Kenneth Norrie

Canadian economic historian From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kenneth Harold Norrie (born 1946) is a Canadian economic historian specializing in the economy of Western Canada at the turn of the century.

Born1946 (age 7980)
Education
Main interestseconomy of Western Canada
Notable worksMacDonald Commission research
Quick facts Born, Academic background ...
Kenneth Harold Norrie
Born1946 (age 7980)
Academic background
Education
Academic work
Main interestseconomy of Western Canada
Notable worksMacDonald Commission research
Close

Born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Norrie received his undergraduate degree from the University of Saskatchewan and his PhD from Yale University. He spent much of his career at the University of Alberta, serving as chair of the Department of Economics and then as dean of the Faculty of Arts (1999–2001). He was provost of McMaster University from January 1, 2002, succeeding psychologist Harvey Weingarten who had left to become president of the University of Calgary. On September 22, 2006, Norrie suddenly resigned the provost position and resumed teaching and research activities as a member of the Faculty of Social Science. Since then he has been appointed as Vice-President (Research) of the Higher Education Quality Council of Ontario.

Norrie is perhaps best known for his work with prairie wheat farming. He was a key researcher for the MacDonald Commission of the early 1980s, which recommended signing the Canadian-American Free Trade Agreement.

Publications

The National Policy and Prairie Economic Discrimination, 1870–1930 [1]

Notes

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI