Tina Merrill Loo FRSC (born 1962) is a Canadian historian.
[2] Prior to joining UBC's Department of History in 2003, Loo taught at McGill University, where she was the youngest-ever holder of the Seagram Chair of Canadian Studies,[3] and Simon Fraser University.
[4] In 2003 Loo was appointed by then-Prime Minister Jean Chrétien to an Advisory Committee for the development of the Canada History Centre.
Her 1994 book Making Law, Order, and Authority in British Columbia won the Canadian Historical Association's 1995 Clio Prize for the best book in British Columbia and/or Yukon history.
[5] The book was also the winner of the 2008 Harold Adams Innis Prize for best English book in the Social Sciences from the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences.