CALJ 2021 Conference, Bios - Indigenous Sovereignty and Editing Practices - Canadian Association of ...
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CALJ 2021 Conference, Bios Indigenous Sovereignty and Editing Practices May 27, 2021 10:00am - 11:00am (MT) Michelle Coupal (Bonnechere Algonquin First Nation) is a scholar of Indigenous literatures. She is a Canada Research Chair in Truth, Reconciliation, and Indigenous Literatures, and an Associate Professor of English at the University of Regina. MIchelle has co-edited a collection of works by Vera Manuel, Honouring the Strength of Indian Women: Plays, Stories, Poetry (2019). Michelle has also co-edited special journal issues for Studies in American Indian Literature (SAIL) and Studies in Canadian Literature. Her open-access website project, How to Teach Stories of Residential School, will be launched in 2021. Niigaanwewidam James Sinclair is Anishinaabe and originally from St. Peter’s (Little Peguis) Indian Settlement near Selkirk, Manitoba. He is an award-winning writer, editor and activist who was named one of Monocle Magazine‘s “Canada’s Top 20 Most Influential People” and he won the 2018 Canadian columnist of the year at the National Newspaper Awards for his bi-weekly columns in The Winnipeg Free Press. He is the co-editor of the award-winning Manitowapow: Aboriginal Writings from the Land of Water (Highwater Press, 2011), Centering Anishinaabeg Studies: Understanding the World Through Stories (Michigan State University Press, 2013) and The Winter We Danced: the Past, the Future and the Idle No More Movement (Arbeiter Ring Press, 2014). Currently at the University of Manitoba, Niigaan teaches courses in Indigenous literatures, cultures, histories, and politics and is a proud Treaty One member. Deanna Reder (Cree-Métis) is Associate Professor of Indigenous Studies and English at Simon Fraser University. Her research focuses on the understudied archive of Indigenous literary work in Canada up to 1992 (see thepeopleandthetext.ca) and she has co-edited several anthologies in Indigenous Literary Studies and helped found the Indigenous Editors Association in 2020. Currently she is guest- editing, with Michelle Coupal, a special issue for SAIL: Studies in American Indian Literature, to be released in 2022. All times listed in Mountain Time (MT)
CALJ 2021 Conference, Bios How do I get my journal out there? May 27, 2021 11:30am - 12:30pm (MT) Elizabeth Brown, (Liz) is Publisher Relations Manager for Project MUSE, a digital publishing platform housed at the Johns Hopkins University. Liz runs the journals program for the publisher relations team, which includes selecting and signing journals for Project MUSE and creating new programs and services for participating journal publishers. An academic librarian by background, Liz began work at Project MUSE in 1998 from the Johns Hopkins University Libraries then at the JHU Press from 2001. She previously held positions at the Rutgers University Libraries, the University of Michigan Libraries, the Harvard College Library, and the Georgia Tech Library. Thane Chambers is the Head, Research Impact Services for the University of Alberta Library. Her work focuses on helping researchers tell the story of their research inside and outside of the academy and helping our institution understand and celebrate the research being done at the University of Alberta Sonya Betz is the Head, Library Publishing and Digital Production Services at the University of Alberta Library. Her team manages the UofA’s active and growing 62-journal diamond open access publishing program, which partners with editorial boards from scholarly associations and organizations across Canada. Sonya is an active member of the Library Publishing Coalition, a partner on the IMLS-funded Library Publishing Workflows Project, and is currently Chair of the Public Knowledge Project’s Technical Committee. Émilie Paquin is the Director of Research and Strategic Development of the Érudit Consortium. With Érudit since 2008, she has been in charge of production and publisher relations, and has also been involved in major digitization projects. She has contributed to Érudit’s successful funding strategies as well as strategic planning for a diversified, equitable and independent research dissemination system. Moderated by: Odile Cisneros, Editor in Chief of Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispánico
CALJ 2021 Conference, Bios Mentorship in Scholarly Publishing May 27, 2021 1:00pm - 1:45pm (MT) Kim Solga is Director of Theatre Studies and Professor, English and Writing Studies, at Western University. She is the editor of six volumes of plays and essays; since 2016 she has served as General Editor of Theatre Research in Canada/Recherches théâtrales au Canada. She is also an award winning teacher and founder of The Activist Classroom, available on Wordpress. Meredith Adinolfi is VP of Publishing Operations for Cell Press and oversees production and editorial operations for a growing journal portfolio in the life, physical, and medical sciences. She also contributes to the strategic vision of Cell Press and uses her Six Sigma certification to focus on workflow optimization. One of her professional passions is developing people through mentorship and career development programs. She is also the host of SSP’s early career podcast. Tom Olyhoek is the Editor in Chief, Directory of Open Access Journals. After obtaining his PhD in molecular microbiology from Amsterdam University (1982) he has been at the Max Planck Institute in Berlin for 7 years. He has spent seven years in Kenya and Algeria doing research on malaria, sleeping sickness and meningococcal epidemics. Since 2012 he has been advocating open access and open science as Open Access working group coordinator for Open Knowledge International. In 2013 he became a member of the (DOAJ, Directory of Open Access Journals) advisory board who were instrumental in redefining the criteria for being indexed in DOAJ. Since 2014 he is Editor in Chief at the DOAJ. From Jan 2018 his main task has been the managing of the global DOAJ ambassador program and global outreach activities including connecting to other open communities like the Creative Commons Global Network and OCSD Net. Ruijia Zhang is a senior undergraduate student studying Honours Chemical Biology at McMaster University. She joined the SFJ team as a typesetter in 2019 and more recently assumed the role of Associate Editor at the end of 2020. As Associate Editor, she facilitates the early stages of the manuscript submission process and has accumulated extensive experience communicating directly with authors about their research and writing work. Moderated by: Adrian Stanley, Chief Innovation and Development Officer at JMIR Publications All times listed in Mountain Time (MT)
