157 results
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2. The Canadian Breast Cancer Symposium 2023 Meeting Report.
- Author
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Cil, Tulin, Boileau, Jean-François, Chia, Stephen, DeCoteau, MJ, Jerzak, Katarzyna J., Koch, Anne, Nixon, Nancy, Quan, May Lynn, Roberts, Amanda, and Brezden-Masley, Christine
- Subjects
BREAST cancer ,MEDICAL personnel ,CENTRAL nervous system ,ONCOLOGIC surgery ,DUCTAL carcinoma ,CARCINOMA in situ ,EXPERIMENTAL medicine ,ONCOLOGY nursing - Abstract
On 15–16 June 2023, healthcare professionals and breast cancer patients and advocates from across Canada met in Toronto, Ontario, for the 2023 Canadian Breast Cancer Symposium (CBSC.). The CBSC. is a national, multidisciplinary event that occurs every 2 years with the goal of developing a personalized approach to the management of breast cancer in Canada. Experts provided state-of-the-art information to help optimally manage breast cancer patients, including etiology, prevention, diagnosis, experimental biology, and therapy of breast cancer and premalignant breast disease. The symposium also had the objectives of increasing communication and collaboration among breast cancer healthcare providers nationwide and providing a comprehensive and real-life review of the many facets of breast cancer. The sessions covered the patient voice, the top breast cancer papers from different disciplines in 2022, artificial intelligence in breast cancer, systemic therapy updates, the management of central nervous system metastases, multidisciplinary management of ductal carcinoma in situ, special populations, optimization-based individual prognostic factors, toxicity management of novel therapeutics, survivorship, and updates in surgical oncology. The key takeaways of these sessions have been summarized in this conference report. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. In-Group Bias and Inter-Group Dialogue in Canadian Multiculturalism.
- Author
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Garang, Kuir ë and Anucha, Uzo
- Subjects
INGROUPS (Social groups) ,SOCIAL groups ,ANTI-Black racism ,MULTICULTURALISM ,SOCIAL status ,MULTICULTURAL education - Abstract
African-Canadians continue to bear the brunt of marginality and stereotyping in Canada even when various mitigating studies and programs have been initiated by the government at federal, state, and municipal levels. These stereotypes continue to affect them in informal settings and state institutions when seeking employment, housing or when in the streets, malls, schools, etc. While social justice advocates, social workers, and policy-makers focus on "Black-White" dynamics because other "racialized minorities" are also marginalized (though not equally) in Canada, it is important to note that "non-White" Canadians also contribute to the spread of historical stereotypes of African-Canadians within Canadian multiculturalism as noted in the emphasis of the city of Toronto's mitigating strategies for "anti-Black racism." Using social group position theory (SGPT) and asset-based model (ABCD), this paper argues that interrogating social group biases beyond "Black-White" binarism to encourage inter-group dialogs is important in making sure that different multicultural communities understand one another through favorable, activities-mediated, inter-group relations as opposed to having multicultural relations mediated by third parties, or not mediated at all. We also argue that African-Canadians should focus on internal strengths and only use external help to augment community initiatives to change the extant negative image. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Do building energy codes adequately reward buildings that adapt to partial occupancy?
- Author
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O'Brien, William and Gunay, H. Burak
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CONSTRUCTION laws ,OFFICE buildings - Abstract
Most building energy codes' performance path implicitly reward buildings that perform well under steady and near-capacity occupancy conditions, even though these are not typical operating conditions. Partially, as a result, our buildings tend not to be designed with features that allow optimal energy performance in the common circumstance of partial and fluctuating occupancy. The objective of this paper is to examine current building energy codes in this regard. The paper uses a simulation-based approach to demonstrate two strategies that target occupancy-adaptability: demand-controlled ventilation and smaller-than-required lighting control zones with occupancy-controlled lighting. In this paper, a code-compliant EnergyPlus archetype office building in Toronto, Canada was used to evaluate these design features under different occupancy conditions. The results confirm that both demand-controlled ventilation and smaller lighting control zones are most advantageous at lower occupancy levels. Accordingly, the paper concludes with generalized recommendations for code modifications to properly credit buildings with greater adaptability to partial occupancy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
5. 'Inoculated with the Ways of Anglicans': Representing Indigenous Participation in Canadian Synodality, 1866.
- Author
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Brown, Terry M. and Lofft, Jonathan S.
- Subjects
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ABORIGINAL Canadians , *ANGLICANS , *VACCINATION , *COUNCILS & synods - Abstract
The unprecedented participation by two Ojibwe-speaking Anishinabek lay delegates in the 1866 meeting of the Electoral Synod of the Anglican Diocese of Toronto garnered a brief flurry of contemporary journalistic coverage across a networked imperial and colonial press. In the most vivid reportage, the two delegates were dehumanized, reduced to the status of 'Indian nags ... becoming inoculated with the ways of Anglicans'. In another more distantly circulated representation, an Indigenous presence at the incipience of Canadian synodality was invested with different rhetorical significance, the unsettling scandal of their voting membership justifying the struggle for self-government in the nascent Anglican Churches of other colonies, thus laying bare anxieties about the precarious situation of colonial Anglicanism. Rather than presuming to interpret the experience and discourse of Indigenous Anglicans, nor simply documenting the first local episode of formal Indigenous involvement in the counsels of Anglicans in Canada, this paper introduces the Electoral Synod, the neglected texts that covered the event, along with the lives of the exoticized churchmen featured in their coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Trans migrations: Seeking refuge in "safe haven" Toronto.
- Author
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Jacob, Tai and Oswin, Natalie
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IMMIGRATION lawyers ,LGBTQ+ literature ,CANADIAN literature ,REFUGEES - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Geographer is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. BRAIDING OUR LIVES: BLACK IMMIGRANT MOTHERS AND ADULT LITERACY.
- Author
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Fearon, Stephanie
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ADULT literacy ,BLACK women ,CREATIVE nonfiction ,WOMEN immigrants ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education is the property of Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
8. Enacting a Latinx Decolonial Politic of Belonging: Latinx Community Workers' Experiences Negotiating Identity and Citizenship in Toronto, Canada.
- Author
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CAHUAS, MADELAINE and MATUTE, ALEXANDRA ARRAIZ
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CITIZENSHIP ,COMMUNITIES ,DECOLONIZATION ,GROUP identity ,ETHNICITY ,LATIN Americans - Abstract
This paper explores how women and non-binary Latinx Community Workers (LCWs) in Toronto, Canada, negotiate their identities, citizenship practices and politics in relation to settler colonialism and decolonization. We demonstrate how LCWs enact a Latinx decolonial politic of belonging, an alternative way of practicing citizenship that strives to simultaneously challenge both Canadian and Latin American settler colonialism. This can be seen when LCWs refuse to be recognized on white settler terms as "proud Canadians," and create community-based learning initiatives that incite conversations among everyday Latinx community members around Canada's settler colonial history and present, Indigenous worldviews, as well as race and settler colonialism in Latin America. We consider how LCWs' enactments of a Latinx decolonial politic of belonging serve as small, incomplete, but crucial steps towards decolonization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
9. Challenging Un-Belonging and Undesirability: How Acts of Autonomy Transform Everyday Realities of Living with Precarious Immigration Status in Toronto, Canada.
