Resources that have been used in our work

Adkin, Laurie, ed. 2016. First world petro-politics: the political ecology and governance of Alberta. University of Toronto Press.

Banack, Clark. 2021. "Ethnography and political opinion: Identity, alienation and anti-establishmentarianism in rural Alberta." Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique 54(1): 1-22. 

Banack, Clark. 2015. "Understanding the influence of faith-based organizations on education policy in Alberta." Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique 48(4): 933-959.

Banack, Clark. 2013. “American Protestantism and the Roots of ‘Populist Conservatism’ in Alberta.” In Conservatism in Canada, edited by J. Farney and D. Rayside. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Banack, Clark. 2015. “‘Government For the People, Not by the People.’ Populism and Parliamentary Governance under Stephen Harper.” In The Harper Record 2008-2015, edited by T. Healy and S. Trew. Ottawa: Canadian Centre For Policy Alternatives.

Banack, Clark. 2015. “Understanding the Influence of Faith-based Organizations on Education Policy in Alberta.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 48(4): 933-959.

Banack, Clark.2016. God's Province: evangelical Christianity, political thought, and conservatism in Alberta. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's Press.

Banack, Clark. 2019. “Gender and Politics in Alberta Under Alison Redford.” In Doing Politics Differently? Women Premiers in Canada's Provinces and Territories, edited by Sylvia Bashevkin. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.

Barrie, Doreen. 2006. The Other Alberta: Decoding a Political Enigma. Regina: Canadian Plains Research Center.

Bell, David. 1991. The Roots of Disunity: A Study of Canadian Political Culture. Oxford. Oxford University Press.

Bickerton, James, Stephen Brooks, and Alain-G. Gagnon. 2006.  Freedom, Equality, Community: The Political Philosophy of Six Influential Canadians. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press.

Blue, Gwendolyn. 2018. "If it ain't Alberta, it ain't beef: Local food, regional identity,(inter) national politics." Food, Culture & Society 11(1): 69-85.

Bratt, Duane, Keith Brownsey, Richard Sutherland, and David Taras, eds. 2018. Orange Chinook: Politics in the New Alberta. Calgary: University of Calgary Press.

Carty, R.K. and David Stewart. 1996. “Parties and Party Systems.” In: Christopher Dunn, Provinces: Canadian Provincial Politics. Peterborough: Broadview Press.

Chilton, Stephen. 1988. “Defining Political Culture.” Western Political Quarterly 41(3): 419–45.

Cochrane, Christopher. 2010. “Left/Right Ideology and Canadian Politics”. Canadian Journal of Political Science 43(3): 583-605. 

Cramer, Katherine. 2016. The Politics of Resentment. Chicago. University of Chicago Press.

Denis, Claude. 1995. "“Government Can Do Whatever It Wants”: Moral Regulation in Ralph Klein's Alberta." Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie 32 (3): 365-383.

Eaton, Emily. 2016. "Oil, Democracy, and Political Ecology in Alberta’s Tar Sands." Journal of Canadian Studies/Revue d'études canadiennes 50(3): 756-765. 

Finkel, Alvin. 2012. Working people in Alberta: A history. Edmonton: Athabasca University Press.

Gibbins, Roger, ed. 2012. Government and Politics in Alberta. Edmonton: University of Alberta Press.

Haluza-Delay, Randolph. 2012. "Giving consent in the petrostate: Hegemony and Alberta oil sands." Journal for Activist Science and Technology Education 4(1): 1-6

Harrison, Trevor W. 2015. “Petroleum, Politics, and the Limits of Left Progressivism in Alberta.” In: Meenal Sbrivastava and Lorna Stefanick, Alberta Oil and the Decline of Democracy in Canada. Edmonton: Athabasca University Press. 

Hvenegaard, G. T., K. Mündel., M. Beckie, and L.K. Hallstrom. 2016. Sustainability Planning and Collaboration in Rural Canada: Taking the Next Steps. Edmonton: University of Alberta Press.

Kuteleva, Anna, and Justin Leifso.2020. "Contested crude: Multiscalar identities, conflicting discourses, and narratives of oil production in Canada." Energy Research & Social Science 70: 1-12.  

