Veuillez télécharger l’article en PDF pour le lire.
Télécharger
Parties annexes
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank, first off, Owen Temby for taking an interest in my work and for hatching the idea of this issue, as well as both Owen and his co-editor of the journal, Harold Bérubé, for trusting me with the job of assembling it and providing me with valuable advice. Harold was especially helpful in advising on the French-language papers. Thanks to all the authors who took the time to write and submit papers, including those whose papers were not deemed right for the issue, and to all the peer reviewers, whose assessments were essential to the process. And I would like to offer a special thank you to my colleague Richard Harris, a scholar with a similar name but a very different, far more accomplished academic resumé, who, promptly and unhesitatingly, provided me with the benefit of his extensive experience at several critical points along the way.
Biographical note
Richard White is an independent Toronto-based historian and author. He received a PhD in history from the University of Toronto in 1995 and has remained associated with the university, working for many years as a sessional instructor in Canadian history at the University of Toronto Mississauga and more recently in planning history at the University of Toronto Scarborough. He also served for a time as research director of the Neptis Foundation, where he began his own research program in planning history. His most recent major publication is Planning Toronto: The Plans, the Planners, Their Legacies, 1940–80 (UBC Press, 2016), recipient of the 2017 Fred Landon Award from the Ontario Historical Society for the best book on local or regional history in Ontario.
Parties annexes
Note biographique
Richard White est un historien et un auteur indépendant basé à Toronto. Il détient un doctorat en histoire de l’Université de Toronto (1995) et est demeuré associé à cette université. Il a travaillé de longues années en tant que chargé de cours d’histoire canadienne à l’Université de Toronto Mississauga, et, plus récemment, d’histoire de l’urbanisme à l’Université de Toronto Scarborough. Il a également oeuvré à titre de directeur de recherche au sein de la Neptis Foundation, où il a entrepris son propre programme de recherche en histoire de l’urbanisme. Ses publications récentes majeures incluent Planning Toronto: The Plans, the Planners, Their Legacies, 1940-80 (UBC Press, 2016) qui s’est mérité le prix Fred Landon 2017 de la Ontario Historical Society pour la meilleure monographie d’histoire locale et régionale en Ontario.