interested readers from many backgrounds and places. Forthcoming titles will tackle pertinent policy issues including image-building, emergency planning, Federal property policy, and Federal infrastructure programs.

Immigrant Settlement Policy in Canadian Municipalities


Contributors include Zainab Amery (Carleton University), Caroline Andrew (University of Ottawa), Guy Chiasson (Universit du Qubec en Outaouais), Rodney Haddow (University of Toronto), Rachida Abdourhamane Hima (Government of Canada), Christine Hughes (Carleton University), Serena Kataoka (University of Victoria), Junichiro Koji (University of Ottawa), Warren Magnusson (University of Victoria), Daiva Stasiulis (Carleton University), Erin Tolley (Queens University), and Robert Young (University of Western Ontario).

Urban Aboriginal Policy Making in Canadian Municipalities


Contributors include Frances Abele (Carleton University), Chris Andersen (University of Alberta), Katherine A.H. Graham (Carleton University), Russell LaPointe (Carleton University), David J. Leech (Skelton-Clark Post-Doctoral Fellow, Queens University), Maeengan Linklater (Mazinaate, Inc., Winnipeg), Michael McCrossan (Carleton University), James Moore (City of Kelowna), Karen Bridget Murray (York University), Evelyn J. Peters (University of Winnipeg), Jenna Strachan (Ofce of Intergovernmental Affairs, Kelowna bc ), Ryan Walker (University of Saskatchewan), and Robert Young (University of Western Ontario).

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PUBLIC POLICY POLITICAL SCIENCE

N AT I V E S T U D I E S P U B L I C P O L I C Y

Immigrant Settlement Policy in Canadian Municipalities


e d i t e d by e ri n to lle y and ro bert young
How policies about immigrant settlement are developed and delivered in a wide variety of Canadian municipalities.

Urban Aboriginal Policy Making in Canadian Municipalities


ed it ed by evelyn j. p et ers
An in-depth analysis of what makes good urban Aboriginal policy in Canada.

Canada has one of the most successful immigration programs in the world, a function of the policies, programs, and services that assist newcomers. Immigrant settlement is a crucial policy eld that involves governments, communities, and a range of social forces. Immigration matters are an area of shared jurisdiction, but the federal government has long been the dominant player. Provinces and municipalities, however, are now pushing for an expanded policy role, increased resources, and governance arrangements that recognize the important part they play in immigrant settlement. Drawing on in-depth interviews with government ofcials and front-line workers, contributors provide a comparative assessment of approaches to immigrant settlement in nineteen Canadian municipalities. This is complemented by a discussion of the federal governments role in this policy eld, and by a comprehensive introduction and conclusion, which ground the book historically and thematically, synthesize its key ndings, and provide recommendations for addressing the challenges related to intergovernmental cooperation, settlement service delivery, and overall immigrant outcomes. Chapters examine the mechanics of public policy-making but also tell a story about diverse and innovative approaches to immigrant settlement in Canadas towns and cities, about gaps and problems in the system, and about the ways in which governments and communities are working together to facilitate integration. Erin Tolley is a Trudeau Scholar and PhD candidate in Political Studies at Queens University. Robert Young is professor of political science at the University of Western Ontario and Canada Research Chair in Multilevel Governance.

The majority of Aboriginal people in Canada First Nations, Inuit, and Mtis live in urban areas. Public policy making concerning urban Aboriginal people is, however, complex, complicated by geographic variation, and varies greatly in both quality and quantity from municipality to municipality. The responsibilities of different levels of government are hotly debated, and there is competition between Aboriginal organizations. In Urban Aboriginal Policy Making in Canadian Municipalities leading authorities interview both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal leaders, report on research done in a large variety of municipalities, and assess the quality of urban Aboriginal policy in Canada. Individual chapters highlight the unique issues related to policy making in this eld the important role of diverse Aboriginal organizations, the need to address Aboriginal and Treaty rights and the right to self-government, and the lack of governmental leadership revealing a complex jurisdictional and programming maze. Contributors look at provinces where there has been extensive activity as well as provinces where urban Aboriginal issues seem largely irrelevant to governments. They cover small and mid-sized towns, remote communities, and large metropolises. While their research acknowledges that existing Aboriginal policy falls short in many ways, it also afrms that the eld is new and there are grounds for improvement as it grows and matures. Evelyn J. Peters is a professor in geography and Canada Research Chair at the University of Winnipeg.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Fields of Governance: Policy Making in Canadian Municipalities August 2011 978-0-7735-3888-7 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US, 19.99 paper 978-0-7735-3877-1 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 344pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Fields of Governance: Policy Making in Canadian Municipalities January 2012 978-0-7735-3949-5 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US, 19.99 paper 978-0-7735-3948-8 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 310pp

T R AV E L W R I T I N G A F R I C A N H I STO RY

Congo Solo
Misadventures Two Degrees North
e mi ly h ahn e d i t e d by ken cuth bertso n
Annotated and with a new introduction by Ken Cuthbertson Foreword by Anneke Van Woudenberg Emily Hahns remarkable eight-month sojourn in the Belgian Congo.

Emily Hahn was one of the most prolic and enduring writers at The New Yorker her rst byline appeared there in 1926, her last in 1996. She was also the author of fty-three books, and, had her 1933 travel memoir, Congo Solo, not been published in a censored version during the darkest days of the Great Depression, it might well have been hailed as a classic of the genre, alongside Dinesens Out of Africa. In many ways Hahns vivid account of her eight-month sojourn in a remote medical clinic was years ahead of its time. A woman who lived life on her own terms, Hahn was an unknown and struggling writer when Congo Solo was published. Here restored to the form she had intended is Hahns unforgettable narrative, a vivid, provocative, and at times disturbing rsthand account of the racism, brutality, sexism, and exploitation that were everyday life realities under Belgiums iron-sted colonial rule. Until now, the few copies of Congo Solo in circulation were the adulterated version, which the author altered after pressure from her publisher and threats of litigation from the main characters

family. This edition makes available a lost treasure of womens travel writing that shocks and impresses, while shedding valuable light on the gender and race politics of the period. There is a long chain of accounts by literary travellers to the Congo over more than a century, and it is good to have one such revealing narrative carefully restored to an uncensored version at last. The chilling episode at its heart reminds one of the cruel megalomania of Joseph Conrads Mr. Kurtz. Adam Hochschild, author of King Leopolds Ghost Ken Cuthbertson is the author of two critically acclaimed books of non-ction, including Nobody Said Not to Go: The Life, Loves, and Adventures of Emily Hahn and Inside: The Biography of John Gunther, shortlisted for a Governor Generals Literary Award. He lives in Kingston, Ontario.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S September 2011 978-0-7735-3904-4 $24.95T CDN, $24.95T US, 16.99 paper 6 x 8.5 304pp 25 b&w photos

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N O R T H A M E R I C A N H I S T O R Y M I L I TA R Y H I S T O R Y

N O R T H A M E R I C A N H I S T O R Y M I L I TA R Y H I S T O R Y

A Wampum Denied
Procters War of 1812, Second edition
sandy antal With a new preface
This formative history takes a new look at a dramatic conict the war on the Detroit frontier in 181213.

n e w i n pa p e r

British Generals in the War of 1812


High Command in the Canadas
we s ley b. t urne r
An examination of the thoughts and actions of ve British generals in Lower and Upper Canada.

CHOICE Outstanding Academic Book Award Procter, Tecumseh, and Brock, their disparate war aims, and the all or nothing character of the campaigns they waged still seem larger than life. Yet Sandy Antals careful reconstruction of Native and national aspiration, vested colonial interest, and territorial aggression reveals motives and expedients that were as often mundane as heroic. A Wampum Denied reassesses the much-maligned career of Henry Procter, commander of the British forces, traces the Canadian/British/Native side of the conict (amid a literature dominated by the American view), and casts new light on an allied military strategy that very nearly succeeded, but when it failed, failed spectacularly. A Wampum Denied is a tour de force a mature piece of work, wellgrounded in primary sources and a signicant contribution to the eld. This is the best work, by far, that Ive read on the Northwest campaign in many years. Dr Larry Nelson, director, Fort Meigs State Memorial, Ohio Sandy Antal, co-author of Duty Nobly Done, became a teacher after retiring from twenty years as a major in the Canadian Forces. He now lives in Cameron, Ontario.

The Canadian people have faced crises of leadership, but never more seriously than during the War of 1812. Despite the many studies of this turbulent time, there are still controversies over traditional issues, one being the quality of leadership on both sides. In British Generals in the War of 1812 Wesley Turner takes a fresh look at ve British Generals Sir George Prevost, Isaac Brock, Roger Sheaffe, Baron Francis de Rottenburg, and Gordon Drummond who held the highest civil and military command in the Canadas. He considers their formative experiences in the British Army and on active service in European and West Indian theatres and evaluates their roles in the context of North American conditions, which were very different from those of Europe. Turner answers questions about the quality of each generals leadership, particularly that of Isaac Brock, the best known of these ve generals. He argues that Brocks charge up Queenston Heights the basis for his heroic stature was brave but hardly a demonstration of competent leadership. Turner also shows us that while the other generals displayed courage in combat, they had to face problems raised by American military successes and by the strains of warfare on the civilian population. British Generals in the War of 1812 explores why these commanders succeeded or failed and why, except for Brock, they are all but forgotten. Wesley B. Turner, retired from the history department at Brock University, is the author of numerous books on the War of 1812, including The Astonishing General: Sir Isaac Brock in Canada (2011). He lives in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Carleton Library Series November 2011 978-0-7735-3937-2 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US, 19.99 paper 6 x 9 480pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S November 2011 978-0-7735-3931-0 $29.95T CDN, $29.95T US, 19.99 paper 6 x 9 288pp

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N AT I V E S T U D I E S P U B L I C P O L I C Y

C A N A D I A N H I S TO R Y AT L A N T I C H I S TO R Y

n e w i n pa p e r

n e w i n pa p e r

Beyond the Indian Act


Restoring Aboriginal Property Rights
tom f l anagan, ch ri s top he r al cantara, and andr le d res say
Foreword by C.T. (Manny) Jules With a new postscript by the authors

Lives and Landscapes


A Photographic Memoir of Outport Newfoundland and Labrador, 19491963
el me r j. harp
With an introductory essay by M.A.P. Renouf

While land claims made by Canadas aboriginal peoples continue to attract attention and controversy, there has been almost no discussion of the ways in which First Nations lands are managed and the property rights that have been in place since the Indian Act of 1876. Beyond the Indian Act looks at these issues and questions whether present land practices have beneted Canadas aboriginal peoples. Challenging current laws and management, this illuminating work proposes the creation of a new system that would allow First Nations to choose to have full ownership of property, both individually and collectively. The authors not only investigate the current forms of property rights on reservations but also expose the limitations of each system, showing that customary rights are insecure, certicates of possession cannot be sold outside the First Nation, and leases are temporary. As well, analysis of legislation, court decisions, and economic reports reveals that current land management has led to unnecessary economic losses. The authors propose creation of a First Nations Property Ownership Act that would make it possible for First Nations to take over full ownership of reserve lands from the Crown, arguing that permitting private property on reserves would provide increased economic advantages. Tom Flanagan is professor of political science at the University of Calgary and author of Harpers Team: Behind the Scenes in the Conservative Rise to Power and First Nations? Second Thoughts. Christopher Alcantara is assistant professor of political science at Wilfrid Laurier University. Andr Le Dressay is director of Fiscal Realities Economists and holds a PhD in economics from Simon Fraser University.

