2,811 results
Search Results
52. Proof clarifies a map-folding problem.
- Author
-
Peterson, I.
- Subjects
- *
PAPER arts , *ORIGAMI , *COMPUTER systems , *STRUCTURAL engineering , *LOGIC , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Focuses on the research of Erik Demaine and coworkers at the University of Waterloo in Ontario on a method for recognizing when a creased sheet is foldable into a flat package. Details of his study with one- and two-dimensional cases of the folding problem; Interest of mathematicians in ways to systemize origami design to enable computers to calculate what sequence of creases in a square of paper will produce a desired figure.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
53. `Low-key' flex-pack maker reaches for higher-quality sales.
- Author
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Spaulding
- Subjects
PAPER converting machinery ,SKILLED labor ,SUPPLY & demand - Abstract
Features the Mississauga, Ontario-based Seville Packaging Inc. Line of business; Avoidance of commodity-type converting; Features of the flexo press and Eco Convert solventless laminator used by the firm; Pride in the firm's lack of middle management and customer service system; Shortage of skilled labor in Canada. INSET: End-product profile..
- Published
- 1999
54. Mags aim to beat paper price hikes.
- Author
-
McElgunn, Jim
- Subjects
PAPER coatings ,PRICES - Abstract
Reports on Telemedia Communications magazine executives' development of plans to cope with the increase in the cost of coated paper in Toronto. Trimming of page sizes; Boosting advertising and editorial ratios; Employee downsizing.
- Published
- 1995
55. PROGRAMS AND SERVICES OFFERED TO YOUNG PEOPLE TRANSITIONING OUT OF CARE IN CANADA: A LITERATURE REVIEW.
- Author
-
Leal-Ferman, Paola A., Weight, Charlene, and Latimer, Eric
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,LITERATURE reviews ,HOUSING subsidies ,MEDICAL assistance ,LIFE skills - Abstract
Little research has been carried out on young people transitioning out of care in Canada. The objective of this paper was to describe and comment on the services provided to youth leaving care systems in Canada, with a focus on the four provinces with the largest populations (Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia, and Alberta). The Quebec government offers only one limited-access transition program, which has just been extended to age 25. Ontario, British Columbia, and Alberta offer several transition programs, which include financial, education, and life skills components. In British Columbia, these offer support up to age 29. The 6 remaining provinces and the 3 territories offer support to a maximum age that ranges from 21 to 26. Most offer a general financial allowance, and some offer additional supports that can include a housing allowance, tuition waivers, and job training. British Columbia and Ontario offer the most supports, including medical assistance, tuition waivers, and mental health supports. Research is needed to find out which supports are most beneficial, and under which circumstances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
56. On The Edge of the Bubble: Homelessness In Canada's Rural-Urban Spaces.
- Author
-
Pin, Laura and Haley, Tobin LeBlanc
- Subjects
HOMELESSNESS ,HOUSING policy ,COMMUNITY housing ,HOMELESS persons ,SOCIAL problems ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Rural & Community Development is the property of Brandon University, Rural Development Institute 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
57. E-FORMS AND PAPER FORMS MANAGEMENT ADDED TO LIVELINK.
- Subjects
FORMS management ,COMPUTER software ,ELECTRONIC records ,RECORDS management - Abstract
Reports that Open Text of Waterloo, Ontario has enhanced the forms management capabilities of its Livelink eForms Management software. New capabilities of the forms management of Open Text; Ability to develop and manage electronic forms in Livelink while automating the processing of the remaining paper forms; Advantage of the new XML features of Open Text.
- Published
- 2004
58. Social (In)justice and Rental Housing Discrimination in Urban Canada: The Case of Ethno-racial Minorities in the Herongate Community in Ottawa.
- Author
-
MENSAH, JOSEPH and TUCKER-SIMMONS, DANIEL
- Subjects
RACE discrimination ,RENTAL housing ,RESIDENTIAL real estate ,HOUSING discrimination ,LUXURY housing ,COMMUNITIES ,REAL property ,MINORITIES - Abstract
In 2015, the predominantly visible minority immigrant community of Herongate, in Ottawa, Ontario, was slated for redevelopment by its landlord, Timbercreek Asset Management. This redevelopment involved mass eviction of the incumbent tenants, demolition of the existing affordable housing and its replacement with luxury rentals, which, by all indications, are beyond the financial reach of the former Herongage tenants. This paper seeks to problematize large-scale residential real estate redevelopment in Canada and examine its impact, using the Herongate situation as a case study. Among other things, it profiles the Herongate community, its history and present redevelopment, and explores the legal framework, and the limits thereof, constraining mass evictions of this type in Ontario. The findings indicate that the selection of Herongate for redevelopment was not fortuitous; generally, racialized and immigrant communities like Herongate are disproportionately likely to be selected for large-scale redevelopment projects, and thus subjected to mass-evictions. Further results suggest that the dissolution of the Herongate community -- and the attendant dislocation of its members -- has exacted a pronounced social and economic toll and compounded the racial discrimination already experienced by the former Herongate residents, most of whom are visible minorities. The paper concludes with an appeal to imbue the redevelopment process with a greater regard for social justice, and a right to housing as a policy solution to address the injustice caused by real estate redevelopment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
59. Short-Term Load Forecasting with a Novel Wavelet-Based Ensemble Method.
- Author
-
Kondaiah, V. Y. and Saravanan, B.
- Subjects
LOAD forecasting (Electric power systems) ,FORECASTING ,INDEPENDENT system operators ,WAVELET transforms ,ELECTRICITY markets ,POWER resources - Abstract
"Short-term load forecasting (STLF)" is increasingly significant because of the extensive use of distributed energy resources, the incorporation of intermitted RES, and the implementation of DSM. This paper provides a novel ensemble forecasting model with wavelet transform for the STLF depending on the decomposition principle of load profiles. The model can effectively capture the portion of daily load profiles caused by seasonal variations. The results indicate that it is possible to improve STLF accuracy with the proposed method. The proposed approach is tested with the data taken from Ontario's electricity market in Canada. The results show that the proposed technique performs well in-terms of prediction when compared to existing traditional and cutting-edge methods. The performance of the model was validated with different datasets. Moreover, this approach can provide accurate load forecasting using ensemble models. Therefore, utilities and smart grid operators can use this approach as an additional decision-making tool to improve their real-time decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