- Author
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Dennler, Kathryn Tomko
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IMMIGRATION status ,PARTICIPANT observation ,SOCIAL networks ,TIME measurements ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Increasing processing times for immigration applications, increasing numbers of people admitted on temporary visas, and delays processing refugee claims mean that more newcomers spend longer periods of time living in Canada with precarious immigration status. This paper uses qualitative research to examine how people with precarious immigration status exercise agency in the face of restrictions to their rights and risk of deportability, as well as the extent to which agency is able to transform people's everyday realities. The research shows that regimes of immigration control construct people with precarious immigration status as un-belonging and undesirable as members of Canadian society. The research identifies two ways that research participants exert autonomy over their lives: persistent presence and critiquing their construction as un-belonging and undesirable. Both forms of agency involve the creation of counterpublics to build networks for practical support and recognition of the legitimacy of their presence in Canada. While agency made it easier for participants to sustain themselves, the research shows that participants internalized discourses hostile to people with precarious immigration status, suggesting that agency is both necessary but also limited in its capacity to mitigate the harm caused by the construction of them as un-belonging and undesirable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
10. The struggle and (im)possibilities of decolonizing Latin American citizenship practices and politics in Toronto.
- Author
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Cahuas, Madelaine C
- Subjects
LATIN Americans ,CITIZENSHIP ,POLITICS & culture ,IDENTITY politics ,PRACTICAL politics ,UNITE the Right rally, Charlottesville, Va., 2017 - Abstract
This paper explores the tensions racialized migrants negotiate when politically organizing and enacting citizenship within the context of the Canadian white settler state. I focus on the experiences of Latin Americans in Toronto and the politics surrounding a cultural celebration – Hispanic Heritage Month. While some Latin Americans sought to use this event to gain recognition and assert their belonging to Canadian society, others opposed its naming, objectives and organization, and opted to create an alternative celebration – the Latin-America History Collective's Día de la Verdad/Day of Truth Rally. I demonstrate that the narratives and practices mobilized around Hispanic Heritage Month and Latin-America History Collective's Rally reveal how different forms of migrant political organizing can internalize, reproduce and contest white settler colonial social relations. Overall, this paper aims to contribute to and complicate debates on the fraught nature of racialized migrants' citizenship, politics and identity formation in Canada, by emphasizing the vast heterogeneity of Latin American communities and decolonizing possibilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Time scales and planning history: medium- and long-term interpretations of downtown Toronto planning and development.
- Author
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Filion, Pierre
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CITIES & towns ,LONGUE duree (Historiography) ,CIVIC improvement ,HISTORY - Abstract
The paper transposes aspects of the histography of Fernand Braudel to the exploration of planning. It explores the extent to which different time scales, dominated by a longue durée perspective, reveal different facets of the history of planning and of how it operates. Lesser time scales focus on specific events while long perspectives bring to light durable aspects of planning, such as those relating to its embeddedness within fundamental relations between the state and the market economy. The paper contends that planning history and theory are largely shaped by a middle-scale histography, focussed on the succession of periods in the evolution of planning and on how they mark its progression. It proposes to counterbalance this historical perspective with a long-term historical lens highlighting persistent dimensions of planning, many referring to the fundamentals of its political economy. The paper argues that a full understanding of planning requires a consideration of different historical scales. The object of study is Downtown Toronto planning and development since 1945. A medium time scale identifies three distinct phases in Downtown Toronto history over this period, while a long-term perspective reveals how this district evolved with remarkable consistency into an expanded and diversified downtown during these years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. "This Is Who I Would Become": Russian Jewish Immigrants and Their Encounters with Chabad-Lubavitch in the Greater Toronto Area.
- Author
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Tapper, Joshua
- Subjects
JEWISH diaspora ,JEWISH identity ,ETHNIC groups ,RELIGIOUS identity ,COMMUNITY centers ,SOCIAL space ,PERSONAL space - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Jewish Studies / Études Juives Canadiennes is the property of Association for Canadian Jewish Studies and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Is the Canadian housing market 'really' exuberant? Evidence from Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal.
- Author
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Rherrad, Imad, Mokengoy, Mardochée, and Kuate Fotue, Landry
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HOUSING market ,EVIDENCE ,REAL estate bubbles ,CANADIAN federal government - Abstract
Since the 2008 financial crisis, federal and provincial governments in Canada has consistently monitored its housing market. However, real estate markets in Canada seem to have significant regional imbalances with moderate evidence of overheating and price exuberance and strong evidence of over-evaluation for several quarters. In this perspective, this paper seeks to test the existence of real estate bubbles in Canada and their contagion. Our methodology, based on monthly data, relies on two steps: First, we build on a GSADF test developed by Phillips, Shi, and Yu (2015) to detect bubbles. Second, using a method developed by Greenaway-McGrevy and Phillips (2016), a non-parametric regression with time-varying coefficient, we verify if, in case of bubbles, there is a contagion among Canadian cities. Our results suggest that there are bubbles in the real estate markets of Toronto and Vancouver, while this is not the case for Montreal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Socio-structural Injustice, Racism, and the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Precarious Entanglement among Black Immigrants in Canada.
- Author
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MENSAH, JOSEPH and WILLIAMS, CHRISTOPHER J.
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COVID-19 pandemic ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,COVID-19 ,RACISM ,BLACK people ,HORSE racetracks - Abstract
As several commentators and researchers have noted since late spring 2020, COVID-19 has laid bare the connections between entrenched structurally generated inequalities on one hand, and on the other hand relatively high degrees of susceptibility to contracting COVID-19 on the part of economically marginalized population segments. Far from running along the tracks of race neutrality, studies have demonstrated that the pandemic is affecting Black people more than Whites in the U.S.A. and U.K., where reliable racially-disaggregated data are available. While the situation in Canada seems to follow the same pattern, race-specific data on COVID-19 are hard to come by. At present, there is no federal mandate to collect race-based data on COVID-19, though, in Ontario, at the municipal level, the City of Toronto has been releasing such data. This paper examines the entanglements of race, immigration status and the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada with particular emphasis on Black immigrants and non-immigrants in Toronto, using multiple forms of data pertaining to income, housing, immigration, employment and COVID-19 infections and deaths. Our findings show that the pandemic has had a disproportionate negative impact on Black people and other racialized people in Toronto and, indeed, Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Understanding barriers to green infrastructure policy and stormwater management in the City of Toronto: a shift from grey to green or policy layering and conversion?
- Author
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Johns, Carolyn M.
- Subjects
GREEN infrastructure ,INFRASTRUCTURE policy ,GREEN business ,NONPROFIT sector ,PRIVATE sector ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
This paper presents findings from a study of policy implementation of green infrastructure and stormwater management in the City of Toronto – Canada's largest city. The analysis uses key informant interviews with public, private and non-profit sector actors to examine the challenges municipalities face in implementing green infrastructure policies. The article begins with a review of the literature related to green infrastructure policy implementation followed by the theoretical and methodological approach used in the paper. Findings are then presented outlining the significant barriers to green infrastructure and insights from participants who articulated that rather than a shift from grey to green, what is evident in terms of policy change is policy layering and very gradual conversion of well-established policies that support grey infrastructure. The paper concludes with a discussion of why the shift from grey to green will continue to be challenging unless significant policy and institutional changes are advanced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Community leadership and engagement after the mix: The transformation of Toronto’s Regent Park.
- Author
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Brail, Shauna and Kumar, Nishi
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COMMUNITY leadership ,PUBLIC housing ,URBAN planning ,SOCIAL cohesion - Abstract
The CAD$1 billion transformation of Toronto’s Regent Park neighbourhood from Canada’s largest public housing site to a mixed income community is likely to inform the next several decades of public housing redevelopment policy both nationally and internationally. This paper focuses on the process and impacts of large-scale redevelopment, in the context of attempts to build a physically and socially inclusive neighbourhood incorporating non-market and market housing in downtown Toronto. Drawing from in-depth interviews with 32 Regent Park community leaders and other key decision makers, the paper explores how resident engagement and leadership development opportunities impact redevelopment processes in mixed income initiatives. Results focus on three key emerging areas of both strength and concern: (1) efforts to build community alongside the redevelopment as an integral, evolving and place-specific strategy; (2) the impacts and challenges of both a strong institutional environment in Regent Park and a sense of weak institutional memory; and (3) formal and informal leadership and mentorship opportunities and their contribution towards the development of engagement and cohesion in Regent Park. The opportunity for low-income housing initiatives to support knowledge building and learning, preservation of institutional memory and local leadership development is significant in the context of examining physical and social redevelopment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Open data and injuries in urban areas—A spatial analytical framework of Toronto using machine learning and spatial regressions.
- Author
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Vaz, Eric, Cusimano, Michael D., Bação, Fernando, Damásio, Bruno, and Penfound, Elissa
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CITIES & towns ,MACHINE learning ,WOUNDS & injuries ,MEDICAL decision making ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Injuries have become devastating and often under-recognized public health concerns. In Canada, injuries are the leading cause of potential years of life lost before the age of 65. The geographical patterns of injury, however, are evident both over space and time, suggesting the possibility of spatial optimization of policies at the neighborhood scale to mitigate injury risk, foster prevention, and control within metropolitan regions. In this paper, Canada's National Ambulatory Care Reporting System is used to assess unintentional and intentional injuries for Toronto between 2004 and 2010, exploring the spatial relations of injury throughout the city, together with Wellbeing Toronto data. Corroborating with these findings, spatial autocorrelations at global and local levels are performed for the reported over 1.7 million injuries. The sub-categorization for Toronto's neighborhood further distills the most vulnerable communities throughout the city, registering a robust spatial profile throughout. Individual neighborhoods pave the need for distinct policy profiles for injury prevention. This brings one of the main novelties of this contribution. A comparison of the three regression models is carried out. The findings suggest that the performance of spatial regression models is significantly stronger, showing evidence that spatial regressions should be used for injury research. Wellbeing Toronto data performs reasonably well in assessing unintentional injuries, morbidity, and falls. Less so to understand the dynamics of intentional injuries. The results enable a framework to allow tailor-made injury prevention initiatives at the neighborhood level as a vital source for planning and participatory decision making in the medical field in developed cities such as Toronto. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. A Pragmatic Non-Randomized Trial of Prehabilitation Prior to Cancer Surgery: Study Protocol and COVID-19-Related Adaptations.
- Author
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Santa Mina, Daniel, Sellers, Daniel, Au, Darren, Alibhai, Shabbir M. H., Clarke, Hance, Cuthbertson, Brian H., Darling, Gail, El Danab, Alaa, Govindarajan, Anand, Ladha, Karim, Matthew, Andrew G., McCluskey, Stuart, Ng, Karen A., Quereshy, Fayez, Karkouti, Keyvan, and Randall, Ian M.
- Subjects
ONCOLOGIC surgery ,PREHABILITATION ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SMOKING cessation ,NUTRITION counseling ,NICOTINE replacement therapy - Abstract
Background: Experimental data highlight the potential benefits and health system cost savings related to surgical prehabilitation; however, adequately powered randomized controlled trial (RCT) data remain nascent. Emerging prehabilitation services may be informed by early RCT data but can be limited in informing real-world program development. Pragmatic trials emphasize external validity and generalizability to understand and advise intervention development and implementation in clinical settings. This paper presents the methodology of a pragmatic prehabilitation trial to complement emerging phase III clinical trials and inform implementation strategies. Methods: This is a pilot pragmatic clinical trial conducted in a large academic hospital in Toronto, Ontario, Canada to assess feasibility of clinical implementation and derive estimates of effectiveness. Feasibility data include program referral rates, enrolment and attrition, intervention adherence and safety, participant satisfaction, and barriers and facilitators to programming. The study aims to receive 150 eligible referrals for adult, English-speaking, preoperative oncology patients with an identified indication for prehabilitation (e.g., frailty, deconditioning, malnutrition, psychological distress). Study participants undergo a baseline assessment and shared-decision making regarding the intervention setting: either facility-based prehabilitation or home-based prehabilitation. In both scenarios, participants receive an individualized exercise prescription, stress-reduction psychological support, nutrition counseling, and protein supplementation, and if appropriate, smoking cessation program referrals. Secondary objectives include estimating intervention effects at the week prior to surgery and 30 and 90 days postoperatively. Outcomes include surgical complications, postoperative length of stay, mortality, hospital readmissions, physical fitness, psychological well-being, and quality of life. Data from participants who decline the intervention but consent for research-related access to health records will serve as comparators. The COVID-19 pandemic required the introduction of a 'virtual program' using only telephone or internet-based communication for screening, assessments, or intervention was introduced. Conclusion: This pragmatic trial will provide evidence on the feasibility and viability of prehabilitation services delivered under usual clinical conditions. Study amendments due to the COVID-19 pandemic are presented as strategies to maintain prehabilitation research and services to potentially mitigate the consequences of extended surgery wait times. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Chinese Immigrant Mothers of Children with Developmental Disabilities: Stressors and Social Support.
- Author
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Su, Chang, Khanlou, Nazilla, and Mustafa, Nida
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IMMIGRANT children ,SOCIAL support ,CHILDREN with developmental disabilities ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL disabilities ,CHILDREN with disabilities ,MOTHERS ,CHILD mental health services - Abstract
This qualitative study examined Chinese immigrant mothers of children with developmental disabilities (DDs) about their experiences of stressors, social support, and traditional cultural beliefs in Canada. Fifteen mothers were recruited from Toronto through one community organization. One-on-one semi-structured in-depth interviews on mothers in Mandarin were used in private settings. A descriptive qualitative approach was applied (Sandelowski, Research in Nursing & Health, 23, 334–340, 2000, Research Nursing Health, 33(1), 77–84, 2010). Analyses were guided by House's (1981) classification of social support (structural, instrumental, emotional, and perceptive). Mothers expressed challenges in accessing services for their children, such as limited financial resources, occupational unemployment, excessive paper work, long waiting times, language barriers, limited knowledge of social services, emotional strain, transportation difficulties, dispersed services, and feelings of "loss of face." All mothers actively seek treatments for their children without traditional "reciprocity thought." The findings provide a better understanding of Chinese immigrant mothers' experiences raising children with DDs in Canada. Implications of the study are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. "I Cannot Hide My Anger to Spare You Guilt": On BLMTO and Canadian Mainstream Media's Response.
- Author
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CAPURRI, VALENTINA
- Subjects
GUILT (Psychology) ,MASS media ,BLACK Lives Matter movement ,CRITICAL race theory ,ANGER - Abstract
In this paper, I examine Canadian mainstream media's response to Black Lives Matter Toronto, focusing in particular on two events that occurred in the city in the Summer of 2016 and Winter of 2017. By relying on Critical Race Theory, I argue that a White-dominated press has been unwilling to engage with the message presented by Black activists under the excuse that the tone of the message is overly harsh and threatening to White audiences. After analysing the historical roots of such a claim, I conclude that, in the current climate, there is no space for any dialogue in what remains an oppressor-oppressed relationship across the country, including in Toronto, Canada's most multicultural city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Role of Pilot Projects in Urban Climate Change Policy Innovation.
- Author
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Hughes, Sara, Yordi, Samer, and Besco, Laurel
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CLIMATE change ,PILOT projects ,HOUSING ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,ENERGY consumption ,RETROFITTING of buildings ,GREENHOUSE gas mitigation - Abstract
Copyright of Policy Studies Journal is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Don't Ask, Don't Tell: The Gendered Politics of Service Provision for Women with Precarious Immigration Status.
- Author
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Abji, Salina
- Subjects
IMMIGRATION status ,WOMEN'S programs ,PRACTICAL politics ,CITY councils ,WOMEN employees - Abstract
In February 2013, Toronto city council passed a motion on "Undocumented Workers in Toronto," which reaffirmed the city's commitment to providing services to all residents regardless of their immigration status. This marked the first such 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' (DADT) sanctuary policy for undocumented migrants in Canada. In this paper, I analyze the gendered politics of DADT policies, particularly for undocumented women seeking access to shelters and anti-violence against women services. The politics of service provision are complex in such cases, given that support against gender-based violence is often funded by multiple arms of the state. Drawing from qualitative interviews with thirty service providers in Toronto who work with women in cases of gender-based violence, this research analyzes both the benefits and limitations of DADT when centering the experiences of women with precarious immigration status. The findings also show how some service providers responded to the policy's limitations by adopting organizational-level practices that sought to re-imagine the city as a postnational space. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
23. GENERATIVE DESIGN FOR PRECISION GEO-INTERVENTIONS.
- Author
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Wen, R. and Li, S.
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,TRAFFIC cameras ,DECISION support systems ,GEOSPATIAL data ,GRID cells ,MACHINE learning - Abstract
The purpose of this research is to develop an approach for a Spatial Decision Support System (SDSS) that integrates Geographic Information Systems (GIS), Automated Machine Learning (AutoML), and Hyperparameter Optimization (HPO) to generate precision geo-interventions based on standardized geospatial data and user design constraints. The geo-intervention generation approach involves three steps: (1) Geo-binning, (2) AutoML, and (3) Prediction Optimization. Geo-binning is used to standardize geospatial data into regularized grids as inputs into AutoML models. Prediction optimization generates geo-interventions by applying user-design constraints and optimizing AutoML model output to find optimized input variables that form precise geo-interventions. An experiment in reducing road traffic collisions using infrastructural changes in Toronto, Ontario, Canada was done to evaluate the geo-intervention generation approach. The results of the experiment found that changing the number of schools, red light cameras, and transit shelters in high traffic areas could potentially halve the total number of traffic collisions according to a 80 by 80 geo-binned grid Auto-Sklearn model with a Mean Absolute Error (MAE) of 117.68. It was also found that user design constraints heavily affected the prediction optimization step as when the areas were altered to an alternative grid of cells with scarce infrastructure, the number of predicted collisions rose by 6127 collisions. Thus, limitations of this study included subjectivity in user design constraints, scalability, and interactivity. Future work involves improving modelling/optimization efficiency and developing an interactive interface for exploring generated precision geo-interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Contradictory mobility: child self-protection and automobiles in interwar Toronto's Globe.
- Author
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Mackintosh, Phillip Gordon
- Subjects
CHILD welfare ,INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) ,AUTOMOBILES - Abstract
Copyright of British Journal of Canadian Studies is the property of Liverpool University Press / Journals and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The lived experiences of transgender and gender-diverse people in accessing publicly funded penile-inversion vaginoplasty in Canada.
- Author
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Lorello, Gianni R., Tewari, Aradhana, Sivagurunathan, Marudan, Potter, Emery, Krakowsky, Yonah, Du Mont, Janice, and Urbach, David R.
- Subjects
VAGINOPLASTY ,TRANSGENDER people ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,WOMEN'S hospitals ,TRANS women ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,GENDER dysphoria ,SENSATION seeking - Abstract
Background: Canada's health care systems underserve people who are transgender and gender diverse (TGD), leading to unique disparities not experienced by other patient groups, such as in accessing gender-affirmation surgery. We sought to explore the experiences of TGD people seeking and accessing gender-affirmation surgery at a publicly funded hospital in Canada to identify opportunities to improve the current system. Methods: We used hermeneutic phenomenology according to Max van Manen to conduct this qualitative study. Between January and August 2022, we conducted interviews with TGD people who had undergone penile-inversion vaginoplasty at Women's College Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, since June 2019. We conducted interviews via Microsoft Teams and transcribed them verbatim. We coded the transcripts using NVivo version 12. Using inductive analysis, we constructed themes, which we mapped onto van Manen's framework of lived body, lived time, lived space, and lived human relations. Results: We interviewed 15 participants who had undergone penile-inversion vaginoplasty; they predominantly self-identified as transgender women (n = 13) and White (n = 14). Participants lived in rural (n = 4), suburban (n = 5), or urban (n = 6) locations. Their median age was 32 (range 27–67) years. We identified 11 themes that demonstrated the interconnected nature of TGD peoples' lived experiences over many years leading up to accessing gender-affirmation surgery. These themes emphasized the role of the body in experiencing the world and shaping identity, the lived experience of the body in shaping human connectedness, and participants' intersecting identities and emotional pain (lived body); participants' experiences of the passage of time and progression of events (lived time); environments inducing existential anxiety or fostering affirmation, the role of technology in shaping participants' understanding of the body, and the effect of liminal spaces (lived space); and finally, the role of communication and language, empathy and compassion, and participants' experiences of loss of trust and connection (lived human relations). Interpretation: Our findings reveal TGD patients' lived experiences as they navigated a lengthy and often difficult journey to penile-inversion vaginoplasty. They suggest a need for improved access to gender-affirmation surgery by reducing wait times, increasing capacity, and improving care experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Lithium-Ion-Capacitor-Based Distributed UPS Architecture for Reactive Power Mitigation and Phase Balancing in Datacenters.
- Author
-
Zhao, Shuze, Khan, Nameer, Nagarajan, Sundar, and Trescases, Olivier
- Subjects
REACTIVE power ,UNINTERRUPTIBLE power supply ,SERVER farms (Computer network management) ,POWER resources ,ARCHITECTURE ,ELECTRIC power distribution grids - Abstract
With the rapid proliferation of cloud computing, the energy cost of datacenters and the impact of reactive power on the grid have become major concerns. This paper presents two energy management control schemes for distributed uninterruptible power supply (UPS) architectures utilizing lithium-ion ultracapacitors (LIC) for improved system efficiency and reactive power mitigation. One scheme is proposed for low-power servers with an internal dc bus, while another is proposed for medium-to-high-power server racks with an in-rack dc bus. The LIC and the dc bus interface with a bidirectional dc–dc converter, which allows the power supply unit to run in the optimal operating region for the improved system efficiency and power factor. The server-level UPS architecture is experimentally tested using a 200-kHz, bidirectional, multiphase dc–dc converter with hysteretic current-mode control, while achieving 33% reactive power mitigation. Based on the SciNet datacenter in Toronto, ON, Canada, a rack-level distributed UPS architecture is built in MATLAB, and system-level simulations indicate a 37% reduction in the reactive power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A crowd sensing system identifying geotopics and community interests from user-generated content.
- Author
-
Tenney, M., Hall, G. Brent, and Sieber, R. E.
