Hector-Louis Langevin (August 25, 1826 – June 11, 1906) was a Canadian lawyer, journalist, and politician who played a pivotal role in creating Canada as...
The Canadian residential school system was a government-sponsored and church-administered network of boarding schools that operated for over 160 years, with the explicit goal of...
The story of British imperialism in the Pacific represents one of history’s most consequential expansions of European power, transforming vast oceanic regions and countless indigenous...
Aboriginal Australians, the Indigenous peoples of the Australian mainland and its islands, such as Tasmania, the Tiwi Islands, and the Torres Strait, represent one of...
Captain James Cook’s voyages to the Pacific Ocean played a significant role in initiating European colonization, which ultimately led to devastating consequences for Indigenous peoples...
The Legacy of European Exploitation: A Cycle of Destruction, Hypocrisy, and Unaccountability Europe’s historical legacy of colonialism, slavery, and exploitation continues to cast a profound...
The Global Drug Epidemic: Understanding the Demand-Supply Nexus and Its Human Cost This article examines how the demand for illicit drugs in wealthy nations drives...
The Universal Races Congress in London: A Historical Perspective The Universal Races Congress, held in London in 1911, stands as a remarkable milestone in the...
The Legacy of João Baptista de Lacerda’s Whitening Ideology in Brazil In 1911, Brazilian scientist João Baptista de Lacerda presented a controversial and deeply troubling...
The policy of Branqueamento, or “whitening,” was a social, political, and cultural phenomenon in Brazil that aimed to “whiten” the population through immigration policies, racial...