Blog — ...general readers, policy makers, academics, journalists, and activists alike on the challenges and opportunities we face when it comes to this global crisis. Memory and Landscape: Indigenous Responses to a...
Book — There exists in both academic and political circles a growing interest in public deliberation as an alternative to the sometimes adversarial and polarizing public engagement activities that result in the...
Blog — ...volume in this series, this book tackles the consequences of a 24-hour news cycle generated through Facebook, Twitter, blogs, and smartphone and how these tools can be used (or misused)...
Blog — ...the digital world. Next on our list to read… Awkward Politics: Technologies of Popfeminist Activism, a fun-looking book from McGill Queen’s University Press looks at how awkwardness can be used...
Blog — ...told us about the female experience. So today, we feature excerpts about women written by women. On women leaders The women, strong-hearted ladies, show us the way to take steps...
— ...formats. In addition to making our books available for reading online, we offer readers the choice of a print edition and/or access to the publication in a digital form on...
Contributor — Laura Peers is interested in the meanings that heritage objects hold for Indigenous peoples today and in relationships between museums and Indigenous peoples. Her publications include Museums and Source Communities...
Contributor — Supriya Kar is an editor and translator from Odisha, India. She previously worked as an editor at Cambridge University Press India, and now edits the online journal, Indian Literature Today,...
Book — When Joegodson Déralciné was still a small child, his parents left rural Haiti to resettle in the rapidly growing zones of Port-au-Prince. As his family entered the city in 1986,...
Book — ...by Elizabeth Jameson and Sheila McManus pool their distinct contributions toward forging the very first comparative, transnational collection of its kind. “We cannot build bridges across unmapped divides.” Sixteen essays...