Permeable Border:
The Great Lakes Basin as Transnational Region, 1650-1990

By John J. Bukowczyk, Nora Faires,  David R. Smith, and Randy William Widdis

$39.95
Available Now
ISBN 1-55238-216-8
250 pp.
6.125" x 9.25"

Available in the United States through the
University of Pittsburgh Press


About the Book


From the colonial era of waterborne transport, through nineteenth-century  changes in transportation and communication, to globalization,  the history of the Great Lakes Basin has been shaped by the people,  goods, and capital crossing and recrossing the U.S.-Canadian  border.

 During the past three centuries, the region has been buffeted  by efforts to benefit from or defeat economic and political integration  and by the politics of imposing, tightening, or relaxing the bisecting international border. Where tariff policy was used  in the early national period to open the border for agricultural  goods, growing protectionism in both countries transformed the border into a bulwark against foreign competition after the 1860s.  In the twentieth century, labor migration followed by multinational  corporations fundamentally altered the customary pairing of capital  and nation to that of capital versus nation, challenging the concept of international borders as key factors in national development.

 In tracing the economic development of the Great Lakes Basin as borderland and as transnational region, the authors of Permeable Border have provided a regional history that transcends national borders and makes vital connections between two national histories that are too often studied as wholly separate.


About the Author


John J. Bukowczyk  is professor of history and director of the Canadian Studies  Program at Wayne State University in Detroit.

Nora Faires is associate professor of history and women's studies at Western  Michigan University in Kalamazoo.

David R. Smith is a  history instructor and academic advisor at the University of  Michigan, Ann Arbor.

Randy William Widdis is professor  of geography at the University of Regina.

 

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