“Why should I bother going to the CHA? It’s all about Canadian history.” How many times have friends and workmates muttered some such line when we ask if they are planning to attend the CHA’s annual meeting. That is an understandable, but unfortunate perspective on the leading professional organization for historians in Canada
One of the main activities of the CHA|SHC is what we refer to as advocacy. We are an organization re...
Although contemporary events have made it appear that there is widespread support in Canada for hist...
The 21st International Congress of Historical Sciences will be held in Amsterdam, 22-28 August 2010....
For graduate students and young faculty in the field of Canadian history, membership in the CHA is a...
In a departure from its normal practice of gathering with the Learned Societies, the Canadian Histor...
Clio in Canada today has notable strengths and weaknesses. Historiography itself has been greatly en...
While in Kingston attending the CHA Annual Meeting, members and guests are invited on a cruise of th...
The 18th International Congress of Historical Societies will be held in Montreal between August 27 a...
This is my last entry as CHA English-language secretary and as co-editor of the CHA Bulletin, now In...
In the fall of 1988, the Council of the CHA assigned the task of examining and conceiving a plan of ...
The 70th Annual General Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association will be held in Kingston at Q...
The Canadian Historical Association annual meeting, which was held a few weeks ago in Vancouver on t...
In May 1925, historian George M. Wrong addressed the Canadian Historical Association on “The Two Rac...
In the last decades, Canadian historiography has undergone sweeping changes which follow those of th...
German academic interest in Canada dates back to the 1780s when the University of Gottingen began to...
One of the main activities of the CHA|SHC is what we refer to as advocacy. We are an organization re...
Although contemporary events have made it appear that there is widespread support in Canada for hist...
The 21st International Congress of Historical Sciences will be held in Amsterdam, 22-28 August 2010....
For graduate students and young faculty in the field of Canadian history, membership in the CHA is a...
In a departure from its normal practice of gathering with the Learned Societies, the Canadian Histor...
Clio in Canada today has notable strengths and weaknesses. Historiography itself has been greatly en...
While in Kingston attending the CHA Annual Meeting, members and guests are invited on a cruise of th...
The 18th International Congress of Historical Societies will be held in Montreal between August 27 a...
This is my last entry as CHA English-language secretary and as co-editor of the CHA Bulletin, now In...
In the fall of 1988, the Council of the CHA assigned the task of examining and conceiving a plan of ...
The 70th Annual General Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association will be held in Kingston at Q...
The Canadian Historical Association annual meeting, which was held a few weeks ago in Vancouver on t...
In May 1925, historian George M. Wrong addressed the Canadian Historical Association on “The Two Rac...
In the last decades, Canadian historiography has undergone sweeping changes which follow those of th...
German academic interest in Canada dates back to the 1780s when the University of Gottingen began to...
One of the main activities of the CHA|SHC is what we refer to as advocacy. We are an organization re...
Although contemporary events have made it appear that there is widespread support in Canada for hist...
The 21st International Congress of Historical Sciences will be held in Amsterdam, 22-28 August 2010....