How has population been viewed as a scientific subject, an object of government, and a historical process?
Ted McCormick
- Professor
- Department of History
- Fellow
- School of Irish Studies
- early modern Europe3
- history of policy
- history of science13
- biopolitics10
- Irish studies17
- early modernity21
- history of ideas3
- scientific revolution
- philosophy of science15
- history of the social sciences4
- international political economy22
- social engineering
- British Empire8
- Reformation4
- Atlantic world5
- colonialism23
- history of medicine7
- alchemy2
- utopian thought5
- social justice96
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Anya Zilberstein
history of environmental science, Atlantic world, British Empire
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Bradley L. Craig
Black Atlantic, Atlantic world, enslaved Africans
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Rachel Berger
South Asia, history of medicine, queer theory
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Theresa Ventura
USA history, empire, colonialism
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Maya Rae Oppenheimer
cultural history, history of media arts, materiality
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Jane G. V. McGaughey
Irish Diaspora, gender and sexuality, lunatic asylums
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Chris Hurl
social movements, labour history, sociology of work
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Nabeel Hamid
early modernity, philosophy of science, nature
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Nalini Mohabir
indentured labour, diasporas, Caribbean countries and territories
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Beverley Best
capitalism, international political economy, globalization
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Darragh Languay
Renaissance literature, Shakespeare, Milton
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Jarrett Carty
Martin Luther, political theory, Reformation
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Ted Rutland
cities, history of urban planning, biopolitics
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Wilson Chacko Jacob
Middle Eastern studies, Indian Ocean World, Islam
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Stephanie Paterson
women's studies, critical theory, gender politics
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William J. Buxton
history of the social sciences, Harold Innis, philanthropy
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Roberto Viereck Salinas
colonialism, Latin American studies, contemporary poetry
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Robert Tittler
British history, early modernity, England
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Matthew Barker
philosophy of biology, philosophy of science, categorization
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Steven Stowell
Renaissance art, sacred art, medieval art
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Michael Bourne
international accounting standards, globalization, international business
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Andrea Falcon
Aristotle, ancient philosophy, history of science
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Amy Swiffen
social and political theory, law and society, social deviance/conformity
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Bengi Akbulut
international political economy, heterodox economics, political ecology
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Martin Danyluk
urban infrastructure, cities, urban logistics
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Allan E. S. Lumba
racial capitalism, colonialism, decolonization
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VK Preston
cultural history, performance studies, embodiment
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Meghan Joy
urban politics, age-friendly cities, public policy
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Jessica Auer
photography, cultural history, landscape
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Geoffrey Robert Little
scholarly communication, Concordia University Press, history of libraries
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Genevieve Renard Painter
Indigenous-Settler relations, law and society, social justice
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Martin A. French
risk, surveillance, privacy
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Travis Smith
political theory, early modernity, religion and politics
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Ming Li
microeconomics, information economics, international political economy
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Jean-Michel Roessli
Christianity, church history, Sibylline Oracles
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Eric Buzzetti
political philosophy, philosophy and literature, history of philosophy
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Gregory Lavers
analytic philosophy, foundations of mathematics, Carnap
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Bradley J. Nelson
Hispanic literature and culture, social impacts of technology, history of science
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Marlene Sokolon
political theory, ancient political thought, Aristotle
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Nora Jaffary
Latin American studies, Mexico, gender
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Norma Rantisi
sustainable development, urban economic development, deindustrialization
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Kristina Huneault
meaning, Canadian art history, selfhood
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Peter Gossage
Quebec studies, family and gender, historical demography
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Marguerite Mendell
civil society, international political economy, cultural and social change
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Anna K. Kruzynski
community economies, post-capitalism, participatory action research