60. A legislative scan and literature review of lifeguard staffing requirements at public swimming pools in Canada.
- Author
-
Gomes, Allison, Young, Ian, and Chun-Yip Hon
- Subjects
LIFEGUARDS ,LITERATURE reviews ,SWIMMING pools ,SCIENTIFIC literature - Abstract
Within the Ontario public pool legislation, a certain number of lifeguards are required for a given number of bathers in a pool at a given time. Of note, these ratios vary across Canada, and there is little to no scientific evidence given for the required lifeguard to bather ratios in legislation or if they are sufficient to ensure bather safety. Our objective was to perform a legislative scan of Canadian public pool legislation as well as a literature review of scientific evidence to support the ratios used in legislation. A case study was also conducted to illustrate the methods found in the literature and apply it to a pool scenario using the lifeguard:bather ratios prescribed in the Ontario legislation. Using keywords across databases, papers were categorized based on five elements that correspond to a proper water rescue (ratio, scanning, technique, vigilance, scanning cues, and zoning). The literature review indicated that more lifeguards allow for a heightened vigilance, an increase in proper scanning technique, as well as coverage of zones. However, more research must be conducted with regards to proper staffing. Additional research should also be conducted to determine the ideal lifeguard:bather ratio, as there is a lack of standardization of these ratios across Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
61. A fruitless exercise? The political struggle to compel corporations to justify factory closures in Canada.
- Author
-
High, Steven
- Subjects
CANADIAN history ,LEGISLATIVE committees ,INDUSTRIAL property ,PLANT shutdowns ,CITIES & towns ,SMALL cities - Abstract
This paper examines the political history of the failed struggle to require companies to justify their plant closing decisions in Canada's industrial heartland of Ontario. Demands for the public review of plant closing decisions began, locally, in the auto town of Windsor in the 1950s and 1960s and reached Toronto with the closure of Dunlop Tire in 1970. Another wave of closures struck in 1980, this time reaching deep into rural and small-town Ontario as well as larger industrial towns and cities, generalizing concern. The resulting Select Committee on Plant Shutdowns and Employee Adjustment, created by the Ontario legislature, took it upon itself to conduct the kind of public review of recent closures that was long demanded. Due to the strength of the political opposition to any interference with management rights, it was essential that proponents could point to precedents in Western Europe. Trade unionists also grounded their argument in favour of government regulation in the moral economy idea that long-service workers accrued a proprietary right to their jobs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
62. "What's getting in the way?" Personal and Professional Barriers to Engineering Leadership.
- Author
-
Rottmann, Cindy, Moore, Emily, Chan, Andrea, Weissling, Lee, and Radebe, Dimpho
- Subjects
ENGINEERING education ,ACADEMIC programs ,EXECUTIVE ability (Management) ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics - Abstract
Recent attempts to ground leadership theory in engineers' day-to-day realities suggest that while engineers may accept the managerial and supervisory responsibilities structured into their work, many resist the notion of engineering as a leadership profession. When engineers resist leadership, they give up their authority to frame the problems they are hired to solve. Our paper examines the prevalence of this resistance alongside other personal and professional barriers to leadership, drawing on a large-scale survey and four follow up focus groups with engineers in Ontario, Canada. We found that the majority of survey respondents actually embraced the idea of engineering as a leadership profession, however, many experienced structural barriers to their leadership. When we disaggregated findings by gender, race, age, licensing status, job category, and internationally trained status, we found that racially minoritized men and women, white women, and early career engineers were most likely to report having experienced barriers to their leadership. Compounding the impact of structural barriers was the inequitable distribution of two important supports--professional autonomy, and decision-making authority. This indirect finding highlights the important relationship between leadership access and managerial authority. Our ability to understand the key structural impediments to embracing and enacting leadership among engineering students and professionals will help us as engineering educators facilitate meaningful leadership development opportunities for our students and alumni, ultimately enhancing their capacity for social, professional, and organizational impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
63. What to Do with Kapuskasing? .
- Subjects
LAND settlement ,SERVICES for veterans ,PAPER mills - Abstract
Focuses on the government policy toward the soldier-resettlement scheme in Kapuskasing, Ontario. Complaints made by veterans against the unsuitability of the land; Compensation for those wishing to leave their holdings; Establishment of a paper mill.
- Published
- 2001
64. Listening to the Voices of Lesbians Diagnosed with Cancer: Recommendations for Change in Cancer Support Services.
- Author
-
Barnoff, Lisa, Sinding, Christina, and Grassau, Pamela
- Subjects
LESBIANS ,CANCER patients ,CANCER in women ,HETEROSEXISM ,SOCIAL services ,MEDICAL care ,SOCIAL support ,SUPPORT groups ,LGBTQ+ studies - Abstract
This paper focuses on the operations of heterosexism and strategies to counter it in a particular service context: the context of psychosocial support services for women with cancer. The paper draws on findings from a participatory, qualitative study set in Ontario, Canada in which 26 lesbians were interviewed about their experiences of cancer diagnosis, treatment, health care and social support, and their feelings and perceptions about shifts in identity, body, sexuality and relationships. This paper focuses on findings related to the changes research participants perceived as necessary in the provision and organization of cancer support services, in order to increase access and ensure equity for lesbians with cancer and their families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
65. “Cultivating Children as You Would Valuable Plants:” The Gardening Governmentality of Child Saving, Toronto, Canada, 1880s–1920s.
- Author
-
Xiaobei Chen, Joanne
- Subjects
GARDENING ,CHILD care ,SOCIAL movements ,CHILDREN ,MIDDLE class - Abstract
Gardening metaphors with English middle-class overtones were widely used in the late nineteenth-century child saving writings in Toronto, Canada to explain and promote the ideal mode of parenting and the objective of child saving. An analysis of gardening metaphors contributes to understanding mechanisms of bio-power on the site of child saving. This paper argues that the child saving movement attempted to install a mode of proper parental control that can be described as “the gardening governmentality”– it was primarily positive/productive (yet without excluding repressive elements), individualized, intelligent, and localized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
66. Can. Governments Agree To Back ABCP Plan.
- Subjects
ASSET backed financing ,COMMERCIAL paper issues ,FEDERAL government ,STATE governments - Abstract
The article reports on the agreement between the federal government of Canada and the provincial governments of Ontario and Quebec to offer credit lines to help finalize the plan to restructure of 32 billion Canadian dollars in asset-backed commercial paper. The committee tasked with developing the solution has until January 16, 2010 to complete the plan, according to a court's decision.
- Published
- 2008
67. Family matters in Canada: understanding and addressing family homelessness in Ontario.
- Author
-
Forchuk, Cheryl, Russell, Gordon, Richardson, Jan, Perreault, Chantele, Hassan, Heba, Lucyk, Bryanna, and Gyamfi, Sebastian
- Subjects
HOMELESS families ,HOMELESSNESS ,COMMUNITY-based participatory research ,CONFLICT management ,SOCIAL problems ,FAMILIES ,HOUSING - Abstract
Background: Homelessness is becoming an international public health issue in most developed countries, including Canada. Homelessness is regarded as both political and socioeconomic problems warranting broad and consistent result-oriented approaches.Methods: This paper represents the qualitative findings of a project that explored risk factors associated with family homelessness and strategies that could mitigate and prevent homelessness among families using a focused ethnographic study guided by the principles of participatory action research (PAR). The sample includes 36 family members residing at a family shelter who participated in focus groups over two years (between April 2016 and December 2017). Most of the participants were single-parent women.Results: The analysis yielded five major themes including, life challenges, lack of understanding of the system, existing power differentials, escaping from hardship, and a theme of proposed solutions for reducing family homelessness in the community.Conclusion: The findings illustrated the complex nature of family homelessness in Ontario; that the interaction of multiple systems can put families at risk of homelessness. Findings from this study underscore the need for urgent housing protocols aimed at educating homeless families on how to navigate and understand the system, enhance their conflict resolution skills, and develop strategies beyond relocation to help them to cope with difficulties with housing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
68. Mid-Latitude Detection of High Schmidt-Number Turbulent Echoes, and Comparison to PMSE and Geomagnetic Variations.
- Author
-
Hocking, Wayne K. and Pinnegar, Victoria L.
- Subjects
GEOMAGNETIC variations ,GEOMAGNETISM ,GLOBAL cooling ,LATITUDE ,ATMOSPHERIC temperature ,GLOBAL warming ,NOCTILUCENT clouds - Abstract
Unexpected observations of strong radiowave scatter at a ~85–90 km altitude with very high frequency radars were explained in the early 1990s, when it was demonstrated that these were due to special turbulent and small-scale scatterers with high Schmidt number. Studies of these phenomena have primarily been concentrated in polar regions, and the events seem most prominent in regions of very cold air (below 140 K). Such radar echoes are referred to as polar mesosphere summer echoes (PMSE), and are rare at lower latitudes. In this paper we report observations of similar scatterers at sites below 50° latitude. The nature of these scatterers is discussed and results are compared to observations at the polar site of Eureka, Canada. Mid-latitude observations at frequencies of 48.92 and 45.47 MHz were made, respectively, at Abitibi Canyon (49.9° N latitude) and Markstay (46.5° N latitude) in Ontario, Canada. In particular, we look at the relationship of these scatterers to geophysical parameters, especially the A
p index. Our results suggest that mesospheric air with temperatures less than 140 K now exists below 50° latitude. This may be an indication of an equator-ward creep of global mesospheric cooling (which is associated with the well-known tropospheric global warming), but the scatterers at lower latitudes also demonstrate correlation with the Ap index. On the other hand, the polar scatterers at Eureka demonstrated no correlation of any significance with Ap . The importance of these results in regard to the global distribution of mesospheric temperatures is discussed, and comparisons to other measurements are made. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
69. Weyerhaeuser Buys Bowater Mill.
- Subjects
- *
PAPER mills , *ASSETS (Accounting) - Abstract
Reveals that Weyerhaeuser Co. purchased a paper mill in Dryden, Ontario and other assets from Bowater Inc. Significance of the company's purchase of the paper mill.
- Published
- 1998
70. Legislated Poverty? An Intersectional Policy Analysis of COVID-19 Income Support Programs in Ontario, Canada.
- Author
-
Pin, Laura, Levac, Leah, and Rodenburg, Erin
- Subjects
- *
INTERSECTIONALITY , *POLICY analysis , *INCOME , *COVID-19 pandemic , *BASIC income , *COVID-19 , *PREPAREDNESS - Abstract
In this paper, we use intersectionality-based policy analysis (IBPA) to examine how COVID-19 income support policies enacted in Ontario, Canada, affected people living with poverty. We find that the privileging of formal labor market attachment in eligibility requirements systemically excluded constituencies most likely to be living with poverty. More broadly, these exclusions represent a retrenchment of neoliberal logics in social policy, and the rejection of universal social welfare programs. In conclusion, we suggest that the experiences of people living with poverty during the COVID-19 pandemic further highlight the need for comprehensive social welfare programs, including a universal basic income. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
71. Assessing geographic and industry-related trends in bladder cancer in Ontario: A population-based study.
- Author
-
Stringer, Leandra, Tina Luu Ly, Moreno, Nicolas Vanin, Hewitt, Christopher Macdonald, Haan, Michael, and Power, Nicholas
- Subjects
- *
BLADDER cancer , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *NATURAL resources , *FURNITURE - Abstract
Introduction: Bladder cancer (BC) is the fifth most prevalent cancer in Canada, with 9000 Canadians diagnosed each year. While smoking is the most important risk factor, environmental and occupational carcinogens have been found to significantly contribute to BC rates. As Canada is highly reliant on natural resource industries, this study seeks to identify geographical and industry-related trends of BC rates in Ontario. Methods: The 1991 and 2001 Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohort (CanCHEC; Statistics Canada) was used, along with individual years of census data. Maps identifying hot and cold spots for BC within Ontario were generated, and the former were assessed for industry patterns between location and BC rates. Cox proportional hazards models were run for each age cohort to predict the likelihood of developing BC by industry of work. Results: Significant geographical and industrial trends in BC rates were identified. For 1991-2001, hot spots included the Cochrane, Manitoulin, Parry Sound, and Sudbury (90% confidence interval [CI]), and Nipissing and Temiskaming (95% CI) regions. Toronto and York were cold spots. Concurrently, metal (p=0.039), paper and publishing (p=0.0062), and wood and furniture (p<0.0001) industries had increased rates of BC. Notably, these industries had high employment density in our hot spot areas and low density in our cold spots. Conclusions: Significant geographical and industrial BC trends were found in Northern Ontario regions reliant on heavy employment in natural resource-based industries, such as forestry, agriculture, and wood/paper. These findings may inform future screening guidelines and aid in identifying individuals at risk of BC development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
72. HEALTH CARE FUNDING POLICIES FOR REDUCING FRAGMENTATION AND IMPROVING HEALTH OUTCOMES.
- Author
-
Sutherland, Jason M.