- Subjects
USER-generated content ,SOCIAL media ,COMMUNITIES ,SOCIAL interaction ,SOCIAL networks ,SMART cities - Abstract
This paper presents a crowd sensing system (CSS) that captures geospatial social media topics and allows the review of results. Using Web-resources derived from social media platforms, the CSS uses a spatially-situated social network graph to harvest user-generated content from selected organizations and members of the public. This allows 'passively' contributed social media-based opinions, along with different variables, such as time, location, social interaction, service usage, and human activities to be examined and used to identify trending views and influential citizens. The data model and CSS are used for demonstration purposes to identify geotopics and community interests relevant to municipal affairs in the City of Toronto, Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Key antecedents to the shopping behaviours and preferences of aging consumers: A qualitative study.
- Author
-
Rahman, Osmud and Yu, Hong
- Subjects
CONSUMER preferences ,QUALITATIVE research ,OLDER consumers ,ONLINE shopping ,SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to gain a deeper understanding of how income, cognitive age, physiological change and life-changing events may affect older consumers' shopping behaviours and preferences. Design/methodology/approach: In-depth semi-structured interview was employed for this study. In total, 13 informants were recruited in Toronto, including 11 females and 2 males aged between 51 and 80 years. Content analysis and holistic interpretation were employed for data analysis. Findings: According to the findings, price was a major concern to many informants regardless of their income level. The relationship between "feel age", "look age", or even "health age", are not always positively correlated. The vast majority of the informants preferred shopping at the brick-and-mortar stores over online shopping. Some informants experienced difficulties or challenges in finding clothing that fit well due to the change of their body shapes. In addition, many informants needed to adjust their personal needs and buying priorities to cope with their changing personal situations and social roles. Practical implications: Other than the price and mobility issues, older consumers encounter different challenges when they shop for different products. It is imperative for retailers, service providers and product developers to understand the older consumers' changing needs, aspirations and challenges through diverse perspectives – the transition of social roles, physiological change and life-changing events. Originality/value: Many prior studies are merely focused on one topic (e.g. cognitive age) or product category (e.g. clothing). Through this multidimensional and mixed categorical approach, new knowledge and insights can be generated and added to the current body of research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Non-Citizen Voting Rights and Urban Citizenship in Toronto.
- Author
-
Siemiatycki, Myer
- Subjects
NONCITIZEN voting rights ,LOCAL elections ,NONCITIZENS ,LEGAL status of noncitizens ,TWENTY-first century ,ONTARIO politics & government ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper examines the current regime of municipal voting rights in Toronto as a problematic expression of urban citizenship. Many residents of Toronto and other Canadian cities are denied the municipal franchise because they are not Canadian citizens. The paper explores recent scholarship and campaigns in Toronto striving to re-define the relationship between migration, citizenship, cities and voting rights. In the process, Toronto has become the first Canadian city to formally endorse non-citizen municipal voting rights. Yet, Toronto lacks the authority to establish its own criteria for the municipal franchise, suggesting that greater municipal autonomy may be a precondition for more inclusive urban citizenship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Governing the Commercial Streets of the City: New Terrains of Disinvestment and Gentrification in Toronto's Inner Suburbs.
- Author
-
Rankin, Katharine N. and McLean, Heather
- Subjects
GENTRIFICATION ,URBAN studies ,SUBURBS ,SHOPPING centers - Abstract
This paper explores the commercial shopping street as a site of racialized class struggle. The argument builds around the study of a disinvested inner-suburban neighbourhood in Toronto, which furnishes an ideal case through which to achieve the paper's objectives of, first, identifying commercial space as an important site of contestation over competing suburban futures; second, delineating how processes of racialization inform the economies of commercial gentrification and urban renewal; and third, highlighting the epistemological and theoretical insights that emerge when research is conducted collaboratively, among academic, community, and activist groupings. The paper argues that such commercial spaces play a key role in making the city accessible to vulnerable and marginalized groups. Two competing planning agendas centred on reordering commercial space, meanwhile, spell the almost-certain demise of such arrangements: a 'real estate' vision featuring new condominium developments, and a new urbanist resistance favouring 'green' and 'creative' alternatives. Our engagements with precarious, predominantly immigrant-owned businesses and community-based researchers reveal the complicity of both modes of development planning with processes of displacement and structural racism. Specifying these dynamics as 'racialized class projects' opens up space for intervention and organizing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. CHAPTER 5: Micromanaging the Massage Parlour: How Municipal Bylaws Organize and Shape the Lives of Asian Sex Workers.
- Author
-
Lam, Elene
- Subjects
SEX workers ,BY-laws ,SEX work ,MASSAGE ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
Debates on sex work in Canada have focused on its criminal aspects, its harms, and the 'nuisance' it posits for communities. Not much attention has been devoted to more subtle forms of regulation that take place in other juridical spaces, such as the legal apparatus of municipalities. A growing number of cities are restricting sex work and using micro-regulation to police, constrain and control the activities and lives sex workers.1 Municipal bylaws are used by local governments to suppress sex work and prosecute sex workers. By 'micro-regulation' I mean the devious introduction of a myriad of rules that strictly constrain the range of activities that can take place in massage parlours, effectively creating barriers to sex work, even though municipalities do not have the power to prohibit the offering of sexual services. This paper aims to alleviate a lacuna in the research and literature on sex work in the juridical space of the municipality. I wish to bring attention specifically to the plight of Asian sex workers employed in massage parlours in the city of Toronto, whose voices and struggles are ignored and go unnoticed.2 My data was collected during a practice-based research study conducted in Toronto in 2014. My findings will show that municipal bylaws create barriers to the practice of sex work in the context of holistic centres, barriers that push sex work underground, endangering sex workers and exacerbating their stigmatization and exploitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Protectors of the Great Victory: Commemoration of World War II in the Russian Community of Toronto.
- Author
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Rogova, Anastasia
- Subjects
COMMUNITIES ,WORLD War II ,ACTIVISM ,WAR ,WORLD history - Abstract
Copyright of Anthropologica is the property of CASCA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Intercultural sensitivity at work: oral histories of the first-generation Serbian immigrants to multicultural Canada.
- Author
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Kaličanin, Milena and Trenčić, Saša
- Subjects
ORAL history ,SERBS ,IMMIGRANTS ,MULTICULTURALISM ,DIASPORA ,ACCULTURATION - Abstract
This article aims to problematize the concept of Canadian multiculturalism from its inception in 1971 to its current tendencies and determine whether this policy is still attainable by referring to significant views of Hall, Taylor, Duchastel, Perin, Clifford, Drache, Hoyos and Kymlicka. These theoretical insights are explored in the case of the Serbian diaspora in Canada. The study is based on the oral histories of the members of the first generation of Serbian immigrants to Canada, conducted in July 2008 in Toronto. Bennett's Developmental Model of Intercultural Sensitivity is used as a theoretical framework. The results show that the first generation of Serbian immigrants shares stronger ties with the mother country than their descendants; however, respect for the values of diversity and hybridity contributes to the process of making inter-generational differences less conspicuous which, regarding the Serbian diasporic community, represents a proof of the topicality of the Canadian multicultural experiment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Real-World Treatment Patterns and Clinical Outcomes among Patients Receiving CDK4/6 Inhibitors for Metastatic Breast Cancer in a Canadian Setting Using AI-Extracted Data.
