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Home » Course Catalogue » MBA Electives » RSM2030H – Canadian Business History Understanding the Now: Context, Capitalism, and Canada in a Globalized Business World

RSM2030H – Canadian Business History Understanding the Now: Context, Capitalism, and Canada in a Globalized Business World

General Information

Instructor(s)

Applicable Major(s):
(c) = Core, (r) = Recommended

  • None

Instructor Bio

Dimitry Anastakis is the L.R. Wilson/R.J. Currie Chair in Canadian Business History, cross-appointed between RSM and the Department of History.  He is the author of numerous books and articles on Canadian business history, particularly the auto sector, and is a regular contributor in the media on issues stemming from Canadian business and history. 

Format

12 weekly sessions

Depending on availability, visitors to RSM2030 will include leading practitioners and senior business leaders as guest speakers.

Course Mission

The course mission is to provide Rotman students with an understanding of business history in a way that illustrates the utility of the past in making it applicable to contemporary Canada, Canadian business, and global capitalism. Only by understanding the past can we effectively address the challenges and opportunities of the present and prepare for the future. RSM 2030 is intended to introduce students to some key debates, interpretations, methodologies, and interdisciplinary intersections that derive from the study of Canadian business history, capitalism, and globalization within the context of international history.

Course Scope

Utilizing a “glocal” approach that combines Canadian, US and global cases, this course explores the evolution of modern Canadian business, capitalism and globalization form the late 19th Century to the early 21stKey issues include entrepreneurship and firms, family firms, industrialization, globalization, Keynesianism, protectionism/free trade, digitization, financialization, automation, deindustrialization, failure, and the emergence of neoliberalism.  

Evaluation and Grade Distribution

ComponentDue DateWeight
Class ParticipationOngoing20%
Assignment #1Week 525%
Assignment #2 PlanWeek 910%
Assignment #2Week 1245%

Assignment options include Case Studies, Corporate Report Analyses, Book Reviews, Podcasts, Walking Tours, Business Biographies, and traditional Essays. There are no exams in this course.

Required Resources

  • Andrew Smith and Dimitry Anastakis, Smart Globalization: The Canadian Business and Economic History Experience (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2014)
  • Joe Martin, Relentless Change: A Casebook for the Study of Canadian Business History (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2010)

Notes

Course syllabi are available upon request: contact dimitry.anatakis@rotman.utoronto.ca

Last Updated: 2021-05-31 @ 12:21 pm