The Politics of Industrial Closure considers the how and why of deindustrialization through a transatlantic perspective.
Bringing together a collection of pre-SFL and embryonic SFL publications from 1935 to 1969, this book highlights a range of works that directly contributed to the conceptualization and development of translation studies empowered by SFL.
In dire need of change, journalist Michael Finnerty found himself ushered into the elusive world of cheesemongering and from there, forever transformed.
Ranging across centuries and continents, this book explores the lives of eight remarkable people who introduced beloved dishes and drinks from one culture to another, with recipes included.
The Good, The Bad, and The Algorithm explores how Big Tech is shaping the AI race, revealing the transformative impact of artificial intelligence on industries, societies, and everyday life.
Ambiguous Inclusion explores how Russian citizenship policies shape belonging, race, and identity for migrants along the country’s Asian borders.
A timely, interdisciplinary collection that investigates the role of dossier-based surveillance in society, this book explores how dossiers are used by various regimes as a key bureaucratic technique linked to violence, reputational harm and human rights violations.
This book offers a comprehensive statement of the Canadian law of intellectual property, including copyright, patents, trademarks, industrial designs, and common-law protection.
Through an artful long-term project with young children and their educators, this book embodies the vision of sustainability as foundational to curriculum composition.
Unlike most mentoring books, Mentorship empowers you to lead your own growth – offering tools and frameworks to help you take charge, build authentic relationships, and drive real development.
Lyric Temporalities explores how lyric – a form of poetry often concerned with an insistently present experience – participates in the perception that time is scarce, ebbing away from us, while also shaping conceptions of remembrance and the future.