1. SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
      1. MIMORANDUM
  2. SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
      1. MEMORANDUM
    1. there there suff1cIet
    2. Library
      1. Library An fndic.
      2. Faculty Gradi.ite Studies Co, r.nittee:
  3. 0 L'4 ?
  4. 45 ?
  5. 45 ??
  6. 4. ? ?
  7. 4' ?
  8. Ito-... ?
      1. U 45'-' OU

kL
J.M. Webster
Dean of Graduate Stu
die
SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY s.
?
107
MIMORANDUM
*
TO
............ SENATE
?
.......
From
.......J.M.WEBSTE
DEAN OF GRADUATE STUDIES
Date
.....................7, 1983
PROPOSED GRADUATE CURRICULUM
Subject .......
.CIMMES
11 1
eO
AtWI4
.............
Action undertaken by the Senate Committee on Graduate Studies
at its
meeting
of November 14, 1983, gives rise to the following motion:-
MOTION:
"That Senate approve and recommend approval to the Board of
Governors, as set forth in S.83-10
7
, changes in Communication
as follows:-
i)
Change of description
CMS 800-5 Contemporary Approaches in Communication
Studies
CMNS 801-5 Design and Methodology in Communication
Research
ii)
Deletion of -
CMS 820-5 Interpersonal and Group Processes
CMNS 822-5 Human Factors in Communication
iii)
New course proposal -
CMNS 845-5 Communication and International Development
iv)
Change of numbers -
CMNS 825-5 The Social Matrix of Communication
to CMNS 815-5
CMNS 834-5 Political Economy of Communications
to CMNS 840-5
CMNS 839-5 Acoustic Dimensions of Communications
to CMNS 859-5
CMNS 840-5 Advanced Communication Theory
to CHNS 810-5
(In each of these instances students with credit for a course
under its previous number may not take the course under its
new number for further credit.)
v)
Under "Areas of Study and Research" listed in the Calendar,
for item 2. replace "Interpersonal and
Organizational
Communications" with "Organizational Communications"."

From
..
?
Meredith
ChiiéiOh
Kimball
....................................
I ..
Graduate
?
Crntee
ix
Date
.....
.
9.83:10-0.
.....................................
.
.,
?
Marian McGinn ?
.........
QCT...4.J983
Graduate
Assistant Fegistrar
•tuçIi•çs
REGISThAR'S OF]
Subjed. ,
Ch ?
.
?
P rip1crMM
.
DESK
anges
Our File No. 1G2(a)
The Faculty of Interdisciplinary Studies Graduate Curriculum Committee
recommends the following changes in graduate course descriptions:
Communications
CMNS 800-5 Contemporary Approaches in Communication Studies
Current Description:
Current perspectives in communication studies. Topics
will include recent advances in communication theory
and methodology (information theory, macro- and micro-
communication systems) and major approaches in the study
of communication behavior (intrapersonal, and inter-
personal).
Proposed Description:
Current perspectives in communication studies and theory.
CMNS 801-5 Design and Methodology in Communication Research
Current Description:
Problems and methods of communication research. Theoreti-
cal assumptions of communication methodology. Examination
of research studies and field studies as case study examples.
Students will design a research project in a selected area.
Proposed Description:
Problems and methods of communication research. Theoreti-
cal assumptions of communication methodology. Examination
of research studies and field studies as case study examples.
Students may design a research project
in
a selected area.
Y).
Meredith Kimball.
cc: L. Salter

SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
MIMORANDUM
MEREDITH KIMBALL
To .............. .SSOCIATDEAN,..pS
Sub.ct .......... CHANG..IN GRADUATE
LIORA SALTER, CHAIR
From .....
ADJJATE. . S.TUIXLES.
COMMUNICATION
1
October 13, 983
Date..............................................
Attached you will find a list of changes that the Department
of Communication wishes to make in its graduate programme and
calendar. These changes are in addition to those you have
already distributed in your memo of October 3, 1983.
The purpose of these changes is the rationalization of the
programme and the calendar description in light of the
retirement of Tom Mallinson and for the purpose of ensuring
a parallel structure in the graduate and undergraduate
course listings. Many of the changes proposed here involve
simply renumbering of courses. Two courses, however, would
be dropped from the programme and two courses would be added.
The rationale for each change is included in the attached
description.
Course descriptions for the new courses are attached. In
addition, we have included a sample of the course description
to be made available to students, a week-by-week course
outline and a bibliography for the proposed new ôourses.
I trust this information is what is required.
Liora Salter
.
0

