For graduate students and young faculty in the field of Canadian history, membership in the CHA is a right of passage, a token of their commitment to a chosen career and one of the important means of establishing professional ties within the wider academic community in Canada. For their colleagues in other areas of history this commitment is not so frequently made. Yet the advantages of CHA membership are many, advantages that are important to all historians working in Canada
For the past ten years, I have seen more and more graduate history students admitted into University...
Last November marked the CHA’s first formail participation in the administrative council of the CFH ...
The Canadian Historical Association annual meeting, which was held a few weeks ago in Vancouver on t...
“Why should I bother going to the CHA? It’s all about Canadian history.” How many times have friends...
This is my last entry as CHA English-language secretary and as co-editor of the CHA Bulletin, now In...
In a departure from its normal practice of gathering with the Learned Societies, the Canadian Histor...
The 70th Annual General Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association will be held in Kingston at Q...
While in Kingston attending the CHA Annual Meeting, members and guests are invited on a cruise of th...
In the fall of 1988, the Council of the CHA assigned the task of examining and conceiving a plan of ...
Members and their participation are important to the CHA. Annual grants to the CHA are based primari...
Supporting graduate students in history across Canada and encouraging their participation in the Can...
The associate membership of the Canadian Historical Association includes several societies whose act...
In November of 2017 the Canadian Historical Association | Société historique du Canada Council passe...
Clio in Canada today has notable strengths and weaknesses. Historiography itself has been greatly en...
In 2014, the CHA Bulletin included a number of articles discussing the career prospects for recent h...
For the past ten years, I have seen more and more graduate history students admitted into University...
Last November marked the CHA’s first formail participation in the administrative council of the CFH ...
The Canadian Historical Association annual meeting, which was held a few weeks ago in Vancouver on t...
“Why should I bother going to the CHA? It’s all about Canadian history.” How many times have friends...
This is my last entry as CHA English-language secretary and as co-editor of the CHA Bulletin, now In...
In a departure from its normal practice of gathering with the Learned Societies, the Canadian Histor...
The 70th Annual General Meeting of the Canadian Historical Association will be held in Kingston at Q...
While in Kingston attending the CHA Annual Meeting, members and guests are invited on a cruise of th...
In the fall of 1988, the Council of the CHA assigned the task of examining and conceiving a plan of ...
Members and their participation are important to the CHA. Annual grants to the CHA are based primari...
Supporting graduate students in history across Canada and encouraging their participation in the Can...
The associate membership of the Canadian Historical Association includes several societies whose act...
In November of 2017 the Canadian Historical Association | Société historique du Canada Council passe...
Clio in Canada today has notable strengths and weaknesses. Historiography itself has been greatly en...
In 2014, the CHA Bulletin included a number of articles discussing the career prospects for recent h...
For the past ten years, I have seen more and more graduate history students admitted into University...
Last November marked the CHA’s first formail participation in the administrative council of the CFH ...
The Canadian Historical Association annual meeting, which was held a few weeks ago in Vancouver on t...