In the late 1940s Elmer Harp, a young PhD candidate at Harvard, began the rst of ve summers of exploration along the coast of the Strait of Belle Isle. Interested in studying early human activity in the area, he came to be equally fascinated with life in outport communities. During the summers of 194950 and 196163, he explored the coast, travelling from one isolated outport village to the next, initially by open boat and later on rudimentary roads, vividly capturing everyday life in his journals and through his extensive Kodachrome slides. In her introduction Priscilla Renouf places Harps story of rural northern Newfoundland in historical and anthropological context. She notes that there are economic and cultural continuities from prehistoric times to the present and shows that the fundamental structure of outport life based on shing and hunting remains today. Visually stunning and elegantly written narrative Harp has transcended the role of scholar and emerged as photographer and storyteller. This book is worthy of shelf-sharing with other Newfoundland classics. It is easy to read, has no jargon, and is highly recommended as a resource book for the general public and academics alike. Latonia Hartery, Department of Archaeology, University of Calgary Elmer Harp Jr. (19132009) was professor emeritus in the Department of Anthropology, Dartmouth College, a department he founded in 1967. M.A.P. Renouf is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and Canada Research Chair in North Atlantic Archaeology at the Department of Archaeology, Memorial University of Newfoundland.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S August 2011 978-0-7735-3921-1 $24.95T CDN, $24.95A US, 16.99 paper 6 x 9 248pp 8 tables

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S July 2011 978-0-7735-3924-2 $39.95T CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 8 x 9 288pp 200 colour photos and illustrations

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N O RTH AM E R I CA N H I STO RY

CA N A D I A N H I STO RY G E O G RA P HY

n e w i n pa p e r

n e w i n pa p e r

Frontier Cattle Ranching in the Land and Times of Charlie Russell


warren m. el of so n
A re-examination of the free-range cattle ranching era in Montana, Southern Alberta, and Southern Saskatchewan.

A Country So Interesting
The Hudsons Bay Company and Two Centuries of Mapping, 16701870
ri ch ard i. ruggles
With a new foreword by Jennifer Brown

Frontier Cattle Ranching in the Land and Times of Charlie Russell is the rst ever in-depth, cross-border study of the cattle ranching frontiers on the northern Great Plains of North America. Warren Elofson argues that although they lived on different sides of the forty-ninth parallel, the rst cattlemen on the western Canadian prairies and in the state of Montana shared a common history. They both forged societies composed of a considerable number of people drawn from eastern homelands by the visual media. They both started out with immense hope that was soon shattered by the natural and frontier environments. They were both dominated by wealthy cattlemen mainly from the East and a popular cowboy culture suited to the conditions of the frontier but designed in part by romance books, dime novels, and Wild West shows disseminated in New York, Chicago, Montreal, Toronto, London, and Edinburgh. They also went through a pattern of agricultural development that was eventually to establish the mixed or ranch-farm as the approach most suited to stock raising under northwestern conditions. And they helped to prepare the ground for the emergence of populist political approaches in which local women as well as men could demand and attain a prominent place. Elofson describes in vivid detail the power and inuence of the so-called cattle barons as well as the lives of the ranch hands on the open range and in the saloons and brothels that dotted the streets of the frontier towns. Warren M. Elofson, a former rancher in Alberta, is professor of history at the University of Calgary and the author of Cowboys, Gentlemen, and Cattle Thieves; Ranching on the Western Frontier and Somebody Elses Money: The Walrond Ranch Story, 18831907.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S September 2011 978-0-7735-3920-4 $27.95T CDN, 18.99 paper 6 x 9 264pp 30 b&w photos World rights except US

Winner: Clio Award for the Prairies Region, Canadian Historical Association Winner: CHOICE Outstanding Academic Book Award, CHOICE Magazine Maps were an essential tool for the Hudsons Bay Company and during the two centuries before Confederation the Company became the main mapping agency in British North America for the immense territory extending from Ungava Bay to the Pacic Ocean. In A Country So Interesting Richard Ruggles describes and analyses the mapping activities of more than 160 Company servants and surveyors as well as the contributions of more than 50 Indians and Inuit who drew sketches and provided original congurations. Also included are annotated catalogues of all the maps known to have been produced by the Hudsons Bay Company and sixty-six reproductions of the most important maps and sketches. The Hudsons Bay Company was responsible for the largest collection in North America of manuscript charts and maps related to the fur trade and Ruggles has produced the rst and most comprehensive study of this unique and rich body of material. The atlas is handsome enough to be a coffee table book, with the added bonus of combining a great deal of content and insightful analysis with a highly readable style. David Hornbeck, The Public Historian A substantial contribution to the history of Canadian cartography. Graeme Wynn, BC Studies Richard I. Ruggles (19232008) was professor emeritus in the Department of Geography, Queens University, a department he founded in 1960.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Ruperts Land Record Society Series August 2011 978-0-7735-3885-6 $49.95A CDN, $49.95A US, 34.00 paper 12 x 9 320pp 66 screened halftone plates, 9 b&w maps

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MEDIA STU DI ES LITERARY STU DI ES

MUSICOLOGY

n e w i n pa p e r

n e w i n pa p e r

Media, Memory, and the First World War


davi d wil l i ams
A cutting-edge, intellectually ambitious, and thought-provoking analysis of the familiar Great War canon that raises fascinating new possibilities for interpreting these works. Mark Sheftall, Duke University Why does the Great War seem part of modern memory when its rituals of mourning and remembrance were traditional, romantic, even classical? In this highly original history of memory, David Williams shows how classic Great War literature, including work by Remarque, Owen, Sassoon, and Harrison, was symptomatic of a cultural crisis brought on by the advent of cinema. He argues that images from Geoffrey Malins hugely popular war lm The Battle of the Somme (1916) collapsed social, temporal, and spatial boundaries, giving lm a new cultural legitimacy, while the appearance of writings based on cinematic forms of remembering marked a crucial transition from a verbal to a visual culture. By contrast, todays digital media are laying the ground for a return to Homeric memory, whether in History Television, the digital Memory Project, or the interactive war museum. Of interest to historians, classicists, media and digital theorists, literary scholars, museologists, and archivists, Media, Memory, and the First World War is a comparative study that shows how the dominant mode of communication in a popular culture from oral traditions to digital media shapes the structure of memory within that culture. A brilliant book that deserves a large readership because it considers deep matters in an impressively intelligent way This is a stunning work of imagination at so many levels the reader is challenged by its speculative links and suggestions. Winnipeg Free Press David Williams is professor of English, St Pauls College, University of Manitoba, and the author of Imagined Nations: Reections on Media in Canadian Fiction.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S McGill-Queens Studies in the History of Ideas October 2011 978-0-7735-3907-5 $29.95T CDN, $29.95T US, 19.99 paper 6 x 9 336pp

Old and New World Highland Bagpiping


jo h n g. gi bs o n
Gibsons passion for the subject shines through on every page and there can be no denying his knowledge of the sources for piping history. David Waterhouse, University of Toronto

Old and New World Highland Bagpiping provides a comprehensive biographical and genealogical account of pipers and piping in highland Scotland and Gaelic Cape Breton. The work is the result of over thirty years of oral eldwork among the last Gaels in Cape Breton, for whom piping t unself-consciously into community life, as well as an exhaustive synthesis of Scottish archival and secondary sources. Reecting the invaluable memories of now-deceased new world Gaelic lorebearers, John Gibson shows that traditional community piping in both the old and new world Gihealtachlan was, and for a long time remained, the same, exposing the distortions introduced by the tendency to interpret the written record from the perspective of modern, post-eighteenth-century bagpiping. Following up the argument in his previous book, Traditional Gaelic Bagpiping, 17451945, Gibson traces the shift from tradition to modernism in the old world through detailed genealogies, focusing on how the social function of the Scottish piper changed and step-dance piping progressively disappeared. Old and New World Highland Bagpiping will stir controversy and debate in the piping world while providing reminders of the value of oral history and the importance of describing cultural phenomena with great care and detail. An excellent work, well researched, splendidly footnoted, a book anyone with an interest in the subject will nd a must have. The Canadian Historical Review John G. Gibson, a scholar of Gaelic culture and ethnographer who lives in Judique, Nova Scotia, is also the author of Traditional Gaelic Bagpiping, 17451945 and The Back o the Hill.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S McGill-Queens Studies in Ethnic History September 2011 978-0-7735-3923-5 $34.95T CDN, $34.95T US, 22.99 paper 6 x 9 448pp Illustrations

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P U B L I C P O L I C Y M I G R AT I O N S T U D I E S

ECONOMICS PUBLIC POLICY

Interregional Migration and Public Policy in Canada


An Empirical Study
kath l ee n m. day and stanl e y l . wi ne r
An in-depth analysis of the impact of interprovincial differences in the generosity of public policies on internal migration in Canada.

Intergovernmental Policy Capacity in Canada


Inside the Worlds of Finance, Environment, Trade, and Health
grego ry j. i nwo od, caro lyn m. johns , and patrici a l . orei lly
A comparative analysis of what prevents governments in Canada from working together on todays major policy challenges.

Given Canadas vast geography and uneven distribution of economic activity, almost all Canadians have at one time or another faced the question of whether an interprovincial move would make them better off. Using a unique dataset based on income tax records, authors Kathleen Day and Stanley Winer examine the factors inuencing the decision to migrate within Canada, paying special attention to the role of regional variation in the generosity of public policies including unemployment insurance, taxation, and public expenditure. The inuence of extraordinary events such as the election of a separatist government in Quebec and the closure of the east coast cod shery is also considered. They look at why we ought to be concerned about public policies that interfere with market-based incentives to move, provide a wealth of information on interregional differences in public policies and market conditions, and examine what other researchers have discovered about scally induced migration, culminating in a discussion of the likely impact of various policy changes on migration and provincial unemployment rates. The authors assessment of the lessons to be learned from their own and past research on policy-induced migration in Canada will be of interest to students of migration and policy makers alike. Kathleen M. Day is associate professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Ottawa. Stanley L. Winer is Canada Research Chair Professor in Public Policy at the School of Public Policy and the Department of Economics, Carleton University.