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SiMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
MEMORANDUM
S ?
0...
.................................................
John Webster
.
nai rperson
Senate Grad Studies Cmtee.
..........
Sub,d....
...................
bepartment of Communication
From .....
Meredith Kimball ?
Chairperson
cv.l...y.........D ...
Graduate Studies Curr. Cmtee.
Date...
'
.. 19A ?
P.?
................................
Our File No. 1C3(L)
The following changes in Communication's graduate calendar
entry have the approval of the Faculty:
Courses to be dropped:
CMNS 820-5 ?
Interpersonal and Group Processes
CMNS 822-5 ?
Human Factors in Communication
Course to be added:
CMNS 845-5 ?
Communication and International Development
S
Course numbers to be changed:
CMNS 825-5 becomes CMNS 815-5
CMNS 834-5 becomes CMNS 840-5
CMNS 839-5 becomes CMNS 859-5
CMNS 840-5 becomes CMNS 810-5
Calendar Description:
See: Areas of Study and Research
Drop: ?
Item no. 2 Interpersonal and Organizational Communications
Substitute: ?
Item no. 2 Organizational Communications
Detailed material concerning these changes was sent to you on
October 13, 1983.
I.,.
Meredith Kimball
MK:mf
cc:
?
Marian McGinn

Graduate Course Changes (see also memo from M. Kimball dated October 3, 1983)
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNICATION
CMNS 820-5: Interpersonal and Group Processes:
Course to be dronned
Rationale: The course is currently being given by Tom Mallinson
who is scheduled to retire at the end of the 1983-84 calendar year.
It is highly unlikely that the Department will have the necessary
new resources to ensure this course is taught regularly and this
area of specialization in the Department is maintained adequately.
CMNS 822-5: Human Factors in Communication:
Course to be dropped
Rationale: This course has not been offered by the Department in
some time. Like 820, it depends upon Departmental resources in the
area of interpersonal communication. With the retirement of Tom
Mallinson, it is unlikely that this course could be offered in the
foreseeable future.
CMNS 845-5: Communication and International Development:
Course to be added (see attached course outline)
Rationale: This course rounds out the graduate offerings to
correspond to the media/institutional/development core of the
Department's programme. A number of graduate students have been
taking the course as a directed readings. Given the number of
students involved and the frequency of offerings, it is more
appropriate to list this course as a regular graduate offering.
Course Numbers to be Changed:
Rationale: The revised numbering system rationalizes the present
system, ensuring that related courses are "streamed" and bear a
number appropriate to their course content and compatible with
the undergraduate offerings.
CMNS 825-5 becomes CMNS 815-5
CMNS 834-5 becomes CMNS 840-5
CMNS 839-5 becomes CMNS 859-5
CMNS 840-5 becomes CMNS 810-5
0

Graduate Course and Calendar Changes (cant).. . page 2.
No change
is envtstaned in- either
course descriptions or content
of any of the above courses.
Calendar Description to be changed:
see: "Areas of Study and Research"
drop: item # 2, Interpersonal and Organizational Cotmiunications
substitute: item
2,
"Organizational Corirunications"
Rationale: "Areas of Study. .
should
."
reflect resources available
in the Corrirunication Department accurately. Students may be
accepted to do work in sorre aspect of Interpersonal Cormtinication
- - - - -
?
but only if there is a significant overlap between this
-work
?
-
and some other area of specialization in the Department. Retiremant
of Tom Nallinson and lack of new resources in the area of
Interpersonal Cormunication precludes specialization in this
area of Contrunication Studies at Simon Praser.
S
0

