Carol E. Mayer wins the 2026 Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for her exploration of Canada’s largest Oceanic collection at the Museum of Anthropology at UBC.

A graphic showing a photo of the book prize winner and the book cover for Sea of Islands

Carol E. Mayer has won the Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Book on British Columbia for her book Sea of Islands: Exploring Objects, Stories, and Memories from Oceania. The $3,500 prize, given by UBC Library and the Pacific BookWorld News Society, will be awarded at a reception to be held in April.

Published by Figure 1, the book is a study of the stories and journeys of cultural belongings within Canada’s largest Oceanic collection, housed at the Museum of Anthropology (MOA) at the University of British Columbia. Totalling some 3,500 objects, the collection is Canada’s largest and most diverse accumulation from the vast region of Oceania, which includes the large land bodies of Australia and Papua New Guinea.

Mayer is a celebrated curator who has spent decades tracing, researching, and documenting MOA’s Oceania holdings. The original collection was donated in 1927 by Frank Burnett, Vancouver-based writer and traveller who sailed the Pacific between 1896 to 1923. Written by Mayer in collaboration with MOA, Sea of Islands shares stories and insights from knowledge holders, scholars, and artists from across the Pacific, as well as members of diasporic Oceanic communities.

“I have been travelling the Pacific since 1997, following the footsteps of Frank Burnett, gathering stories, building community relationships, creating formal partnerships, collecting new works for the museum, organising internships and attending conferences,” says Mayer. “All these activities were triggered by my intention to reframe and decolonize the collections by reconnecting objects to their origins, their stories and their journeys.”

The collection has grown significantly, notes Mayer, thanks to the donations from immigrants who brought their memories and collections to Vancouver. “MOA was the obvious new home for the objects from the Pacific. The donors, the new donations, and their stories are now embedded in the fabric of the culture and history of MOA and Vancouver. I was very encouraged when the jurors for this award recognised the relevance of this collection to Vancouver and British Columbia.”

“This book is a wonderfully collaborative study that explores how this vast collection at MOA has evolved, and draws focus to the many stories contained within,” says Dr. Susan E. Parker, UBC’s University Librarian. “We are honoured to present Carol E. Mayer with this year’s Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize.” 

Carol E. Mayer is the Research Fellow—Pacific at the University of British Columbia’s Museum of Anthropology. Internationally known for her work as a museum curator, she has published widely on museum-related topics, curated more than forty exhibitions, and received fellowships from the Smithsonian Institution and the Sainsbury Research Unit and numerous awards.

This book is available to purchase through the UBC Museum of Anthropology (MOA) Shop.

Shortlisted titles for the prize are:

Tender Labour: Migrant Care Work, Filipina/o Young People, and Family Life across Borders by Jennifer E. Shaw. (UBC Press).

The Thin Edge of Innovation: Metro Vancouver’s Evolving Economy by Roger Hayter, Jerry Patchell, and Kevin Rees. (UBC Press).

About the Prize

The Basil Stuart-Stubbs Prize for Outstanding Book on British Columbia, sponsored by UBC Library and the Pacific BookWorld News Society, recognizes the best scholarly book published by a Canadian author on a B.C. subject. The book prize was established in memory of Basil Stuart-Stubbs, a bibliophile, scholar and librarian who passed away in 2012. Stuart-Stubbs’s many accomplishments included serving as the University Librarian at UBC Library and as the Director of UBC’s School of Library, Archival and Information Studies. Stuart-Stubbs had a leadership role in many national and regional library and publishing activities. During his exceptional career, he took particular interest in the production and distribution of Canadian books and was associated with several initiatives beneficial to authors and their readers, and to Canadian publishing.

A Legacy of Ink 墨韻傳承 – Event Recap

Approximately 80 participants, including students, faculty, staff, and community members, joined the Asian Library for the Legacy of Ink event held at the Asian Centre Auditorium on the afternoon of January 29, 2026. The event offered an inspiring exploration of the legacy of Chinese calligraphy—a tradition that spans centuries and continues to shape Chinese cultural […]

New Books at the Law Library – 26/03/17

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE933 .S65 2025 E.A. Smith, The Canadian Construction Contracts Guidebook, 2nd ed (Thomson Reuters, 2025). LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE5759 .H64 2025 Jinyan Li & Joanne Magee, Principles of Canadian Income Tax Law, 11th ed (Thomson Reuters, 2025). LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE8809 .L43 2025 […]

