Anthony G. Gulig, Ph.D.
Department of History
University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
Whitewater, Wisconsin 53190
Education
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Ph.D., History, Areas of Concentration:
Western Canada, General
Canada, and British Empire and Commonwealth with an emphasis on Canadian and
American Indian-white relations and Indian policy, University
of Saskatchewan,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, September 1997.
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Dissertation is entitled "In Whose Interest?: Government-Indian Relations
in Northern Saskatchewan and Wisconsin, 1900-1940."
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M.A., History, Area of Concentration: U.S. History with an emphasis on
American Indian policy and Indian-white relations, University
of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Eau Claire, Wisconsin, August 1991.
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Thesis is entitled "The Social and Political Relationship of Lawrence Taliaferro
to the Chippewas and the Sioux of the St. Peters Agency, 1819-1839."
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B.A., with distinction, Cum Laude, major in secondary education, emphasis
in history, Wisconsin teaching certifications in broadfield social studies,
history, geography, and political science, University
of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Eau Claire, Wisconsin, December 1989. |
Teaching Experience
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Assistant Professor, Department
of History, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater,
Whitewater, Wisconsin, August 1999 to present.
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Courses taught: American Indian History; United
States History in a World Context, North
American Environmental History, The American West
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Interacademic Chair, Department
of History, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater,
Whitewater, Wisconsin, June 2001 to August 2001.
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Adjunct Assistant Professor, Center
for Canadian-American Studies, Western
Washington University, Bellingham, Washington, September 1997 to August
1999.
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Courses taught: Canadian Aboriginal History; Canadian Environmental
Policy
Advising Coordinator, Western Washington University, Academic
Advising Services, July 1996 to August 1999.
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Lecturer, Western Washington University, Department of History,
Bellingham, Washington, August 1995 to June 1996; April 1997 to June 1997;
March 1998 to August 1999.
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Courses taught: U.S. History to 1865; U.S. History Since 1865; Western
Civilization
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Sessional Lecturer, University of Saskatchewan, Department of History,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, May 1995 to August 1995.
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Courses taught: The Americas
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Teaching Assistant, University of Saskatchewan, Department of History,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, September 1992 to August 1995.
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Courses taught: Canadian History
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Lecturer, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Department of History,
August 1991 to August 1992.
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Courses taught: Native American History; U.S. History to 1877; U.S.
History Since 1877
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Lecturer, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Department of Geography,
August 1991 to May 1992.
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Courses taught: Environmental Quality; Outdoor Recreation
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Instructor, Chippewa Valley Technical College, Social Studies Department,
January 1992 to May 1992.
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Courses taught: Contemporary American Society
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Lecturer, University of Wisconsin-La
Crosse, Department of History, August 1991 to December 1991.
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Courses taught: Native American History
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Graduate Assistant, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Department
of History and Office of Graduate Studies and Research, August 1990 to
August 1991.
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Courses assisted: Native American History; Nazi Germany;
Western
Civilization
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Long Term Substitute Teacher, Eau Claire Area School District, January
1990 to June 1990.
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Courses taught: American National Politics
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Intern Teacher, Eau Claire Area School District, DeLong Junior High
School, January 1989 to June 1989.
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Courses taught: U.S. History to 1865; U.S. History Since 1865
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Technical, World Wide Web, and Computer-Related
Experience
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Developed UW-Whitewater
course
web pages and Blackboard companion web pages for U.S.
Experience in a World Context, American
Indian History, American
History, and North
American Environmental History.
Provided technical support for Western Washington University's
Academic
Advising and Tutorial Center
computer and computer program-related needs, 1996-1999.
Developed Western Washington University'sAcademic
Advising Center's web page, 1998.
Edited, maintained and updated Western Washington University's printed and on-line Degree
Planning Guide and GUR/Scheduling
Guide, 1996-1999.
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Supervised the development of ClassFinder,
Western Washington University's on-line registration assistance tool, 1997.
Co-Editor of H-Canada,
1994-1997.
Co-Founder of H-Canada,
an electronic discussion list and part of H-Net,
humanities and social sciences on-line, 1995. |
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Other Related Experience
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Undergraduate Student Assistant, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire,
Department of History, September 1988 to June 1990.