- Author
-
Moulson, Ruth, Feugère, Guillaume, Moreira-Lucas, Tracy S., Dequen, Florence, Weiss, Jessica, Smith, Janet, and Brezden-Masley, Christine
- Subjects
METASTATIC breast cancer ,CYCLIN-dependent kinase inhibitors ,CYCLIN-dependent kinases ,EPIDERMAL growth factor receptors ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6 inhibitors (CDK4/6i) are widely used in patients with hormone receptor-positive (HR+)/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 negative (HER2−) advanced/metastatic breast cancer (ABC/MBC) in first line (1L), but little is known about their real-world use and clinical outcomes long-term, in Canada. This study used Pentavere's previously validated artificial intelligence (AI) to extract real-world data on the treatment patterns and outcomes of patients receiving CDK4/6i+endocrine therapy (ET) for HR+/HER2− ABC/MBC at Sinai Health in Toronto, Canada. Between 1 January 2016 and 1 July 2021, 48 patients were diagnosed with HR+/HER2− ABC/MBC and received CDK4/6i + ET. A total of 38 out of 48 patients received CDK4/6i + ET in 1L, of which 34 of the 38 (89.5%) received palbociclib + ET. In 2L, 12 of the 21 (57.1%) patients received CDK4/6i + ET, of which 58.3% received abemaciclib. In 3L, most patients received chemotherapy (10/12, 83.3%). For the patients receiving CDK4/6i in 1L, the median (95% CI) time to the next treatment was 42.3 (41.2, NA) months. The median (95% CI) time to chemotherapy was 46.5 (41.4, NA) months. The two-year overall survival (95% CI) was 97.4% (92.4, 100.0), and the median (range) follow-up was 28.7 (3.4–67.6) months. Despite the limitations inherent in real-world studies and a limited number of patients, these AI-extracted data complement previous studies, demonstrating the effectiveness of CDK4/6i + ET in the Canadian real-world 1L, with most patients receiving palbociclib as CDK4/6i in 1L. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Patient Experience and the Treatment of Venereal Disease in Toronto's Military Base Hospital during the First World War.
- Author
-
BOGAERT, KANDACE
- Subjects
SEXUALLY transmitted disease treatment ,WORLD War I ,HOSPITAL patients ,MILITARY hospitals ,MILITARY bases ,MEDICAL care of military personnel ,HISTORY ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
During the First World War, the Canadian Espeditionary Force (cef) was infamous for having the highest rates of venereal infection among the Allies. Soldiers could be inspected at random, questioned about the source of their infection, and held in quarantine in hospital until cured. While medical officers published research on the prevalence and treatment of venereal disease, little has been written on the experiences of patients. This paper examines the experiences of venereal patients in Toronto's Military Base Hospital in 1916. Soldiers' correspondences reveal their perspectives, along with the ways in which the military's management of venereal disease was laden with the prevailing beliefs concerning sexually transmitted infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
36. Refashioning urban space in postwar Toronto: the Wood-Wellesley redevelopment area, 1952–1957.
- Author
-
Lewis, Robert and Hess, Paul
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,URBAN renewal ,URBAN planning - Abstract
This paper considers the creation and the subsequent meaning of ‘redevelopment areas’ in Toronto in the 1950s. The city passed a bylaw in 1952 that defined blighted areas as suitable for redevelopment. One of these areas was the downtown district that runs between Wood and Wellesley streets. The history of the Wood-Wellesley redevelopment area between 1952 and 1957 was important in several ways: it built on but differed from similar activity in the USA; it discursively reflected the needs of the city to refashion itself as a modern landscape; it provided the city with the tools to turn planning ideas into action; and it gave developers the forum by which they could push for specific areas of the city to be opened up for investment. Politically calculated and heavily contested visions of urban space, redevelopment areas such as Wood-Wellesley were used by the state and developers to physically reconstruct Toronto’s downtown area for private capital, to create a new modernist landscape, and to reproduce new and to reinforce existing social inequalities. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The difficult search for belonging for Canadian-born Ismaili Muslim adolescents in Toronto, Canada.
- Author
-
Virani-Murji, Farah
- Subjects
MUSLIMS ,MUSLIM youth ,HAPPINESS ,PREJUDICES ,SHIITES ,ADULTS ,RACE - Abstract
There is a growing body of research examining the prejudice and discrimination experienced by Muslim youth in Canada. This article explores the narratives of feeling excluded and misunderstood articulated by 8 Canadian-born Shia Ismaili Muslim youth (aged 14-17). Drawing on a psycho-social theoretical framework, I speculate that youth utilize a "happiness defense": a term that denotes their portrayal of being a "good immigrant" or happy subject who is grateful to Canada for giving them a home. My analysis looks behind the scenery of the happiness defense to examine deeper dynamics such as discomfort, difference, and anxiety as youth seek to find a place of belonging in Canada. Underneath the happiness defense, I speculate about the anxiety of hybridity that is linked to feelings of not belonging. The implications of these findings will be helpful for policy makers, educators, community workers, and adults who work with adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Temporal change in urban fish biodiversity—Gains, losses, and drivers of change.
- Author
-
Lawson, Lauren, Edge, Christopher B., Fortin, Marie‐Josée, and Jackson, Donald A.
- Subjects
URBAN biodiversity ,URBAN ecology ,FISH communities ,FRESHWATER fishes ,FISHING villages ,WATERSHEDS - Abstract
Our aim was to examine temporal change in alpha and beta diversity of freshwater fish communities in rivers that have urbanized over the same period to understand the influence of changes in land use and river connectivity on community change. We used biological (2001–2018), land use (2000–2015), and connectivity data (1987–2017) from Toronto, Ontario, Canada. We used linear mixed effects models to determine the strength of upstream land use, connectivity, and their changes over time to explain temporal change in alpha and beta diversity indices. We examined beta diversity using the temporal beta diversity index (TBI) to assess site‐specific community change. The TBI was partitioned into gains and losses, and species‐specific changes in abundance were assessed using paired t‐tests. There were more gains than losses across the study sites as measured by TBI. We found little to no significant differences in species‐specific abundances at aggregated spatial scales (study region, watershed, stream order). We found different relationships between landscape and connectivity variables with the biodiversity indices tested; however, almost all estimated confidence intervals overlapped with zero and had low goodness‐of‐fit. More fish biodiversity gains than losses were found across the study region, as measured by TBI. We found TBI to be a useful indicator of change as it identifies key sites to further investigate. We found two high value TBI sites gained non‐native species, and one site shifted from a cool‐water to warm‐water species dominated community, both of which have management implications. Upstream catchment land use and connectivity had poor explanatory power for change in the measured biodiversity indices. Ultimately, such spatial–temporal datasets are invaluable and can reveal trends in biodiversity useful for environmental management when considering competing interests involved with urban sprawl in the ongoing "Decade on Restoration." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A comparative effectiveness study of the breaking the cycle and Maxxine Wright intervention programs for substance-involved mothers and their children: study protocol.
- Author
-
Racine, Nicole, Barriault, Sophie, Motz, Mary, Leslie, Margaret, Poole, Nancy, Premji, Shainur, Andrews, Naomi C. Z., Penaloza, Denise, and Pepler, Debra
- Subjects
MOTHER-child relationship ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,RELATIONSHIP quality ,MENTAL illness ,RESEARCH protocols ,MENTAL health - Abstract
Background: Children of substance-involved mothers are at especially high risk for exposure to adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and poor mental health and development. Early interventions that support mothers, children, and the mother-child relationship have the greatest potential to reduce exposure to early adversity and the mental health problems associated with these exposures. Currently, there is a lack of evidence from the real-world setting demonstrating effectiveness and return on investment for intervention programs that focus on the mother-child relationship in children of substance-involved mothers. Methods: One hundred substance-involved pregnant and/or parenting women with children between the ages of 0–6 years old will be recruited through the Breaking the Cycle and Maxxine Wright intervention programs, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and Surrey, British Columbia, Canada, respectively. Children's socioemotional development and exposure to risk and protective factors, mothers' mental health and history of ACEs, and mother-child relationship quality will be assessed in both intervention programs. Assessments will occur at three time points: pre-intervention, 12-, and 24-months after engagement in the intervention program. Discussion: There is a pressing need to identify interventions that promote the mental health of infants and young children exposed to early adversity. Bringing together an inter-disciplinary research team and community partners, this study aligns with national strategies to establish strong evidence for infant mental health interventions that reduce child exposure to ACEs and support the mother-child relationship. This study was registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT05768815) on March 14, 2023. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. 'You might understand Toronto': tracing the histories of writing on Toronto writing.