In a highly networked world, where governments must cope with increasingly complex and inter-related policy problems, the capacity of policy makers to work intergovernmentally is not an option but a necessity. Gregory Inwood, Carolyn Johns, and Patricia OReilly offer unique insights into intergovernmental policy capacity, revealing what key decision-makers and policy advisors behind the scenes think the barriers are to improved intergovernmental policy capacity and what changes they recommend. Senior public servants from all jurisdictions in Canada discuss the ideas, institutions, actors, and relations that assist or impede intergovernmental policy capacity. Covering good and bad economic times and comparing insiders concerns and recommendations with those of scholars of federalism, public policy, and public administration, they provide a comparative analysis of major policy areas across fourteen governments. Intergovernmental policy capacity, while of increasing importance, is not well understood. By examining how the Canadian federation copes with todays policy challenges, the authors provide guideposts for federations and governments around the world working on the major policy issues of our day. Gregory J. Inwood is professor in the Department of Politics and Public Administration at Ryerson University. Carolyn M. Johns is associate professor, Department of Politics and Public Administration, and director of the PhD in Policy Studies Program at Ryerson University. Patricia L. OReilly is associate professor in the Department of Politics and Public Administration at Ryerson University.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Carleton Library Series November 2011 978-0-7735-3745-3 $34.95A CDN, $34.95A US, 22.99 paper 978-0-7735-3744-6 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 480pp 185 tables, 70 graphs

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S December 2011 978-0-7735-3895-5 $34.95A CDN, $34.95A US, 22.99 paper 978-0-7735-3894-8 $100.00S CDN, $100.00S US, 75.00 cloth 6 x 9 544pp

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Q U E B E C H I STO RY PO L I TI CA L S C I E N C E

R ELIGIOUS STU DI ES SOC IOLOGY

Contemporary Quebec
Selected Readings and Commentaries
e di t e d by mi ch ael d . be h i el s and matt he w h ayday
A compelling and informative overview of Quebecs evolution over the past several decades.

Gods Plenty
Religious Diversity in Kingston
wi ll iam clo ss on james
A complete religious topography of a mid-sized Canadian city in the early twenty-rst century, inspired by the Harvard Pluralism Project.

In the last seventy years, Quebec has changed from a society dominated by the social edicts of the Catholic Church and the economic interests of anglophone business leaders to a more secular culture that frequently elects separatist political parties and has developed the most comprehensive welfare state in North America. In Contemporary Quebec, leading scholars raise provocative questions about the ways in which Quebec has been transformed since the Second World War and offer competing interpretations of the reasons for the provinces quiet and radical revolutions. Collecting the works of historians, political scientists, sociologists, experts in aboriginal studies and womens studies, chapters consider issues ranging from language policies, to progressive changes in gender roles and norms, and intense debates surrounding issues of nationalism and identity. Providing a remarkably clear and engaging overview of the major themes, issues, and events of Quebec history, culture, and politics, Contemporary Quebec is an invaluable resource for history and Canadian studies courses, and an ideal introduction for anyone wanting to better understand this dynamic province.
For a full list of contributors please visit our website at www.mqup.ca.

Michael D. Behiels is University Research Chair, Canadian Federalism and Constitutional Studies, at the University of Ottawa and author of Canadas Francophone Minority Communities: Constitutional Renewal and the Winning of School Governance. Matthew Hayday is associate professor of history at the University of Guelph and the author of Bilingual Today, United Tomorrow: Ofcial Languages in Education and Canadian Federalism.

Religious life in Canada has changed dramatically in recent decades due to secularization and the population shifts resulting from urbanization and immigration. New varieties of pluralism have emerged, entailing massive changes in a culture once assumed to be almost uniformly Christian. Gods Plenty examines the religious landscape of Kingston, Ontario, in the twenty-rst century. The rich religious life of Kingston a mid-sized city with a strong sense of its history and its status as a university town is revealed in a narrative that integrates material from sociological and historical studies, websites, interviews, religious and literary scholarship, and personal experience. In Kingston, as in every Canadian city, downtown parishes and congregations have dwindled, disappeared, or moved to the suburbs. Attendance at mainline churches and their political authority has declined. Ethnic diversity has increased within Christian churches, while religious communities beyond Christianity and Judaism have grown. Faith groups have split along liberal and conservative lines, and the number of those claiming to have no religion or to be spiritual but not religious has increased. Yet amidst all this, religion continues to be evident in institutions and public life and important to the lives of many Canadians. Gods Plenty, a ground-breaking contribution to the study of religion in Canada and a model for future community-based research, is the rst overview of the religious topography of a Canadian city, telling the story of various faith communities and adding to the study of religious diversity and multiculturalism. A specialist in religion in Canada, William Closson James has been a member of the Department of Religious Studies at Queens University for more than thirty-ve years.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S October 2011 978-0-7735-3925-9 $34.95A CDN paper 978-0-7735-3889-4 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 456pp 20 b&w photos

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S January 2012 978-0-7735-3891-7 $54.95A CDN, $54.95A US, 37.00 paper 978-0-7735-3890-0 $135.00S CDN, $135.00S US, 101.00 cloth 6.125 x 9.125 824pp 10 graphs

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C A N A D I A N H I S TO R Y P U B L I C A D M I N I S T R AT I O N

C O M M U N I C AT I O N S S T U D I E S P O L I T I C A L S C I E N C E

On to Civvy Street
Canadas Rehabilitation Program for Veterans of the Second World War
p e t er ne ary
The story of the origins of the Veterans Charter, a program that shaped the future of a generation of Canadians.

Everyone Says No
Public Service Broadcasting and the Failure of Translation
kyle co nway
A look back at the failures of the media during the collapse of the Meech Lake and Charlottetown Accords.

The bungled demobilization of Canadians returning from the First World War contributed to a period of intense political, social, and economic upheaval. At the outbreak of the Second World War, Ottawa having learned from the previous domestic turmoil immediately began planning for the return of veterans, who ultimately numbered more than one million, to civilian life. On to Civvy Street tells the story of the development and administration of the resulting program, which shaped an entire generation. Detailing the ways in which the Canadian government built on existing programs for veterans, Peter Neary identies the key gures and events responsible for developing the orders and statutes that came to be known as the Veterans Charter, creating the Department of Veterans Affairs, and establishing sweeping new benets for servicemen and women. Comparing rehabilitation programs after the Second World War with those after the First World War, Neary reveals the lasting importance of the countrys new way of expressing its obligations to veterans. He shows that the measures developed to reintegrate them into civilian society became essential building blocks for the Canadian welfare state and helped pave the way for the unprecedented prosperity of the 1950s. A comprehensive study of a fundamental change in the relationship between government and citizens, On to Civvy Street is also a timely reminder of the debt the country owes its veterans. Peter Neary is professor emeritus in the Department of History at The University of Western Ontario.

Quebec has never signed on to Canadas constitution. After both major attempts to win Quebecs approval the Meech Lake and Charlottetown Accords failed, Quebec came within a fraction of a percentage point of voting for independence. Everyone Says No examines how the failure of these accords was depicted in French and English media and the ways in which journalists reporting failed to translate the differences between Quebec and the rest of Canada. Focusing on the English- and French-language networks of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Kyle Conway draws on the cbc/Radio Canadas rich print and video archive as well as journalists accounts of their reporting to revisit the story of the accords and the furor they stirred in both French and English Canada. He shows that the cbc/Radio Canadas attempts to translate language and culture and encourage understanding among Canadians conrmed viewers pre-existing assumptions rather than challenging them. The rst book to examine translation in Canadian news, Everyone Says No also provides insight into Canadas constitutional history and the challenges faced by contemporary public service broadcasters in increasingly multilingual and multicultural communities. Kyle Conway is assistant professor of communication in the English Department, University of North Dakota.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S November 2011 978-0-7735-3927-3 $29.95A CDN paper 978-0-7735-3913-6 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 368pp 65 b&w photos, 7 tables

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S November 2011 978-0-7735-3934-1 $27.95A CDN, $27.95A US, 18.99 paper 978-0-7735-3933-4 $90.00S CDN, $90.00S US, 67.00 cloth 6 x 9 200pp

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I N T E R N AT I O N A L D E V E L O P M E N T P O L I T I C A L S C I E N C E

AFR ICAN STU DI ES CON FLICT STU DI ES

Elections in Dangerous Places


Democracy and the Paradoxes of Peacebuilding
e d i t e d by david gi ll ies
An important look at when and how to hold elections in war-torn countries and situations of conict.

Recounting Migration
Political Narratives of Congolese Young People in Uganda
ch ri s tina r. cl ark-kazak
Clark-Kazak captures the humanity of Congolese young people through their stories, moving beyond the identities that have been cast upon them by the outside world. Lieutenant-General the Honourable Romo A. Dallaire (Retd) Millions of citizens from the Democratic Republic of Congo (drc) have been killed or displaced during decades of political corruption and military conict. Many forced migrants are young people, who are often seen either as passive victims or as radicalized and amoral child soldiers perpetuating the cycle of violence. Recounting Migration refutes these stereotypes by presenting young Congolese refugees nuanced understanding of the complex power relations that affect their everyday lives. Christina Clark-Kazak, a former international aid worker, uses extensive interviews done in Kampala and Kyaka II refugee settlement, Uganda, to present the narratives of ten young people living as refugees. Their accounts reveal both political awareness and individual agency in everyday and extraordinary circumstances. The author shows how refugee youth seek to inuence decision-making processes in families, communities, and at policy levels through formal and informal mechanisms, as well as through non-political channels such as education and music. She juxtaposes their interpretations of the situations with the discourse and bureaucracy of international aid organizations, showing the sometimes radical differences between these perspectives. ClarkKazak not only provides insight into the politics of labelling but offers recommendations for future research, policy, and programs for refugee young people. A remarkable and compelling look at the lives of young refugees, Recounting Migration challenges stereotypes by giving these migrants a long-overdue opportunity to speak for themselves. Christina R. Clark-Kazak is an assistant professor of international studies at York University.

From Afghanistan and Iraq to Haiti, Cote dIvoire, and Egypt, ill-timed, fraudulent, or poorly managed elections have led to discord, violence, and even regime change. While much of the international community views elections as a critical milestone in the stabilization of war-torn societies, Elections in Dangerous Places shows how awed elections can act as democracy in reverse and diminish political legitimacy and stable governance. Through a series of frank and incisive case studies of conicted countries, contributors chapters challenge the centrality and timing of elections as a key pillar of reconstruction at a wars end. They underline the dangers in rushing elections, compromising principles, and lowering the bar for what constitutes free and fair elections in situations of conict. The authors also underline the economic cost of elections in uncertain political situations and argue that global taxpayers, who must bear the burden, are justied in questioning the value of ill-timed elections. A candid and important study of political turmoil, Elections in Dangerous Places provides valuable lessons and practical advice on how to better mitigate conict and violence before, during, and after highly charged elections.
For a full list of contributors please visit our website at www.mqup.ca.

