For much of its history Saskatchewan has been a net exporter of people, mainly to adjacent Great Plains locales and across North America. Many expatriates retain psychological ties to this prairie province that stretch beyond familial or historical connections, and this deep sense of identity is puzzling to students of prairie polities. Unlike other established societies with high out-migration levels such as Newfoundland, Saskatchewan was settled fairly recently, and many families lived there for one or two generations at most before leaving. How is it that in a relatively brief period many new immigrants developed such a deep and abiding association with this province
The Trajectories of Rural Life presents papers from a Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy confer...
The Great War touched many places in Canada, but James M. Pistula\u27s book is the first to examine ...
CENTENNIAL SASKATCHEWAN In their pictorial overview about the northern prairie city of Saskatoon, Je...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
Somewhat broader than its title suggests, the book focuses not merely on Saskatchewan politics, but ...
Doreen Barrie should have subtitled this book Advocating a Different Identity because this is its ...
Bill Waiser\u27s sweeping narrative of the history of Canada\u27s most identifiable agricultural pro...
Review of Overlooking Saskatchewan: Minding the Gap edited by Randal Rogers and Christine Ramsay
From Louis Riel, leader of the Canadian prairie Metis, to Preston Manning, Alberta-based leader of t...
Intended to mark the centennial of Saskatchewan’s becoming a province in 1905, this collection of 18...
This is a story of a dream that died. Between 1900 and 1915 over one-hundred thousand people moved i...
In The Canadian Prairies, Gerald Friesen has taken on a monumental task. Over the past generation pr...
This collection of eighteen essays explores the ways in which the Prairie West was identified as a ...
The Political Economy of Manitoba analyses the evolution of social, economic, and political marginal...
The current historiography of the Great Plains Metis finds its roots in the work of Sylvia Van Kirk,...
The Trajectories of Rural Life presents papers from a Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy confer...
The Great War touched many places in Canada, but James M. Pistula\u27s book is the first to examine ...
CENTENNIAL SASKATCHEWAN In their pictorial overview about the northern prairie city of Saskatoon, Je...
Loewen and Friesen trace the origins of public concern about the adverse influence of immigrants in ...
Somewhat broader than its title suggests, the book focuses not merely on Saskatchewan politics, but ...
Doreen Barrie should have subtitled this book Advocating a Different Identity because this is its ...
Bill Waiser\u27s sweeping narrative of the history of Canada\u27s most identifiable agricultural pro...
Review of Overlooking Saskatchewan: Minding the Gap edited by Randal Rogers and Christine Ramsay
From Louis Riel, leader of the Canadian prairie Metis, to Preston Manning, Alberta-based leader of t...
Intended to mark the centennial of Saskatchewan’s becoming a province in 1905, this collection of 18...
This is a story of a dream that died. Between 1900 and 1915 over one-hundred thousand people moved i...
In The Canadian Prairies, Gerald Friesen has taken on a monumental task. Over the past generation pr...
This collection of eighteen essays explores the ways in which the Prairie West was identified as a ...
The Political Economy of Manitoba analyses the evolution of social, economic, and political marginal...
The current historiography of the Great Plains Metis finds its roots in the work of Sylvia Van Kirk,...
The Trajectories of Rural Life presents papers from a Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy confer...
The Great War touched many places in Canada, but James M. Pistula\u27s book is the first to examine ...
CENTENNIAL SASKATCHEWAN In their pictorial overview about the northern prairie city of Saskatoon, Je...