KPop and Demons in the Asian Library Collection

The Asian Library is featuring two displays on “Pop Culture Across Asia” (upper floor) and “Demons in Japanese and Korean Contexts” (ground floor). These displays were installed just in time for Kids Take Over UBC 2026 and are inspired by the hugely popular animated film KPop Demon Hunters. Released in the summer of 2025, this […]

New Books at the Law Library – 26/03/10

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): K1430 .S864 2025
M.T. Sundara Rajan, The Moral Rights of Authors and Artists: From the Birth of Copyright to the Age of Artificial Intelligence, 2nd ed ( Oxford University Press, 2025).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE9028 .M55 2023
J. Miller, The Law of Contempt in Canada, 3rd ed (Thomson Reuters, 2023).

Student submissions to cIRcle: What, why, and how?

Three students sitting in front of a laptop computer in Irving K. Barber Library on the UBC Vancouver. The students are smiling and appear to be collaborating on a project.

Photo courtesy UBC Library Communications and Marketing

As UBC’s institutional repository, cIRcle supports all current UBC students seeking to make their research and course outputs openly accessible online. Our student collections grow each semester, with more than 2,000 non-thesis graduate level publications and nearly 3,000 undergraduate works currently available in Open Collections.

Read on to find out more about how we support student publications in cIRcle, and what UBC students and faculty should know about student deposits to cIRcle. 

Why submit to cIRcle as a student?

Submissions in cIRcle are made openly accessible online, which encourages use and engagement by scholars around the world. By contributing to cIRcle, you are contributing to the global research ecosystem. Persistent links create reliable citations, meaning that your work will be easily found and referenced for years. 

With support from a faculty supervisor, undergraduate and graduate students working on non-thesis materials can submit their work to cIRcle on an individual basis or as part of a cohort-based submission, such as a class or event. cIRcle’s metadata allows for all student works to be linked together with other works from the same course, program, or conference, highlighting the connections between students and their scholarly outputs. 

cIRcle accepts more than just papers written for courses: we encourage the submission of publications that won scholarships or other student awards, zines, cookbooks, podcasts, and more alternative research outputs

How to submit as a student?

The processing of submitting work to cIRcle will be different based on your level of study. All student submissions require approval from your faculty supervisor or course instructor. 

Undergraduate students can follow the quick, 5-step submission instructions on our Undergraduate Work page. After confirming your faculty supervisor supports your submission to cIRcle, prepare your file(s) by removing copyrighted materials and private information, such as student number or instructor comments. Once you submit your deposit request to cIRcle, we’ll take care of the rest. 

Graduate students can submit their non-thesis work directly to cIRcle by following the instructions on our Graduate Work (Non-thesis) page. During this process, your faculty supervisor will be asked to approve your submission directly in cIRcle. 

When submitting your student works to cIRcle, it’s important to make sure you are submitting the final, edited, approved copy of your work. Because cIRcle prioritizes preserving content for long-term, stable access, requests to change or revise your content are generally not supported.

How can faculty support students wanting to submit?

Student submissions to cIRcle generally begin with a conversation with your faculty supervisor or course instructor. After discussing your project and your aims for depositing your work to cIRcle, your supervisor or instructor will approve your work for submission to cIRcle: for undergraduates, request they complete our Student Submission Approval Form; for graduates, they will receive an email prompting their approval as soon as you submit your work to cIRcle.

If you are a faculty supervisor or course instructor and feel your student(s) have created exceptional scholarly outputs, you can encourage them to deposit to cIRcle and share the benefits that come with making their work openly accessible on a global scale. You can include deposit to cIRcle as one of your course expectations, or work with students on one-on-one to help them refine their project before depositing to cIRcle. If you are a faculty member wanting to learn more about how best to support your students with depositing to cIRcle, Contact Us for recommendations and guidance.

Pitchbook – New Login Process

UBC Library is pleased to announce that we will be moving to a new Single Sign On (SSO) approach to Pitchbook. On the morning of Wednesday, March 11th , UBC users will be able to login directly to Pitchbook via the Library Website with their UBC CWL login. Users will no longer need to login multiple times or have to recreate Pitchbook accounts to access.

Our Library Pitchbook Resource Page will be updated with this new SSO login on March 11th. Please continue to use this Resource Page as your access point for Pitchbook.

I just want to give a quick thank you to the UBC Library and IT staff that worked hard to put this change in place. This should greatly increase the Pitchbook User experience at UBC.