David Gillies is principal researcher, Fragile and Conict-Affected States, The North-South Institute in Ottawa.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Published for The North-South Institute August 2011 978-0-7735-3936-5 $32.95A CDN, $29.95A US, 19.99 paper 978-0-7735-3935-8 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 344pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S August 2011 978-0-7735-3882-5 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US, 19.99 paper 978-0-7735-3881-8 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 248pp 4 maps

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MQU P FALL 2011

P O L I T I C A L S C I E N C E I N T E R N AT I O N A L S T U D I E S

PH I LOSOPHY WOMENS STU DI ES

Secessionism
Identity, Interest, and Strategy
jas o n s o rens
An examination of the reasons independence movements remain peaceful or become violent.

The Return of Feminist Liberalism


rut h abbey
A detailed evaluation of the allegiance between feminism and liberalism.

There are numerous regions where movements for sovereignty or independence are seen as serious alternatives to the status quo. Quebec, Scotland, Catalonia, and Flanders have followed a generally non-violent, political process, while movements in Kashmir, the Basque Country, Chechnya, and Kurdistan have led to militancy or civil war. Secessionism is the rst work to examine why secessionist struggles occur and why some of them become violent, while offering constructive suggestions for keeping the peace in contested regions. Using innovative methods to analyze both advanced democracies and developing countries, Jason Sorens shows how central governments can alleviate or increase ethnic minority demands for regional autonomy. He argues that when countries treat secession as negotiable and provide legal paths to pursuing it rather than absolutely prohibiting independence, violence is far less likely. Additionally, independence movements encourage government policies of decentralization that may be benecial to regional minorities. An informative investigation of the root causes of political violence, Secessionism provides a clear-eyed look at independence movements for both governments and secessionists. Jason Sorens is assistant professor of political science at the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York.

A meticulously researched, thoughtful, and clearly written discussion of crucial developments in feminist liberal theory over the past fty years. A tremendously valuable contribution to feminist theory. Molly Shanley, Vassar College A major issue in recent English-language feminist political thought has been whether liberalism can continue to serve feminist purposes or should be relegated to the past. In The Return of Feminist Liberalism, Ruth Abbey examines the positions of three contemporary feminists Martha Nussbaum, Susan Moller Okin, and Jean Hampton who, notwithstanding decades of feminist critique, are unwilling to give up on liberalism. Abbey examines why, and in what ways, each of these theorists believes that liberalism offers the normative and political resources for the improvement of womens lives. Going beyond their shared allegiance to liberalism, Abbey explains and evaluates their theoretical differences, and in so doing, goes to the heart of recent debates in feminist and political theory. It is likely to become the go-to resource for scholars and students interested in liberal feminism, or feminist liberalism. Amy Baehr, Hofstra University, New York Ruth Abbey is associate professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S October 2011 978-0-7735-3930-3 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US, 19.99 paper 978-0-7735-3896-2 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 240pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S August 2011 978-0-7735-3916-7 $32.95A CDN, $32.95A US paper 978-0-7735-3914-3 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 6 x 9 352pp North American rights

25

MQU P FALL 2011

PHILOSOPHY

PHILOSOPHY

The Philosophy of Sartre


ant ho ny h at zi moys is
A careful and insightful discussion of the phenomenology and ontology that underpin Sartres existentialism and the methodological and metaphilosophical commitments these are rooted in An excellent introduction and a valuable contribution to scholarly and philosophical discussion of Sartre. Jonathan Webber, Cardiff University

The Philosophy of Heidegger


mi ch ae l watts
A deep and wide knowledge of Heideggers texts, an unusual ability to bring the issues alive and an unpretentious written style combine in The Philosophy of Heidegger in a truly impressive way. Dan Watts, University of Essex

As a playwright, novelist, political theorist, literary critic, and philosopher, Jean-Paul Sartre (19051980) remains an iconic gure. This book examines his philosophical ideas and methods. Anthony Hatzimoysis gives readers a clear understanding of Sartres approach to the activity of philosophising and shows how his method favours certain types of analysis. Each chapter considers a range of issues in the Sartrean corpus, including his conception of phenomenology, the question of selfidentity, the Sartrean view of conscious beings, his understanding of the self, his theory of value, his notion of human action as both the originator and the outcome of social processes, dialectical reason, and his conception of artistic activity. Providing an introductory guide in plain language for the reader who wishes to understand Sartres philosophical arguments, The Philosophy of Sartre reconstructs key instances of Sartres philosophical reasoning at work and shows how certain questions arise for Sartre and what philosophical tools he uses to address those questions. Anthony Hatzimoysis is assistant professor in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Athens.

In The Philosophy of Heidegger, Michael Watts provides an overview of Heideggers thoughts that is suitable for both beginning and advanced students. Free from jargon and the standard idioms of academic philosophical writing, Watts uses several illustrations and concrete examples to introduce key Heideggrian concepts such as throwness, the clearing, authenticity, falling, moods, nullity, temporality, Ereignis, enframing, dwelling, and Gelassenheit. He avoids over-involvement with the secondary literature and with wider philosophical debates, which gives the writing an immediate, accessible voice. Ranging widely across Heideggers writings, the book displays an impressively thorough knowledge of his corpus, navigating the difcult relationship between the earlier and later texts and giving the reader a strong sense of the fundamental motives and overall continuity of Heideggers thought. Michael Watts tackles Heidegger with exemplary skill, tenacity, and sobriety. He presents Heideggers thoughts in plain, uncluttered prose and steers the reader through the complexities of Heideggers terminology. A reliable and congenial guide for ones rst approach to Heidegger. Michael Inwood, University of Oxford Michael Watts is a professional psychologist and independent writer. He has published widely on existentialist philosophy, including Kierkegaard.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Continental European Philosophy August 2011 978-0-7735-3939-6 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US paper 978-0-7735-3938-9 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 6.125 x 9.125 224pp North American rights

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Continental European Philosophy August 2011 978-0-7735-3917-4 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US paper 978-0-7735-3915-0 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 6.125 x 9.125 288pp North American rights

26

MQU P FALL 2011

PHILOSOPHY

PHILOSOPHY

Gilles Deleuze
Key Concepts, Second Edition
e di t e d by ch arl es j. s ti vale
A basic, rigorous, and accessible starting point for teaching Deleuze.

Kants Critique of Pure Reason


An Introduction
jame s o s h ea
An accessible introduction to a landmark work of Western philosophy.

One of the most radical philosophers of the twentieth century, Gilles Deleuze has become hugely inuential in philosophy, cultural studies, literature, art, and architecture. Gilles Deleuze: Key Concepts brings together leading specialists from a variety of different disciplines in an easy-to-access primer on Deleuzes work. Deleuzes concepts such as assemblage, the fold, difference and repetition, cinema and desire are key to understanding his philosophical approach: they work to unsettle particular bodies of knowledge, to open them up and link them to other concepts within and outside that body of knowledge. The short and accessible chapters in this book each focus on a single concept, offering a denition and showing what the concept does. The contributors also consider how the concepts are engaged, intersect, and link, and how they may deviate from other areas of postmodern thought. Gilles Deleuze: Key Concepts is aimed at a readership new to Deleuze both from within philosophy and outside the discipline. Accessible and stimulating, this collection is to be recommended both for drop-in and for season-ticket pursuants of Deleuzes conceptual orchestra. French Studies
For a full list of contributors please visit our website at www.mqup.ca.

Most philosophy students encounter Kants Critique of Pure Reason at some point in their studies, but at nearly seven hundred pages of detailed and complex arguments it can be a demanding and intimidating read. Aimed at students coming to the book for the rst time, James OSheas short introduction provides a step by step analysis of Kants text in clear, unambiguous prose. The conceptual problems Kant sought to resolve are outlined, and his conclusions concerning the nature of the faculty of human knowledge and the possibility of metaphysics as well as the arguments for those conclusions are explored. In addition, OShea shows how the Critique ts into the history of modern philosophy and how transcendental idealism affected the course of philosophy. Key concepts are explained throughout and the student is provided with an excellent route map through the various parts of the text. James OShea is senior lecturer in philosophy at University College Dublin.

introducing a new series t h i s way u p


The books in This Way Up, a new series from Acumen Publishing, provide guides to the major works of the philosophical canon.

Charles J. Stivale is distinguished professor of French at Wayne State University in Detroit.


S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Key Concepts October 2011 978-0-7735-3947-1 $27.95A CDN, $24.95A US paper 6 x 9 256pp North American rights S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Acumen Publishing October 2011 978-1-84465-279-2 $24.95A CDN, $24.95A US paper 978-1-84465-278-5 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 5.5 x 8.5 192pp North American rights

This Way Up

27

MQU P FALL 2011

PHILOSOPHY

PHILOSOPHY

Time and Philosophy


A History of Continental Thought
jo hn m c cumbe r

The Musical Structure of Platos Dialogues


j.b. kennedy
How Plato used the musical scale as an outline for structuring his narratives.

In Time and Philosophy, John McCumber presents a detailed survey of continental thought through a historical account of its key texts. The common theme taken up in each text is how philosophical thought should respond to time. Looking at the development of continental philosophy in both Europe and America, McCumber discusses philosophers ranging from Hegel, Marx, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Husserl, Heidegger, Arendt, Adorno and Horkheimer, Sartre, de Beauvoir, Foucault, and Derrida to the most inuential thinkers of today Agamben, Badiou, Butler, and Rancire. Throughout, McCumbers concern is to elucidate the primary texts for readers coming to these thinkers for the rst time, while revealing the philosophical rigour that underpins and connects the history of continental thought. Time and Philosophy lls a great vacuum in the literature on continental philosophy, providing students with an invaluable orientation into this complex tradition. James Luchte, University of Wales Trinity Saint David John McCumber is professor in the Department of Germanic Languages at ucla.

