Harnetty was born June 6, 1927, in Brighton, England, to Edward and Anne (McKeon) Harnetty. He traveled from the UK to Canada to attend the University of British Columbia.[1] In September 1956, he married Claire Demers. They have one son.[2] Harnetty made an endowment for a grant called the Peter Harnetty Prize in Asian Studies that is awarded annually to undergraduate students.[3]
Harnetty received a Bachelor of Arts degree in History at the University of British Columbia in 1953 followed by a Masters of Arts (1954) and a Doctorate (1958) at Harvard University.[4][2] Harnetty undertook post-doctoral research studies starting in the summer of 1964 at the India Office Library in London and the Manchester Central Reference Library after receiving a research fellowship from the Canada Council.[7]
Politics
Harnetty was one of over 500 academics to sign a petition in 2015 in support of Fair Vote Canada.[8]
Professional
Teaching
Harnetty was hired as an instructor at the University of British Columbia in 1958.[9] From 1958 to 1992, Harnetty held a joint appointment in the UBC Department of Asian Studies and the UBC Department of History.[4] In fact, "the University inaugurated the teaching of South Asian courses with recruitment of [Harnetty]."[10][3] In 1971, he was promoted to full professor.[11] He served first as acting head of the Dept. of Asian Studies in 1970/71 and then as head 1975-1980.[12][13][14] Upon his retirement in 1992, he was granted the status of Professor Emeritus.[15][4]
Faculty of Arts Teaching Prize (now UBC Killam Teaching Prize), 1990.[4]
Publications
HARNETTY, Peter. Imperialism and Free Trade. Lancashire and India in the Mid-Nineteenth Century. [Vancouver]: University of British Columbia; Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1973.
Archival records
The records pertaining to Harnetty’s time as a professor at the University of British Columbia are located in the University of British Columbia Archives.
^ abcdef"Peter Harnetty". Gale Literature: Contemporary Authors. Gale Literature Resource Center. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
^ abAsian Studies, Department Of (Spring 2012). "A Gala to Celebrate 50 Years of Asian Studies". Asian Edge. University of British Columbia. Department of Asian Studies. p. 2. doi:10.14288/1.0041710.