2. COURSE OUTLINES FOR NEW COURSES:
a) COMMUNICATION 845-5
.
0

Ki
1. CHANGES IN CALENDAR OR COURSES OFFERED
Li
0

Nru C.r;oiiato four Se
f'ru .
;;
4
?
ror'm
('.AI1
-
1)AR
INFOR.MATION:
Dcpartccnt: ?
C
onununication
?
Cotir.
ir..cr
:CMNS
845-
7I
tie: ?
Cormuiication and International iv1ont
cr pt
o,.:F1ow of influence and excháige of information between and within networks of
institutions
to deve1oixint,
engaged
and the
in
attempts
international
to
change
development
the pattern
,
the cozitribudori
of international
of comnuriication
camunication.
Credit
flours: ?
5 ?
?
._
Vector: ?
Dr
SN0I.1WNT AN
D
SCHEDULING:
17
!;tI',- ,.'
l
tvd Enro]]t: ?
U
?
reu
V
ill Ow
C')r4
fi;t ?
(fifrid: ?
Spring 1985
!'.w oft,,,'
will the
course
1,e ?
once every four
se
me
sters.
.WS1 I
H
CAT IflN
Addition of this
course rounds out our graduate offerings. About one-quarter of our
g
r
a d
uate students
have interests in the su
b
ject, and the research literature is expanding
rapidly
on the inter
a
ction
of cciimiication and international developm
e
nt.
I^I
dch Fctrlcy
rer'r
will noi
t
n.Aly tt':ch Ow
c .
,
I
r.,:
?
Robert S. Anderson
-
- -
rt are the,
budjc
t
ary I pl I c
t.
l
olls of niurt
ncI
lw
C
u; ?
rune ?
. -
Ate
bibliography
there
there suff1cIet
attached
Library
-- all
resources
held in Library.
?
. ?
Library holdings are good. See
ArNnJe
.
d: a) outline
of
th
Course.
b)c)
Library
An fndic.
rcscurec.q
*
t ion of the co
p
e(nce of the
F1 t
y nii:hor
to
?
t'J( t ho
c'.ist (.
1
1
proved: ?
Dcpartrental Gr
adu
at
e
?
tudI ?
('oui1 r,.:(
?
. ?
I),?
4.:
Faculty Gradi.ite Studies Co,
r.nittee:
D
a t ?
Q.}.
Fact) lty:'))l
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............ .
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........
.
t)Le:
$e ' n.te
('rdi;.rt p
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tuI1e ?
C)r1
t
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r. ?
.
Senate:

.
(}INS
845-5
CaMUNICATION AND IIffERNNrIONAL I)EVETI)PMENF
cbjecth)es:
Study of catniiuication in the context of the interests, policies and
practices of institutions which participate in the political economy of
international development. Carmunication is understood, in this context,
as the flow of influence and exchange of information between and within
networks of institutions (goverment agencies like CID, non-government
organizations, multi-national corporations, development banks, universities,
etc.). Assessment of specific cormiunication technologies and projects in
development projects, and their consequences in terms of the continuing
unequal world order. Analysis of development policy and practice in terms
of the cultural value assumptions which are part of the international order.
The focus of the second half of the course on Canadian institutions will be
maintained in terms of the variety of Canadian positions and responses in
the post-Brandt, post-MacBride debates, with respect to the role of
camixiicaticii in development.
(1) First half of the course concerns pre-1945.
(2) Second half of the course concern-, post-1945.
(3) Critical discussion of these required readings:
(a) Imnanuel Wallers tein, The Modem World System, Academic Press,
1974.
(b)North-South: A Program for Survival (The Brandt Coranission on
International Deveio1xnt Issues), MIT Press, 1) 80.
(c) tSM
Voices, One Wrld (The MacBride Camiission on International
Communication Problems), UNESCO, 1980.
(4) Course Requirements:
(a)
Ccxnpletion of research paper which caiiines aspects of the
first and second parts of the course (607).
(b)
Final exam (407).

r
CMS 845-5
Week-by-Week Outline
Week 1 Communication and the evolution of the modern world system.
Week 2 Theory and practice in the modern world system. The response
of "other worlds" to European expansion.
Week 3 Case: Empire armaments and cormainicati on, 1450-1700; the
roots of the Industrial Revolution.
Week 4 Case: Classical political-economy and iiperial practice; the
communication of population and poverty theories to 19th century
India.
Week 5 Alternate models Of communication in the world process -- critique.
Week 6 Mid-term assessment and review.
Week 7 New order in the 20th century: new institutions and communication
after 1945.
Week 8 Communicating
of development
definitions
policies in
of
Asia.
deve1.oint: case; the communication
?
S
Week
9
Atlas of Canadian institutions in
international development.
Week
10
Brandt Commission and subsequent
debates on world economic order.
Week 11 McBride Commission and subsequent debates on world information
order.
Week 12 Canadian interests in north-south communication.
Week 13 Conference of project presentations.
0

CMNS 845-5
.
?
PER 101) [CALS
1.
Cooperation Canada (dnA) and CIDA Contact have now become Development
Directions (CIDA) "A Newsmagazine on International Development", beginning
Vol. I, No. I, May 1.978.
2.
Action (CIDA) A Quarterly Publication of Non-Governmental Activities.
3.
IDRC Reports (Magazine) TDRC News/Nouvelies (press releases).
4. Canada, External Affairs, International Perspectives "A Journal of Opinion
on World Affairs" (published privately after 1780).
S. International. Journal (Canadian Institute of International Affairs).
6. International Canada (Canadian Institute of International Affairs) monthly
digest of news.
7 Caadia Public Polity (University
- of Tobto).
8.
International Development Review (Society for International Development).
9. Report: News of the World Bank.
10.
Development Form (IN Centre for Economic and Social Information)
newspaper format.
11. Development and Change (Sage).
12. International Organizations (Stanford).
13.
Development Dialogue (Dag Haiumerskold Foundation).
14.
Comparative International Development (Rutgers: Transaction Periodicals
Consortium). See also Alternatives: A Journal of World Policy.
15.
Review, a Journal of the Fernand Braudel. Centre for the Study of
Economics, Historical Systems, and Civilization, Vol.. 1 from 1977.
16. World Development (Pergamon Press).
17. Third World Quarterly (London).
18.
South (London).
19.
The World Economy (quarterly).
20. Economic Development and Cultural Change (Chicago).
21.
Peasant Studies Newsletter.
22. Technology and Culture.
23.
Monthly
Review.

.
ire).
a v
iNs 845-5
BIBLIOGRAPHY
?
HISTORY AND THEORY OF EUROPEAN EXPANSION AND IMPERIALISM
?
"EARLY DEVELOPMENT"
AMBIRA.JAN, S., Classical Political Economy and British Policy in India.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1978. Cf. Ch. 7, "Political
Economy and a Policy of Economic Development"; Ch. 8, "The State and the
Policy for Economic Development".
APPLEBY, Joyce 0., Economic Thought and Ideology in Seventeenth-Century
England. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1978. Cf. (1. 6, "The
Poor as a Productive Resource". HB103 A2 A6.
ARRIGHI, Giovanni, The Geometry of Imperialism: The Limits of I-iohson's
Paradigm. London: NLR, 1978. JC359 A75.
CIPPOLA, Carlo, European Culture and Overseas Exnsion. London: Penguin.
EISENSTEIN, Elizabeth, The Priti
Communications and Ciltural
Z124 E27, Vol. 1 and 2.
FRANK, Andre Gunder, World Accumulation, 1492-1789. London: Monthly Review
Press. HC51 F68.
GAULTIJNG, Johan, HEIESTAD, Tore and RUDENG, Erik, "On the Decline and Fail, of
Empires: The Roman Empire and Western Imperialism Compared", Review (IV,
1, Summer 1980),
pp.
91-153.
GREEN, Martin, Dreams of Adventure, Deeds of Empire. New York: Basic Books,
1979.
Cf.
Ch. 1, "Modern Empire, Caste, and Adventure";
Ch.
21
"Narrative, Other Forms, and Literature-as-a-System"; Ch. 3, "Popular
Literature and Children's Literature".
I-IOGSBMM, Eric, Industry and Empire. London: Penguin, 1967.
INNIS, Harold, Empire and Communications. Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 1972. IS P20 1972.
KESNER, Richard M., Economic Control and Colonial Development. Westport,
CT: Greenwood Press, 1981. Cf. Ch. 4, "The Jmpe'fJal Government and the
Development of Grown Colony
Transportation Networks"; Cit. 5, "TmperiiJ
Conununi cations".
0