Followers of Pythagoras famously thought that the cosmos had a hidden musical structure and that wise philosophers would be able to hear this harmony of the spheres. J.B. Kennedy argues that Platos dialogues have an unsuspected musical structure and uses symbols to decode his Pythagorean doctrines. Kennedy shows that Plato gave his dialogues a similar musical structure, dividing each dialogue into twelve parts and inserting symbols at each twelfth to mark a musical note. These passages are either harmonious or dissonant and traverse the ups and downs of a known musical scale. Many of Platos early followers insisted that Plato used symbols to conceal his own views within the dialogues, but modern scholars have denied this. Kennedy, an expert in Pythagorean mathematics and music theory, is able to show that Platos dialogues contain a system of symbols that are undetectable by those without knowledge of obsolete Greek mathematics. The book begins with a concise and accessible introduction to Platos symbolic schemes and the role of allegory in ancient times. The author then annotates the musical symbols in two of Platos most popular dialogues, the Symposium and Euthyphro, and shows that Plato used the musical scale as an outline for structuring his narratives. J.B. Kennedy, lecturer in the Centre for the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine at the University of Manchester, is the author of Space, Time and Einstein.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S September 2011 978-0-7735-3943-3 $29.95A CDN, $27.95A US paper 978-0-7735-3942-6 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 6 x 9 352pp North American rights

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Acumen Publishing June 2011 978-1-84465-267-9 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US paper 978-1-84465-266-2 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 6.125 x 9.125 240pp North American rights

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MQU P FALL 2011

PHILOSOPHY

PHILOSOPHY

Ethics for a Broken World


Imagining Philosophy after Catastrophe
t i m mul gan
A bold, creative, provocative, ingenious, and important book that will be of tremendous interest to students and teachers of ethical, political, and environmental philosophy. John Seery, Pomona College, California Imagine living in the future in a world already damaged by humankind, a world where resources are insufcient to meet everyones basic needs and where a chaotic climate makes life precarious. Then imagine looking into the past back to our own time and assessing the ethics of the early twenty-rst century. In Ethics for a Broken World, Tim Mulgan imagines how the future might judge us and how living in a time of global environmental degradation might reshape the politics and ethics of the future. Presented as a series of history of philosophy lectures given in the future, studying the classic texts from a past age of afuence our own the central ethical questions of our time are shown to look very different from the perspective of a ruined world. By looking into the future to revisit the present, Mulgan aims to reimagine contemporary philosophy in an historical context and, with the benet of hindsight, highlight the contingency of our own moral and political ideals. Tim Mulgan is professor of moral and political philosophy at the University of St Andrews. His books include Understanding Utilitarianism.

Global Ethics
An Introduction
h eath er wid dows
A superb analysis of the ethical issues that arise at the global level. One particularly attractive feature of the book is the way it unites ethical analysis with detailed accounts of the practical challenges that we face today. Simon Caney, University of Oxford

The study of global ethics addresses some of the most pressing ethical concerns today, including rogue states, torture, scarce resources, poverty, migration, consumption, global trade, medical tourism, and humanitarian intervention. How we resolve or fail to resolve the dilemmas of global ethics shapes how we understand ourselves, our relationships with one another, and the social and political frameworks of governance now and into the future. This is seen most clearly in the case of climate change, where our actions now determine the environment our grandchildren will inherit. Heather Widdows introduces students to the theory and practice of global ethics, ranging over issues in global governance and citizenship, poverty and development, war and terrorism, bioethics, environmental and climate ethics, and gender justice. An excellent text that deserves to become the standard introduction to the topic. An impressive achievement, the book is at once usable, engaging, and thought-provoking. Bob Brecher, University of Brighton Heather Widdows is professor of global ethics in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Birmingham and lead editor of the Journal of Global Ethics.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S November 2011 978-0-7735-3945-7 $27.95T CDN, $22.95T US paper 978-0-7735-3944-0 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 6 x 9 256pp North American rights

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Acumen Publishing September 2011 978-1-84465-282-2 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US paper 978-1-84465-281-5 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 6.125 x 9.125 288pp North American rights

29

MQU P FALL 2011

PHILOSOPHY

PHILOSOPHY

A Priori
e dwin mare s
An accessible introduction to the standard topics and current debates within a priori knowledge.

reannouncing

Commitment
pi ers be nn
What is commitment, and why should it matter?

In recent years many inuential philosophers have argued that philosophy is an a priori science, yet few epistemology textbooks discuss a priori knowledge at any length, focusing instead on empirical knowledge and justication. Although a priori knowledge has moved to centre stage, the literature remains either too technical or too out-of-date to make up a reasonable component of an undergraduate course. Edwin Mares seeks to make the standard topics and current debates within a priori knowledge including necessity and certainty, rationalism, empiricism and analyticity, Quines attack on the a priori, Kantianism, Aristotelianism, mathematical knowledge, moral knowledge, logical knowledge, and philosophical knowledge accessible to students. Edwin Mares is associate professor of philosophy at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. His books include Realism and Anti-Realism.

Most of us care deeply about certain people and things, and some of these concerns become personal commitments, involving our values, our relationships, our work, and our religious or political stances. But what is commitment, and why should it matter? Is social commitment for example, to the family being eroded by individualism or ironic detachment? How should we deal with the potential tension between devotion to something and the doubts prompted by pursuit of rational integrity? Piers Benn delves into the relationship between commitment and meaningful life, and asks whether commitment must be based on truth to provide such meaning. He also explores obstacles to commitment such as boredom, sloth, and indifference. Drawing on personal experience, Benn suggests that a sceptical, cautious attitude to important matters can be a virtue but also an obstacle to human fulllment. Piers Benn has lectured in philosophy at the universities of St Andrews and Leeds, and in medical ethics and law at Imperial College London. He is the author of Ethics.

Also in the series God W. Jay Wood 978-0-7735-3840-5 $29.95A CDN, $27.95A US paper Rights Duncan Ivison 978-0-7735-3329-5 $29.95A CDN, $27.95A US paper

Also in the series Hope Stan Van Hooft 978-1-84465-260-0 Distraction Damon Young 978-1-84465-254-9 $19.95T CDN paper $18.95T US paper Forgiveness Eve Garrard and David McNaughton 978-1-84465-226-6 $19.95T CDN paper $18.95T US paper S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Acumen Publishing October 2011 978-1-84465-231-0 $19.95T CDN, $18.95T US paper 5.5 x 7.5 160pp North American rights

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Central Problems of Philosophy October 2011 978-0-7735-3941-9 $29.95A CDN, $27.95A US paper 978-0-7735-3940-2 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 6 x 9 240pp North American rights

$19.95T CDN paper $18.95T US paper

Art of Living Series

30

MQU P FALL 2011

PHILOSOPHY

MUSIC PHILOSOPHY

Understanding Nietzscheanism
ash l ey wo odward

Friendly Remainders
Essays in Music Criticism after Adorno
murray d ine e n
A critical look at modern music from Beethoven and Coltrane to Schoenberg and Zappa.

Nietzsches critiques of traditional modes of thinking, valuing, and living, as well as his radical proposals for new alternatives, have been vastly inuential in a wide variety of areas, so that an understanding of his philosophy and its inuence is important for grasping many aspects of contemporary thought and culture. However Nietzsches thought is complex and elusive, and has been interpreted in many ways. Moreover, he has inuenced starkly contrasting movements and schools of thought, from atheism to theology, from existentialism to poststructuralism, and from Nazism to feminism. This book charts Nietzsches inuence, both historically and thematically, across a variety of disciplines and schools of interpretation. It provides both an accessible introduction to Nietzsches thought and its impact and an overview of contemporary approaches to Nietzsche. A superb achievement. The authors coverage of the phenomenon of Nietzscheanism is admirably comprehensive and hugely instructive. Students and teachers alike will nd lucid and informative accounts of the nature and impact of Nietzsches ideas on seminal movements in twentieth-century thought such as existentialism, poststructuralism and naturalism, as well as helpful treatments of important topics such as Nietzsche and posthumanism and Nietzsche and politics. Keith Ansell-Pearson, University of Warwick Ashley Woodward lectures in philosophy at the University of Melbourne, Australia.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Acumen Publishing October 2011 978-1-84465-293-8 $27.95A CDN, $24.95A US paper 978-1-84465-292-1 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US cloth 5.5 x 8.5 224pp North American rights

Theodor Adornos writings on Western music and the culture industry, always provocative and acerbic, have made his critical position on popular music well known, if not well understood. In Friendly Remainders Murray Dineen examines and extends Adornos critical method. Friendly Remainders draws on Adornos concept of the negative dialectic, examining its importance in Adornos thought and its critical application to musical forms. Moving beyond a positivist view where musical object and appreciation operate as a synthesis, the negative dialectic method focuses on divergence and dissonance in musical forms and in society. Contradictions and divergent details and concepts become remainders, friendly because of the fresh perspective they offer on musical forms. Dineen examines these contradictory remainders in subjects such as the fascist element in Wagners character, the torpor of Schoenbergs twelve-tone method, the selfcontradiction implicit in Beethovens Late Style, Frank Zappas attempt to dene himself as a serious composer, the reactionary stasis in Marilyn Mansons dvd Guns, God and Government World Tour, and the death motive in John Coltrane. Friendly Remainders takes seriously the project of making Adorno accessible, asking the same questions of classical and popular music taking the measure of Mahler as much as Manson for the value of the critical insights they provoke. Murray Dineen is professor of music theory and musicology at the University of Ottawa.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S

Understanding Movements in Modern Thought

October 2011 978-0-7735-3919-8 $32.95A CDN, $32.95A US, 21.99 paper 978-0-7735-3884-9 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 256pp 2 diagrams

31

MQU P FALL 2011

PHILOSOPHY POLITICAL THEORY

LAW

Public Passion
Rethinking the Grounds for Political Justice
re be cca ki ngsto n
A defence of the role of public emotion in politics.

Law, Ideology, and Collegiality


Judicial Behaviour in the Supreme Court of Canada
d onald r. s o nger, s usan w. joh ns on, c.l . ost berg, and matth ew e. wets tei n
A sweeping analysis of Canadian Supreme Court decision making using in-depth interviews and sophisticated methodology.

Whether in the reception of rousing political oratory like that of de Gaulle or Martin Luther King or in the motivations of demonstrators in popular uprisings like those in Tunisia and Egypt, there is no denying that emotion and politics are connected. Nonetheless, criticism of political debate and discourse as emotionally (rather than rationally) based is ubiquitous and emotion is often presented as a negative factor in politics. Public Passion shows that reason and emotion are not mutually exclusive and restores the legitimacy of shared emotion in political life. Public Passion traces the role of emotion in political thought from its prominence in classical sources, through its resuscitation by Montesquieu, to the present moment. Combining intellectual history, philosophy, and political theory, Rebecca Kingston develops a sophisticated account of collective emotion that demonstrates how popular sentiment is compatible with debate, pluralism, and individual agency and shows how emotion shapes the tone of interactions among citizens. She also analyzes the ways in which emotions are shared and transmitted among citizens of a particular regime, paying particular attention to the connection between political institutions and the psychological dispositions that they foster. Public Passion presents illuminating new ways to appreciate the forms of popular will and reveals that emotional understanding by citizens may in fact be the very basis through which a commitment to principles of justice can be sustained. Rebecca Kingston is associate professor of political science at the University of Toronto.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S McGill-Queens Studies in the History of Ideas October 2011 978-0-7735-3926-6 $32.95A CDN, $32.95A US, 21.99 paper 978-0-7735-3878-8 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 256pp

In a ground-breaking study on the nature of judicial behaviour in the Supreme Court of Canada, Donald Songer, Susan Johnson, C.L. Ostberg, and Matthew Wetstein use three specic research strategies to consider the ways in which justices seek to make decisions grounded in good law and to show how these decisions are shaped within a collegial court. The authors use condential interviews with Supreme Court justices, analysis of their rulings from 1970 to 2005, and measures that tap their perceived ideological tendences to provide a critical examination of the ideological roots of judicial decision making, uncovering the complexity of contemporary judicial behaviour. Examining judicial behaviour through the lens of three different research strategies grounded in qualitative and quantitative methodologies, Law, Ideology, and Collegiality presents compelling evidence that political ideology is a key factor in decision making and a prominent source of conict in the Supreme Court of Canada. Donald R. Songer, professor of political science at the University of South Carolina, is the author of The Transformation of the Supreme Court of Canada: An Empirical Examination. Susan W. Johnson is assistant professor of political science, University of North Carolina at Greensboro. C.L. Ostberg is professor of political science, director of the Legal Scholars Program, University of the Pacic, Stockton, California, and co-author of Attitudinal Decision Making in the Supreme Court of Canada. Matthew E. Wetstein is dean of Planning, Research, and Institutional Effectiveness, San Joaquin Delta College, Stockton, California, and co-author of Attitudinal Decision Making in the Supreme Court of Canada.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S January 2012 978-0-7735-3929-7 $29.95A CDN, $29.95A US, 19.99 paper 978-0-7735-3928-0 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 240pp 22 tables, 4 diagrams

32

MQU P FALL 2011

E U R O P E A N H I S TO R Y M I G R AT I O N S T U D I E S

H I STO RY S O C I A L S C I E N C E S

Ireland, Sweden, and the Great European Migration, 18151914


do nal d h arman ake ns o n
A comparative history of European emigration.

Nature and Nurture in French Social Sciences, 18591914 and Beyond


mart in s . staum
The dilemmas of early French social scientists inclined to stress either heredity or environment, but forced to concede the inuence of both.

This book is the product of Donald Akensons decades of research and writing on Irish social history and its relationship to the Irish diaspora it is also the product of a lifetime of trying to gure out where Swedish-America actually came from, and why. These two matters, Akenson shows, are intimately related. Ireland and Sweden each provide a tight case study of a larger phenomenon, one that, for better or worse, shaped the modern world: the Great European Diaspora of the true nineteenth century. Akensons book parts company with the great bulk of recent emigration research by employing sharp transnational comparisons and by situating the two case studies in the larger context of the Great European Migration and of what determines the physics of a diaspora: no small matter, as the concept of diaspora has become central to twenty-rst-century transnational studies. He argues (against the increasing refusal of mainstream historians to use empirical databases) that the history community still has a lot to learn from economic historians and, simultaneously, that (despite the self-condence of their proponents) narrow, economically based explanations of the Great European Migration leave out many of the most important aspects of the whole complex transaction. Akenson believes that culture and economic matters both count and that leaving either one on the margins of explanation yields no valid explanation at all. Donald Harman Akenson is Douglas Professor of Canadian and Colonial History at Queens University.

The relative importance of heredity or environmental inuence remains an enduring, hotly debated issue, while the legacy of scientic racism and sexism still tarnishes the twenty-rst century. This unique study analyzes how theories of inherited difference including race and gender affected French social scientists in the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The prevailing assumption has been that French ethnographers highlighted the cultural and social environment while anthropologists emphasized the scientic study of head and body shapes. Martin Staum shows that the temptation to gravitate towards one pole of the nature-nurture continuum often resulted in reluctant concessions to the other side. Psychologists Thodule Ribot and Alfred Binet, for example, were forced to recognize the importance of social factors. Non-Durkheimian sociologists were divided on the issue of race and gender as progressive and tolerant attitudes on race did not necessarily correlate with exible attitudes on gender. Recognizing this allows Staum to raise questions about the theory of the equivalence of all marginalized groups. Anthropological institutions re-organized before the First World War sometimes showed decreasing condence in racial theory but failed to abandon it completely. Staums chilling epilogue discusses how the persistent legacy of such theories was used by extremist anthropologists outside the mainstream to deploy racial ideology as a basis of persecution in the Vichy era. Martin S. Staum is professor emeritus of history, University of Calgary, and author of Labeling People: French Scholars on Society, Race, and Empire, 18151848 and Minervas Message: Stabilizing the French Revolution.
S P E C I F I C AT I O N S McGill-Queens Studies in the History of Ideas October 2011 978-0-7735-3892-4 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 256pp 6 b&w photos

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S June 2011 978-0-7735-3957-0 $65.00S CDN, $65.00S US cloth 6 x 9 320pp North American rights

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E D U C AT I O N M A N A G E M E N T

POLITICAL SCIENCE PUBLIC POLICY

Leadership Under Fire


The Challenging Role of the Canadian University President
ros s h . paul
An insightful commentary on the leadership challenges faced by university presidents and a comprehensive survey of the changing university landscape.

How Ottawa Spends, 20112012


Trimming Fat or Slicing Pork?
ed i ted by ch ristop her s to ney and g. bruce doern
A critical examination of the Harper Conservatives scal austerity strategies in the wake of Budget 20112012 and the often bitter politics of continued minority government. Continuing its tradition of timely and exemplary scholarship, the 20112012 edition of How Ottawa Spends examines national politics, priorities, and policies, with an emphasis on the austerity measures and budget-cutting strategy of the Harper Conservative government; it also includes an analysis of the outcome of the federal election in May 2011. Leading scholars from across Canada examine a new era of life under the knife in the context of the Harper agenda after ve years in power, the partisan calculus of a minority Parliament, and a deep global recession still in crisis mode. Given the budget-related pressure for an election, the book poses questions about the degree to which the budget agenda involves the political arts of trimming fat versus slicing the pork of partisan spending. Several closely linked political, policy, and spending realms are examined, including economic stimulus, environmental assessment, energy and climate change, health care, science and technology, immigration, and northern strategy (including affordable housing). Related governance issues such as the use of new media, regulatory budget cuts, Industry Canada as an economic regulator, and federal compensation costs are also discussed in detail.
For a full list of contributors please visit our website at www.mqup.ca.

While the role of the university president has evolved dramatically in recent years, the recruitment pool and selection process have changed little since the 1960s. In Leadership Under Fire, Ross Paul combines leadership theory, interviews with eleven of Canadas most successful presidents, and thirty-ve years of personal experience to shed light on the complexity and importance of leading a university and identies some of the critical challenges and opportunities facing Canadian universities today. Paul illuminates some of the ways in which Canadian universities are unique and uses these differences to make clear the importance of organizational cultural and institutional t for leaders confronting critical academic issues such as academic leadership and accountability, student success and support, university funding and fund-raising, strategic planning, government and community relations, and internationalism. His analysis reafrms some long-standing practices, while arguing that changes are badly needed in others. While much has been written about university leadership elsewhere, Leadership Under Fire focuses on Canada and some of the men and women who have made a real difference to the quality of its post-secondary institutions. Paul builds on their stories to offer useful perspectives and advice at a time when the quality of universities was never more critical to the countrys economic, social, and political success. Ross H. Paul has held senior leadership positions in four post-secondary institutions in three Canadian provinces over the past thirty-ve years, including tenures as president of Laurentian and Windsor Universities.

Christopher Stoney is a professor in the School of Public Policy and Administration at Carleton University. G. Bruce Doern is a professor in the School of Public Policy and Administration at Carleton University and in the Politics Department at the University of Exeter.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S September 2011 978-0-7735-3887-0 $49.95A CDN, $49.95S US, 34.00 cloth 6 x 9 344pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S How Ottawa Spends August 2011 978-0-7735-3918-1 $32.95A CDN, $32.95A US, 21.99 paper 6 x 9 280pp

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POLITICAL SC I ENC E SECU R ITY STU DI ES

P O L I T I C A L S C I E N C E I M M I G R AT I O N S T U D I E S

Security Operations in the 21st Century


Canadian Perspectives on the Comprehensive Approach
e d i t e d by mi chae l ros tek and p et e r gi zewski
How governmental and non-governmental agencies are coming together to tackle the centurys new security challenges. In recent years, there has been increased recognition of the need for a more coordinated and holistic approach to government security operations. To this end, various Canadian government departments have been investigating the effectiveness of a new collective approach to security operations known as the Comprehensive Approach. Such an undertaking would bring together the efforts of government departments, non-governmental organizations, and private sector entities to work towards a shared goal. Considerable progress has been made with this approach but questions remain regarding its sustainability. The authors demonstrate that the research and experience of academics and practitioners can be consolidated as Canada attempts to create a new standard for dealing with the security challenges of the 21st century.
For a full list of contributors please visit our website at www.mqup.ca.

International Migration in Uncertain Times


ed it ed by jo hn nieuwe nhuyse n, h oward duncan, stine ne e rup
How the economic crisis has affected policies of inclusion and exclusion.

This compelling volume examines changes to immigration ows and policy during the global economic crisis in the late 2000s. A series of analyses of countries and regions explores to what extent the crisis has affected migrant decisions, migration outcomes, and national policies. Authors also look at what the long-term effects may be on protection of migrants, support for immigration, labour markets, and the need for foreign workers. Finally, contributors consider whether changes are likely to be eeting or enduring and whether these changes fundamentally transform the way we think of migration ows and the role of migration policies.
For a full list of contributors please visit our website at www.mqup.ca.

Lieutenant-Colonel Michael Rostek, PhD, is a member of the Canadian Forces and currently leads a research team for the Canadian Army engaged in strategic foresight. Peter Gizewski is a senior defence scientist with Defence Research and Development Canadas Center for Operational Research and Analysis.

John Nieuwenhuysen (AM) is the director of the Monash Institute for the Study of Global Movements, Monash University. Howard Duncan is the executive head of Metropolis, Ottawa, Canada. Stine Neerup is a research associate at Monash Institute for the Study of Global Movements and a PhD fellow at the Centre for the Study of Equality and Multiculturalism, Copenhagen University.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Queens Policy Studies July 2011 978-1-55339-351-1 $39.95A CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 6 x 9 250pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S

Queens Centre for International Relations

Queens Policy Studies September 2011

Metropolis Project

978-1-55339-308-5 $39.95A CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 6 x 9 250pp

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POLITICAL SCIENCE

E D U C AT I O N P O L I C Y S T U D I E S

The Federal Idea


Essays in Honour of Ronald L. Watts
e d i t e d by t h omas j. co urch ene , jo hn r. all an, ch ris ti an l e up recht, and nad ia ve rrel l i
A collection of papers on the policies and practices of federalism across the globe.