- Author
-
Smith, Will
- Subjects
LITERARY criticism ,CANADIAN literature ,CITIES & towns ,LITERARY prizes ,ANTHOLOGIES - Abstract
Copyright of British Journal of Canadian Studies is the property of Liverpool University Press / Journals and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Big box battles: the Ontario Municipal Board and large-format retail land-use planning conflicts in the Greater Toronto Area.
- Author
-
Webber, Steven and Hernandez, Tony
- Subjects
LAND use planning ,REAL estate development ,COMMERCIAL real estate ,STAKEHOLDERS ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
The Ontario Municipal Board is a quasi-judicial tribunal that is responsible for adjudicating municipal land-use planning appeals. The Board exerts considerable influence over property development outcomes. Big box retail as a form of commercial development has often been subject to planning conflict and appeal. This paper examines 65 big box retail Board appeals filed between 1993 and 2012 by developers and stakeholders independently or jointly in response to applications submitted at the municipal level throughout the Greater Toronto Area, Canada's largest metropolitan market. Results indicate the presence of game playing strategies used by participants that involves leveraging the potential of proceeding with a potentially expensive, time-consuming and uncertain hearing as a means to negotiate a settlement. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Quantitative Precipitation Estimation from a C-Band Dual-Polarized Radar for the 8 July 2013 Flood in Toronto, Canada.
- Author
-
Boodoo, Sudesh, Hudak, David, Ryzhkov, Alexander, Zhang, Pengfei, Donaldson, Norman, Sills, David, and Reid, Janti
- Subjects
METEOROLOGICAL precipitation ,POLARIZATION (Electricity) ,RADAR ,FLOODS - Abstract
A heavy rainfall event over a 2-h period on 8 July 2013 caused significant flash flooding in the city of Toronto and produced 126 mm of rain accumulation at a gauge located near the Toronto Pearson International Airport. This paper evaluates the quantitative precipitation estimates from the nearby King City C-band dual-polarized radar (WKR). Horizontal reflectivity Z and differential reflectivity Z
DR were corrected for attenuation using a modified ZPHI rain profiling algorithm, and rain rates R were calculated from R( Z) and R( Z, ZDR ) algorithms. Specific differential phase KDP was used to compute rain rates from three R( KDP ) algorithms, one modified to use positive and negative KDP , and an R( KDP , ZDR ) algorithm. Additionally, specific attenuation at horizontal polarization A was used to calculate rates from the R( A) algorithm. High-temporal-resolution rain gauge data at 44 locations measured the surface rainfall every 5 min and produced total rainfall accumulations over the affected area. The nearby NEXRAD S-band dual-polarized radar at Buffalo, New York, provided rain-rate and storm accumulation estimates from R( Z) and S-band dual-polarimetric algorithm. These two datasets were used as references to evaluate the C-band estimates. Significant radome attenuation at WKR overshadowed the attenuation correction techniques and resulted in poor rainfall estimates from the R( Z) and R( Z, ZDR ) algorithms. Rainfall estimation from the Brandes et al. R( KDP ) and R( A) algorithms were superior to the other methods, and the derived storm total accumulation gave biases of 2.1 and −6.1 mm, respectively, with correlations of 0.94. The C-band estimates from the Brandes et al. R( KDP ) and R( A) algorithms were comparable to the NEXRAD S-band estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. 'I Fit the Description': Experiences of Social and Spatial Exclusion among Ghanaian Immigrant Youth in the Jane and Finch Neighbourhood of Toronto.
- Author
-
ZAAMI, MARIAMA
- Subjects
- *
GHANAIANS , *AFRICANS , *ASSIMILATION of immigrants , *IMMIGRANTS , *IMMIGRANT children , *SOCIAL integration , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
Public interest in the influence of neighbourhoods on immigrant integration in Canadian society has been growing in recent years; yet, there are few studies that explain the effect of neighbourhoods on immigrant experiences of exclusion in Canada. Drawing on in-depth interviews (12 males and 13 females) and a focus group discussion (five females and three males) conducted with Ghanaian immigrant youth between the ages of 18 to 30 from the Ghanaian community in the Jane and Finch neighbourhood of Toronto in May to June, 2011, this paper discusses the experiences of social and spatial exclusion among Ghanaian immigrant youth. Drawing on socio-spatial dialectics, the findings suggest that Ghanaian immigrant youth experiences of socio-spatial exclusion are intertwined in a dialectical process involving the Jane and Finch neighbourhood and the general public. In particular, the youth negotiate access to employment opportunities, shopping malls and counter exclusion through reformulation of resumes, and masking of their actual neighbourhoods. This paper fills an important gap in our knowledge of the lived experiences of African immigrant youth and contributes to our understanding of the dynamics of neighbourhood stigmatization and its impact on residents' integration into the larger society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Strategic Migrant Network Building and Information Sharing: Understanding 'Migrant Pioneers' in Canada.
- Author
-
Somerville, Kara
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,INDIAN diaspora (South Asian) ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This article explores the migrant networks that develop between migrants, non-migrants and the larger Indian diaspora. Specifically, it examines the decision to migrate to Toronto, Canada and how this decision is shaped by, and in turn shapes the migrant network. Based on 35 interviews with migrants from Karnataka, South India, two main findings are presented. First, migrants are deliberately choosing settlement countries in which their families are not yet located, thereby becoming 'migrant pioneers' in their country of settlement, which is an attempt to expand their migrant networks globally. Second, the narratives these migrants receive and subsequently impart to others are often inaccurate, which can lead to miscommunication flows among these migrant networks. These findings are considered in light of the large body of research on migrant networks and the ways they develop and transmit information. This paper argues that existing understanding of migrant networks is somewhat static. Findings indicate that these 'migrant pioneers' may be engaging in global risk-diversification strategies for subsequent generations, but may themselves suffer from the more immediate consequences of misinformed networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. John Porter Lecture: Waves of Protest--Direct Action, Deliberation, and Diffusion.
- Author
-
Wood, Lesley
- Subjects
POLITICAL movements ,CULTURE diffusion ,SOCIAL movements ,DIRECT action ,PROTEST movements ,FIRST Nations of Canada ,ACTIVISM ,POLITICAL participation ,HISTORY - Abstract
The book Direct Action, Deliberation and Diffusion: Collective Action After the WTO Protests in Seattle argues that the process of diffusion is dependent on social processes in the receiving context. The most important in social movements is an egalitarian and reflexive deliberation among diverse actors. The book traces the direct action tactics associated with the Seattle protests against the World Trade Organization in 1999 and how these spread to activists in Toronto and New York City. It shows how the structure of the political field, racial and class inequalities, identity boundaries, and organizational and conversational dynamics limited deliberation among activists, and thus limited the diffusion of the Seattle tactics. By constraining the spread of the Seattle tactics, this slowed the global justice movement's wave of protest. In this paper, I explore the application of and implications of this model of protest tactic diffusion to the recent Idle No More mobilizations. Le livre Direct Action, Deliberation and Diffusion: Collective Action After the WTO Protests in Seattle fait valoir que le processus de diffusion dépend de processus sociaux dans le contexte de réception. Le plus important pour les movements sociaux est une délibération égalitaire et réflexive entre divers acteurs. Le livre retrace les tactiques d'action directe associés aux manifestations de Seattle contre l'Organisation Mondiale du Commerce en 1999 et comment ils se propagent à des militants de Toronto et de New York. Il montre comment la délibération de la structure des inégalités le domaine politique, raciales et de classe, les limites de l'identité et de la dynamique de l'organisation et de la conversation limitée parmi les militants, et donc limiter la diffusion de la tactique de Seattle. En limitant la propagation de la tactique de Seattle, ce ralentissement de la vague de protestation du mouvement altermondialiste. Dans cet article, j'explore l'application et implications de ce modèle de diffusion protestation de tactique pour les dernières Idle No More mobilisations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Toronto-area Ethnic Newspapers and Canada's 2011 Federal Election: An Investigation of Content, Focus and Partisanship.
- Author
-
Lindgren, April
- Subjects
CANADIAN elections ,ETHNIC press ,CANADIAN politics & government ,MASS media & politics ,POLITICAL participation ,POLITICIANS in the press ,TWENTY-first century ,HISTORY - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Political Science / Revue Canadienne de Science Politique is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Environmentalism put to work: Ideologies of green recruitment in Toronto.
- Author
-
Castellini, Valentina
- Subjects
GREEN business ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,LABOR market ,UNPAID labor ,JOB advertising ,SUPPLEMENTARY employment ,MACROECONOMIC models - Abstract
• Mainstream green economies are market-driven models centered on growth and profit accumulation. • An analysis of labour is essential to shed light on green economies' logics and practices. • Recruitment promotes a representation of green jobs as sites for environmentalist politics. • The politicization of green work is ideological as it normalizes precarious and unpaid work. • Putting environmentalism to work extends the reach of labour subsumption. Market-driven green economies are premised upon the exploitation and ongoing commodification of both labour and nature. Yet their concrete incarnations experiment with new strategies to "secure and obscure" such processes. These strategies include the formulation and dissemination of an ideological representation of green labour in which environmentalism is "put to work." In this paper I focus on worker recruitment in Toronto and analyze its role in constructing green jobs as a venue for environmentalist politics, and therefore as "good" and "meaningful" work. My empirical material consists of green job announcements posted on GoodWork.ca, the main platform for green worker recruitment in Canada. Building on a Gramscian understanding of ideology, I query the concrete and symbolic functions performed by job ads and discuss them in relation to the structural processes that characterize Toronto's contemporary labour market. I suggest that an ideological representation of green work is used to select motivated and productive workers, justify the offer of non-specialized, precarious, or unpaid positions, and ultimately extend the reach of labour subsumption into spheres traditionally considered outside the employment relation, such as environmentalist activism. In turn, such a representation conceals the extent to which green economies rely on the exploitation of labour while it circumscribes environmentalist critiques within market-driven and economic growth-centered initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Evaluating the potential public health impacts of the Toronto cold weather program.
- Author
-
Benmarhnia, Tarik, Zhao, Xu, Wang, John, Macdonald, Melissa, and Chen, Hong
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC health , *WARNINGS , *CEREBROVASCULAR disease , *COLD (Temperature) , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *WEATHER - Abstract
Extreme cold weather alert programs have been implemented in some areas to address the significant health impacts of exposure to cold. One such program is the Toronto Cold Weather Program (TCWP) that was implemented in the City of Toronto since 1996 to protect the public from extreme weather conditions. In this paper, we aim to evaluate the effectiveness of the TCWP in reducing mortality and morbidity outcomes related to cold temperatures. We applied a quasi-experimental study design using the Difference-in-Differences method coupled with propensity-score-matching to determine the effect of the TCMP on daily hospitalizations and deaths due to cardiovascular disease (CVD), coronary heart disease (CHD) or cerebrovascular disease, using two complementary analytical approaches. Overall, the analysis did not detect an impact on reduced mortality/morbidity in the City of Toronto from the TCMP. For example, we obtained a Risk Difference (RD) of −0.88 (per 1,000,000 people) (95% CI: −3.27 to 1.51) and a Risk Ratio (RR) of 0.98 (95% CI: 0.91 to 1.05) people for CVD hospitalizations. The TCWP was not found to be effective in reducing cold related mortality and morbidity which demonstrates the importance of improving existing policies related to cold in Canada and other countries. • Exposure to cold is substantially increases an individual's risk for injury and death, and worsen pre-existing chronic conditions • Little is known about existing cold warning programs impact on reducing cold-related mortality and morbidity. • We observed that the Toronto Cold Weather Program was not effective in reducing cold-related mortality/morbidity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Capturing variability in material intensity of single-family dwellings: A case study of Toronto, Canada.
- Author
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Arceo, Aldrick, Tham, Melanie, Guven, Gursans, MacLean, Heather L., and Saxe, Shoshanna
- Subjects
BUILT environment ,CONSTRUCTION materials ,BUILDING envelopes ,SINGLE family housing ,FACILITATED communication ,BASEMENTS - Abstract
• Material intensities within single-family dwellings have coefficients of variation ranging from 13% to 160%. • Concrete basements are the largest driver of material use by mass and building envelope by volume. • Zoning ordinances incentivize high MI construction. • Understanding the variability in MI facilitates communication of its impacts on LCA findings, bottom-up MFA or circular economy studies, and similar. The need to reduce resource use in the built environment is widely recognized, but quantitative understanding of material use in buildings is limited, especially at neighbourhood and city scales. Existing bottom-up material inventories largely rely on typology-based methods, using representative buildings with little quantification of variability in material use. They also typically focus on advancing material replacement or recycling with less attention to reducing material use. This paper quantifies the material intensity of 40 single-family wood framed dwellings in Toronto, Canada. Design and construction drawings from the Toronto Committee of Adjustment and local building codes were used to estimate material quantities for each building. The variability in material use and intensity is explored per building, floor area and number of bedrooms and the largest drivers determined to identify opportunities for building design modifications to meaningfully reduce material intensity. Variability in the quantities of construction materials used within the single-family dwellings studied is large, with coefficients of variation ranging from 13% up to 160%. Concrete basements are the largest driver of material use by mass (mean 56% of total material mass) and building envelope insulation by volume (37%). This paper advances our understanding of the range of material intensities within a single building type in one city and the largest drivers of material use within single-family dwellings. This provides valuable information for including variability in typology approaches to bottom-up urban material intensity and insights for policy/design pathways for reducing material use in single-family dwellings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Iconic Toronto Toy Store Files for Creditor Protection in Canada.
- Author
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Sambo, Paula
- Subjects
TOY stores ,DEBTOR & creditor ,COVID-19 pandemic ,OPERATING costs ,COST control ,PRIVATE equity - Abstract
Mastermind Toys, a specialty Canadian independent retailer, has filed for creditor protection due to tough competition, a difficult economic climate, and the lingering effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. The company, which started in 1984 selling educational software before switching to toys in the 1990s, had expanded rapidly after 2010 with the help of Birch Hill Private Equity Partners. Despite implementing operational improvements and cost reductions, the challenges facing the company have become too significant to overcome. All 66 stores across Canada will remain open, and holiday promotions will continue online and in-store. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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