Athabasca University Press is Canada’s first open access scholarly press. Founded in 2007 with the principal aim of reducing barriers to knowledge and increasing access to scholarship, AU Press is committed to bringing the work of emerging and established scholars to the public. With both an open-access journal and monograph program, they make a significant contribution to the growing body of academic and literary work that is available to a global readership at no cost to the reader.
Silm Da’axk / To Revive and Heal Again
Historical Ecology and Ethnobotany in Laxyuubm Gitselasu
- Copyright year: 2024
The Red Baron of IBEW Local 213
Les McDonald, Union Politics, and the 1966 Wildcat Strike at Lenkurt Electric
- Copyright year: 2022
Lookout Cave
The Archaeology of Perishable Remains on the Northern Plains
This fully illustrated volume sheds new light on Plains culture and the centuries old use of the well-hidden space at Lookout Cave.
- Copyright year: 2017
Hockey on the Moon
Imagination and Canada’s Game
- Copyright year: 2024
An Honourable and Impartial Tribunal
The Court Martial of Major General Henry Procter, Minutes of the Proceedings
- Copyright year: 2020
Exploring Agency in Children and Youth
Expressions and Constraints
- Copyright year: 2022
Troubles Online
Ableism and Access in Higher Education
- Copyright year: 2024
Challenging Borders
Contingencies and Consequences
- Copyright year: 2024
Triumph and Solidarity
BC Communists in the Early Years of the Great Depression
- Copyright year: 2023
Political Activist Ethnography
Studies in the Social Relations of Struggle
- Copyright year: 2023
On Othering
Processes and Politics of Unpeace
- Copyright year: 2023
Cape Breton in the Long Twentieth Century
Formations and Legacies of Industrial Capitalism
- Copyright year: 2023
Grieving for Pigeons, Revised Edition
Twelve Stories of Lahore
- Copyright year: 2024
Unsettling Colonialism in the Canadian Criminal Justice System
- Copyright year: 2022
Principles of Blended Learning
Shared Metacognition and Communities of Inquiry
- Copyright year: 2023
The Law is (Not) for Kids, Revised and Updated Edition
A Legal Rights Guide for Canadian Children and Teens
- Copyright year: 2023
Not Hockey
Critical Essays on Canada’s Other Sport Literature
- Copyright year: 2023
How to Read Like You Mean It
- Copyright year: 2023
How Education Works
Teaching, Technology, and Technique
- Copyright year: 2023
Violence, Imagination, and Resistance
Socio-Legal Interrogations of Power
- Copyright year: 2022
Indigiqueerness
A Conversation about Storytelling
- Copyright year: 2023
Racism in Southern Alberta and Anti-Racist Activism for Change
- Copyright year: 2022
Critical Digital Pedagogy in Higher Education
- Copyright year: 2022
Memory and Landscape
Indigenous Responses to a Changing North
- Copyright year: 2020
Little Wet-Paint Girl
- Copyright year: 2022
Class Warrior
The Selected Works of E. T. Kingsley
- Copyright year: 2022
Of Sunken Islands and Pestilence
Restoring the Voice of Edward Taylor Fletcher to Nineteenth-Century Canadian Literature
- Copyright year: 2022
A Sales Tax for Alberta
Why and How
In this collection, Alberta scholars and policy experts map out why and how a provincial sales tax should and can be implemented as the days of buoyant capital investment, jobs, and wealth are passing Alberta by.
- Copyright year: 2021
Screening Nature and Nation
The Environmental Documentaries of the National Film Board, 1939-1974
- Copyright year: 2022
World Bolshevism
In 1903, at the close of the Second Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, the socialist party had split into two factions, those that would follow Lenin’s proposed revolutionary path and those that would follow Iulii Martov—a group that would call themselves the Mensheviks. In this edition, Martov’s only book is ably translated by Paul Kellogg and Mariya Melentyeva, making it available in English in its complete form for the first time in a hundred years.
- Copyright year: 2019
Under the Nakba Tree
In this moving memoir, a Palestinian man recalls his childhood in Canada and the struggles he faced at the intersection of indigeneity, national identity, and marginality.
Bucking Conservatism
Alternative Stories of Alberta from the 1960s and 1970s
With chapters by both scholars and activists, Bucking Conservatism highlights the lasting influence of Alberta’s nonconformists.
- Copyright year: 2019
"Truth Behind Bars"
Reflections on the Fate of the Russian Revolution
The temporary class of peasants-in-uniform, unmotivated by Lenin’s vision of democracy, that brought down the Russian Revolution.
- Copyright year: 2019
Plastic Legacies
Pollution, Persistence, and Politics
Plastic Legacies brings together scholars from the fields of marine biology, psychology, anthropology, environmental studies, Indigenous studies, and media studies to investigate and address the urgent socio-ecological challenges brought about by plastics.
- Copyright year: 2021
Dissenting Traditions
Essays on Bryan D. Palmer, Marxism, and History
The work of Bryan D. Palmer, one of North America’s leading historians, has influenced the fields of labour history, social history, discourse analysis, communist history, and Canadian history, as well as the theoretical frameworks surrounding them. Dissenting Traditions gathers Palmer’s contemporaries, students, and sometimes critics to examine and expand on the topics and themes that have defined Palmer’s career, from labour history to Marxism and communist politics.
- Copyright year: 2021
Regime of Obstruction
How Corporate Power Blocks Energy Democracy
Rapidly rising carbon emissions from the intense development of Western Canada's fossil fuels continue to aggravate the global climate emergency and destabilize democratic structures. This book provides essential context to the climate crisis and will transform discussions of energy democracy.
- Copyright year: 2020
Finding Refuge in Canada
Narratives of Dislocation
George Melnyk is professor emeritus of Communication, Media and Film at the University of Calgary. He has written and edited over twenty-five books on Canadian cinema, Alberta literature, the co-operative movement, and other Canadian subjects. As someone who came to Canada as a refugee he is deeply connected to the phenomenon and has published articles on Canada and refugees. This is his first book on the topic. Christina Parker is an assistant professor in Social Development Studies at Renison University College at the University of Waterloo. She specializes in critical ethnographic and mixed methods research in diverse schools and communities and is the author of Peacebuilding, Citizenship, and Identity: Empowering Conflict and Dialogue in Multicultural Classrooms (Sense|Brill, 2016).
- Copyright year: 2020
Centring Human Connections in the Education of Health Professionals
- Copyright year: 2020
The Finest Blend
Graduate Education in Canada
As Canadian universities work to increase access to graduate education, many are adopting blended modes of delivery for courses and programs. This book provides a comprehensive overview of current practices and opportunities for blended learning success.
- Copyright year: 2020
Psychiatry and the Legacies of Eugenics
Historical Studies of Alberta and Beyond
From 1928 to 1972, the Alberta Sexual Sterilization Act, Canada’s lengthiest eugenic policy, shaped social discourses and medical practice in the province. This volume extends historical analysis into considerations of contemporary policy and human rights issues through a discussion of disability studies as well as compensation claims for victims of sterilization.
- Copyright year: 2020
The Art of Communication in a Polarized World
In North America and elsewhere, communities are fractured along ideological lines as social media and algorithms encourage individuals to seek out others who think like they do and to condemn those that don’t. An essential guide for surviving in our polarized society, this book offers concrete strategies for refining how values and ideas are communicated.
- Copyright year: 2020
25 Years of Ed Tech
In this lively and approachable volume based on his popular blog series, Martin Weller demonstrates a rich history of innovation and effective implementation of ed tech across higher education.
- Copyright year: 2020
Unforgetting Private Charles Smith
A poetic setting of a World War I soldier's diary.