Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Toronto Political Scientist Stephen Clarkson Has Died In Germany At Age 78

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Feb, 2016 10:59 AM
    TORONTO — Renowned Canadian political scientist Stephen Clarkson, a leading historian and academic authority on North American relations, has died.
     
    The University of Toronto's political science department, where Clarkson taught for several decades, confirmed he died on Sunday in hospital in Freiburg, Germany.
     
    Clarkson had contracted an influenza virus in Portugal that developed into pneumonia and then an incurable sepsis, the school said.
     
    He was 78.
     
    Clarkson's work focused on areas including the North American Free Trade Agreement and how Canada has been affected by globalization.
     
    In 1990, he and then-wife Christina McCall won the Governor General's Literary Award for non-fiction for "Trudeau and Our Times." The second volume of that book won the J.W. Dafoe prize.
     
    In 2011, Clarkson was named a member of the Order of Canada.
     
    "Stephen was a pillar of the department for many decades," said a Facebook post from U of T's political science department.
     
    "He was a great friend, a most dedicated teacher, and an indefatigable scholar. Our condolences go to Stephen's wife Nora, his daughters, grandchildren and extended family."
     
    Clarkson did his graduate studies at the University of Oxford and the Paris-Sorbonne University. In 1969, he ran for mayor of Toronto.
     
    His other books included "The Big Red Machine: How the Liberal Party Dominates Canadian Politics," "Canada and the Reagan Challenge," and "Uncle Sam and Us."
     
    Clarkson's other honours included an election to the Royal Society of Canada.
     
    He was once married to former governor general Adrienne Clarkson.
     
    Funeral arrangements have not been announced.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Convicted Animal Killer From New Westminster Granted Unescorted Leave From Halfway House

    Convicted Animal Killer From New Westminster Granted Unescorted Leave From Halfway House
    She must wear a GPS tracking device and have permission from her parole officer.

    Convicted Animal Killer From New Westminster Granted Unescorted Leave From Halfway House

    Quebec Man Mathieu Roy Gets 57-month Sentence For Sexually Assaulting Teen Girls

    Quebec Man Mathieu Roy Gets 57-month Sentence For Sexually Assaulting Teen Girls
    Mathieu Roy had initially pleaded not guilty but changed his plea today and was sentenced by Quebec court Judge Guylaine Tremblay

    Quebec Man Mathieu Roy Gets 57-month Sentence For Sexually Assaulting Teen Girls

    Guinness World Records Not Reviewing Claim Montreal Woman Is 120 Years Old

    Guinness World Records Not Reviewing Claim Montreal Woman Is 120 Years Old
    The family of Cecilia Laurent says she turned 120 years old on Jan. 31, and had said Guinness was looking into that claim.

    Guinness World Records Not Reviewing Claim Montreal Woman Is 120 Years Old

    B.C. Gives Eviction Notices To People At Tent City Behind Victoria Courthouse

    B.C. Gives Eviction Notices To People At Tent City Behind Victoria Courthouse
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government will be evicting homeless campers behind the courthouse in Victoria and offering them temporary shelter and rental housing.

    B.C. Gives Eviction Notices To People At Tent City Behind Victoria Courthouse

    Vancouver Woman Inspires Petition To Save Japan Elephant From 'Concrete Prison'

    Vancouver Woman Inspires Petition To Save Japan Elephant From 'Concrete Prison'
    VANCOUVER — What struck Ulara Nakagawa when she first saw Japan's oldest elephant was how she resembled a figurine in a "concrete prison."

    Vancouver Woman Inspires Petition To Save Japan Elephant From 'Concrete Prison'

    Rosemary Sullivan Wins B.C. Non-fiction Prize For 'Stalin's Daughter'

    Rosemary Sullivan Wins B.C. Non-fiction Prize For 'Stalin's Daughter'
    "Stalin's Daughter: The Extraordinary and Tumultuous Life of Svetlana Alliluyeva" (HarperCollins Canada) took the $40,000 prize on Thursday.

    Rosemary Sullivan Wins B.C. Non-fiction Prize For 'Stalin's Daughter'