Historical Education in Canada

17 06 2009

Today’s Globe and Mail has an opinion piece bemoaning Canadians’ lack of knowledge of the history of their own country. As a history professor, I have a vested interest in favour of more historical education, so I’m inclined to sympathize with anybody who advocates that our citizens learn more about the past. The fact some provinces do not require the study of any history in high school is a disgrace. However, I’m struck by the fact that the piece’s authors (Marc Chalifoux and J.D.M. Stewart) focus exclusively on the public’s knowledge of _Canadian_ history. It seems to me that an educated person ought to know about both the history of their country as well as that of the world as a whole.  They should also know something about the history of their locality or metropolitan area.

Yes, Canadians should be familiar with the Last Spike, Macdonald, Trudeau, Louis Riel and all the rest of it. But they should also know something about the French Revolution,  Edison, Jenner, Mao, Auschwitz, Lincoln, and Mandela.  Reasonable people can disagree about the right balance of local, Canadian, and world history in the school curriculum, but I think that there should be at least a bit of all three.  To only teach students Canadian history would breed parochialism. In any event, you can’t really understand Canadian history without knowing something about the histories of Britain, France, and the United States. (I say this as a specialist in Canadian history).

Note re the authors of the article: Marc Chalifoux is executive director of the Dominion Institute and J.D.M. Stewart is a teacher of Canadian history at Bishop Strachan School in Toronto.





Eager Student

17 06 2009

One of the first-year students I will be teaching next year has already emailed me to ask for a course outline. I’m impressed, since the school year does not even start until September. He seems really dedicated. This is encouraging.





Trailer for Academic Book

17 06 2009

The major academic presses in the US are using video to market books. Take a look at the rather creative trailer for  The Invisible Hook:
The Hidden Economics of Pirates
by Peter T. Leeson (Princeton University Press, 2009)  $24.95 / £14.95.





Three Cheers for the National Business Archives of Canada

16 06 2009

I was very excited to discover the existence of a new organization, the National Business Archives of Canada.

From its website: “The National Business Archives of Canada is a non-profit organization with a focus on education, culture and society. This unprecedented national business heritage project aims to commemorate the events that have shaped Canadian business history: from the incorporation of the Hudson’s Bay Company in 1670, to the introduction of the first BlackBerry by Research in Motion in 1999.

In the near term, the Archives will exist as a virtual centre and digital knowledge base of artifacts and historical resources. In the longer run, a business centre, library and public exhibit gallery are planned. Officially launched in a public ceremony on March 31st, 2009, the Archives are celebrated by a Mosaic Mural art installation at Brookfield Place in downtown Toronto. The mural depicts the most significant events in Canadian business history.”

I think that this is a wonderful, wonderful initiative. The single greatest problem facing business historians is access to corporate archives. A few companies, most notably the Hudson’s Bay Company, make their archives available to researchers. The HBC has also done a good job of telling researchers what is in their archives and that it is all available for use. Many companies, however, keep their archives totally closed to outsiders. They do so for a number of reasons, not the least of which is the sheer administrative hassle of scheduling visits by academic researchers. Other companies have documents that they are willing to share with researchers but do a poor job of promoting awareness of their archives.

The United Kingdom has long had a Business Archives Council (BAC), which maintains a directory of records available to researchers. This list includes a short description of the documents at each company as well as the details of a contact person. Business history is a much bigger part of the historical profession and the undergraduate historical curriculum in the UK than it is in Canada. The secondary literature on the history of business in Canada is also very incomplete: most of the existing historiography is the very small number of firms with relatively open archives. As a result, Canadian historians know a great deal about the minutiae of the fur trade and almost nothing about huge swathes of the economy.

I’m convinced that one of the reasons why business history is so vibrant in the UK is the existence of a centralized clearing house for information about company archives. In the 1970s, there was an attempt to set up something similar to the BAC in Canada, but it folded within a few years, apparently due to lack of funds. I suspect that the current initiative will be much more successful, as it has received the support of Deloitte, TD Financial Group, and CN.