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Resident Assistant, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Housing
Department, August 1987 to June 1989.
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Student Assistant, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Media Development
Center, January 1986 to December 1989.
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Books and Articles
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“Whales, Walleyes
and Moose: Recent Case Studies in
a Comparison of Indian Law in the United States and Canada,” in Native
Studies Review 16 no. 1 (2005): 91-118.
“‘Determined to
Burn off the Entire Country:’ Prospectors, Caribou, and the Denesuliné in
Northern Saskatchewan, 1900-1940,” in The American Indian Quarterly
26. no. 2 (Summer 2002): 335-359.
"'We Beg The Government:' Native People and Game Regulation in Northern
Saskatchewan, 1900-1940," in Prairie Forum 28, no. 1 (Spring
2003): 81-98.
With L. Sidney Harring, "An Indian Cannot Get a Morsel of Pork: A
Retrospective on Crow Dog, Lone Wolf, Blackbird, Tribal
Sovereignty, Indian Land, and Writing Indian Legal History," in The
University of Tulsa Law Review 38, no. 1 (Fall 2002): 87-112.
With Nikki Mandell, The United States in the Modern World: A Primary
Source Reader. Boston: Pearson Custom Publishing, 2002.
"Northern
Fishery, 1900-1948," in Atlas of Saskatchewan, Ka-iu Fung, ed. 66-67. Saskatoon: University of
Saskatchewan, 1999.
“Nunavut: An
Inuit Homeland at Last,” in Canadian Studies News 11, no. 2 (Spring-Summer
1999): 5.
"To Kill a Moose," in NewWest Review
(April/May 1999): 10-12.
"Carving Up the North: Fur Conservation Schemes and First Nations Peoples
in Saskatchewan’s North, 1940-1960," An article for the Canadian Embassy,
funded by a faculty research grant from the Canadian Embassy, February,
1999.
"Yesterday's Promises: The Negotiation of Treaty Ten," in Saskatchewan
History (Spring 1998): 25-39.
"Environmental Movement;" "Fishing Rights;" "Hunting Rights," in Encyclopedia
of American Indian Civil Rights, James Olson, ed., 116-118, 131-133,
164-165. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1997.
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"Sizing up the Catch: Native-Newcomer Resource Competition and the Development
of a Commercial Fishery in Saskatchewan," Saskatchewan History (Fall
1995): 3-12.
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Co-Compiler, "The Americas: A Critical Reader," a secondary source reading
guide for History 113, The Americas, University of Saskatchewan,
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, 1995
With Ronald N. Satz and Richard St. Germaine, Classroom Activities on
Chippewa Treaty Rights: to be used in grades K-12. Madison: Department
of Public Instruction, 1991.
Research Assistant for Ronald N. Satz's Chippewa Treaty Rights: The
Reserved Rights of Wisconsin's Chippewa Indians in Historical Perspective.
Madison: Wisconsin Academy of Arts, Sciences and Letters, 1991. |
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Published Book Reviews
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David
M. Quiring, CCF Colonialism in Northern Saskatchewan: Battling Parish
Priests, Bootleggers, and Fur Sharks. Ontario History, forthcoming,
Fall 2004.
Paul
Hackett, A Very Remarkable Sickness: Epidemics in the Petit Nord, 1670-1846.
American Review of Canadian Studies, forthcoming, Fall 2004.
- Duff Crerar and
Jaroslav Petryshyn, eds. Treaty 8 Revisited: Selected Papers on the 1999 Centennial
Conference. The Canadian Historical Review 83, no. 2 (June 2002):
272-275.
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Laurence Hauptman and
L. Gordon McLester III, eds. The Oneida Journey: From New York to Wisconsin,
1784-1860. The Michigan Historical Review 27, no. 1 (Spring 2001):
185-186.
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R.D. Symons, Many Patrols: Reminiscences of a Game Officer. Saskatchewan
History 49, no. 2 (Fall 1997): 42-43.
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Gordon Davies,
The Living Rivers of British Columbia: A River Guide. Canadian Book Review Annual, (1995): 148.
