New events posted; Does Canada have a foreign policy?

An item from a fellow Canadian organization in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Upcoming Events

  • Conference on Proto-Algonquian
  • Come from Away: Newfoundland and Labrador’s Food Security Dilemma

News from Canada

  • Opinion: “Foreign Policy and the Next Election” by Jeremy Kinsman

Academic Opportunities

  • Call for papers: Florence Piron Day: Bridging Open Science and Local Knowledge

External Events

  • Seeing It All: Changing the World One Photo at a Time
  • Critical Understanding of Canada in the World: Breaking Through
  • Reconciling Our Built Heritage: The Decolonization of 100 Wellington

UPCOMING EVENTS

Conference on Proto-Algonquian

Saturday, March 2 | 9:30 am – 4:00 pm | 223 Philosophy Hall | RSVP

The Canadian Studies Program invites you to a one-day conference honoring the late David Pentland on the occasion of the posthumous publication of his Proto-Algonquian Dictionary. The conference will bring together scholars from across the United States and Canada to celebrate this significant milestone in Algonquian scholarship, and to celebrate Dr. Pentland’s life and career as a prominent scholar in the field of Algonquian studies.

Ever since Leonard Bloomfield published his groundbreaking 1946 sketch outlining the sound system and basic morphology of Proto-Algonquian, refinements of the details of sound change and the reconstruction of Proto-Algonquian has been a central part of Algonquian linguistics. But the close similarities among most of the languages has led to a plethora of proposed reconstructions that are often not fully consistent with one another. Pentland’s dictionary has been a long-awaited step forward, bringing a new level of rigor and consistency to the field. It will also be a springboard to a range of new questions about methodology, classification, and borrowing. And we cannot discount the window on Algonquian culture such a comprehensive work provides. Speakers at the conference will address these questions and more.

Details about the conference, including the speaker schedule, are available on our website. The conference is at no cost, but attendees must register by emailing canada@berkeley.edu.

Come from Away: Newfoundland and Labrador’s Food Security Dilemma

Tues., March 12 | 12:30 pm | 223 Philosophy Hall | RSVP

This presentation illuminates past and current complexities of Newfoundland and Labrador’s unique food system. Following confederation with Canada in 1949, the province’s once-abundant fisheries fed North America to the point of over-exploitation, creating both cultural and food system disruption. Currently, most food is imported into the province and transported by ferry, including produce from California’s Central Valley. Though hunting is prevalent in rural communities, high priced, pre-packaged, and processed food, rather than fish, are the dietary mainstay. Recent efforts to expand agricultural production within the province would improve local control over the food system. This would ostensibly be more expensive than most imported foods, given the province’s short growing season and relatively small, diffusely located population. Yet financially supporting such endeavors might be justifiable to facilitate a basic human right to access and produce food.

Note: The speaker will also share Newfoundland and Labrador artwork and handicrafts at the in-person presentation.

About the Speaker

Dr. Catherine Keske is a professor of management of complex systems in the School of Engineering at UC Merced. She is an agricultural economist and social scientist who studies sustainable food, energy, and waste systems. Prior to joining UC Merced in 2017, she was associate professor of environmental studies (economics) in the School of Science and the Environment at Memorial University of Newfoundland. Her research on food security and Newfoundland and Labrador includes an edited book, Food Futures: Growing a Sustainable Food System for Newfoundland and Labrador, and “Economic feasibility of biochar and agriculture coproduction from Canadian black spruce forest” published in Food and Energy Security.

This event is cosponsored by the Berkeley Food Institute.

If you require an accommodation to fully participate in an event, please let us know at least 7 days in advance.

NEWS FROM CANADA

Opinion: “Foreign Policy and the Next Election”, by Jeremy Kinsman

Foreign policy is unlikely to be a significant issue in the next Canadian election, with affordability topping the polls for most Canadian voters by a wide margin. But Canada’s retreat from global leadership has not only hurt its own international standing, but deprived the world of a voice of moderation. Canada must rebuild its influence if it wants to preserve a rules-based international order.