Business History Conference

16 06 2009

Last week, I presented the joint session of the Business History Conference and the European Business History Association held in Milan. The BHC is one of the two conferences I attend every year, the other being the Canadian Historical Association. Joint sessions with the EBHA are relatively rare, as the BHC is normally held somewhere in North America. I really appreciated the opportunity to meet so many historians of business from Europe, not to mention Asia and Australia. I’m a better scholar for having made such international contact.
For this year’s conference, I organized a panel on “Culture, Institutions, and Overseas Investment: British Investment in the Dominions in the Age of High Imperialism”.
The papers and presenters were:

Andrew Smith, Laurentian University

The Dollars and Cents of British Imperialism: The Political Economy of British Investment in Canada, 1867-1914

Abstract:

“This paper examines four important British free-standing companies that were active in present-day Canada in the 1860s and 1870s. These companies were the Hudson’s Bay Company, the Canada Company, the Trust and Loan Company of Upper Canada, and the Grand Trunk Railway. In the early 1860s, these companies lobbied the British government to unite the previously separate colonies in North America. The companies were controlled by well-connected gentlemanly capitalists who were in a position to influence British policy. In 1867, the British Parliament passed legislation uniting four of the colonies in mainland North America into a federal state know as the Dominion of Canada. This paper examines what happened to these companies after 1867. This paper will show that the union of the colonies did not benefit the four companies in the ways their directors had anticipated. The Grand Trunk remained on the edge of bankruptcy after 1867. The Hudson’s Bay Company, the Canada Company, and the Trust and Loan Company of Upper Canada also derived fewer benefits from Confederation than they had anticipated.”

Andrew Dilley, University of Aberdeen

Empire and Risk: Edwardian Financiers, Australia, and Canada, c.1899-1914

Abstract: “It has often been claimed that British investors showed no marked “imperial piety.” Yet there is a good case that investments in the Dominions (self-governing colonies within the British empire) occupied an exceptional place in the capital market—particularly enjoying low interest rates. This paper traces the ways in which London financiers and investors in the Edwardian period expected the imperial connection to affect the risk of investing in Canada and Australia. By reconstructing the assumptions linking investment and empire, the factors contributing to dominion “exceptionalism” become clearer. The paper suggests that empire reassured investors in two ways. First, certain institutional factors, especially legal integration through the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, and British defensive guarantees reassured some investors. However, there institutional factors depended on colonial consent. Second, empire promoted information flows, social networking, and certain shared cultural assumptions which were also seen by many to make the dominions safer havens for British capital. Colonial borrowers played on these factors in their dealings with the capital market. The paper concludes that while empire membership did not replace more familiar economic and political factors in calculations of risk, it did inform the way in which those risks were judged.”

Gary Magee, La Trobe University, Bundoora

Investors, Information, and the British World, 1860-1913
Abstract: “This paper concerns itself with the export of British capital between 1860 and 1913. It seeks to lay bare key financial relationships and mechanisms that made such a massive movement of money possible. On what basis did British investors make their decisions? More particularly, in what ways did the ties of social interaction predispose them to provide greater support to investment projects within the “British world” than outside it? This paper examines these questions in two ways: by studying the coverage of investment opportunities as reported by the press and by exploring some of the rich social and financial networks that underpinned Britain’s capital markets. The exceptionalism of the “British world” in these regards stemmed from the way its institutions, press, and transnational networks gave rise to an informational asymmetry within the UK capital markets. As a consequence, British investors found themselves making choices on the basis of a stock of knowledge that was heavily biased in favor of opportunities that existed in the “British World.” This state of affairs was in many ways the natural by-product of the global expansion of British human and social capital in the nineteenth century.”

I think that our panel went very well. I was very pleased to be presenting alongside two very strong presenters, Dilley and Magee. Our very impressive discussant, Duncan Ross, who teaches at the University of Glasgow (see here and here), gave excellent feedback, as did the audience. I received questions from Leslie Hannah (LSE), Richard Sylla (NYU Stern School of Business), and Joe Martin (Director of Canadian Business History, Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto).

