A tax acted as the spark that lit the American Revolution. The reviled Tea Tax of 1773 was regarded as yet another attempt by the British Parliament to squash American freedom.
And, in France about the same time, a tax on salt became the most hated levy in the country. The gabelle is regarded as one of the root causes of the dissatisfaction that led to the French Revolution.
If theres anything that can get people up in arms, its taxes. But here in Canada, the historical literature says little about the violence and drama of tax resistance.
Have struggles around taxation played so little part in forming Canadas political culture? asks AV整氈窒 history professor Shirley Tillotson.
She suspects there's something more to it, which is why shell be studying the cultural history of taxation in greater depth, thanks to a three-year, $88,900 standard research grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC).
Paying taxes, she says, is a monetary expression of the values we hold as a nation. And, when someone announces, Im a taxpayer, what theyre really saying is that they have the right to speak and be heard. Paying taxes also infers rights.
Dr. Tillotsons research is just one of the research projects at AV整氈窒 to be supported by SSHRC. The federal funding agency announced$77.8 million in standard research grants in Canada, including $804,000 for research at AV整氈窒.All told, theinvestment supports some 2,800 research projects, including 841 new projects involving 1,581 researchers across the country.
|
- Jennifer Bain, Assistant Professor Music, for research on Medieval composer, Hildegard von Bingen, a 12th-century abbess and arguably the worlds first woman composer.
- Yuri Leving, Assistant Professor of Russian, for a project entitled Becoming a Great Writer. Hell examine how Vladimir Nabokov, best known as the writer of Lolita, transformed himselffrom an emigre professorinto a best-selling author.
- Marjorie Stone, Professor of English and Womens Studies, for three major projects focusing on the influential 19th-century English poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
- Elizabeth Kay-Raining Bird, Professor, School of Human Communications Disorders, for her ongoing study of the language abilities of bilingual children with Down Syndrome.
- Patricia Glazebrook, Associate Professor, Dept. of Philosophy, for research into the role of women in Ghana's agricultural economy.
- Stephen Porter, Associate Professor, Dept. of Psychology, for Dangerous Decisions: Investigations of the Communication and Identification of Concealed and Fabricated Emotions.
- Fiona Black, Associate Professor, School of Information Management, for Investigating Complexity in Information Systems: The Example of Print Culture and Geographic Information Systems.
- Bertrum MacDonald, Professor, School of Information Management, and Peter Wells, School for Resource and Environmental Studies, for From Science to Policy and Decision-Making: Investigating the Use and Impact of Grey Literature of National and International Governmental Agencies Focused on the Environment
- Michael Ungar, Associate Professor, School of Social Work, for research on the protective processes used by children growing up in difficult environments. For more information on Dr. Ungar's work, see the story:.
SSHRC is an independent federal government agency that funds university-based research and graduate training through national peer-reviewed competitions.