Volume 14 (1998/9): Migrants, Money and Markets
| Guest editor: Tim Rooth | ||
| David Rhind | Tribute to Dr. John Davis | 1 |
| John Othick | Migrants, Money and Markets: the Canadian Experience | 4 |
| James Sturgis & John Davis | Who was the Ideal Immigrant? Settlement in Western Canada, 1880–1914 | 9 |
| Tim Rooth | The Continental Imperative? Canadian International Trade and Finance in the Twentieth Century | 22 |
| John Douglas Belshaw | ‘Doomed to Disappear’: Canadian Society and Culture Faces Post-War Immigration | 44 |
| T.A. MacDonald | Canada, the FTA and NAFTA: A View from the Negotiating Table | 55 |
| Daniel Drache | Globalization: Is there Anything to Fear? | 66 |
This issue is dedicated to Dr. John Davis following his untimely death on January 1st 1999. There is a special tribute to him in this volume as well as an article that he co-wrote with Dr. Jim Sturgis for this volume. He will be missed very much by his family, colleagues and Canadianists all over the world.
We are grateful for the generous financial and other encouragement from the Government of Canada (London High Commission) that has enabled both the publication and the maintenance of the London Conference for Canadian Studies (LCCS). I would like to thank Dr. Tim Rooth (University of Portsmouth) for editing this special issue, and the reviewers for all the hard work they have done for this volume. I am also grateful to Dr. Richard Dennis and Catherine Pyke for their assistance with the final editing and preparation of this volume.
Dr. Itesh Sachdev, Editor
Index
- About the LJCS
- Vol 23: War & Peace
- Vol 22: Gender & the City
- Vol 21: Canada in Moving Images
- Vol 20: The North Atlantic Triangle
- Vol 19: Deepening Integration
- Vol 18: Images of Trudeau
- Vol 17: Quality, Equality & Inequality
- Vol 16: Continuities & Changing Realities
- Vol 14: Migrants, Money & Markets
- Vol 13: Enviromental Politics & Policy
- Vol 12: Geography, Gender & Identity
- Vol 11: Aboriginal Peoples
- Vol 10: NAFTA
- Vol 9: Atlantic Canada
- Printed Volumes