That’s the argument former diplomat Jeremy Kinsman makes in a new op-ed published in Policy Magazine. Kinsman, who has spoken to the Canadian Studies Program several times, argues that Canadians have become “spectators” to important world affairs. Apart from a few issues relevant to specific diaspora groups, Canadians retain a distinctly parochial outlook and have abdicated leadership to other countries. Canada has too long acquiesced to following US foreign policy, even to the country’s occasional detriment. Meanwhile, the ineffectiveness of an atrophied diplomatic corps has demolished Canada’s influence in key countries like China and India. But with the prospect of a second Trump term looming, Canada could be face with a more isolationist neighbor, and policies that conflict with Canadian values. If Canada is to protect its interests in coming years, Kinsman concludes, the next government must re-establish Canada as a trusted and independent presence on the global stage.

ACADEMIC OPPORTUNITIES

Call for Papers: Florence Piron Day: Bridging Open Science and Local Knowledge

Submission deadline: March 15, 2024

Nukskahtowin at the Athabasca University, in partnership with the Association science et bien commun and the UNESCO Decade for Indigenous Languages, invites paper submissions to celebrate the 3rd annual “Florence Piron Day” on April 26.

This interdisciplinary conference will examine the intellectual and scientific heritage of Florence Piron (1966-2021) between question of (i) ethics, (ii) Open Science and Open Access, (iii) participative research and collaboration with local communities, (iv) critical pedagogy, (v) local knowledge and their potential to contribute to local sustainable development, (vi) cognitive justice, (vii) the métissage of knowledge, democracy, decolonial studies, citizen science and participatory research, etc.

Submissions should include an abstract of no more than 500 words and a 100-word biography identifying key institutional affiliations and key scholarly contributions. For the conference terms of reference and to make a submission, please click here.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Seeing It All: Changing the World One Photo at a Time

Wed., Feb. 28 | 5:30 pm | San Francisco | Buy tickets

The Commonwealth Club invites you to join three Canadian women for a conversation on the power of images to change how we see the world, raise awareness about the most urgent environmental issues, and spark action. Seeing It All: Women Photographers Expose Our Planet is the latest publication from BigPicture and the California Academy of Sciences. Featuring more than 125 photos by female BigPicture award recipients and jurors, these incredible images present new perspectives of rarely seen animals, places, and conservation around the world.

Written by Canadian Studies board member Rhonda Rubinstein (Co-founder, BigPicture Natural World Photography; Creative Director, California Academy of Sciences), Seeing It All illustrates the extraordinary complexity of the natural world and exposes how we – humans, animals, and nature – are living together now. Panelists will also include Toronto-based photojournalist Jo-Anne McArthur (Founder, We Animals Media) and neuroscientist Dr. Indre Viskontas (UCSF/San Francisco Conservatory of Music.) Tickets are available to attend both in-person and online; books will be available for purchase and signing.

Critical Understanding of Canada in the World: Breaking Through

Tuesday, March 5 | 11:30 am PT | Online | RSVP

Brock University (Ontario) is hosting a free online panel discussing Canada’s contemporary foreign policy. Speakers will include Aaron Ettinger (Carleton University), on “Diversity, Pedagogy, Canadian Foreign Policy”‘; Breanna Kubat (Carleton University), on “Pearsonian Nostalgia: Rethinking the Rhetoric of Canadian Internationalism Under the Trudeau Liberals”; and Rebekah K. Pullen (McMaster University), “Do you Hear What I Hear? Considering the Dissonance of Canada’s Silence on Nuclear Disarmament and its Character on the World Stage”. The panel will be moderated by Liam Midzain-Gobin (Brock University).