Laycock, David. 1990. Populism and Democratic Thought in the Canadian Prairies, 1910 to 1945. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Lipset, Seymour Martin. 1950. Agrarian Socialism. Toronto: Oxford University Press.

Macpherson, C.B. 1953. Democracy in Alberta. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Macpherson, Crawford Brough. 2013. Democracy in Alberta: Social credit and the party system. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Neitsch, Alfred Thomas. 2009. "The Status of French in Alberta: A Rejoinder." Canadian parliamentary review: 27-31. 

O'Neill, B. 2013. "The Alberta Advantage?." In: Linda Trimble, Jane Arscott, and Manon Tremblay, Stalled: The Representation of Women in Canadian Governments. Vancouver: UBC Press. 

Ornstein, Michael D., H. Michael Stevenson, and A. Paul Williams. 1980. "Region, class and political culture in Canada." Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique 13(2): 227-271.

Perron, Dominique. 2013. L’Alberta Autophage: Identités, Mythes et Discours Du Pétrole Dans l’Ouest Canadien. Calgary: University of Calgary Press.

Ray, Lana. 2018. "Pipelines, prostitution and Indigenous women: A critical analysis of contemporary discourse." Canadian Woman Studies 33(1-2): 107-116.  

Richards, John and Larry Pratt. 1979. Prairie Capitalism: Power and Influence in the New West. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.

Salomons, Geoff, and Daniel Béland. 2000. "The Presence of an Absence: The Politics of Provincial Sales Tax in Alberta." American Review of Canadian Studies 50(4): 418-435.

Shrivastava, Meenal, and Lorna Stefanick, eds. 2015. Alberta oil and the decline of democracy in Canada. Edmonton: Athabasca University Press.

Simpson, Wayne and Jared J. Wesley. 2012.  “Effective Tool or Effectively Hollow?: Balanced Budget Legislation in Western Canada.” Canadian Public Policy 38(3): 291-314. 

Stewart, David. 2001. Quasi-Democracy: Parties and Leadership Selection in Alberta. Vancouver: UBC Press. 

Tenove, Chris, Jordan Buffie, Spencer McKay, and David Moscrop. 2018. Digital Threats to Democratic Elections: How Foreign Actors Use Digital Techniques to Undermine Democracy. Vancouver: Centre for the Study of Democracy, UBC.

Tomblin, Stephen G. 1995. Ottawa and the Outer Provinces. Toronto: James Lorimer & Company Ltd., Publishers.

van Assche, K., L. Deacon, Monica Gruezmacher, Robert Summers, Stéphanie Lavoie, Kevin Edson Jones, Michael Granzow, Lars Hallstrom and John Russell Parkins. 2017. Boom & Bust: Local Strategy for Big Events (A Community Survival Guide to Turbulent Times). Edmonton: University of Alberta Press.

Wellstead, Adam. 2007. "The (post) staples economy and the (post) staples state in historical perspective." Canadian Political Science Review 1(1): 8-25.

Wesley, Jared J.  2012. “Defining Prairie Politics: Campaigns, Codes and Cultures.”  In Adele Perry, Esyllt W. Jones, Leah Morton, Place and Replace. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press.

Wesley, Jared J. Code politics: Campaigns and cultures on the Canadian prairies. UBC Press, 2011.

Wesley, Jared J., ed. 2016. Big Worlds: Politics and Elections in the Canadian Provinces. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Wesley, Jared, and Sylvia Wong. 2022. "Beyond Fragments: The Canadian State and the Origins of Alberta Political Culture." International Journal of Canadian Studies 60: 60-87. 

Wiseman, Nelson. 2011. "The American imprint on Alberta politics." Great Plains Quarterly 31(1): 39-53.

Wiseman, Nelson. 1981. “The Pattern of Prairie Politics.” Queen’s Quarterly 88(2): 298-315.

Wiseman, Nelson. 2007. In Search of Canadian Political Culture. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.

Wiseman, Nelson. 2015. “Reading Prairie Politics: Morton, Lipset, Macpherson.” International Journal of Canadian Studies 51: 7-25.

Wiseman, Nelson. 2016. “Provincial Political Cultures.” In Christopher Dunn, Provinces: Canadian Provincial Politics 3rd edition. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.