Michael Boudreau Curriculum Vitae
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Curriculum Vitae Michael Scott Boudreau Address: St. Thomas University, 51 Dineen Drive, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada, E3B 5G3. E-Mail: [email protected] Office Phone: (506) 452-0501 Citizenship: Canadian. Education: Bachelor of Arts with First Class Honours in History and Political Science, Mount Allison University, 1989. Master of Arts, Queen’s University, 1991. PhD, Queen's University, 1996. Academic Teaching Experience: Professor, Department of Criminology & Criminal Justice, St. Thomas University, July 1st, 2016 - . Granted promotion to the rank of Professor, July 1st, 2016. Associate Professor, Department of Criminology & Criminal Justice, St. Thomas University, July 1st, 2007 - June 30th, 2016. Granted tenure and promotion to the rank of Associate Professor, July 1st, 2007. Assistant Professor, Department of Criminology & Criminal Justice, St. Thomas University, July 1st, 2004 - June 30th, 2007. Sessional instructor, Department of History, University of British Columbia, 2000- 2004. Sessional instructor, Langara College, Vancouver, 2000-2004. Sessional instructor, Department of History, Simon Fraser University, 2002-2003. Sessional instructor, Department of History, University College of the Fraser Valley, British Columbia, 1998-2000. Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of Prince Edward Island, 1997-1998. 1 Publications: Peer-Reviewed Monographs: Michael Boudreau and Bonnie Huskins, Just the Usual Work: The Social Worlds of Ida Martin, Working-Class Diarist (Montreal & Kingston: McGill- Queen’s University Press, 2021). City of Order: Crime and Society in Halifax, 1918-35. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2012 (Hardback). Short-listed for the 2013 Canadian Historical Association prize for the book “judged to have made the most significant contribution to the understanding of the Canadian past.” City of Order: Crime and Society in Halifax, 1918-35. Vancouver: UBC Press, 2013 (Paperback). Peer-Reviewed Edited Monograph: Michael Boudreau, Peter G. Toner, and Tony Tremblay, eds. Exploring the Dimensions of Self-Sufficiency for New Brunswick. Fredericton: New Brunswick & Atlantic Studies Research & Development Centre, 2009. Peer-Reviewed Articles and Book Chapters: “`He was always a mental defective’: Psychiatric Conversations and the Execution of Bennie Swim in New Brunswick, 1922”. Journal of New Brunswick Studies, 12 (Fall 2020): 25-43. “Hippies, Yippies, the Counter-Culture, and the Gastown Riot in Vancouver, 1968- 71”. BC Studies: The British Columbian Quarterly, 197 (Spring 2018): 39-65. With Bonnie Huskins, “Irresponsibility, Obligation, and the ‘Manly Modern’: Tensions in Working-class Masculinities in Postwar Saint John, New Brunswick”. Labour/Le Travail: Journal of Canadian Labour Studies, 78 (Fall 2016):165- 196. “The ‘Struggle for a Different World’: The 1971 Gastown Riot in Vancouver”. In Debating Dissent: Canada and the Sixties, Lara Campbell, Dominique Clement, and Greg Kealey, eds. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2012, 117- 133. “‘Delinquents Often Become Criminals’: Juvenile Delinquency in Halifax, 1918- 1935”. Acadiensis: The Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region, 39, 1 (Winter/Spring 2010): 108-132. 2 With Bonnie Huskins, “‘Getting By’ in Postwar Saint John: Working-Class Families and New Brunswick’s Informal Economy”. In Exploring the Dimensions of Self- Sufficiency for New Brunswick, Michael Boudreau, Peter G. Toner, and Tony Tremblay, eds. Fredericton: New Brunswick & Atlantic Studies Research & Development Centre and St. Thomas University, 2009, 77-99. With Bonnie Huskins. “Life After Ile Ste-Croix”. Acadiensis: The Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region, 35, 2 (Spring 2006): 180-187. With Bonnie Huskins. “`Daily allowances’: literary conventions and daily life in the diaries of Ida Louise Martin (nee Friars), Saint John, New Brunswick, 1945-1992”. Acadiensis: The Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region, 34, 2 (Spring 2005): 88-108. “Justice or Repression?: Canadian State Trials and the Rule of Law”. Dalhousie Law Journal 20, 1 (Spring 1997): 275-294. “Strikes, Rural Decay, and Socialism: The Presbyterian Church in Nova Scotia Grapples with Social Realities, 1880-1914”. In The Contribution of Presbyterianism to the Maritime Provinces of Canada, Charles H.H. Scobie and G.A. Rawlyk, eds. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1997, 144-159. “A`rare and unusual treat of historical significance': The 1923 Hector Celebration and the Political Economy of the Past”. Journal of Canadian Studies 28, 4 (Winter 1993-94): 28-48. Non-Peer-Reviewed Articles and Book Chapters: With Bonnie Huskins. “Widows.” In Daily Life of Women: An Encyclopedia from Ancient Times to the Present (3 volumes), Colleen Boyett, et al, eds. Greenwood: 2020, 783-784. “Francis Hanrahan: Halifax Chief of Police”. Dictionary of Canadian Biography, Volume XV, 1921-1930. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2005, 452-453. Introduction. In Crime and Deviance in Canada: Historical Perspectives, Chris McCormick, ed. Toronto: Canadian Scholars Press, 2005, 1-7. “Conducting Historical Research and Teaching Criminology”. Teaching Perspectives, St. Thomas University, (Spring 2005), 6. 3 “A Shared History Or A Shared Authority?: Canada's National History”. Newsletter of the Atlantic Association of Historians 37 (Winter 1999/2000): 13-15. “Crime and Society in Halifax, 1918-1935”. Collections of the Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society 44 (1996): 95-103. “Reflections on George A. Rawlyk's Contribution to the History of the Maritimes”. Nova Scotia Historical Review 16, 1 (1996): 1-6. “`There is...no pernicious dualism between sacred and secular': Nova Scotia Baptists and the Social Gospel, 1880-1914”. Nova Scotia Historical Review 16, 1 (1996): 109-131. “Ship of Dreams”. New Maritimes XI, One (September/October 1992): 6-15. Blog Postings: “I am totally shocked that something of this sort could happen in Canada”: Vancouver’s Gastown Riot Fifty Years Later. Active History, 21 May 2021. http://activehistory.ca/2021/05/gastown2021/ He had “insanity in his veins”: The Execution of George Gee in New Brunswick. Acadiensis Blog, 25 January 2021. https://acadiensis.wordpress.com/2021/01/25/he- had-insanity-in-his-veins-the-execution-of-george-gee-in-new-brunswick/ Negotiating the Personal: Working with the Diaries of Ida Martin. Active History, 25 September 2019. http://activehistory.ca/2019/09/negotiating-the-personal-working-with-the-diaries-of-ida- martin/ A “backwoods tragedy”: The Bannister Brothers and Capital Punishment in New Brunswick, 1936. Acadiensis Blog, 15 August 2019. https://acadiensis.wordpress.com/2019/08/15/a-backwoods-tragedy-the-bannister- brothers-and-capital-punishment-in-new-brunswick-1936/ “bad characters”: The Execution of George & Rufus Hamilton in Fredericton, 1949. Acadiensis Blog, 7 November 2018. https://acadiensis.wordpress.com/2018/11/07/bad- characters-the-execution-of-george-rufus-hamilton-in-fredericton-1949/ “The Legalization of Cannabis in New Brunswick.” Acadiensis Blog, 11 October 2017. https://acadiensis.wordpress.com/2017/10/11/the-legalization-of-cannabis-in-new- brunswick/ 4 Website: With Greg Marquis, Crime and Punishment in New Brunswick, 2008 and updated in 2010 and 2012: http://www.unbsj.ca/arts/hist/gregmarquis/cph/index.php. “Website explores history of crime and punishment in N.B.” Daily Gleaner, 13 September 2010. Book Reviews: Canadian Historical Review 101, 3 (September 2020): 470-71. American Historical Review 124, 2 (April 2019): 648-49. Canadian Historical Review 96, 1 (March 2015):122-24. Law and Politics Book Review 23, 9 (2013): 475-78. http://www.lpbr.net/2013/09/westward-bound-sex-violence-law-and.html?m=1 Canadian Historical Review 94, 2 (June 2013):336-38. Journal of the Royal Nova Scotia Historical Society 13 (2010):200-202. Canadian Journal of Law and Society 24, 2 (2009):279-280. CAUT/ACPPU Bulletin 56, 4 (April 2009). Histoire sociale - Social History XLI, 82 (November 2008): 637-640. Histoire sociale - Social History XLI, 81 (May 2008): 275-77. Canadian Journal of Law and Society 21, 2 (2006): 180-83. Canadian Journal of Law and Society 21, 1 (2006): 210-14. Law and Politics Book Review 16, 7 (2006): 539-541. http://www.bsos.umd.edu/gvpt/lpbr/subpages/reviews/knafla-swainger0706.htm. Canadian Literature 186 (Autumn 2005): 176-77. Archivaria 40 (Fall 1995): 226-28. New Maritimes XIII, Three (January/February 1995): 27-29. 5 left history Two, Two (Fall 1994): 138-140. New Maritimes IX, Two (November/December 1990): 20-22. New Maritimes XII, Four (April/May 1994): 19-22. Conference Papers & Invited Lectures: “he was always a mental defective”: Psychiatric Conversations and the Execution of Bennie Swim in New Brunswick, 1922. Canadian Historical Association Annual Meeting, Congress 2019, University of British Columbia, 4 June 2019. “Canada’s Efforts to Police & Legalize Cannabis, 1923-2018”. LSA-CLSA Joint Annual Meeting, Sheraton Centre, Toronto, 8 June 2018. “`he deserves to be lynched’: Ethnicity, Justice, and Capital Punishment in Nova Scotia & New Brunswick, 1927-1949.” Atlantic Canada Studies Conference, Acadia University, 4 May 2018. “‘tragic drama’: Executions in New Brunswick, 1869-1957.” Osgoode Society Legal History Workshop, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, 28 March 2018. “Vancouver’s 1971 `Grasstown Smoke-In and Street Jamboree’: Reflections on Canada’s Efforts to Legalize Marijuana.” Power, Politics, and the State in Canadian History, University of British Columbia, 30 September 2017. “Atlantic Canadian Legal History: