This book presents the longest-running Canadian generational study of its kind, tracking nearly 50 years in the lives of a high school cohort from 1973.
A sweeping overview of political development in seven large Canadian cities, this landmark edited volume illuminates the drivers of continuity and change in urban politics from the early 1980s to the present.
Ethics of Coexistence maps a pathway for a socially just world through activist pedagogy of ethno-photography.
Austerity and Resistance documents the 1995–1998 Days of Action following Mike Harris’s election, which led to the largest sustained mass social movement in Ontario and Canadian history.
Ravens Talking offers a collaborative analysis of Indigenous feminist legal studies, particularly its emergence in the last ten years.
This book delves into the rhetoric and communication aspects of emergency medical calls to offer vital guidance and training advice for medical and paramedical professionals.
Skills to Build the Nation explores how ideas of skill and training shape integration practices in Canada, creating conditions where skilled immigrants’ integration is contingent on performing a Canadianness that is both elusive and assimilatory.
Over the last 28 years, those who purchased a copy of The Art of the Real Estate Deal found valuable instruction and guidance therein. This fifth edition of the book has been expanded to include instruction and guidance on joint ventures, strategies, and tactics.
Auxiliary Organizations examines how, from the 1930s to the 1980s, Indigenous women in Kanata’s West identified everyday challenges and responded with purposeful, multifaceted social and political action – uncovering the deep commitment and care driving their activism.
Who Deserves Welfare? explores how the media shapes Canadians’ perceptions of who deserves social assistance, examining the impact of race and identity on public attitudes, particularly regarding immigrant and Indigenous recipients.
This book examines how judges interpret science in cases involving transgender children, revealing how legal decisions often pathologize trans identities and offering a new approach to decision-making that centers the voices and needs of trans youth.
This book combines legislative analysis and case law in an accessible format to offer an engaging guide to Ontario condominium law.