Crisis in a Tweet shows how a single social media post, like, or share can rapidly escalate into a public calamity, instantly disrupting careers and brands in today’s hyper-connected world.
Collaborative AI explores how educators can ethically and effectively integrate artificial intelligence into English language teaching while preserving the central role of human expertise.
A daring exposé of racism in the workplace, this book explores how discrimination is embedded in our corporations and society at large. Business expert Bobby Siu explores how best to eradicate it.
Coastal Futures examines the “coastalization” of society from an ethnographic perspective, lending voice to climate modellers, planners, tourists and fisherfolk to consider the shore as a critical space from where to rethink environmental change, governance, and conflicts.
This book covers all aspects of civil procedure and provides a pan-Canadian comparison of legislation and rules from various jurisdictions in an extensive yet accessible manner.
This guidebook for contemporary Jewish values is inspired by personal narratives, classic texts, and contemporary commentary.
Silent Struggles exposes how existing policies shape – and often limit –the political participation of individuals experiencing homelessness, revealing both the barriers they face and the agency they exercise in seeking change.
This English translation of Leon Battista Alberti’s Renaissance dialogue offers timeless reflections on fortune, adversity, aging, and conversation.
This book provides an English translation and in-depth commentary on Helene Kottannerin’s gripping firsthand account of stealing the Hungarian royal crown in 1440 to secure the throne for the unborn heir.
Beyond Building examines architecture in nineteenth-century France through the lens of gender, making a case for the adoption of an expansive view of architecture and the inclusion of previously excluded makers and works.
Humans of AI explores the hidden culture of AI workers and reveals the people behind a technology often sold as post-human. Believed to be ushering in an era decentring individuality, this book depicts the vitality of personhood even in the creation of AI.
The Historical Imaginary examines Quebec’s French-language feature films through the lens of “national cinema,” focusing on genres that depict images of the past: the historical film, the literary adaptation, the biopic, and the period film.