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care costs ,MEDICAL personnel ,ELECTRONIC health records ,HEALTH information exchanges ,SECONDARY care (Medicine) ,FEDERAL government ,MONETARY incentives - Abstract
The federal government's role in Canadian health-care funding policy has historically been a matter of writing cheques to the provinces and territories, leaving the nuts and bolts of funding policy for the provinces and territories to work out. Unfortunately, provinces and territories are stuck in policies from the past that have led to underperformance of their health care systems even as their health budgets continue to grow. There are opportunities for the federal government to remove some of provinces' and territories' barriers to adopting new policies for funding health care. Episode-based payments could help break down barriers between and within sectors and providers. Episode-based payments create financial incentives by aligning care providers across settings, with physicians potentially engaging in financial risk-sharing partnerships. The American example, led by U.S. Medicare insurance, suggests that the use of episode-based payments can work for certain conditions even in siloed and fragmented settings. Similarly, capitation-based funding models create incentives for organizations to work together across sectors. Reducing fragmentation includes primary care-centred organizations that span physical and mental health, and requires improvements to the intersection between primary and secondary care. These new-to-Canada models allocate a pre-set budget to provider organizations for health care based on each resident's health. The goal of these primary care-focused models is to align funding with resident's long-term health outcomes. The federal government can use what leverage it has to remove provinces' and territories' barriers to funding policy reforms. The federal government can fund research into best practices, fund the development of new streams of data that better measure value from health care funding, and support ways to link social care data with health care data. On a per capita basis, combined provincial, territorial and federal spending on health care places Canada among the highest of wealthiest countries in the world. Progress on the quadruple aim is elusive and ill-measured. Frustratingly, money does not appear to be the primary reason for underperformance in health care; the problem is likely due to how it is spent. Ontario is experimenting, albeit narrowly and slowly, with some new initiatives in episode-based funding, without causing ruptures in Canadian society. Provincial and territorial funding policies involve costly trade-offs. COVID-induced pressures on health care may tip the balance of these trade-offs towards funding policies previously considered too dynamic. Even with the widespread aversion to use market forces that prevails in Canadian health care, the use of funding policies to shape new and different incentives or activities might work in Canada, too. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
73. Montreal Accord Likely Headed To Noteholder Vote.
- Author
-
Johnson, Aaron
- Subjects
SUPERIOR courts ,COMMERCIAL paper issues ,ASSET backed financing ,ASSETS (Accounting) ,BANKRUPTCY - Abstract
The article reports that the Ontario Superior Court of Justice is likely to allow 20 Canadian asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) issuers to let their noteholders vote on a market-wide restructuring plan. The Montreal Accord would affect 32 billion U.S. dollars of illiquid assets. The Pan-American Investors Committee for Third-Party Structured ABCP filed application under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act for bankruptcy protection.
- Published
- 2008
74. Tempest in a Toilet.
- Author
-
Priesnitz, Wendy
- Subjects
SEWAGE sludge ,PAPER mills & the environment - Abstract
Discusses the negative effects of paper mill sludge sold as soil fertilizer by Cornwall, Ontario-based Domtar Fine Paper on the environment. Ingredients of sludge; Health problems caused by the fertilizer; Accusations against the company that its toilets are connected with the mill's waste water treatment process.
- Published
- 2000
75. EMOTIONS UNCORKED: INSPIRING EVANGELISM FOR THE EMERGING PRACTICE OF COOL-CLIMATE WINEMAKING IN ONTARIO.
- Author
-
MASSA, FELIPE G., HELMS, WESLEY S., VORONOV, MAXIM, and LIANG WANG
- Subjects
WINE industry ,CUSTOMER relations ,WINE marketing ,EMOTIONS ,MARKETING & psychology - Abstract
This paper examines how organizations create evangelists, members of key audiences who build a critical mass of support for new ways of doing things. We conduct a longitudinal, inductive study of Ontario's cool-climate wineries and members of six external audience groups who evangelized on behalf of their emerging winemaking practice. We found that wineries drew from three institutionalized vinicultural templates-- "provenance," "hedonic," and "glory"--to craft rituals designed to convert these audience members. These rituals led to inspiring emotional experiences among audience members with receptive gourmand and regional identities, driving them to engage in evangelistic behaviors. While a growing body of work on evangelists has emphasized their individual characteristics, the role of emotions in driving their activities, as well as how they advocate for organizations, our study demonstrates how evangelism can be built through ritualized interactions with organizations. Specifically, we reveal how organizations develop rituals that translate emerging practices into inspiring emotional experiences for particular members of audiences. This suggests that rituals can be used not only to incite dedication within organizational boundaries, but to inspire members of external audiences to act as social conduits through which emerging practices spread. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
76. Rooftop solar with net metering: An integrated investment appraisal.
- Author
-
Hashemi, Majid, Jenkins, Glenn, and Milne, Frank
- Subjects
- *
CAPITAL budget , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *SOLAR technology , *GREENHOUSE gases , *SOLAR system , *CARBON pricing ,CANADIAN federal government - Abstract
This paper develops a framework for a financial, economic, and stakeholder analysis of a residential rooftop solar net-metering program. The empirical focus of the paper is the net-metering program in Ontario, Canada, but the methodology is applicable to evaluating other public programs. The results highlight that without the Federal Government's subsidy for the initial investment cost, net-metered solar systems are not financially viable for representative households. Moreover, the stakeholder analysis reveals that for each additional net-metered system installed in Ontario, non-net-metered households experience financial losses of six times the benefits to the net-metered households. The net losses to the Federal Government of Canada and the Canadian economy are five and nine times the benefit to the net-metered households, respectively. The only stakeholder who benefits marginally is the Government of Ontario. In terms of environmental benefits, our estimate of the cost of greenhouse gas abatement by residential net-metered solar is 325 CAD per ton of CO 2 , which is significantly higher than the current (65 CAD in 2023) and future (170 CAD by 2030) national carbon price set by the Government of Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
77. Assessing geographic and industry-related trends in bladder cancer in Ontario: A population-based study.
- Author
-
Stringer, Leandra, Ly, Tina Luu, Moreno, Nicolas Vanin, Hewitt, Christopher, Haan, Michael, and Power, Nicholas
- Subjects
- *
BLADDER cancer , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *NATURAL resources , *FURNITURE - Abstract
Introduction: Bladder cancer (BC) is the fifth most prevalent cancer in Canada, with 9000 Canadians diagnosed each year.1 While smoking is the most important risk factor, environmental and occupational carcinogens have been found to significantly contribute to BC rates.2 As Canada is highly reliant on natural resource industries, this study seeks to identify geographical and industry-related trends of BC rates in Ontario. Methods: The 1991 and 2001 Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohort (CanCHEC; Statistics Canada) was used, along with individual years of Census data. Maps identifying hot and cold spots for BC within Ontario were generated, and the former were assessed for industry patterns between location and BC rates. Cox proportional hazards models were run for each age cohort to predict the likelihood of developing BC by industry of work. Results: Significant geographical and industrial trends in BC rates were identified. For 1991-2001; hot spots included the Cochrane, Manitoulin, Parry Sound, and Sudbury (90% confidence interval [CI]), and Nipissing and Temiskaming (95% CI) regions. Toronto and York were cold spots. Concurrently, metal (p=0.039), paper and publishing (p=0.0062), and wood and furniture (p<0.0001) industries had increased rates of BC. Notably, these industries had high employment density in our hot spot areas and low density in our cold spots. Conclusions: Significant geographical and industrial BC trends were found in Northern Ontario regions reliant on heavy employment in natural resource-based industries, such as forestry, agriculture, and wood/paper. These findings may inform future screening guidelines and aid in identifying individuals at risk of BC development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
78. 'Eating' Odorous Pollutants.