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Jane Marie Pederson, Between Memory and Reality: Family and Community
in Rural Wisconsin, 1870-1970. Labour/ le travail, 36 (Fall/automne
1995): 367-368.
Robert Bieder, Native Communities in Wisconsin, 1600-1960. The
Canadian Journal of History XXX, 3 (December 1995): 530-531.
Francis Paul Prucha, American Indian Treaties: The History of a Political
Anomaly. The Canadian Journal of History XXX, 3 (December 1995):
532-533.
Clayton Mack, Bella Coola Man: More Stories of Clayton Mack,
Harvey Thommasen, ed. Canadian Book Review Annual, (1994): 346.
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Wayne Merry, The Official Wilderness First Aid Guide. Canadian
Book Review Annual, (1994): 22.
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Tzeporah Berman et al., Clayoquot and Dissent. Canadian
Book Review Annual, (1994): 409.
Richard Thomas Wright, Bowron Lake Provincial Park: The Season Guide.
Canadian
Book Review Annual, (1994): 38.
Hugh A. Dempsey, The Amazing Death of Calf Shirt and Other Blackfoot
Stories. Canadian Book Review Annual, (1994): 343.
Kevin Callan, The Ways of the Wild: A Practical Guide to the Outdoors.
Canadian
Book Review Annual (1994): 2253-2254.
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Clayton Mack, Grizzlies and White Guys: The Stories of Clayton Mack.
Canadian
Book Review Annual (1994): 4230.
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Peter Jowett, Nahanni: The River Guide, Canadian Book Review
Annual (1994): 1063.
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Gerald Killan, Protected Places: A History of Ontario's Provincial Park
System. Canadian Book Review Annual (1994): 5027.
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Hugh W. McKervill, The Salmon People, Canadian Book Review Annual
(1994): 5040.
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Irene M. Spry and Bennett McCardle, The Records of the Department of
the Interior and Research Concerning Canada's Western Settlement. Saskatchewan
History 46, 2 (Fall 1994): 50.
A.G.E. Jones, Polar Portraits: Collected Papers. The Musk-Ox
40 (Summer 1994): 75-76.
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William Barr, ed. A Frenchman in Search of Franklin: De Bray's Arctic
Journal, 1852-1854. Emile Frédéric De Bray. The Canadian
Historical Review LXXV, 1 (March 1994): 97-98.
Mark O. Dickerson, Whose North?: Political Change, Political Development,
and Self Government in the Northwest Territories. Canadian Book
Review Annual (1993): 444.
Indian Treaties and Surrenders from 1680 to 1890: Volume 1, Treaties.
Canadian
Book Review Annual (1993): 449-450.
Aboriginal Governments and Power Sharing in Canada, Douglas Brown,
ed. Canadian Book Review Annual (1993): 438.
Doug McKown, Canoeing Safety and Rescue: A Handbook of Safety and
Rescue Procedures for Lake and River Canoeists. Canadian Book Review
Annual (1993): 143-144.
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Margaret A. Robinson, A Woman of Her Tribe. The Alan Review
19, 2 (Winter 1992): 36.
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Academic and Financial Awards
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Canadian Embassy Research Grant, 2003-2004.
UW-Whitewater, Diversity Infusion Grant, 2003.
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UW
System Institute on Race and Ethnicity, 2000, Category B, Curriculum Development
Grant, 2000-2001.
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Canadian Embassy
Faculty Enrichment Grant, 1999-2000.
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Canadian Embassy Research Grant, 1997-1999.
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University Graduate Scholarship, University of Saskatchewan 1992-1995.
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American Philosophical Society, Phillips Fund Grant for Native American
Research, 1994.
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Messer Fund Grants for Research in Canadian History, University of Saskatchewan
1993; 1994; 1995.
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J.S. Ewart Memorial Fund Research Travel Grant, 1994.
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Graduate Students' Association Summer Research Bursary 1993.
M.A. Thesis, runner-up to the 1991 Midwestern Association of Graduate Schools
Distinguished Thesis Award. |
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Current Research
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Monograph, "In Whose Interest?: Government-Indian Relations in Northern
Saskatchewan and Wisconsin," University of British Columbia Press, under
consideration.
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Professional Activity
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"Whales,
Walleyes and Moose: Recent Case Studies in a Comparison of Indian Law in the
United States and Canada," Native-Newcomer Relations: Comparative
Perspectives, University of Saskatchewan, 9-10 May 2003.
Paper,
“Fire in the North: Prospectors, Caribou, and the Denésuliné in Northern
Saskatchewan, 1900-1940,” American Society for Environmental History,
Providence, Rhode Island, 26-30 March 2003.
Invited
Session Commentator, "An Imposed Transition: Aboriginal Communities
Between Hunting and Wage Labour," Canadian Historical Association Learned
Societies Conference, Toronto, Ontario, 28 May 2002.
Paper,
"'Determined to Burn Off the Entire Country:' Forest Fires and
Environmental Change in Northern Saskatchewan," Canadian Historical
Association Learned Societies Conference, Toronto, Ontario, 28 May 2002.
Paper,
"The Greatest Test of All: A Comparative History of Indian Law in the
United States and Canada," Canadian Historical Association Learned
Societies Conference, Toronto, Ontario, 27 May 2002.
Paper,
"'We Beg the Government:' Native Peoples and Fish and Game Regulation in
Northern Saskatchewan, 1908-1945," British Association of Canadian
Studies/Association of Canadian Studies in Ireland, Belfast, Northern Ireland,
5 April 2002.
Presentation,
“Wisconsin Indian Treaties,” part of the Fairhaven “Favorite Things”
lecture series, Whitewater, Wisconsin, 1 October 2001.
Presentation
“Indigenous Rights and Natural Resources in Canada,” West Virginia
University College of Law, Morgantown, West Virginia, 8 November 2000
Presentations,
“Ojibwe Treaty Rights,” and “Tribal Sovereignty,” as part of the
Multicultural Education’s recognition of Native American Heritage: From
Preceding Generation Series University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, Whitewater,
Wisconsin, 15 and 27 November 2000.
Paper,
“Shifting Sands: Treaty Rights and Fish and Game Law Enforcement in Northern
Saskatchewan, 1920-1945,” Canadian Historical Association Learned Societies
Conference, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, 28 May 2000.
Presentation,
“Hand to Mouth, Field to Freezer: A Comparison of Native Subsistence
Activities in Canada and the United States,” Sheldon Jackson Museum, Sitka,
Alaska, 30 March 2000.
Presentation,
“ClassFinder: Course Selection, Advising, and In-Line Information for
Students,” National Conference on Academic Advising, University of
California, San Diego, San Diego, California, 5 October 1998.
Presentation, Study Canada Summer Institute, "Native Peoples in Canada
and the United States: A Comparison," Western Washington University, Bellingham,
Washington, 30 June 1998.
Consultant, Saskatchewan Treaties Project, jointly prepared by the Government
of Canada, Saskatchewan, and the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations,
October 1997 to December 1997.
Paper, "Law Conservation, and Indians in Saskatchewan's North After
the Transfer," Canadian Historical Association Learned Societies Conference,
Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's Newfoundland, 6 June 1997.
Round Table/Table ronde, "Graduate Students and H-Net Participation,"
Canadian Historical Association Learned Societies Conference, Brock University,
St. Catharines, Ontario, 3 June 1996.
Paper, "Cops and Robbers in the North, Fish and Game Law Enforcement
and Indians in Saskatchewan's North, 1905-1930," 30th Annual Northern Great
Plains History Conference, Brandon, Manitoba, 30 September 1995.
Paper, "Sizing Up the Catch: Native-Newcomer Resource Competition and
the Development of the Commercial Fishery in the Provincial North, 1914-1940,"
Pacific Northwest History Conference, Richland, Washington, 25 March 1995.
Workshop Instructor/Organizer, "H-Net and Media Technology on the Classroom:
Humanists Using the Internet," University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan,
5-6 May 1995.
Paper, "Rights and Resources: A Comparison of Native/Government Resource
Relations in the Treaty Ten and Chippewa Ceded Territory," Canadian Historical
Association Learned Societies Conference, University of Calgary, Calgary,
Alberta, 14 June 1994.
Paper/Conference Organizer, "History, Rights, and the Oral Record: Testimony
from the Voigt Case," Oral Traditions/Les Traditions Orales,
University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, 30 October 1993.
Paper, "Stay the Course: Canadian Indian Policy in Response to the Indian
Reorganization Act," Third Annual Riding Mountain History Colloquium, Riding
Mountain, Manitoba, 28 February 1993.
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Moderator, History Section, Annual Conference of the Wisconsin Academy
of Sciences, Arts, & Letters, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Eau
Claire, Wisconsin, 25 April 1992.
Paper, "Understanding Indian History," Upper Midwest Honors Council Conference,
University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Eau Claire, Wisconsin, 24 April 1992.
"Wisconsin Indian Treaty Rights," Beloit College Seminar on Indian Culture
and Treaty Rights, Forts Folle Avoine, Burnett County Historical
Society, Siren, Wisconsin, 21-22 March 1992.
Discussion Leader, "After the Treaties: Wisconsin Indians and the U.S.
Government. A Reading/Discussion Series on American Indian History," Chippewa
Valley Museum, Eau Claire, Wisconsin, 25 January, 8 and 22 February, 7
March 1992.
Plenary Session, "Classroom Activities on Chippewa Treaty Rights: The
Author's Perspective," 1992 State Conference on K-12 Indian Studies: Strategies
for Implementing American Indian Studies, Stevens Point, Wisconsin, 13-15
January 1992.
"Treaty Making and Chippewa Treaty Rights," Social Security Administration,
Eau Claire, Wisconsin, 12 November 1991.
Paper, "Lawrence Taliaferro: Social and Political Relations with the
Chippewas and Sioux of the St. Peters Agency, 1819-1840," American Indian
History and Culture Conference, Green Bay, Wisconsin, 7-9 November 1991.
"Teaching Indian History and Chippewa Treaty Rights." Wisconsin Education
Association Council Workshop, Ripon College, Ripon, Wisconsin, 8 August
1991.
"Indian-White Relations in the Fur Trade, 1670-1821," Graduate Forum, University
of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Eau Claire, Wisconsin, 7 May 1991.
Paper, "The Trade of 1854 and Chippewa Removal," Phi Alpha Theta Regional
Conference, University of Minnesota-Duluth, Duluth, Minnesota, 20 April
1991.
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"The Effects of Stereotypes on Racism," United Methodist Church Women's
Organization, Eau Claire, Wisconsin, 17 April 1991.
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"The British Admiralty and the Search for the Northwest Passage, 1818-1859,"
History 715, Colloquium in Modern Europe, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire,
12 December 1990.
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Committee Membership and Organizational Participation
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University
of Wisconsin-Whitewater, Diversity Committee, 2003-present.
Council
of University of Wisconsin Libraries, general member and faculty representative
to the executive committee,
2001-present.
Faculty
Advisor,
Phi Alpha Theta, Department of History, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater,
2000-present.
College
of Letters and Sciences
Curriculum Committee, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, 2000-present.
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Collection Development
Committee, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, 1999-present.
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Exempt Professional Staff Employment Relations Committee, Western Washington
University, 1998.
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Association for Canadian Studies in the United States, 1997-present.
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Editorial Board Member, H-Canada, 1997 to present.
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Co-Moderator, H-Canada, 1994 to 1997.
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American Historical Association, 1993 to present.
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Phi Alpha Theta, 1988 to present.
Vice-President, Exempt Professional Staff Organization, Western Washington
University, 1997-1998.
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President, History Graduate Students' Committee, University of Saskatchewan,
1993 to 1994.
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Steering Committee, Conference on Oral Tradition, University of Saskatchewan,
1992 to 1994.
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Chair, Graduate Student Search and Screen Committee, Department of History,
University of Saskatchewan, 1995.
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Vice-President, History Graduate Students' Committee, University of Saskatchewan,
1992 to 1993.
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American Indian Studies Committee, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire,
1991 to 1992.
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Department of History Graduate Committee, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire,
1990 to 1991.
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Forum Advisory Committee, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, 1987 to 1988.
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