Blog — ...removal of barriers to knowledge. The 2016 theme is “Open in Action” which calls for scholars and publishers to commit to various open access practices. You can find more information...
Blog — ...those online and at a distance, afford educators opportunities to embrace only the most effective face-to-face assessment methods and to realize the potential of delivering education in the digital age....
Blog — AU Press is thrilled to be celebrating Open Access Week once again this year. We have a few things in store for you, but to get the ball rolling, we’re...
Blog — ...up to each person, under Elder guidance, to learn where he or she fits into the contemporary Native spiritual mosaic and—equally important—to perceive how to take advantage of the potential...
Blog — ...you’re not sure where to start, we have some reading recommendations for you. Click “Read Online” on each of these book pages to dive in! kiyâm by Naomi McIlwraith is...
Blog — ...the opportunity to launch From Turtle Island to Gaza by David Groulx and Living on the Land: Indigenous Women’s Understand of Place edited by Nathalie Kermoal and Isabel Altamirano-Jiménez in...
Contributor — ...Laraque. The novel was included on Canadian Literature magazine’s “All-Time Top Ten List of Best Canadian Sport Literature” and topped the CBC Book Club’s list of Top 10 Sport Books....
Contributor — Patrick Grant, professor emeritus of English at the University of Victoria, is best known for his studies on literature and religion. He is the author, most recently, of two other...
Blog — Photo: Detail of Tsątsąke k’e (Iron Foot Place) by Alex Janvier in Rogers Place. Did you know that all Edmontonians are treaty people? About half of Canada’s land is...
Blog — ...dreaming are what draw people into the novel—and often, into sport more generally. Sport is a world where myth sometimes lives and walks and where people can form a sense...