- Subjects
- *
CHEMICAL manipulation , *PAPER mills - Abstract
Focuses on the biofiltration technique developed by researchers from the University of Toronto in Ontario that uses bacteria to eat odorous sulfur pollutants from paper mills. Materials used.
- Published
- 2002
79. Medication reviews in community pharmacy: a scoping review of policy, practice and research in Canada.
- Author
-
Olufemi-Yusuf, Damilola T, Kung, Janice Y, and Guirguis, Lisa M
- Subjects
MEDICATION reconciliation ,DRUGSTORES ,MEDICAL personnel ,CORPORATE culture ,DRUG side effects - Abstract
Objectives This scoping review aims to systematically map the empirical evidence on publicly funded medication reviews provided by community pharmacists in Canada and identify gaps that could inform future research directions. Methods We used a scoping review framework and PRISMA guidelines for Scoping Reviews to conduct the study. Three electronic databases were searched for papers published between January 2000 until August 2020. Data was charted on study characteristics, and a thematic synthesis was performed. Key findings Of 41 original studies included, most were conducted in Ontario (n = 21). Majority of the studies employed quantitative designs (70%). Five major themes identified were program uptake, patient health outcomes, stakeholder beliefs and attitudes, processes and collaboration and pharmacy workplace culture, which varied considerably. At the individual, organizational and policy levels, many factors were interrelated and influenced the implementation of reimbursed medication reviews by community pharmacists. Gaps in eligibility policy highlighted some patients who may have complex needs are excluded. Variation in clinical outcomes may relate to different types of medication review and pharmacist practice across Canada. Few researchers evaluated eligibility criteria, the impact of policy changes, strategies to engage patients and healthcare professionals, patient–pharmacist communication or compared practice models of medication reviews. About 12% of the research applied a theoretical framework. Summary Publicly funded medication reviews in Canadian community pharmacies reduce medication-related problems and potentially improve patient health outcomes. Future research and policies could consider addressing barriers and exploring models for sustainable delivery of high-quality medication reviews internationally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
80. Linking restorative human health outcomes to protected area ecosystem diversity and integrity.
- Author
-
Reining, Catherine E., Lemieux, Christopher J., and Doherty, Sean T.
- Subjects
ECOLOGICAL integrity ,PROTECTED areas ,ECOSYSTEMS ,SPECIES diversity ,PERCEIVED quality ,PARK management - Abstract
Human health and well-being benefits have increasingly been associated with contact with nature. However, limited research has focused on the influence of ecosystem type and quality on these outcomes. This paper reports on the results of an in-situ survey of 467 visitors to an Ontario protected area. Results revealed high overall restorative outcomes across all ecosystem types, with greater benefits reported for women than men. Perceived ecosystem quality, including species richness, naturalness, and ecological integrity, had the greatest impact on restorative outcomes, while the type of ecosystem and time spent had surprisingly little influence. Greater restorative outcomes for women were also associated with specific ecosystem types. The study advances our limited understanding of the nuanced relationship between human health and well-being outcomes and exposure to diverse ecosystems, and by extenstion the unique aspects of biodiversity and ecosystem condition that Canada's protected areas exhibit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
81. "We're Not Where We Should Be": Enhancing Law Enforcement Responses to Hate Crime.
- Author
-
Perry, Barbara and Samuels-Wortley, Kanika
- Subjects
LAW enforcement ,HATE crimes ,ENVIRONMENTAL crimes ,HATE ,POLICE reform ,POLICE - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Criminology & Criminal Justice is the property of University of Toronto 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
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
82. Collective bargaining in Canada in the age of precarious employment.
- Author
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Lewchuk, Wayne
- Subjects
PRECARIOUS employment ,COLLECTIVE labor agreements ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,INDEPENDENT contractors ,RESEARCH teams - Abstract
The decline in the prevalence of the Standard Employment Relationship in Canada has created challenges for Canadian unions. This article reviews the available estimates of the prevalence of precarious employment and gig work in Canada. Using data from the Poverty and Employment Precarity in Southern Ontario (PEPSO) research group it evaluates both the success of unions in organising workers in precarious employment and bargaining for them. The last section reviews recent union strategies to organise workers in precarious employment with a focus on the subset of precarious employment referred to as gig work. Organising gig workers presents unique challenges for unions as many are deemed by their employers as independent contractors and as a result not covered by existing Canadian labour legislation and hence not eligible for union membership. The paper concludes by arguing that organising precarious workers is a work in progress, whose ultimate outcome remains uncertain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
83. "Tell Me About Yourself" - Using eportfolio as a Tool to Integrate Learning and Position Students for Employment, a Case from the Queen's University Master of Public Health Program.
- Author
-
Melles, Brenda, Leger, Andrew B., and Covell, Leigha
- Subjects
REFLECTIVE learning ,PROFESSIONAL-student relations ,PUBLIC health education ,PUBLIC health ,CURRICULUM ,CORE competencies - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching & Learning is the property of Society for Teaching & Learning in Higher 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
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
84. A tale of two Canadian cities: Comparing supervised consumption site (SCS) policy making in Toronto and Vancouver.
- Author
-
Hayle, Steven
- Subjects
DRUG control ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,DRUG laws ,LOCAL government ,POLICY sciences ,POLICY science research ,PUBLIC hospitals ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
The Canadian government recently sanctioned a supervised consumption site (SCS) that is currently in Vancouver, British Columbia. The government is open to sanctioning more sites across the country; however, by law the federal health minister must consider whether such facilities are supported by local governments representing the cities where the sites are proposed to be located. Until 2016, the government of Canada's largest city, Toronto, did not support SCSs. Drawing on Lenton cannabis policy research, this study analyses government documents, policy papers, scientific reports, and newspaper articles and secondary literature to identify some of the significant barriers that minimised the likelihood that Toronto's council would support SCSs between 2003 and 2016. The report compares conditions in Toronto to those of Vancouver where SCSs have enjoyed council support since 2001. This study find that three conditions play an important role in explaining why SCSs were supported in Vancouver 14 years before they were endorsed in Toronto: (1) Strong public support; (2) Favourable electoral conditions; and (3) Law enforcement support. Changes in Toronto surrounding these conditions help explain why its council endorsed SCSs in 2016. This study concludes that Lenton's research holds utility as a socio-legal theory of municipal drug policy change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
85. The Making of Informed Choice in Midwifery: A Feminist Experiment in Care.
- Author
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MacDonald, Margaret E.
- Subjects
MIDWIFERY ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,MATERNAL health services ,COUNTERCULTURE ,SOCIAL movements ,PUBLIC health ,HISTORY of feminism ,CHILDBIRTH ,DECISION making ,ETHNOLOGY ,HISTORY - Abstract
This paper is about the clinical principle of informed choice-the hallmark feature of the midwifery model of care in Ontario, Canada. Drawing on ethnographic history interviews with midwives, I trace the origins of the idea of informed choice to its roots in the social movement of midwifery in North America in the late 1960s and 1970s. At that time informed choice was not the distinctive feature of midwifery but was deeply embedded what I call midwifery's feminist experiment in care. But as midwifery in Ontario transitioned from a social movement to a full profession within the formal health care system, informed choice was strategically foregrounded in order to make the midwifery model of care legible and acceptable to a skeptical medical profession, conservative law makers, and a mainstream clientele. As mainstream biomedicine now takes up the rhetoric of patient empowerment and informed choice, this paper is at once a nuanced history of the making of the concept and also a critique of the ascendant 'regime of choice' in contemporary health care, inspired by the reflections of the midwives in my study for whom choice is impossible without care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
86. A multi-objective approach for designing a tire closed-loop supply chain network considering producer responsibility.
- Author
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Ahmed, Javeria, Amin, Saman Hassanzadeh, and Fang, Liping
- Subjects
- *
REVERSE logistics , *SUPPLY chains , *TIRES , *LINEAR programming , *OPTIONS (Finance) , *FUZZY logic - Abstract
• Developing a new optimization model for designing a tire closed-loop supply chain. • Presenting a Spherical fuzzy logic method to calculate the importance of suppliers. • Discussing the application of the model in Greater Toronto Area, Canada. • Solving the multi-objective model using the augmented ε -constraint method. • Performing extensive sensitivity analyses and analyzing the results. For tire manufacturers to remain profitable while fulfilling environmental and social obligations such as producer responsibility, the opportunity lies in designing a tire Closed-Loop Supply Chain (CLSC) which combines forward and reverse supply chains. In this paper, a new multi-objective mixed-integer linear programming model is proposed to configure and optimize a multi-echelon, multi-product, multi-period tire CLSC network based on multiple recovery options and markets. For one of the objectives of the model, the weighting factors (importance) of suppliers are determined according to a unique framework of qualitative criteria. In this respect, a novel decision-making method based on Spherical fuzzy logic is developed. Finally, the solution approach is devised based on the formulation of the augmented ε -constraint method for finding efficient solutions. The application of the model is illustrated focusing on the region of Greater Toronto Area in Ontario, Canada. The optimal quantities for the flows of products, and number and locations of open facilities of the network are computed. The results show that the selected suppliers and allocated orders from them are impacted by considering multiple objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
87. Integrating Customized Information Into Science and Health Science Curricula: The Essential Role of Library/Faculty Collaboration.
- Author
-
Leishman, Joan L.
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC communication ,INFORMATION science ,MEDICAL sciences - Abstract
This paper describes the library/faculty liaison program at the Gerstein Science Information Centre at the University of Toronto and provides examples to show how it has created an environment where collaboration between librarians and faculty is encouraged and supported. The paper describes three separate initiatives where librarians worked closely with faculty to integrate customized information delivery into newly developed science and health science curricula. Collaboration makes it possible to customize information delivery consistent with student and faculty needs. Collaboration is a key factor in ensuring the value and relevance of library services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. EATING THEIR DUST.
- Author
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Grace, Heather
- Subjects
ONTARIO. Ministry of Environment & Energy ,PAPER mills ,INDUSTRIAL wastes - Abstract
Reports that the Ministry of Environment and Energy of Ontario has charged Norampac Inc. for failing to comply with an order regarding the disposal of the sticky waste produced by its paper mill. Information on the April 1999 order; Reason for banning the use of Norampac's waste material as dust suppressant; Market name of Norampac's waste material.
- Published
- 2001
89. Ottawa construction paper expands to D.C.
- Subjects
NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
Discusses the release of the local newspaper 'Washington Construction News,' which was designed and managed in Ottawa, Ontario.
- Published
- 2001
90. Manufacturing space for inclusive innovation? A study of makerspaces in southern Ontario.
- Author
-
Vinodrai, Tara, Nader, Brenton, and Zavarella, Christian
- Subjects
SPACE industrialization ,MAKERSPACES ,SOCIAL integration ,SUSTAINABILITY ,SOCIAL sustainability - Abstract
The popular discourse on making and makerspaces is laden with optimistic narratives suggesting that makerspaces act as key institutions that support more inclusive and sustainable forms of local economic development. Despite their popularity, we know little about how makerspaces actually support entrepreneurship and innovation and even less about how they advance the goals of environmental sustainability and social inclusion, particularly in the Canadian context. In an effort to redress these gaps, this paper uses a unique database of makerspaces, complemented with findings from in-depth case studies, to examine the practices of makerspaces in southern Ontario (Canada). Our study finds that while makerspaces offer access to technologies and basic skills training, we find limited evidence that makerspaces generate the promised economic or social outcomes so often attributed to them. Moreover, we find very limited evidence that makerspaces actively seek to be socially inclusive in their membership and programming or encourage environmentally sustainable practices. In other words, the potential of makerspaces, in their current form, to contribute to more inclusive and sustainable forms of local economic and community development is not yet fully realized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. A 30-Year Study of Impacts, Recovery, and Development of Critical Effect Sizes for Endocrine Disruption in White Sucker (Catostomus commersonii) Exposed to Bleached-Kraft Pulp Mill Effluent at Jackfish Bay, Ontario, Canada.
- Author
-
Ussery, Erin J., McMaster, Mark E., Servos, Mark R., Miller, David H., and Munkittrick, Kelly R.
