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Joint venture From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The McGill–Queen's University Press (MQUP) is a Canadian university press formed as a joint venture between McGill University in Montreal, Quebec and Queen's University at Kingston in Kingston, Ontario.
Parent company | McGill University and Queen's University at Kingston |
---|---|
Country of origin | Canada |
Headquarters location | Montreal, Quebec |
Distribution | Georgetown Terminal Warehouses (Canada) Marston Book Services (EMEA) Chicago Distribution Center (US) East-West Export Books (Asia and Australasia) Research Press (Indian Subcontinent)[1] |
Publication types | Books |
Official website | www |
McGill–Queen's University Press publishes original peer-reviewed works in most areas of the social sciences and humanities. As of 2023, it has more than 4,000 books in print.[2] For more than twenty-five years, the publishing house has been under the direction of executive director Philip Cercone, a former director of Canada's Awards to Scholarly Publishing Program, the governmental agency that funds scholarly books published in Canada. Under Cercone's guidance, the list has grown to the point where MQUP is sometimes claimed to be Canada's leading academic publisher. For many years, one of its senior editors was the historian and author Donald Akenson.
The press is currently a member of the Association of University Presses.[3]
Among the best-known academics to have published with the press are Jacob Neusner, Margaret Somerville, Stéphane Dion, Charles Taylor, Bruce Trigger and Christl Verduyn. It also has a poetry list including such writers as Carmine Starnino, Mark Abley, Peter Dale Scott and Brian Bartlett. In recent years the press has also become known for contentious books on Canadian politics by Tom Flanagan among others. Some of its books are translated from French.[citation needed]
McGill–Queen's has been awarded numerous prizes for the design of its books, as well as for editorial quality.
McGill–Queen's University Press began as McGill in 1961 and amalgamated with Queen's in 1969.[4]
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