.
2
KRIEDTE, Peter, Industrialization Before Industrialization: Rural Industry in
the Genesis of Capitalism. Cambridge University Press, 1981. (Relation
of agriculture and peasant industry, 1400-1800.)
LAO-I, Donald F., Asia in the Eyes of Europe, Vol. 1, 1965, and Vol.. II,
1977. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1965 and 1.977. DS33-1 L3
V-i V-2.
US, Catharina and SOLY, Hugo, Poverty and Capitalism in Pre-Industrial
Europe. Hassocks, Sussex, U.K.: The Harvester Press, 1979. Cf. Ch. 1,
"Feudalism, Poverty and Charity"; Ch. 3, "Economic Growth, Impoverishment
and Social Policy"; Ch. 5, "Economic Growth, Pauperization and the
Regulation of the Labour Market". HC 240 1,55.
?
- -
MARTINES, Lauro, Power and Imagination: City States in Renaissance Italy.
New York: Alfred Knopf, 1979. Cf. Ch. V, "The End of the Popular
Commune"; Ch. X. "Economic Trends and Attitudes"; Ch. XI, "Humanism: A
Program for Ruling Classes". DG494 M37.
PARRY, J.U.
'
Trade and Dominion: The E
?
can Overseas
EmUi
res in the
Eighteenth Century. kI?rkT'racger, {7t
RICH, E.E. and WILSON, C.!!., The CambrI,EconomicHkturyof Europe:
__Vol.
V, The Economic Organization of Early Modern Iurope. Cf. "
Th
e
Canging
Patterns of Trade";"Monetary, Credit n1 nitg systems"; "The Nature of
Enterprise".
STREET, Brian, The Savage in Literature. London: Routledge i Kegan Paul,
1975.
TILLEY, Charles (ed.), The Formation of National States in Western Europe.
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1975. JN94 A2 F67.
WALLERSTEIN, Immanuel, The Modern World-System: Capitalist Agriculture and
Origins of the European World Economy in the Sixteenth Century. Academic
Press, 1974.
WOODRUFF, William, The Struggle for World Power, 1500-1980. New York: St.
Martin's Press, 1981.
L