- Subjects
PULP mills ,ENDOCRINE glands ,SEX hormones ,WASTE treatment ,BODY size - Abstract
Jackfish Bay is an isolated bay on the north shore of Lake Superior, Canada that has received effluent from a large bleached-kraft pulp mill since the 1940s. Studies conducted in the late 1980s found evidence of reductions in sex steroid hormone levels in multiple fish species living in the Bay, and increased growth, condition and relative liver weights, with a reduction in internal fat storage, reduced gonadal sizes, delayed sexual maturation, and altered levels of circulating sex steroid hormones in white sucker (Catostomus commersonii). These early studies provided some of the first pieces of evidence of endocrine disruption in wild animals. Studies on white sucker have continued at Jackfish Bay, monitoring fish health after the installation of secondary waste treatment (1989), changes in the pulp bleaching process (1990s), during facility maintenance shutdowns and during a series of facility closures associated with changing ownership (2000s), and were carried through to 2019 resulting in a 30-year study of fish health impacts, endocrine disruption, chemical exposure, and ecosystem recovery. The objective of the present study was to summarize and understand more than 75 physiological, endocrine, chemical and whole organism endpoints that have been studied providing important context for the complexity of endocrine responses, species differences, and challenges with extrapolation. Differences in body size, liver size, gonad size and condition persist, although changes in liver and gonad indices are much smaller than in the early years. Population modeling of the initial reproductive alterations predicted a 30% reduction in the population size, however with improvements over the last couple of decades those population impacts improved considerably. Reflection on these 30 years of detailed studies, on environmental conditions, physiological, and whole organism endpoints, gives insight into the complexity of endocrine responses to environmental change and mitigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
92. A prototype compact accelerator-based neutron source (CANS) for Canada.
- Author
-
Laxdal, Robert, Maharaj, Dalini D., Abbaslou, Mina, Tun, Zin, Banks, Daniel, Gottberg, Alexander, Marchetto, Marco, Rodriguez, Eduardo, Yamani, Zahra, Fritzsche, Helmut, Rogge, Ronald, Pan, Ming, Kester, Oliver, Marquardt, Drew, Baxter, David, Gutberlet, Thomas, Otake, Yoshie, Ott, Frédéric, and Wang, Xuewu
- Subjects
BORON-neutron capture therapy ,NEUTRON sources ,POSITRON emission tomography ,NEUTRON beams ,NEUTRON scattering ,NEUTRON flux - Abstract
Canada's access to neutron beams for neutron scattering was significantly curtailed in 2018 with the closure of the National Research Universal (NRU) reactor in Chalk River, Ontario, Canada. New sources are needed for the long-term; otherwise, access will only become harder as the global supply shrinks. Compact Accelerator-based Neutron Sources (CANS) offer the possibility of an intense source of neutrons with a capital cost significantly lower than spallation sources. In this paper, we propose a CANS for Canada. The proposal is staged with the first stage offering a medium neutron flux, linear accelerator-based approach for neutron scattering that is also coupled with a boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT) station and a positron emission tomography (PET) isotope production station. The first stage will serve as a prototype for a second stage: a higher brightness, higher cost facility that could be viewed as a national centre for neutron applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. A study protocol for a quasi-experimental community trial evaluating the integration of indigenous healing practices and a harm reduction approach with principles of seeking safety in an indigenous residential treatment program in Northern Ontario.
- Author
-
Marsh, T. N., Eshakakogan, C., Eibl, J. K., Spence, M., Morin, K. A., Gauthier, G. J., and Marsh, D. C.
- Subjects
TREATMENT programs ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,HARM reduction ,HEALING ,GENDER - Abstract
Background: Indigenous communities in Canada face significant challenges with intergenerational trauma, which manifests in substance use disorders. There is consensus that connecting treatment approaches to culture, land, community, and spiritual practices is a pathway to healing trauma and substance use disorders for Indigenous peoples. Indigenous residential addiction treatment programs have been established as the primary intervention to provide healing for Indigenous peoples with substance use disorders and intergenerational trauma. However, there is limited evidence demonstrating the effectiveness of these programs. In collaboration with the Benbowopka Treatment Centre, this paper describes a study protocol which aims to evaluate the effectiveness of blending Indigenous Healing Practices and Seeking Safety for the treatment of Indigenous patients with intergenerational trauma and substance use disorders. Methods: We will conduct a pre/post Quasi Experimental Community trial, to compare historical treatment outcomes for patients following the implementation of Indigenous Healing and Seeking Safety. We will conduct quantitative and qualitative analyses to understand the differences before and after the intervention is implemented. The pre- Indigenous Healing and Seeking Safety intervention study window will span from 2013 to 2016; n = 343, and the post-Indigenous Healing and Seeking Safety intervention study window from 2018 to 2020; n > 300. All participants will be enrolled in the Benbowopka residential treatment for the first time during the study periods. All data will be anonymized at the time of data entry. Propensity matching will be undertaken for patient characteristics, including sex/gender, age, and substance use type. Results and conclusions: The study findings could be used to inform intergenerational trauma and substance use disorders residential treatment programming for Indigenous communities across Canada. Our work will contribute to the field of community-based intergenerational trauma and substance use disorders programming by addressing objectives that consider: (a) the patient perspective, (b) the program perspective, and (c) the community perspective. The study findings may validate an innovative approach for evaluating the effectiveness of residential addiction treatment and particularly the effective and appropriate care for Indigenous patients with intergenerational trauma and substance use disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
94. Translating strong principles into effective practice: environmental assessment in Ontario, Canada.
- Author
-
Savan, Beth and Gore, Christopher
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,SUSTAINABLE development ,SOCIAL participation - Abstract
This paper examines two fundamental and inter-related tensions relating to environmental assessment between the desire to be proactive, promoting sustainable development and the more traditional practice of preventing harm, as well as the need to balance a predictable, expeditious and efficient process with transparency and inclusive deliberation. Proposed reforms to the environmental assessment process in Ontario, Canada, are examined as a case in point, showing how the recommendations in Ontario are consistent with international trends. In particular, over-arching principles need to be embedded in more precise sector-specific policies to enable environmental assessment processes to meet these competing goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. Graduate Certificates in Ontario colleges: uniquely engaging in specialized skills development.
- Author
-
Thorsell, Laura A.
- Subjects
STUDENT engagement ,EMPLOYABILITY ,ACADEMIC degrees ,OUTCOME-based education ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine Graduate Certificates in colleges in Ontario, Canada, and their distinctive ability to generate intrinsic student engagement in specialized skills development, and a culture of progression and scholarship. Design/methodology/approach - This is a review of selected literature on student engagement. While extrinsic motivation, such as employment, has most often been discussed this paper purposefully considers intrinsic motivation and factors that build deeper engagement in students. This paper compares and contrasts the literature, and its link with the features of the Ontario College Graduate Certificate in Canada. More specifically, it examines the background and development of the credential in the context of the movement towards competency-based education. Findings - This paper postulates that colleges can uniquely provide applied and intrinsically engaging programming through credentials like the Graduate Certificate. The Graduate Certificate helps heighten graduate skills engagement, a culture of progression and scholarship, and ultimately competitiveness in today's workplace. Practical implications - The findings of this paper have implications for colleges to distinguish themselves amongst post-secondary institutions as providers of specialized skills development in higher education, especially as competency-based education grows in importance. It also puts in to question how this type of engaging design can be further built in to post-secondary graduate curriculum. Originality/value - This paper illuminates innovative practice at the post-graduate level, as an example of a skills-based scholarly activity. It helps position colleges as providers of effective, competency and outcomes-based higher education. This paper can add value to practitioners looking to build similar programming, by combining this Graduate Certificate design with evidence-based factors that build student engagement, particularly intrinsic motivation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
96. The absence of language: A critical race discourse analysis of Ontario's child welfare legislation and the impacts on Black families.