CALJ 2021 Conference, Bios Creative Scholarship May 28, 2021 10:00am - 11:00am (MT) Sally Campbell Galman is an editor at Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures, and a cartoonist, anthropologist, and Professor of child and family studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She is the author of the Shane the Lone Ethnographer series of methods comics. Her research focuses on supporting transgender and gender diverse children and their families. You can learn more about her work at sallycampbellgalman.com. Violaine Iglesias is CEO & co-founder of Cadmore Media, which aims to spur the growth of streaming media in scholarly and professional communication. Violaine’s experience spans fifteen years in professional, scholarly and trade publishing including stints at technology provider GVPi, SAGE Publishing, Random House, and Flammarion. Hannah McGregor is an Assistant Professor of Publishing at Simon Fraser University, where her research focuses on podcasting as scholarly communication, systemic barriers to access in the Canadian publishing industry, and the history of magazines as serial media. She is the co-director of the Amplify Podcast Network, Canada’s first peer-reviewed podcast network, and the creator of the network’s pilot podcast, Secret Feminist Agenda. She is also the co-creator of Witch, Please, a feminist podcast on the Harry Potter world; the host of The SpokenWeb Podcast; and the co-editor of the book Refuse: CanLit in Ruins (Book*hug 2018). Moderated by: Lauren Bosc, Managing Editor, Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures French in an English-Dominated Academic World May 28, 2021 11:30am - 12:30pm (MT) Liette Vasseur est professeure titulaire au Département des sciences biologiques à l’Université Brock, St Catharines, Ontario, Canada. Elle est aussi membre du Centre de recherche sur la durabilité environnementale, un des cinq centres de recherche transdisciplinaire de l’université). Depuis 2014, elle est titulaire de la Chaire UNESCO en viabilité des communautés: du local au global. Son programme de recherche est transdisciplinaire et se lie à All times listed in Mountain Time (MT)
CALJ 2021 Conference, Bios la gestion des écosystèmes, la résilience et l’adaptation aux changements climatiques et ce à travers des recherches actions participatives avec les communautés soit rurales ou côtières. Son travail se situe non seulement au Canada, mais aussi à l’international comme en Chine (comme chercheure Minjiang à la Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), l’Équateur, le Burkina Faso et le Sénégal. Elle travaille sur les aspects d’égalité de genre, diversité et inclusion avec la CCUNESCO. Depuis 2020, elle est co-éditrice-en-chef de la revue Botanique. Elle préside présentement la Commission canadienne pour l’UNESCO (CCUNESCO) ainsi que le groupe thématique en gouvernance écosystémique à la Commission sur la gestion des écosystèmes de l’Union internationale sur la conservation de la nature où elle est aussi vice-présidente pour l’Amérique du Nord. Sa recherche université-communauté lui a valu d’être récipiendaire en 2011 du prix Latornell de Conservation Ontario et le Brock University Distinguished Research and Creative Activity Award en 2018. Christian Lacroix, est professeur titulaire dans le département de biologie à l’université de l’île-du-prince-Edouard à Charlottetown. Il est rédacteur en chef pour la revue Botany/botanique publiée par les Éditions Sciences Canada (auparavant NRC Research Press) depuis 2011 et partage maintenant le rôle avec Liette Vasseur. Il est président du réseau national de développement économique et d’employabilité (RDÉE) de l’Île-du-Prince-Édouard et ancient président de l’organisme régional science atlantique. Alexandrine Boudreault-Fournier est professeure d’anthropologie à l’Université de Victoria. Elle enseigne l’anthropologie visuelle, les études sonores et les médias. Ses recherches portent sur les infrastructures et les médias à Cuba. Elle est l’auteure de Aerial Imagination in Cuba (2020) et coéditrice du livre Audible Infrastructures : Music, Sound, Media (2021). Elle a réalisé le film Golden Scars (2010) en parti financé par l’ONF du Canada, coréalisé le film Fabrik Funk et Guardians of the Night. Elle est la rédactrice en chef de la revue bilingue Anthropologica qui est disponible en libre accès depuis 2021. Marc-André Éthier, professeur titulaire au Département de didactique à l’Université de Montréal, rédacteur en chef, Revue des sciences de l’éducation. David Lefrançois, Ph. D., est professeur en sciences de l’éducation à l’Université du Québec en Outaouais. Ses recherches et publications analysent les contenus des programmes d’études, les méthodes et les moyens d’enseignement et d’évaluation de l’apprentissage en sciences sociales au primaire et au secondaire. All times listed in Mountain Time (MT)
CALJ 2021 Conference, Bios Hélène Cazes est professeure au département de français à l’Université de Victoria depuis 2001. Ses recherches portent sur la tradition et la réception des textes, la transmission et les réseaux des savoirs, les icônes culturelles, les mythes historiographiques et les catégories du biais (genre, colonisation) ; elles combinent méthodologie et théorie littéraires avec la lecture de divers textes de genres, registres et périodes. Membre du conseil éditorial de nombreuses revues (Études Littéraires, Analyses, Voix Plurielles…), ancienne éditrice adjointe de Renaissance et Réforme/Renaissance and Reformation, elle dirige la revue en ligne (accès ouvert) Topiques, Études Satoriennes. Moderated by: Emmanuel Hogg, Directeur de la rédaction et directeur générale, Histoire sociale / Social History “Whine and Wine” May 27, 2021 1:00pm - 1:45pm (MT) Breakout room 1: Hosted by Michael Donaldson Breakout room 2: Hosted by Eugenia Zuroski Breakout room 3: Hosted by Emmanuel Hogg All times listed in Mountain Time (MT)
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