Blog — Labour and labour related issues have been at the centre of media attention over the past few weeks. The 2016 Alberta Budget was announced. “The Alberta Jobs Plan,” as the...
Book — ...Brunswick anthropologist, Gail Pool, and University of Toronto PhD student in anthropology, Donna Young. They situate Lefty politically and historically and locate Lefty’s work in current debates about workers’ control....
Blog — ...of the book. Open Access: Endless Possibilities The question that still needs to be asked is how could we benefit as readers and as an academic community from reading technology...
Book — ...and Deian R. Hopkin. Canadian essays are by Craig Heron, Robert Babcock, Bruno Ramirez, Allen Seager, Linda Kealey, Varpu Lindstrom-Best, and Gregory S. Kealey. The volume includes photographs, maps and...
Blog — AU Press is excited to announce an innovative and interactive way to read our freely accessible ebooks! As a leader in open access publishing, AU Press is constantly striving for...
Blog — ...sociology and creative writing. When I was selecting my internship, scholarly publishing was an obvious fit, blending as it does academic research and the creative process of refining text. As...
Blog — ...law, women’s equity, urban social policy, and the arts. Alberta books are not just about Alberta. They are about Canadian literature, Frankenstein and Marshall McLuhan, musical patterns and neural networks,...
Blog — ...of a modern history lost between the cracks.” —Khaled A. Beydoun, author of American Islamophobia: Understanding the Roots and Rise of Fear “Mowafa Househ is not only an outstanding scholar...
Blog — ...The Winter 2017/18 issue of Prairie Books Now arrived in our mailbox and contains three AU Press titles! Pick up your copy at your local library. Canada’s History released their...
Blog — ...on the Saturday with a pile of books for you to buy. We are looking forward to hearing Harsha Walia’s Saturday afternoon plenary, “Racism, Austerity, and Precarity: Canada’s Role in...