Aortic aneurysm, a condition often asymptomatic until rupture, claims innumerable lives worldwide each day. This volume provides an authoritative and accessible examination of the aorta, granting readers exceptional insight and a sense of medical empowerment.
The Court and the Constitution is an up-to-date collection of leading high court decisions on all aspects of the Canadian Constitution, including federalism, the Charter, Indigenous rights, and constitutional change.
From House to Home reflects on the processes, opportunities, and challenges of engaging in archaeological research through the case study of a project conducted at the Ancestral Maya townsite of Alabama, Belize.
Centring young people’s viewpoints, Enmeshed Realities explores how youth actively traverse and navigate today’s digital ecologies: the entangled online and offline worlds that shape everyday life.
Siglo Latinx studies twenty-first-century adaptations of early modern Spanish theatre created by Latinx artists in North America who emphasize inclusivity, accessibility, and socially transformative practices.
This book develops the theoretical foundations and resultant implications of the idea that the primary purpose of school education is to support children in developing the art of living – helping them thrive as students and beyond.
This book critically examines the literature on caregiving parents of autistic children in a Canadian landscape. It sheds light on the barriers they face in seeking support for their children and calls for meaningful, systemic change.
This book documents how students, staff, and faculty use the post-secondary campus as a site for organizing for food justice. The book offers rich empirical cases and novel conceptual interventions, written by contributors engaged in food justice organizing.
This memoir brings to life the remarkable career of Earl A. Cherniak, K.C., an eminent and esteemed Canadian advocate for over sixty years.
Al-Fa?ia’: The Horror is a powerful graphic novel that tells the story of a young Syrian dissident who survived military imprisonment and was ultimately forced to flee to Europe.
Making a Killing documents the emergence of insurance fraud as a public concern by examining six legal cases from 1890s Ontario where the alleged murderers sought the payouts promised by the death of an insured person.
Drawing on secret archival records, this book reconstructs the world of William Krehm and his Trotskyist comrades who pursued revolutionary politics across North America and in Spain during the Great Depression.