Academic Reform
Policy Options for Improving the Quality and Cost-effectiveness of Undergraduate Education in Ontario
ian d . clark, david trick, and ri ch ard van l oon
An exploration of how universities can affordably increase the effectiveness of their undergraduate programs. Academic Reform provides realistic policy options for improving the quality and cost-effectiveness of undergraduate education in Ontario. The authors begin with the premise that the teacher-scholar ideal pursued by individual universities has led to a model for undergraduate education in Ontario that is nancially unsustainable and does not provide the best possible education for undergraduate students. Drawing on literature and recent policy initiatives in the United Kingdom, Australia, Germany, United States, and Canada, the authors show how to provide high-quality education to an ever-expanding number of students at a cost that is affordable to both students and governments. Academic Reform explores ways to sharpen the universities focus on undergraduate teaching and increase the number of students without diminishing Ontarios ability to attract and retain university researchers of the highest calibre. Ian D. Clark is a professor in the School of Public Policy and Governance at the University of Toronto. David Trick is president of David Trick and Associates. Richard Van Loon is president emeritus of Carleton University.

The Federal Idea is a collection of more than thirty papers by Canadian and international scholars on a wide range of issues relating to the theory and practice of federalism. The rst section, Celebrating Ron Watts, assesses Ronald Watts academic contributions to the study of federalism (including comparative federalism) as well as his important role as an advisor to federations across the globe. The second section, The Federal Idea: Concepts, explores different perspectives on federalism, both constitutional and citizen-related, and assesses the successes and failures of the federal idea. The nal section, The Federal Idea: Practice, addresses a range of policies and practices in individual federations. In addition to case studies, the contributors deal with such issues as scal federalism, intergovernmental relations, federalism in the European Union, Scottish devolution, and the differing approaches to upper chambers.
For a full list of contributors please visit our website at www.mqup.ca.

Thomas J. Courchene is the Jarislowsky-Deutsch professor of economics and nancial policy at Queens University. John R. Allan is a fellow and former associate director of the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations, Queens University. Christian Leuprecht is associate professor at the Royal Military College of Canada and holds cross-appointments at Queens University. Nadia Verrelli is a research associate at the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Queens Policy Studies December 2011 978-1-55339-198-2 $44.95A CDN, $44.95A US, 29.99 paper 978-1-55339-199-9 $105.00S CDN, $105.00S US, 80.00 cloth 6 x 9 500pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S

Institute of Intergovernmental Relations

Queens Policy Studies October 2011

School of Policy Studies

978-1-55339-310-8 $39.95A CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 978-1-55339-311-5 $85.00S CDN, $85.00S US, 64.00 cloth 6 x 9 250pp

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POLITICAL SCIENCE

POLITICAL SCIENCE PUBLIC POLICY

A New Synthesis of Public Administration


Serving in the 21st Century
jo ce lyne bo urgon
A study of how public service has changed in this new era of interconnectedness.

Diverse Nations, Diverse Responses


Approaches to Social Cohesion in Immigrant Societies
ed i ted by paul s po onle y and e rin toll e y
An overview of the historical, demographic, and political forces that shape social cohesion.

In an increasingly interconnected environment, shocks, crises, cascading failures, and surprising breakthroughs are features of our age. The ability to anticipate, intervene, innovate, and adapt is now seen as essential for governments. Public ofcials serve in an expanded public space that is being reshaped by the rise of social networking and modern information and communication technologies. The desired results on many public issues exceed the reach and resources of government. A New Synthesis of Public Administration sets out a theoretical framework that takes this new reality into account. It reveals how government forms part of a co-evolving system between people and society, where public results are a shared responsibility and citizens are respected as important creators of public value. The Honourable Jocelyne Bourgon is president of Public Governance International and distinguished research professor at the University of Waterloo.

In the decades since the Second World War, immigration has reshaped the racial, ethnic, religious, and linguistic diversity of many countries. While policies, programs, discourse, and public opinion vary across countries, concerns about social cohesion have been persistent and have increased in the wake of antiimmigrant politics and global economic insecurity. Diverse Nations, Diverse Responses provides a rich overview of the historical, demographic, and political forces that shape social cohesion. It also provides a comparative analysis of the policy goals that have been pursued, the programs that have been implemented, the ways that social cohesion has been dened and measured, and the effects of such issues on immigrants, minorities, and host communities. The volume provides a cross-national conversation on approaches to social cohesion and will appeal to researchers, policy-makers, and practitioners interested in immigration, diversity management, and the factors that affect policy choice, diversity, and outcomes.
For a full list of contributors please visit our website at www.mqup.ca.

Paul Spoonley is a research director for the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Massey University, New Zealand. Erin Tolley is a Trudeau Scholar and PhD candidate in political studies at Queens University.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Queens Policy Studies September 2011 978-1-55339-312-2 $39.95A CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 978-1-55339-313-9 $85.00S CDN, $85.00S US, 64.00 cloth 6 x 9 250pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S

School of Policy Studies

Queens Policy Studies June 2011

Metropolis Project

978-1-55339-309-2 $39.95A CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 6 x 9 250pp

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LABOU R STU DI ES PU BLIC POLICY

SOCIOLOGY PHILOSOPHY

Building More Effective Labour-Management Relationships


e d i t e d by ri ch ard p. ch aykows ki and ro bert hi cke y
A collection of papers that provide unique insights in the eld of industrial relations.

Rethinking the Political


The Sacred, Aesthetic Politics, and the Collge de Sociologie
s imone tta falas ca-zamponi
A compelling account of a controversial and innovative episode in sociological thought.

Building More Effective Labour-Management Relationships combines valuable insights into new approaches to relationship-building and collective bargaining with unique knowledge and concrete lessons garnered from some of the foremost industrial relations practitioners in Canada. Contributors include Warren Smokey Thomas (president, opseu), Buzz Hargrove (former president, caw), Warren Edmondson (former adm Labour, Government of Canada, and chair of the clrb), George Smith (former vp at cp Rail and cbc/Radio Canada), David Logan, (adm, Government of Ontario), Glenda Fisk (Queens University), Richard Chaykowski (Queens University), and Robert Hickey (Queens University). Richard P. Chaykowski is professor and director of the Master of Industrial Relations Program in the School of Policy Studies, Queens University. Robert Hickey is an assistant professor of Industrial Relations in the School of Policy Studies, Queens University.

From 1937 to 1939, a group of French intellectuals of diverse origins and disciplines gathered under the leadership of Georges Bataille and Roger Caillois to form the Collge de Sociologie. Inspired by Durkheims theory of the sacred as the symbolic foundation of community, and having witnessed the importance of symbolic aesthetics in the rise of fascism during the interwar years, the short-lived but profoundly innovative Collge examined the possibilities for social bonds in the modern secularized era. Rethinking the Political demonstrates that the Collge de Sociologies quest to create a new place for the sacred in modern collective life ostensibly entailed avoiding the theorization of both aesthetics and politics. While the Collge condemned manipulation by totalitarian regimes, its understanding of community also led to a rejection of democratic and communist forms of political organization, leaving the group open to accusations of irting with fascism. Acknowledging these political ambiguities, the author goes beyond a narrow ideological reading to reveal the Collges important contribution to our thinking about the relationships between community formation, politics, aesthetics, and the sacred in the modern world. She expands her historical account of the members thought, including their relationship to Surrealism, beyond the groups dissolution, and shows how the work of Claude Lefort extends, but also resolves, many of the Collges key theoretical insights. A fascinating study of some of the twentieth-centurys most daring thinkers, Rethinking the Political offers crucial insights into the contradictions at play in modern notions of community that still resonate today. Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi is professor of sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Queens Policy Studies November 2011 978-1-55339-306-1 $39.95A CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 6 x 9 250pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S

Industrial Relations

McGill-Queens Studies in the History of Ideas December 2011 978-0-7735-3901-3 $39.95A CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 978-0-7735-3900-6 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 296pp

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BIOGRAPHY J EWISH STU DI ES

F R E N C H H I STO RY WOM E N S STU D I E S

A Russian Jew of Bloomsbury


The Life and Times of Samuel Koteliansky
galya d i me nt
How a Russian Jew inuenced Britains turnof-the-century cultural and literary elite.

Between the Queen and the Cabby


Olympe de Gougess Rights of Woman
jo h n r. col e
The rst full exploration of de Gougess pamphlet advocating the extension of revolutionary rights to women.

Samuel Koteliansky (18801955) ed the pogroms of Russia in 1911 and established himself as a friend of many of Britains literati and intellectuals, who were fascinated by his homelands more civilized side: the Ballets Russes, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, and Chekhov. Kot, as he was known, soon became an indispensable guide to Russian culture for Englands leading writers, artists, and intellectuals, who in turn helped introduce English audiences to Russian works. A Russian Jew of Bloomsbury looks at the remarkable life and inuence that an outsider had on the tightly knit circle of Britains cultural elite. Among Kotelianskys friends were Katherine Manseld, Leonard and Virginia Woolf for whose Hogarth Press he translated many Russian classics Mark Gertler, Lady Ottoline Morrell, H.G. Wells, and Dilys Powell. But it was his close and turbulent friendship with D.H. Lawrence, with whom he had copious correspondence, that proved to be Kotelianskys lasting legacy. In a lively and vibrant narrative, Galya Diment shows how, despite Kots determination, he could never shake off the dark aspects of his past or overcome the streak of anti-Semitism that ran through British society and could be found in many of his famous literary friends. A stirring account of the early-twentieth century, Jewish migr life, and English and Russian letters, A Russian Jew of Bloomsbury casts new light and shadows on the giants of English modernism. Galya Diment is chair and professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Washington, Seattle.

Students of the French Revolution and of womens right are generally familiar with Olympe de Gougess bold adaptation of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. However, her Rights of Woman has usually been extracted from its literary context and studied without proper attention to the political consequences of 1791. In Between the Queen and the Cabby, John Cole provides the rst full translation of de Gougess Rights of Woman and the rst systematic commentary on its declaration, its attempt to envision a non-marital partnership agreement, and its support for persons of colour. Cole compares and contrasts de Gougess two texts, explaining how the original text was both her model and her foil. By adding a proposed marriage contract to her pamphlet, she sought to turn the ideas of the French Revolution into a concrete way of life for women. Further examination of her work as a playwright suggests that she supported equality not only for women but for slaves as well. Cole highlights the historical context of de Gougess writing, going beyond the inherent sexism and misogyny of the time in exploring why her work did not receive the reaction or achieve the inuential status she had hoped for. John R. Cole is the Thomas Hedley Reynolds Professor of History at Bates College in Lewiston, Maine.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S November 2011 978-0-7735-3899-3 $65.00S CDN, $59.95S US, 40.00 cloth 6 x 9 472pp 55 b&w photos

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S McGill-Queens Studies in the History of Ideas August 2011 978-0-7735-3886-3 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 328pp 17 drawings

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LITERARY STU DI ES

H I STO RY O F M E D I C I N E CA N A D I A N H I STO RY

Recesses of the Mind


On Aesthetics in Gubergur Bergssons Work
birna bjarnad t t ir
A detailed discussion of the aesthetics of Icelandic novelist and poet Gubergur Bergsson.

