The second volume of this definitive text expands upon Christian M.I.M. Matthiessen’s work on Systemic Functional Linguistics spanning forty years, offering a fundamental understanding of his theories.
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.
A Continent of Colleagues uncovers how interwar European parliamentarians built cross-party and international networks behind the scenes, shaping democracy even as rising extremism pushed political debate into private backrooms.
The Long Arc of Training follows six medical trainees over twelve years, capturing the peaks, valleys, and plateaus in their transformative journey from classrooms to independent clinical practice.
The Handover chronicles the mentorship between a seasoned nurse on the verge of retirement and a young, idealistic newcomer just beginning her career. As Tilda Shalof... Læs mere
Becoming Ecological reveals how transforming our language and everyday conversations can reshape our relationship with the planet, inspiring deeper ecological awareness and meaningful action both in our daily lives and collective future.
This book examines communist gender policies targeting Muslim communities in the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and Bulgaria, and shows how Muslim women and men navigated them through both resistance and compliance.
This book critically examines and challenges the myth that online education can free us from the constraints of traditional in-person schooling, particularly in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Liberation and Libido delves into the changing portrayals of gay male masculinity in The Body Politic (1971–1987), shedding light on how debates surrounding gender, race, class, and ability influenced the politics of gay liberation in Canada.