2024-2025

Disability, Capacity, and Debility, HIST 5315F/PECO 5501F, Fall 2024

2023-2024

Natural Resources Extraction. HIST 5315F: State and Society in Canada.

2022-2023

Natural Resources Extraction in Canadian History, HIST 5315F: State and Society in Canada.  Syllabus.

Conflict of Change in Early Canadian History, HIST 1302A. Winter Semester.

Ph.D. Tutorials , Directed Readings in Canadian History, HIST 6906 Fall 2022 & Winter 2023; HIST 6911 Fall 2022.

2021-2022

Conflict of Change in Early Canadian History, HIST 1302A. Fall semester, designed with the help of Kegan Rumig, thanks to a grant from the Students as Partners ProgramHIST 1301A Dominique Marshall F2021 course outline.

Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) in the History of Canadian Society and Policy, HIST 4305A, Fall semester. HIST 4305A Dominique Marshall F2021 course outline.

In both courses, students  will participate in Recipro: The history of international and humanitarian aid.

HIST 1302A: Rethinking Modern Canadian History, HIST1302A, Winter 2022. Description.

2020-2021

The Making of Canada, HIST 1300A, Fall 2020-Winter 2021. Fall semester designed with the help of Jack Reid (Fall) and Raeann Au (Winter), thanks  grants of the Students as Partners Program. Syllabi: Winter 2021: HIST 1300A Dominique Marshall FW2020-21 course outline (WINTER) Fall 2020: HIST 1300A Dominique Marshall FW2020-21 (FALL)

History of Human Rights in Canada, HIST 5315, Fall 2020. Syllabus: HIST 5315F PECO 5502F PSCI 5502F SOCI 5505F Dominique Marshall F2020 course outline

Coordination of the doctoral seminars in African History (HIST 6906) (in collaboration with Candace Sobers) and in Canadian History (HIST 6901/6906), Fall 2020 – Winter 2021.

Directed readings in Disability Studies, DBST 3900, Fall 2020.

History of Humanitarian Aid (HIST 3111),Winter 2021.  Syllabus: HIST 3111A Dominique Marshall W2021 course outline. Designed with the support of a grant from the Shared Online Projects Initiative (SOPI), and the Co-program of the University of Ottawa.  In collaboration with Instructors Nicolas Lépine (University of Ottawa, History, History of anarchism) and Phillip Primeau (Carleton, Introduction to Sociology), and Camilla Orvedo, research assistant.  See the teaching website under construction here: Recipro: The history of international and humanitarian aid repository.

2019-2020

History of Children and Youth, HIST 3113, Fall 2019 Syllabus: HIST 3115A Marshall F2019

History of Humanitarian Aid, HIST 3111, Fall 2019. Syllabus: HIST 3111A Marshall F2019

History of Human Rights in Canada, HIST 5315, Winter 2020. Syllabus: FINAL_Syllabus_Human_Rights HIST 5315W, PECO 5502X, PSCI 5502X, SOCI 5505X Marshall W2020[2]

Historian’s Craft, HIST 2809, Fall 2020. Syllabus: HIST 2809B Marshall W2020, Updated 9 January 2020 (1)

2018-2019

Problems in Global & Transnational Histories, HIST 3813A, Fall 2018.

This course will help you discover the central concepts of Global, Transnational and World histories. It will show the exciting developments of the last 20 to 30 years that have dramatically overturned many of historians’ traditional ways of conceiving of the past and present.

The class meets two times 80 minutes a week. The precise format will vary between seminar discussions, workshops in the humanitarian collections of Carleton Archives and Research Collections, virtual seminars on the transnational history of the environment with fellow history students of the course of Soenke Kunkel at the John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies of the Free University of Berlin, experiments with digital methods conducive to transnational reflections, interviews with guest speakers and visits to close by events and exhibitions.

Syllabus: HIST 3813A DMarshall F2018

2017-2018

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Institutional Histories and Disability, HIST 5904S, Reading course offered with Shawn Graham, Summer 2017.

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Problems in Global & Transnational Histories, HIST 3813A, Fall 2017.

2016-2017

The Historian’s Craft: The First World War, Histories and Memories, HIST2809B, winter 2017

Syllabus

How do historians know what they know? What is it that historians do? And how do they do what they do? This course is an introduction to the way that historians work. We will look at everything from hand-written documents, to photographs, to material culture: this is a practical, hands-on course that will encourage students to explore and experience the actual materials and methods of analysis used by historians. Those taking this course will leave with a good understanding of the ways in which historians explore history through a wide variety of sources, the methods that historians have used to examine them, and the various ways in which history is presented to specialists and to the wider public.

2015-2016

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The Historian’s Craft: The First World War, Histories and Memories, HIST2809A, Fall 2015, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4:00 to 5:30 – Departmental course offered in collaboration.  For the syllabus click HERE

2014-2015

The First World War: Histories and Memories, HIST2910B, Fall 2014, Tuesdays and Thursdays from 11:30 to 1:00 – Departmental course offered in collaboration. For the syllabus click HERE

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Reading graduate course on the history of humanitarianism, 0.5 credit, Winter 2015.

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2013-2014

History of International Humanitarian Assistance, HIST 3111

See the virtual exhibition of students’ projects online

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Previous Courses

HIST 1300: Introduction to Canadian History

FYSM 1405A: Canadian History and its Sources

HIST 3301: Quebec Since the 1860s

HIST 4302: Canada: Ideas and Culture

HIST 4304A/5311: Canada’s Transnational Pasts

HIST 5003: Historical Theory and Methods

PECO 6000: Political Economy Doctoral Seminar

History of Welfare and Poverty in Canada

Canadian Families: Images and Realities

Canadian State Formation