Reconciling Our Built Heritage: The Decolonization of 100 Wellington

Tuesday, February 27 | 12:00 pm PT | Online | RSVP

This case study tackles the controversial “gifting” of the former United States Embassy in Ottawa to the National Indigenous Organizations. The main issue with this “gift” is that the current settler-colonial heritage conservation regulations place strict limitations on interventions that would decolonize this building. The research is based on critical discourse analysis of multiple sources and an emphasis on Indigenous literature. Indigenous research methods, such as storytelling, visiting, and self-reflexivity, are a means to ground this research from a decolonizing framework. The speaker, Christopher DesRivieres, is an architectural professional based in Ottawa, with a background in Indigenous studies and heritage conservation.

This talk is part of the speaker series “Populations Rendered ‘Surplus’ in Canada”, sponsored by the Center for Canadian-American Studies at Western Washington University, Fairhaven College of Interdisciplinary Studies, the Ray Wolpow Institute, and the Foundation for WWU & Alumni.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

WEBSITE | EMAIL | DONATE

Facebook  Twitter
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Philosophy Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720

Welcome new Legion members this February!

An item from Dominion Command.


Legion Debrief. Visit member services.
February 2024
Twitter. Facebook. Youtube. Instagram. Linkedin.
Poppy Store.
Show your fellow Legionnaires some love this February!
As we embark on a new year, it’s heartwarming to witness the remarkable influx of new members joining our Legion. Over 43,000 members joined in 2023, bringing us to a total of 256,524 Legion members from coast to coast to coast and abroad!
We warmly encourage every member to extend a heartfelt welcome to our new Legionnaires, embracing them into our Legion family. Let’s all make an effort to involve them in the exciting activities we have planned ahead.
alt_text
Looking back: Legion National Headquarters in 2023
From helping thousands of Veterans receive the help they needed, to advocating for Canadian policies and actions that will further improve Veteran well-being, the Legion is looking back on important successes in 2023. It is also celebrating a welcome increase in new membership. In this end of year review, learn more about the varied projects undertaken by the Legion’s National Headquarters and how they contributed to its overall mission.
Learn more  ‣
alt_text
Legion members are feeding their communities
Legion Branch 509 in Prince Edward County is working hard to serve their community! They partnered with the Prince Edward County Learning Centre to establish their Good Food Market initiative: a fresh fruit and vegetable market taking place every other Friday.
The Good Food Market was launched to help their community access nutritious foods, especially those on a tight budget who may have difficulty affording fresh fruits and vegetables. All produce is sourced as locally as possible, priced as low as possible, available through online orders for in-person pickup. This is a wonderful initiative that benefits the community greatly, especially in these current times.
Know a Legion Branch that’s making a difference for Veterans in your community? Send us your story at marketing@legion.ca.
alt_text
Peer-to-peer support is here
The Royal Canadian Legion offers a variety of peer-to-peer support programs to encourage Veterans and their families to connect locally within their communities. Participate in a new hobby like scale modeling through Operation VetBuild, or receive peer support at a Buddy Check Coffee session.
Learn more about the Legion’s peer support programs.
Remember, Legion supports for Veterans are always free and you don’t need to be a member to access help. For more information, please visit our website.
alt_text
Did you serve in Cyprus under OP Snowgoose?
2024 is the 60th anniversary of Canadian involvement on the island of Cyprus, and the 50th anniversary of the 74th conflict.
If you served in Cyprus, you may be interested in taking a trip down memory lane by joining Team Cyprus 2024 for a November 2024 reunion. Taking place in Cyprus, the reunion is open to all CAF Veterans who served under the United Nations banner in Cyprus and family members of those who served. The linked brochure provides the background to the tour. Please contact Special Travel International for more information.
Read the brochure  ‣
Your membership can help you save
38,400 Legion members have saved a combined total of over $2 Million in savings through our MemberPerks program!
Celebrate Family Day with us and win a $250 CAD gift card to Deerhurst Resort!
Check out this latest offer, and many more! With MemberPerks®, you can shop online or in‑store at local and national stores and service providers and save $1000s every year. It’s a great way to support the Legion, local businesses, and your wallet.
Sign up for MemberPerks® today. It’s free with your Legion membership.
Learn more  ‣
Support your Branch activities
A corkboard with notes.
Are you actively involved in supporting Branch operations, campaigns, administrative tasks, committee work, or other similar roles? Our monthly Legion Branch Dispatch shares important information to support Branch activities!
Check out the February 2024 edition
In this edition:
2023 was a year of membership growth!
Updates on the 49th Dominion Convention
Minutes from the Dominion Executive Council Meeting
Learn about affiliated organizations supporting Branch operations
and more!
Received this from a friend? Never miss an issue:
Join the Legion today >
Update your membership profile with your email address. Login to the Member Services Website.
Working together to serve Canada’s Veterans.
Click here if you are having trouble viewing this message