3
'Il'IENTIE'fll CENTURY DEVEI,OPMI NI'
?
INSTI11ITIONS AND ISSUES
BARNET, Richard and MULLER, R.E.., Global. Reach: The Power of the
Multinational Corporations. New York: Simon F, Schuster, 1974.
BERNSTEIN, Heiry, Underdevelopment and Development: The Third World Today.
London: Penguin (Education), 1978, reprint collection of useful readings.
BIROU, Main, HENRY, Paul-Marc and SCHLEGEL, John P., Towards a Redefinition
?
of Development. London: Pergamon Press, 1977. Published for OEM,
Paris-7-M-92-T628.
COOLING, Benjamin F. (ed.), War, Business, and World Military- Industrial.
Complexes. Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press, 1981. Case studies of
France, Russia, Canada, Brazil. I-1D9743 A2 W37.
DEUQ1, Karl W., Eco-Social S
r
stems and Eco-Politics. A Reader on Human and
Social Implications of Environmental Management in Developing Countries.
Paris: . UNESCO, 1977. TINES P00855.
D'ONOFRIO-FLORES, Pamela M., et al. (eds.), Scientific-Technological Change
and the Role of Women in Development. Boulder: Westview Press, 1982.
1.
GcLILET, Denis, The Uncertain Promise: Value Conflicts in the Transfer of
Technology. New York: IDOC/North America and the Overseas Development
Council, 1977.
GRANGER, John V., Technology and International Relations. San Francisco:
W.H. Freeman, 1979. Cf. Ch. 6, "Technology and Development", Ch. 8,
"Technology and National Sovereignty", Ch. 9,"National. and International
Institutions".
HENDERSON, P.D., "Survival, Development and the Report of the Brandt
Commission", The World Economy, (June 1980), pp. 87-118. (Henderson is
former Senior Economist, The World Bank, 1969-1975.)
HOGGART, Richard, An Idea and Its Servants: UNESCO From Within. London:
Chatto Windu71 -
78 Cf. Ch. 4,
1
T Constituency Tcrnments;
Ch. 5, "2nd Constituency -- Intellectual Communities"; Ch. 6, "6th
Estate -- The Secretariat"; Appendix,
"UNESCO's Constitution". AS4 1183
1158.
I.M.F., Balance of Pa
,
pts y
earboq, 1967-74. Washington: T.M.F., 1976.
National accounts. 1W104 IS.
S

S
4
JACKSON, Sir Robert, A Study of the Capacity of the UN's Development System.
New York: UN, 1969. HC60 J29 Vol. i.
JONES, Joseph M., The UN at Work: Developing Land, Forests, Oceans and
People. London: Pergamon Press, 1965. S401 U63 J6.
KOISTINEN, Paul A.C., The Military-Industrial Complex: A Historical
Perspective. New York: Praeger, 1980 (WWI and tVWITT
- -
?
MYRDAL, Gimnar, Asian Drama. Penguin, it97i,3v6ls. 11'11 M9
NIELSEN, Waldemar A., The Big Foundations. New York:.. Columbia University
Press, 1972. Cf. Part Four, "Foundations in the American Context", also,
Ford and Rockefeller Foundations. 'HV97 A3 N5.
North-South: A Proposal for Survival (Brandt Commission on international
Development Issues). MIT Press, 1980.
• ?
OLIVER, Thomas, The United Nations in Bangladesh. Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1978.
PADDOCK, William, We Don't Know How: An Independent Audit of What They Call
Success in Foreign Assistance.
Iowa
Ames:
State University Press,
1973. HC60 P22.
UNITE!) STATES House of Representatives Committee on International Relations,.
Science Technology and American Diplomacy, Vols. I, IT, III.
Washington: US Coveriment Printing Office, 1977. Cf. Part I,
"Six
Cases"; Part 4, "Bilateral versus Multilateral. Diplomatic Relationship";
"Role of Public and Private Institutions in International Technology".
Q125 S4347 V.1, 2, 3.
VANDORMAEL, Armand, Bretton Woods: Birth of a Monetary System. London:
MacMillan, 1978. 1IG20S 1944067 1978.
VOLL, Sarah Potts, A Plough in a Field: Arable Western Business in Third
World Agriculture. Hanover, N.H.: Universit
y
Press of New England, 1980
(based on cases in Middle East and Africa).
WALLMAN, Sandra (ed.), Perceptions of Development. Cambridge University
Press, 1977. Collection of essays on developiient (projects) viewed from
the bottom up. HD82 P443.
0

