Series — ...important or recently discovered sites, new analytical techniques, and methodological advances. As an essential part of its mission, the series seeks to bring archaeology to a wider audience, and a...
Series — ...of a homogenized West fighting for a place in the sun blunted interest in the lives of ordinary people and the social struggles that pitted some groups in the West...
Blog — ...the benefits, but also the limits of this new requirement. She affirms that this course requirement will “carry on a tradition of Indigenous engagement in and critique of education.” Adam...
Blog — ...face challenges both complex and sometimes intractable. In Small Cities, Big Issues, editors Christopher Walmsley and Terry Kading “call into question the myth of Canada as a fair and just...
Blog — ...they are launching a new grocery delivery program—on bikes! Pogo CarShare: this carsharing initiative uses your smartphone to find a car in your zone and even uses an app to...
Blog — ...myths in turn contributed to cultural and social developments. The mythology of a homogenized West fighting for a place in the sun blunted interest in the lives of ordinary people...
Blog — ...in open access in his article entitled “Beyond the Choir.” Read some stories from open access supporters on the Scholastica blog through their new initiative “The Open Access Stories.” According...
Blog — ...the most complex and intractable issues like climate change. In An Ethnohistorian in Rupert’s Land, Jennifer Brown, one of the leading ethnohistorians in North America, investigates the surprising range of...
Blog — ...each chapter on a technology, theory, or concept that has influenced each year since 1994. Throughout this historical overview, Weller advocates for a critical and research-based approach to new technologies,...
Blog — ...to shape federal policy? In Alberta, the New Democratic Party is in a position to reverse the democratic deficit that is presently fuelling political and economic inequality. The findings in...