Copyright © 2024 The Royal Canadian Legion. All rights reserved.

Administrative emails from Legion National Headquarters are sent to the email address on file for your local Legion Branch. If this is no longer the correct email address for your Branch, please forward this email to the new contact and request the Branch update their contact information.

The Branch may update the email address at any time by updating their Branch Profile on the Member Services Website or by contacting Member Services. Learn more about All Branch emails.

Our contact information is:
The Royal Canadian Legion National Headquarters
Member Services Department
86 Aird Place
Ottawa, ON K2L 0A1
Canada

Toll free: 855‑330‑3344
E-mail: membership@legion.ca

Lost and found: High-flying CP warco survives shoot down

An item from the Legion Magazine.


Front Lines
Front Lines

The Sept. 21, 1944, message from SHAEF informing The Canadian Press that Charlie Bruce’s plane was overdue. [CP]

Lost and found: High-flying CP warco survives shoot down

STORY BY STEPHEN J. THORNE

The army message, marked CONFIDENTIAL, arrived in the London bureau of The Canadian Press shortly after lunch on Sept. 21, 1944.

It bore troubling news from General Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force: a plane carrying the superintendent of the wire service’s overseas operations, Charlie Bruce, was 18 hours overdue.

Bruce had been covering a resupply mission over the German-occupied Netherlands during the Allies’ ill-fated attempt to bring the war to an early end—an airborne invasion called Operation Market Garden, later to be memorialized in the star-studded 1977 Hollywood film A Bridge Too Far.

READ MORE

RCAF 100
Military Milestones
Military Milestones

The Silver Dart in flight. [Wikimedia]

The Silver Dart: Canada’s first successful plane and the RCAF

STORY BY PAIGE JASMINE GILMAR

On Feb. 23, 1909, the Royal Canadian Air Force’s pathway to the stars first began to take shape; the first flight of a powered, heavier-than-air, controlled airplane in Canada—the Silver Dart—was a success. Marking its 115th anniversary this year, the Silver Dart held the promise of a new future for Canada’s military: the possibility of an air force.

In 1907, Alexander Graham Bell, along with engineers J.A.D. (Douglas) McCurdy and Frederick Baldwin and two Americans, formed the Aerial Experiment Association with the financial support of Bell’s wife, Mabel. Their goal was “to get a man into the air.” Two years later, one of their creations was ready.

READ MORE

Rebuilding bodies after WW I

Military Milestones

COURTESY OF GOOSE LANE EDITIONS

Rebuilding bodies after WW I

STORY BY KRISTEN DEN HARTOG

This exclusive excerpt from the new book The Roosting Box: Rebuilding the Body After the First World War by Kristen den Hartog explores some of the fascinating work of Toronto’s Christie Street Hospital in supporting wounded Canadian veterans after the conflict. Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Goose Lane Editions.

The roof ward was one of the marvels of the Christie Street Hospital, and came under the direction of a young doctor named Robert Inkerman Harris, who arrived at the facility with a gaggle of “war wrecks” wasting away from tuberculosis. Harris had suffered from tuberculosis as a child, and that old memory apparently fuelled his curiosity about the disease.

