Call for Papers: Undergraduate Research Conference - "The United States, Canada, and Quebec"

The Canadian Studies Program at Bridgewater State University invites paper proposals from undergraduate university students in the United States and Canada for an in-person international research conference on the subject "The United States, Canada, and Quebec" to be held on Friday, March 31, 2023. All topics will be considered. Presentations can focus on Canada or Quebec alone, on Canada-US or Quebec-US relations, or can offer a comparative perspective. Panels will consist of three 15-minute papers, with questions to follow.

Call for Papers: Undergraduate Research Conference - "The United States, Canada, and Quebec"

The Canadian Studies Program at Bridgewater State University invites paper proposals from undergraduate university students in the United States and Canada for an in-person international research conference on the subject "The United States, Canada, and Quebec" to be held on Friday, March 31, 2023. All topics will be considered. Presentations can focus on Canada or Quebec alone, on Canada-US or Quebec-US relations, or can offer a comparative perspective. Panels will consist of three 15-minute papers, with questions to follow.

Call for Papers: ARCS Special Issue on Canada-U.S. Relations

 

The editors of the American Review of Canadian Studies invite submissions for the journal’s biennial Thomas O. Enders Special Issue on Canada-U.S. Relations, which they plan to publish in late 2023. Full-length article submissions from all disciplines and from interdisciplinary perspectives are welcome, but they should, in some way, focus on the issue’s main theme: the past, present, or future of Canada-U.S. Relations.

The Future of the Canadian Conservative Party - British Association of Canadian Studies Panel - Dec. 6, 2022

The next BACS/University College London event will be a panel discussion of the outcome of the recent Conservative party leadership election in Canada in which Pierre Poilievre defeated Jean Charest. How do we explain this result and what does it mean for the future of the Canadian Conservative party and Canadian politics more generally?