The rest of the conference was also good. The organization was superb, as was the food and drink.  More importantly, I heard many excellent papers. I was very impressed by the research presented by Rowena Olegario, Kevin Tennent, Andrew Russell, and Leslie Hannah.





Visual History of the Credit Card

9 06 2009

Check out this visual history of the credit card. (Slide show)

Please note that I will be posting infrequently for the next few days due to a conference.





Historians on the British National Party

9 06 2009

The BNP continues to attract a great deal of attention in the British media.  I’m inclined to think that much of this angst is unwarranted, as the BNP remains a very marginal force in UK politics. The parallels people have drawn between the so-called rise of the BNP in the wake of the credit crunch and the Nazi seizure of power in the Great Depression are lurid and unhelpful .

The Guardian,  the left-leaning London daily, asked a number of leading historians to comment on the BNP. None of these scholars thinks that the BNP poses a real threat to British democracy. I’m posting this link because the Guardian contacted some of the world’s leading historians, including Eric Hobsbawn, Michael Burleigh, and Richard Overy.





Flawed Globe and Mail article on the far right in Europe

9 06 2009

Doug Saunders has published a deeply flawed article on the alleged rise of the far-right in Europe. The danger is that the Globe’s Canadian readers  will accept Saunder’s flawed interpretation as accurate.

I normally like Doug Saunders’s work, but his article on the recent EU elections is a travesty of the facts. I will speak about the UK situation, which I know best.
First point: the BNP, which is clearly a racist and fascist party, saw its share of the popular vote fall in this election from the 2004 election.  Saunders wrongly suggests that the BNP is rising in popularity. Moreover, the BNP’s share of the vote is small.

Second point:  Saunders suggests that UKIP is, like the BNP, a racist party and that the jump in support for UKIP shows that Britons are becoming more racist. This is not the case. UKIP is a hard-right party like the old Canadian Reform Party. It believes in tax cuts, deregulation, is against the minimum wage, and it wants to pull out of the EU. UKIP admires the free market economy of the USA. It is not, however, a racist party, although it is opposed to the open immigration policies that have allowed many Polish and other Eastern European workers to come into the UK.

Third: European countries can’t really be compared to Canada, which is very much an immigration country. Britain is a densely populated island that has been inhabited by the same ethnic groups for many centuries. It isn’t Canada, which is sparsely populated and proud of its cultural diversity. One of the things I like the most about Canada is the sheer tolerance of Canadians. Canadian multiculturalism is a great success, something of which I am very proud.





ActiveHistory.ca

5 06 2009

I would like to promote a new Canadian history resource, activehistory.ca

From their website:

“ActiveHistory.ca is a new website to help connect historians with the public, policy makers and the media.  This is a part of an effort to facilitate and disseminate the ideas developed at the  conference “Active History: History for the Future” at Glendon College in September 2008.  The website project is currently being led by a group of PhD Students in the History Department at York University, but we hope to expand the steering committee and editorial support board over the next few months.

We are looking at the British History & Policy Website as a model for this project.

We are looking for historians to join our database and submit papers.

We are also seeking editorial board members.  Please contact us if you might be interested in taking a more active role with this project: info@activehistory.ca”





One of the best lectures I have ever seen

4 06 2009

Like most academics, I’m constantly trying to improve my lectures. In particular, I try to keep abreast of developments in IT that allow university teachers to be more effective in imparting knowledge to 20 year olds. I was, therefore, very interested in this online video of a truly outstanding lecture by Dr Hans Rosling, a Swedish doctor interested in global public health. Global public health is pretty far away for the subject matter I teach, of course. While I found the subject of his lecture fascinating, I’m much more interested in _how_ Rosling communicates his information. As someone who struggles to make effective use of Powerpoint, I’m just blown away by what he can do with images on a screen. He is absolutely brilliant when it comes to using animated graphics to present statistical information.

I urge every university teacher in every discipline to look at this video. One person had this to say about Rosling’s lecture: “You’ve never seen data presented like this. With the drama and urgency of a sportscaster, statistics guru Hans Rosling debunks myths about the so-called ‘developing world.’”