READ MORE

Member Benefit Partner

Belair

Join Dominion President Bruce Juliahttps://bstvacations.ca/royal-canadian-legion-cruise/n and Darlene Julian, BST Vacations, and Royal Canadian Legion members from across Canada on an Ultimate Southern Caribbean Cruise on the innovative Celebrity Silhouette. This 10-night cruise will be sailing to St. Maarten, St. Lucia, Tobago, Grenada, & Antigua, includes 4 glorious days at sea, and 1 night pre-cruise in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Discover amazing enhancements at every turn. You’ll relax in transformed staterooms that are so gorgeous, you may never want to leave your room!

Big news from former director Bloemraad; Can photos save the planet?

A newsletter from one of our fellow Canadian organizations in the Bay Area.


Canadian Studies Announcements

In This Issue:

Program News

  • Former director Irene Bloemraad to join the University of British Columbia
  • Save the date: the Big Give is March 14!

Upcoming Events

  • Conference on Proto-Algonquian
  • Come from Away: Newfoundland and Labrador’s Food Security Dilemma

External Events

  • Modest Livelihood with a Live Score by eagles with eyes closed
  • Seeing It All: Changing the World One Photo at a Time

Irene Bloemraad Appointed President’s Chair in Migration at the University of British Columbia

It is with very mixed emotions that the Canadian Studies Program announces that former program director Irene Bloemraad will be leaving Berkeley at the end of the current academic year. Professor Bloemraad has accepted a new position at the University of British Columbia. As recently announced by UBC, she has been appointed President’s Excellence Chair in Global Migration, beginning July 1, 2024.

While we are happy for Irene and the opportunities that this new position offers her, her departure will leave a hole in our Canadian Studies community here at Berkeley. Professor Bloemraad directed the Canadian Studies Program for ten years, ending her directorship just last year. During that time, she played a critical role in stabilizing and growing the Program. She oversaw a broad restructuring of the Program’s governance and finances, and implemented numerous community partnerships that continue to bear fruit today. In addition to her academic and organizational talents, she is a personal friend to many in our community, and we will miss seeing her around campus.

At UBC, Dr. Bloemraad will hold appointments in the Departments of Political Science and Sociology. She will also serve as the co-director of the Centre of Migration Studies in the Faculty of Arts and will continue to co-direct the Boundaries, Membership and Belonging program of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, a Canada-based global research organization.

Canadian Studies would like to thank Professor Bloemraad for her service not just to the Program, but to Berkeley as a whole. While we are certainly sad that she is leaving, we know that she will remain a committed friend. We look forward to working with her to build connections with UBC and develop further avenues for collaboration. We hope that you will join us in wishing her well in her new position!

Save the Date: The Big Give is March 14!

It’s that time of year again! On March 14, join our community in showing support for Canadian Studies by making a gift during the Big Give, Berkeley’s annual day of giving. Canadian Studies is a donor-supported program, and your donation goes directly to support education and research about Canada. We’ll follow up with additional information on how you can multiply the impact of a gift of any size. Until then, mark your calendars – we hope to see you on March 14!

UPCOMING EVENTS

Conference on Proto-Algonquian

Saturday, March 2 | 9:30 am – 4:00 pm | 223 Philosophy Hall | RSVP

The Canadian Studies Program invites you to a one-day conference honoring the late David Pentland on the occasion of the posthumous publication of his Proto-Algonquian Dictionary. The conference will bring together scholars from across the United States and Canada to celebrate this significant milestone in Algonquian scholarship, and to celebrate Dr. Pentland’s life and career as a prominent scholar in the field of Algonquian studies.

Ever since Leonard Bloomfield published his groundbreaking 1946 sketch outlining the sound system and basic morphology of Proto-Algonquian, refinements of the details of sound change and the reconstruction of Proto-Algonquian has been a central part of Algonquian linguistics. But the close similarities among most of the languages has led to a plethora of proposed reconstructions that are often not fully consistent with one another. Pentland’s dictionary has been a long-awaited step forward, bringing a new level of rigor and consistency to the field. It will also be a springboard to a range of new questions about methodology, classification, and borrowing. And we cannot discount the window on Algonquian culture such a comprehensive work provides. Speakers at the conference will address these questions and more.

Details about the conference, including the speaker schedule, are available on our website. The conference is at no cost, but attendees must register by emailing canada@berkeley.edu.

Come from Away: Newfoundland and Labrador’s Food Security Dilemma

Tues., March 12 | 12:30 PM | 223 Philosophy Hall | RSVP

This presentation illuminates past and current complexities of Newfoundland and Labrador’s unique food system. Following confederation with Canada in 1949, the province’s once-abundant fisheries fed North America to the point of over-exploitation, creating both cultural and food system disruption. Currently, most food is imported into the province and transported by ferry, including produce from California’s Central Valley. Though hunting is prevalent in rural communities, high priced, pre-packaged, and processed food, rather than fish, are the dietary mainstay. Recent efforts to expand agricultural production within the province would improve local control over the food system. This would ostensibly be more expensive than most imported foods, given the province’s short growing season and relatively small, diffusely located population. Yet financially supporting such endeavors might be justifiable to facilitate a basic human right to access and produce food.

Note: The speaker will also share Newfoundland and Labrador artwork and handicrafts at the in-person presentation.

About the Speaker

Dr. Catherine Keske is a professor of management of complex systems in the School of Engineering at UC Merced. She is an agricultural economist and social scientist who studies sustainable food, energy, and waste systems. Prior to joining UC Merced in 2017, she was associate professor of environmental studies (economics) in the School of Science and the Environment at Memorial University of Newfoundland. Her research on food security and Newfoundland and Labrador includes an edited book, Food Futures: Growing a Sustainable Food System for Newfoundland and Labrador, and “Economic feasibility of biochar and agriculture coproduction from Canadian black spruce forest” published in Food and Energy Security.

If you require an accommodation to fully participate in an event, please let us know at least 7 days in advance.

EXTERNAL EVENTS

Modest Livelihood with a Live Score by eagles with eyes closed

Wed., Feb. 21 | 7:30 pm | BAMPFA | Buy tickets

A screening of the silent film Modest Livelihood, by Cree artist Duane Linklater (pictured left) and Brian Jungen, is accompanied by a new score performed by a trio of UC Berkeley student musicians. The score is written by eagles with eyes closed, a musical project consisting of Duane Linklater and Tobias Linklater, exploring the generative experience of watching films together as intergenerational collaborators, father and son, and two Indigenous artists. The screening will close out the exhibit Duane Linklater: mymothersside, which ends tomorrow. Space is limited, and tickets are required.

Seeing It All: Changing the World One Photo at a Time

Wed., Feb. 28 | 5:30 pm | San Francisco | Buy tickets

The Commonwealth Club invites you to join three Canadian women for a conversation on the power of images to change how we see the world, raise awareness about the most urgent environmental issues, and spark action. Seeing It All: Women Photographers Expose Our Planet is the latest publication from BigPicture and the California Academy of Sciences. Featuring more than 125 photos by female BigPicture award recipients and jurors, these incredible images present new perspectives of rarely seen animals, places, and conservation around the world.

Written by Canadian Studies board member Rhonda Rubinstein (Co-founder, BigPicture Natural World Photography; Creative Director, California Academy of Sciences), Seeing It All illustrates the extraordinary complexity of the natural world and exposes how we – humans, animals, and nature – are living together now. Panelists will also include Toronto-based photojournalist Jo-Anne McArthur (Founder, We Animals Media) and neuroscientist Dr. Indre Viskontas (USCF/San Francisco Conservatory of Music.) Tickets are available to attend both in-person and online; books will be available for purchase and signing.

Canadian Studies Program

213 Philosophy Hall #2308

WEBSITE | EMAIL | DONATE

Facebook  Twitter
Canadian Studies Program | Univ. of California, Berkeley213 Philosophy Hall #2308Berkeley, CA 94720