Labour / Le Travail
Issue 89 (2022)

Contributors / Collaborateurs

Pier-Luc Bilodeau est professeur agrégé au Département des relations industrielles de l’Université Laval, où il enseigne les relations du travail. Ses recherches portent sur la négociation collective et les politiques publiques dans l’industrie de la construction.

Susan Braedley is an associate professor in the School of Social Work and Institute of Political Economy at Carleton University.

Dalton Campbell is an archivist in the Archives Branch at Library and Archives Canada.

Rebecca Coulter is professor emerita at the University of Western Ontario. As a historian of education, she has written on women teachers and unions, gender policy and education, youth unemployment, and child welfare. She served on the NAC board and both the Canadian Association of University Teachers and Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations status of women committees.

Alvin Finkel is professor emeritus of history at Athabasca University. He is president of the Alberta Labour History Institute. A prolific historian, his most recent book is Compassion: A Global History of Social Policy (2018).

Chris Hurl is assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Concordia University in Montréal, Canada. His research investigates urban governance, state formation, and the politics of the public sector in Canada.

Margaret Hillyard Little is a professor in gender studies and political studies at Queen’s University.

Meg Luxton is professor of gender, sexuality, and women’s studies, York University, Toronto. In the 1980s and 1990s she was a member of the NAC committee on the economy. Her research focuses on women’s work, paid and unpaid, and on feminist theory.

Katie-Marie McNeill is a PhD candidate at Queen’s University. Her doctoral research examines prisoners’ aid societies in the 20th century from a transnational perspective.

Tara McWhinney is a PhD candidate and feminist scholar with the School of Social Work at Carleton University. She researches and teaches on topics related to domestic labour, social reproduction, social policy analysis, and the political economy of the welfare state.

Sarah Nickel is Tk’emlupsemc (Kamloops Secwépemc), Ukrainian, and French Canadian and an associate professor of history at the University of Alberta. Her work focuses on 20th-century Indigenous political activism, with a particular focus on gender. She is the author of Assembling Unity: Indigenous Politics, Gender, and the Union of BC Indian Chiefs (2019) and co-editor of In Good Relation: Gender, History, and Kinship in Indigenous Feminisms (with Amanda Fehr; 2020).

Lisa Pasolli is an assistant professor in the Department of History at Queen’s University. She studies the history of social policy, women and gender, child care, and taxation and is the author of Working Mothers and the Child Care Dilemma: A History of British Columbia’s Social Policy (2015).

Joan Sangster, Vanier Professor Emeritus, Trent University, has published on the history of women, work and the labour movement; feminism and the Left; law and criminalization; and setter-Indigenous relations in Canada. Her most recent book is Demanding Equality: One Hundred Years of Canadian Feminism (2021).

Tom Wayman’s recent books include an essay collection, If You’re Not Free at Work, Where Are You Free? Literature and Social Change (2018), and a poetry collection, Watching a Man Break a Dog’s Back: Poems For a Dark Time (2020). In 2015 the Vancouver Public Library named Wayman a Vancouver Literary Landmark, with a plaque on the city’s Commercial Drive honouring his championing of people writing for themselves about their daily employment (www.vpl.ca/literarylandmarks/tom-wayman). For more information, see www.tomwayman.com.

Cameron Willis is an independent researcher who directed the research service at the Penitentiary Museum in Kingston, Ontario.

David Witwer is a professor of history at Penn State University. He is the author of Corruption and Reform in the Teamsters Union (2003) and Shadow of the Racketeer: Scandal in Organized Labor (2009) and coauthor of Murder in the Garment District: The Grip of Organized Crime and the Decline of Labor in the United States (with Catherine Rios; 2020). He is currently working on a book about the disappearance of James R. Hoffa.


How to cite:

Dalton Campbell, “Newly Available Archival Records at Library and Archives Canada,” Labour/Le Travail 89 (Spring 2022): 263–268. https://doi.org/10.52975/llt.2022v89.001