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A Samaritan State Revisited: Contributors

A Samaritan State Revisited
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table of contents
  1. Contents
  2. List of Abbreviations
  3. Acknowledgements
    1. Introduction
  4. Part 1 Entering the Aid World,1950–1960
    1. 1 Encounter and Apprenticeship: The Colombo Plan and Canadian Aid in India, 1950–1960
    2. 2 “Reasonably Well-Organized”: A History of Early Aid Administration
    3. 3 Developing the World in Canada’s Image: Hugh Keenleyside and Technical Assistance
  5. Part 2 Development, Diplomacy, and Trade, 1953–1991
    1. 4 “A One Way Street”: The Limits of Canada’s Aid Relations with Pakistan, 1958–1972
    2. 5 One Size Fits All? Canadian Development Assistance to Colombia, 1953–1972
    3. 6 Samaritanos canadienses?: Canadian Development Assistance in Latin America during the Trudeau Years
    4. 7 “Trotsky in Pinstripes”: Lewis Perinbam, CIDA, and the Non-Governmental Organizations Program, 1968–1991
  6. Part 3 Imagery and Symbolism
    1. 8 Building a Base: The Growth of Public Engagement with Canadian Foreign Aid Policy, 1950–1980
    2. 9 Pictures in Development: The Canadian International Development Agency’s Photo Library
    3. 10 “Tears Are Not Enough”: Canadian Political and Social Mobilization for Famine Relief in Ethiopia, 1984–1988
  7. Part 4 The Political Economy of Canadian Aid, 1980–2018
    1. 11 Canadian Development Assistance to Latin America
    2. 12 CIDA and Aid to Africa in the 1990s: A Crisis of Confidence
    3. 13 A Samaritan State?, Canadian Foreign Aid, and the Challenges of Policy Coherence for Development
  8. Conclusion
    1. 14 Concluding Reflections: Beyond Aid
  9. Bibliography
  10. Contributors
  11. Index

Contributors

David Black is the Lester B. Pearson Professor of International Development Studies and the chair of the Political Science Department at Dalhousie University.

Stephen Brown is a professor of political science at the School of Political Studies at the University of Ottawa.

Kevin Brushett is an assistant professor of history and chair of the Military and Strategic Studies Programme at the Royal Military College of Canada.

Jill Campbell-Miller is a SSHRC postdoctoral fellow in the Department of History at Carleton University

Ted Cogan completed his PhD in history at the University of Guelph in 2017.

Sonya de Laat completed her PhD in the Faculty of Information and Media Studies at Western University in 2017.

Greg Donaghy is head of the Historical Section at Global Affairs Canada.

Laura Macdonald is a professor in the Department of Political Science and the Institute of Political Economy at Carleton University.

Dominique Marshall is chair of the History Department at Carleton University.

Asa McKercher teaches history of the Royal Military College of Canada.

Nassisse Solomon is a PhD candidate in the Collaborative Graduate Program in Migration and Ethnic Relations at Western University.

Stefano Tijerina teaches history, international relations, and business at the University of Maine.

Ryan Touhey is an associate professor and chair of the History Department at St. Jerome’s University.

David Webster is a professor of history at Bishop’s University.

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