COMMUNICATION AND DEELOPMENT
BIELENSTEIN, Dieter, Toward a New World information Order: Consequences for
Development Policy. Bonn: Institute for International Relations, 1980.
P90 T69 1980.
BORDENAVE, .Juon E. Diaz, Communication and Rural Development.
Paris:
UNESCO,
1977.
CHERRY, Cohn, World Communication: Threat or Promise? New York: Wiley
Inter Science, 1971. Cf. Ch. 2, "On Conununicat[n, Ancient and Modern";
Ch. 5
1
"Caiuntmication and Wealth".
0-lU, Godwin, RAt-tIM, Syed and KINCAID, D.L. (eds.), Communication for Group
?
Transformation in Development. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1976.
HABERMAS, Jurgen, Communication and the Evolution of Society (trans. T.
McCarthy). Boston: Beacon Press, 1979. Cf. Ch. 5, "Legitimation
Problepis in
the Modern State". HM 106 H313.
Many Voices, One World (The McBride Commission on International. Communication
Problems). Paris: UNESCO, 1980.
McANANY, Emile G., Communication in the Rural Third World: The Role of
Information in Development. New Y6r1: Praeger, 1980. IN 980 C66.
SCHR A
S+1, W. and LERNER, D. (eds.), Communication and Change: The Last Ten
Years -- and The Next. Honolulu: The University Press of Hawaii, 1976.
Cf. extensive bibliography.
IIJNSALL, Jeremy, The Media are American: Anglo American Media in the World.
London: Constable, 1977. Cf. Dallas Smythe's review article in
Culture and Society, 1979, I, 107-114.
S
0

I-
.
6
CANADIAN INSTITuTIONS AND PERSPECTIVES IN WORLD DEVELOPMENT
CARTY, Robert and SMITH, Virginia, Peptuiting Poverty: The Political
Economy of
Canadian
Foreign Aid.
Toronto: Tetwecn the
Lines
Press, 1981.
DAPANDREJ, Andreas and ZOIIAR, Uri, The Impact Approach to Project
Selection. Toronto: York University, 1974. TThA surferstudy case
studies
all,
from Kenya.)
DEPARTMENT OF (Xfl1UNICATIONS, Communication and the Canadian Assistance
-
?
Program for Developing Countries: Tel ecommission Study 3(b). Ottawa,
19717 HE 7811 T45 no. 3b.
DEPARTMENT OF EXTERNAL AFFAIRS, Foreign Policy for Canadians: Book IV --
International Development. Ottawa, 1970. 70 CN I Fx L P65.
ECONOMIC COTINCIL OF CANADA, For a Common Future: AStudy of 'International
Development. Ottawa, 1978.
HILL, 0. Mary, Canada's Salesman to the World: I, T and C, 1892-1.939.
Montreal: McGill Queen's Press, 1978.
LYON, P.V. and ISMkEL, T.Y. (eds.), Canada and the Third World. Toronto:
MacClelland Stewart, 1976. P5050
C26.
NORTH SOLTfl-I INSTI'llrrE, Third World Deficits and the Debt Crisis. Ottawa,
1977.
NORTH SOUTH INSTITUTE, World Food and the Canadian "Breadbasket". Ottawa:
North South Institute, 1978.
Parliamentary Special Committee on North-South Relations, in House of Commons,
Votes
shelved
and
under
Proceedings,
Gov't Doc.
17
Reference
December
TIC
1980.
59.7
Also
C335.
Minutes of Proceedings
are
PEARSON, Lester, Partners in Development. New York: Praeger, 1969 (report of
the Pearson Commission for the World Bank).
ROcI-IE, Douglas (HP), Justice Not Charity: A New Global Ethic for Canada.
Toronto: MacClel.land Stewart, 1976. HC60 R63.
SANGER, Clyde, Half a Loaf: Canada's Semi-Role Among Developing Countries.
Toronto: Ryerson Press, 1969. HC60 S36.
0

7
SPICER, Keith, A Samaritan State? External Aid in Canada's Foreign Policy.
Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1966. HC60 S67.
WILSON, C.F., A Century of Canadian Grain: Government Policy to 1951.
Saskatoon: Western Producer Prairie Books, 1978.
Cf.
International Wheat
Councils, International. Wheat Conferences, United Nations, F.A.O.,
International. Wheat Agreements.
0

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Oixipetance of Instructor:
Anderson has taught an undergraduate course on this topic since 1977;
has taught CMNS 801-5, CMS 855-5 and (}INS 860-2, and is guiding M. A.
and Ph.D. students in this subject. His research and publications are
mainly in this field.
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