Restoring the Spirit


The Beginnings of Occupational Therapy in Canada, 18901930
j ud it h frie dland
Foreword by Christie Brenchley and Gail Teachman

Recesses of the Mind explores Gubergur Bergssons aesthetics of life and literature. Bergsson like so many writers whose language is not widely spoken or read is scarcely known outside his homeland, but the sychological depth of his vision reveals the minds of his characters in ways that are reminiscent of novelists such as Hamsun, Faulkner, and Garcia Mrquez. Birna Bjarnadttir constructs a deep and comprehensive argument for Bergssons signicance as a master of narrative. Crossing centuries, oceans, and continents, her contextualization of Bergssons aesthetics stretches from his native lands literary tradition to the cultural domains of Europe and North and South America. Her investigation of his ideas on beauty, love, and belief, presented as a dialogue between Bergsson and numerous other writers and philosophers Plotinus, Augustine, Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, Blanchot is a striking reection on some of the most important questions of modern times. Recesses of the Mind introduces a profound writer to the international stage. The books exploration of the cultural periphery is equally signicant, suggesting new interpretative strategies for considering cultural contributions from isolated places. Birna Bjarnadttir is the chair and acting head of the Department of Icelandic Language and Literature, University of Manitoba.

When injured soldiers returned from the First World War and needed to convalesce from severe injuries and trauma, a group of women were ready to help. Then known as ward aides, these women many of whom were artists or teachers used simple craft activities to raise morale, build self-esteem, and teach skills. Restoring the Spirit illuminates the origins of occupational therapy in Canada and shows how the profession became an indispensable part of modern health care. Tracing the inuence of popular political and social movements of the time, including the Mental Hygiene, Arts and Crafts, and Settlement House movements, Judith Friedland tells the stories of pioneering women in the eld and describes how they established professional associations, workshops, and educational programs. She highlights the help they received from male physicians, which gave them access to those with decision-making power, and examines their work in both rural and urban environments with those from different economic and ethnic backgrounds. An informative look at the origins of a eld that now has over thirteen thousand practitioners in Canada, Restoring the Spirit is also the compelling story of the rise of working women and their crucial contributions to the history of health care. Judith Friedland Judith Friedland is professor emerita in the Department of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S January 2012 978-0-7735-3910-5 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 304pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S October 2011 978-0-7735-3922-8 $39.95A CDN paper 978-0-7735-3912-9 $95.00S CDN, $95.00S US, 71.00 cloth 6 x 9 328pp

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G E O G RA P HY H I STO RY

CA N A D I A N H I STO RY

n e w i n pa p e r

available again

The Ordinary People of Essex


Environment, Culture, and Economy on the Frontier of Upper Canada
jo hn cl arke

Prelude to Quebecs Quiet Revolution


Liberalism vs Neo-Nationalism, 194560
mich ae l d. beh i els
A comprehensive, useful account intense, provocative. American Review of Canadian Studies

How great is the environments role in shaping the history of a region? The Ordinary People of Essex systematically analyzes the use of land in Upper Canada, particularly the inuence of agricultural activity on the area. Presenting the ndings of an impressive collection of statistical data, John Clarke creates a detailed map and rich history of the region by tracking the successes and failures of land practices commonly employed by settlers in Essex County. Clarke covers a remarkable number of topics, including geographic factors in the choice of agricultural land, land acquisition and clearance, energy expended in clearing and planting the land, and selection of specic crops and their extent and yields in particular combinations of soils. He also investigates the geographic parameters for wheat production which drove the local economy and the cultural origins of farmers as it relates to their use of intensive and extensive agriculture. Brimming with detail and expert analysis, The Ordinary People of Essex is an illuminating study of settler life and the conditions that make it possible to found a community. It complements the authors award-winning Land, Power, and Economics. John Clarke is a Distinguished Research Professor at Carleton University and a recent recipient of the Canadian Association of Geographers award for service to Ontario geography.

Michael Behiels study of the intellectual origins of Quebecs Quiet Revolution of the 1960s provides the most comprehensive account to date of the two competing ideological movements that emerged after the Second World War to challenge the tenets of traditional French-Canadian nationalism. The neo-nationalists, a group of young intellectuals and journalists centered around Le Devoir and LAction nationale in Montreal, set out to reformulate Quebec nationalism in terms of a modern, secular, urban-industrial society that would be fully master in its own house. An equally dedicated group of French Canadians of liberal and social democratic persuasion was centred around the periodical Cit libre one of whose editors was Pierre Trudeau and had links with organized labour. Citlibristes sought to remove what they saw as the major obstacles to the creation of a modern francophone society: the inuence of clericalism inherent in the Catholic churchs control of education and the social services, and the persistence among Quebecs intelligentsia of an outmoded nationalism that advocated the preservation of a rural and elitist society and neglected the development of the individual and the pursuit of social equality. Behiels delineates the divergent societal models proposed by the two movements, focusing on such themes as the critique of traditional nationalism, the roles of church, state, and labour, the reform of education, and the search for a third party. Michael D. Behiels is professor of history and University Research Chair, Canadian Federalism and Constitutional Studies at the University of Ottawa.

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S Carleton Library Series October 2011 978-0-7735-3777-4 $39.95A CDN, $39.95A US, 26.99 paper 6 x 9 776pp

S P E C I F I C AT I O N S August 2011 978-0-7735-0424-0 $34.95A CDN, $34.95A US, 22.99 paper 6 x 9 400pp

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m c gi ll-qu e e ns u n ive rsity press fall 2011


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43

MQU P FALL 2011

Author/Editor Index
Abbey, Ruth / 25 Akenson, Donald Harman / 33 Alcantara, Christopher / 18 Allan, John R. / 36 Antal, Sandy / 17 Behiels, Michael D. / 22, 41 Benn, Piers / 30 Bjarnadttir, Birna / 40 Bourgon, Jocelyne / 37 Chaykowski, Richard P. / 38 Clark, Ian D. / 36 Clarke, John / 41 Clark-Kazak, Christina R. / 24 Coady, Mary Frances / 10 Cole, John R. / 39 Conway, Kyle / 23 Courchene, Thomas J. / 36 Cuthbertson, Ken / 16 Day, Kathleen M. / 21 Diment, Galya / 39 Dineen, Murray / 31 Doern, G. Bruce / 34 Duncan, Howard / 35 Elofson, Warren M. / 19 Falasca-Zamponi, Simonetta / 38 Flanagan, Tom / 18 Friedland, Judith / 40 Gagnon, Franois-Marc / 2, 3 Gibson, John G. / 20 Gillies, David / 24 Gizewski, Peter / 35 Hahn, Emily / 16 Harp, Elmer J. / 18 Hatzimoysis, Anthony / 26 Hayday, Matthew / 22 Heintzman, Ralph / 13 Hickey, Robert / 38 Inwood, Gregory J. / 21 James, William Closson / 22 Johns, Carolyn M. / 21 Johnson, Susan W. / 32 Kennedy, J.B. / 28 Kingston, Rebecca / 32 Le Dressay, Andr / 18 Leuprecht, Christian / 36 Mares, Edwin / 30 McCumber, John / 28 Meindl, Maria / 7 Mellin, Robert / 9 Mulgan, Tim / 29 Neary, Peter / 23 Neerup, Stine / 35 Nicolas, Louis / 2, 3 Nieuwenhuysen, John / 35 OReilly, Patricia L. / 21 OShea, James / 27 Ostberg, C.L. / 32 Paul, Ross H. / 34 Persky, Stan / 8 Peters, Evelyn J. / 15 Phillips, Ruth B. / 4 Ray, Arthur J. / 5 Rostek, Michael / 35 Ruggles, Richard I. / 19 Songer, Donald R. / 32 Sorens, Jason / 25 Spoonley, Paul / 37 Staum, Martin S. / 33 Stivale, Charles J. / 27 Stoney, Christopher / 34 Styran, Roberta M. / 12 Tallis, Raymond / 6 Taylor, Robert R. / 12 Tolley, Erin / 15, 37 Trick, David / 36 Turner, Wesley B. / 17 Van Loon, Richard / 36 Verrelli, Nadia / 36 Waite, P.B. / 11 Watts, Michael / 26 Wetstein, Matthew E. / 32 Widdows, Heather / 29 Williams, David / 20 Wilson, David A. / 1 Winer, Stanley L. / 21 Woodward, Ashley / 31 Young, Robert / 15

Title Index
A Priori / 30 Academic Reform / 36 Aping Mankind / 6 Between the Queen and the Cabby / 39 Beyond the Indian Act / 18 British Generals in the War of 1812 / 17 Building More Effective Labour-Management Relationships / 38 Codex Canadensis and the Writings of Louis Nicolas, The / 2, 3 Commitment / 30 Congo Solo / 16 Contemporary Quebec / 22 Country So Interesting, A / 19 Diverse Nations, Diverse Responses / 37 Elections in Dangerous Places / 24 Ethics for a Broken World / 29 Everyone Says No / 23 Federal Idea, The / 36 Friendly Remainders / 31 Frontier Cattle Ranching in the Land and Times of Charlie Russell / 19 Georges and Pauline Vanier / 10 Gilles Deleuze / 27 Global Ethics / 29 Gods Plenty / 22 How Ottawa Spends, 20112012 / 34 Immigrant Settlement Policy in Canadian Municipalities / 15 In Search of R.B. Bennett / 11 Intergovernmental Policy Capacity in Canada / 21 International Migration in Uncertain Times / 35 Interregional Migration and Public Policy in Canada / 21 Ireland, Sweden, and the Great European Migration, 18151914 / 33 Kants Critique of Pure Reason / 27 Law, Ideology, and Collegiality / 32 Leadership Under Fire / 34 Lives and Landscapes / 18 Media, Memory, and the First World War / 20 Museum Pieces / 4 Musical Structure of Platos Dialogues, The / 28 Nature and Nurture in French Social Sciences, 18591914 and Beyond / 33 New Synthesis of Public Administration, A / 37 Newfoundland Modern / 9 Old and New World Highland Bagpiping / 20 On to Civvy Street / 23 Ordinary People of Essex, The / 41 Outside the Box / 7 Philosophy of Heidegger, The / 26 Philosophy of Sartre, The / 26 Prelude to Quebecs Quiet Revolution / 41 Public Passion / 32 Reading the 21st Century / 8 Recesses of the Mind / 40 Recounting Migration / 24 Rediscovering Reverence / 13 Restoring the Spirit / 40 Rethinking the Political / 38 Return of Feminist Liberalism, The / 25 Russian Jew of Bloomsbury, A / 39 Secessionism / 25 Security Operations in the 21st Century / 35 Telling It to the Judge / 5 This Great National Object / 12 Thomas DArcy McGee, Volume 2 / 1 Time and Philosophy / 28 Understanding Nietzscheanism / 31 Urban Aboriginal Policy Making in Canadian Municipalities / 15 Wampum Denied, A / 17

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