Finally, I wanted to mention that Pitchbook has now put in place website security tools to protect against their website data from being mass downloaded. Please note that using Browser Extensions that have “Read and Change” permissions – such as translation browser extensions like Google Translate – will be flagged as website data downloading.

To be clear: Using “Read and Change”  Browser Extensions when using Pitchbook will case your account to be blocked. Please disable these Extensions before using Pitchbook.

For any Questions or Issues please respond via our Library Electronic Resources Form

New Display in the Law Library – International Women’s Day & Celebrating Women in Law

International Women's Day Display
Celebrating Women in Law Display

New Displays in the Law Library:
• International Women’s Day
• Celebrating Women in Law

UBC Library makes the Slocan History Series openly available through cIRcle

A graphic showing all 9 booklet covers

When Canadian geographer Cole Harris created the Slocan History Series, he had a local audience deliberately in mind. Printed as short, accessible booklets for residents and visitors of the Slocan Valley in British Columbia, the publications invite readers to reflect on the region’s early settler-colonial and industrial past.

Now, thanks to a collaboration between UBC Library and the Harris family, the full series is available online for anyone to download from cIRcle, the university’s open access digital repository.

The Slocan Valley through stories and scholarship

Dr. Richard Colebrook (Cole) Harris (1936-2022) was a geographer and faculty member in UBC’s Department of Geography, who retired in 2001 as a Professor Emeritus. His research focused on Canadian historical geography, the geographic patterns of early Canada, and the far-reaching impacts of settler colonialism.

A prodigious scholarly writer throughout his career, Harris authored and co-authored several books and many influential essays over the course of five decades. He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1982, and an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2004.

A photo from Boom Days in the Slocan, The Slocan History Series, Booklet 1, Harris, J. C., & Harris, Cole, 2014. “First house in Three Forks, 1892.” Royal BC Museum, BC Archives.

The Slocan History Series was a project that Harris took up during this retirement. The first two booklets in the series are detailed first-hand accounts of life in Slocan during the 1880s to early 1900s, written by Harris’ grandfather Joseph Colebrook Harris in 1944, and edited and prefaced by Cole Harris.

Boom Days in the Slocan and Beginnings of the Bosun Ranch chronicle Joseph Colebrook Harris’ life as an early settler in the Slocan Valley during the Slocan mining rush. The seven other booklets in the series consider issues of colonialism,  through scholarly articles, adapted and made more accessible to a non-academic audience.

A family-initiated project

Making the Slocan History Series available digitally through cIRcle began with a simple inquiry, says Amber Saundry, Digital Repository Librarian at UBC Library.

Dr. Douglas Harris, a Professor in UBC’s Peter A. Allard School of Law, reached out to cIRcle with an idea to widen access and preserve his father’s booklet series. Although physical copies of the booklets were already held in the library’s collection, access was limited.

Douglas Harris and his mother, Dr. Muriel Harris, an Associate Professor Emerita in the UBC Department of Medical Genetics, were interested in making the series more widely available. “I was really concerned about whether they’d be available in the future,” says Muriel Harris. “So how can they be safe and available to people?”

“Having a permanent digital location was really attractive,” adds Douglas Harris. “[The booklets] are going to be available long-term for anybody, including local or distant audiences.”

A photo from Early New Denver, The Slocan History Series, Booklet 6, von Krogh, Hennin, & Harris, Cole, 2017. “Bertha Angrignon feeding her chickens, New Denver.” K. Angrignon Collection.

Local history with broad appeal

Rooted in the Slocan Valley, the booklets explore a wide range of topics, offering perspectives relevant to researchers and community members interested in British Columbia history, geography, and environmental change.

“You also don’t need to be an expert to get a lot out of the material,” adds Saundry. “There’s a nice balance of visuals, and the content is not dense, which opens up the audience. It’s not primarily for academics.”

“His language is accessible, but it’s also… meaningful to academic audiences and relevant and accessible to a general public,” says Douglas Harris. “That’s not easy to do — but Dad was able to do it.”

For UBC Library, the project reflects a broader commitment to amplifying locally created scholarship and making it accessible to the public.

“I really want to recognize the [Harris] family and how they brought this project to the library,” says Saundry. “This is what I love about the work that we do, extending the reach of local history that’s been created by our UBC community and has these numerous intersections across UBC and the province.”

The Slocan History Series demonstrates how meaningful collections sometimes arrive fully formed—carefully prepared, thoughtfully contextualized, and offered with generosity.

Explore the Slocan History Series.

New Books at the Asian Library (February 2026)