- Author
-
Edwards, Travonne, McManamna, Nakema, and King, Bryn
- Subjects
- *
CRITICAL discourse analysis , *CHILD welfare , *ANTI-Black racism , *BLACK people , *CANADIAN history , *SOCIAL work with children - Abstract
The research pertaining to racial disparities for Black families in child welfare is relatively limited in Canada. Recent research reveals that the overrepresentation of Black families in Canadian child welfare systems typically begins at the reporting or investigation stage and continues throughout the child welfare service and decision-making continuum. This research is occurring against the backdrop of increasing public acknowledgement of Canada's historic anti-Black policy-making and institutional relationships to Black communities. Though there is increased awareness about anti-Black racism, there has been limited exploration of the connection between anti-Black racism in child welfare legislation and how this policy generates disparities for Black families in both child welfare involvement and outcomes – this paper seeks to fill this gap in knowledge. The objective of this paper is to explore the entrenchment of anti-Black racism within the child welfare system by critically assessing the language and absence of language within the guiding legislative and implementation policies. Utilizing a critical race discourse analysis method, this study explores the entrenchment of anti-Black racism within the Ontario child welfare system by critically assessing the language and absence of language within the guiding legislative policies that shape practice for Black children, youth, and families. The findings revealed that though the legislation does not explicitly address anti-Black racism, there were instances where the legislation indicated that race and culture may be considered in responding to children and families. The lack of specificity, particularly in the Duty to Report, has the potential to contribute to disparate reporting and decision-making for Black families. Policy makers should acknowledge the history of anti-Black racism that informed the development of the legislation in Ontario and move towards tackling systemic injustices that disproportionately affect Black families. More explicit language will shape future policies and practices to ensure that the impact of anti-Black racism is considered across the child welfare continuum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
97. Dust in the Wind, an Update.
- Author
-
Asselstine, Julia
- Subjects
PAPER mills & the environment - Abstract
Questions the future of Dombind, a paper-mill waste material that was being used as a dust suppressant in Ontario's rural roads. Information on a deal by Norampac, manufacturer of Dombind, with the Ministry of Environment; Various comments on Norampac.
- Published
- 1999
98. Spatialising procedural justice: fairness and local knowledge mobilisation in nuclear waste siting.
- Author
-
Bell, Marissa Z.
- Subjects
PROCEDURAL justice ,RADIOACTIVE wastes ,RADIOACTIVE waste disposal ,LOCAL knowledge ,FAIRNESS ,FUKUSHIMA Nuclear Accident, Fukushima, Japan, 2011 - Abstract
Recent shifts in energy infrastructure siting have seen movement toward more procedurally just participatory decision-making processes. The energy justice literature emphasises both the normative need for fairness and justice in energy decision-making, while recognising the instrumental value of procedural justice for more favourable siting outcomes. Against a global nuclear backdrop of historically closed decision-making and public controversy, Canada's high-level nuclear waste siting process has sought to offer a more participatory and community-driven process. Drawing from ethnographic observation and interviews in Ontario, Canada, this paper seeks to evaluate the NWMO's siting process according to principles of energy justice, focusing on how local context and nuclear landscape may problematise normative applications of procedural justice. Through this analysis, I address a perceived deficit in studies of the spatial implications of procedural justice, examining how local geography can shape how procedurally just a process is, at times translating well-intended policy into unintended outcomes. Ultimately, I argue that effective mobilisation of local knowledge for more localised practices is key to informing fairer and more just siting processes and eventual outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. Smart energy harvesting performance of photovoltaic roof assemblies in Canadian climate.
- Author
-
Molleti, Sudhakar and Armstrong, Marianne
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL buildings ,BUILDING-integrated photovoltaic systems ,ENERGY harvesting ,SNOW cover ,SOLAR energy ,VOCATIONAL schools ,PERFORMANCE technology ,SOLAR radiation - Abstract
In Canada, the solar electricity sector is growing rapidly. Much of this success is based on the growth of the Ontario solar market where more than 99% of Canada's solar electricity is generated. Ontario has developed a globally recognized solar market sector. The vast surface area of existing residential roofs across Canada represents an untapped resource for capitalizing on passive and active management of impinging solar insolation. The aim of the current research study is to evaluate the new energy harvesting technologies such as a thin-film PV integrated roof system that could serve as a conventional roofing for weather protection while generating clean solar electricity, and the new generation micro inverters that have the potential to outperform string inverters under shading and snow-cover conditions. This paper has two parts that will discuss about two smart energy harvesting technologies and their performance on residential applications in Canadian climate. Part 1 of the paper focusses on field evaluation of Roof Integrated Photovoltaic (RIPV) and Part 2 talks about the energy yield performance of integrated solar tiles and new generation micro inverters. The RIPV field trial took place at the Canadian Centre for Housing Technology (CCHT) Info Centre in Ottawa, Canada. This is a novel approach adapted from a roofing system that would typically be found on low-sloped roofs such as commercial supermarkets, industrial warehouses and school buildings. Over the eight month study period, surmounting the effects of snow cover and shadows, the RIPV system generated over 1 MWh of electricity, and had a measured system efficiency of 5.3%. The study on the new generation micro inverters for residential applications addressed the shading effects on the intermittent nature of solar energy generation. Simulating the shading conditions that are experienced by typical residential rooftop, the micro inverters were found to increase production by 1–68% relative to the conventional string inverters. The research outcome of this study has demonstrated that both these energy harvesting technologies have important incremental benefits in increasing the renewables contribution to power generation in residential homes in Canadian climatic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. The Influence of Supply Management on Farmland Values in Ontario.
- Author
-
Vyn, Richard J and Rude, James
- Subjects
PRICE regulation ,CANADIAN provinces ,POULTRY - Abstract
Supply management programs for Canada's dairy and poultry sectors are intended to reduce price volatility and provide fair returns for producers. However, the reduced risk and higher returns for these producers may contribute to higher farmland values. This paper estimates the impact of supply management on farmland values in the Canadian province of Ontario using a hedonic approach based on over 25,000 farmland sales. The results indicate that farmland values have been positively impacted by supply‐managed livestock density. In addition, a recent policy change ‐ a cap on the price of dairy quota ‐ is found to further contribute to increased farmland values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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