43 results on '"David A, Brown"'
Search Results
2. Securities lawyer heads up RCMP pension investigation.
- Subjects
PENSIONS ,INSURANCE plans - Abstract
The article focuses on an investigation into allegations relating to RCMP pension and insurance plans. Honorable Stockwell Day, Minister of Public Safety in Ontario, appoints David A. Brown, counsel to Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg, to lead an independent investigation. Denise Revine, a human resources director for the RCMP, discovered managers using the pension plan as a slush fund for millions of dollars in operating expenses that had nothing to do with pensions.
- Published
- 2007
3. L'État canadien et la reconnaissance des droits religieux autochtones.
- Author
-
Gélinas, Claude
- Subjects
RECONNAISSANCE operations ,LIENS - Abstract
Résumé: La politique actuelle de réconciliation qui guide les rapports que l'État canadien entretient avec les peuples autochtones affiche une certaine discontinuité en matière de reconnaissance de leurs droits religieux. D'une part, les gouvernements accordent aux Autochtones certains privilèges à des fins de valorisation de leurs particularismes religieux dans l'espace public, d'une manière qui ne s'étend pas nécessairement à d'autres segments de la société. Parallèlement, par l'entremise de lois et d'ententes politiques, des nations autochtones se sont vu reconnaître des droits et privilèges en lien avec leur sphère religieuse, lesquels demeurent toutefois largement assujettis au cadre normatif établi par la majorité. Enfin, les tribunaux peinent jusqu'à présent à considérer les particularismes religieux des nations autochtones en tant que motif décisionnel. Cette reconnaissance à géométrie variable laisse transparaître un relent de colonialisme suivant lequel la dimension symbolique est valorisée, au détriment des avenues susceptibles de mener à une réelle autonomie des nations autochtones en matière d'expression religieuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Enhancing researcher capacity to engage youth in research: Researchers' engagement experiences, barriers and capacity development priorities.
- Author
-
Hawke, Lisa D., Darnay, Karleigh, Relihan, Jacqueline, Khaleghi‐Moghaddam, Mohammad, Barbic, Skye, Lachance, Lisa, Ben‐David, Shelly, Brown, Marion, Iyer, Srividya, Chaim, Gloria, Soklaridis, Sophie, Kidd, Sean A., Halsall, Tanya, Mathias, Steve, and Henderson, Joanna
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHI-squared test ,FISHER exact test ,MEDICAL care research ,MEDICAL research ,NEEDS assessment ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,T-test (Statistics) ,PATIENT participation ,HUMAN research subjects ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: There is increasing emphasis on engaging youth in research about youth, their needs, experiences and preferences, notably in health services research. By engaging youth as full partners, research becomes more feasible and relevant, and the validity and richness of findings are enhanced. Consequently, researchers need guidance in engaging youth effectively. This study examines the experiences, needs and knowledge gaps of researchers. Methods: Eighty‐four researchers interested in youth engagement training were recruited via snowball sampling. They completed a survey regarding their youth engagement experiences, attitudes, perceived barriers and capacity development needs. Data were analysed descriptively, and comparisons were made based on current engagement experience. Results: Participants across career stages and disciplines expressed an interest in increased capacity development for youth engagement. They had positive attitudes about the importance and value of youth engagement, but found it to be complex. Participants reported requiring practical guidance to develop their youth engagement practices and interest in a network of youth‐engaged researchers and on‐going training. Those currently engaging youth were more likely to report the need for greater appreciation of youth engagement by funders and institutions. Conclusions: Engaging youth in research has substantial benefits. However, skills in collaborating with youth to design, conduct and implement research have to be learned. Researchers need concrete training and networking opportunities to develop and maximize these skills. They also need mechanisms that formally acknowledge the value of engagement. Researchers and those promoting youth engagement in research are encouraged to consider these findings in their promotion and training endeavours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. LAWS OF CONCEPTION: A QUEER GENEALOGY OF CANADA’S ASSISTED HUMAN REPRODUCTION ACT.
- Author
-
Marvel, Stu
- Subjects
REPRODUCTIVE technology -- Law & legislation ,REPRODUCTIVE technology ,LGBTQ+ people - Published
- 2016
6. Has the Supreme Court of Canada Rejected “Originalism”?
- Author
-
Oliphant, Benjamin and Sirota, Léonid
- Subjects
CONSTITUTIONS ,JUDICIAL reform ,DEMOCRACY ,IDENTITY politics - Abstract
A number of core precepts of Canadian constitutional interpretation—that the Constitution is to be regarded as a “living tree” and that the intentions of the framers should not constrain its growth—have led to the common belief that “originalism” is flatly inconsistent with Canadian law and judicial practice. The authors set out to challenge this conventional wisdom. While one popular strain of originalist thought was rejected early in the life of the Charter, originalism has grown, changed and diversified a great deal in the last three decades. Today, most originalists are less focused on the subjective intention of the framers and more concerned with identifying a fixed original meaning of constitutional terms, which seeks to constrain the scope of constitutional doctrine but typically leaves considerable room for evolution in the application of that fixed meaning to concrete modern day controversies. In light of these developments, the authors argue that the conventional wisdom—that originalism has been squarely rejected by the Supreme Court of Canada—is not established by the case law to date, and many key decisions of the Court are fully compatible with modern originalist thought. Moreover, the authors suggest that the breezy invocation of constitutional buzzwords like “living tree”, while neglecting contemporary debates over constitutional interpretation, has led to a degree of malaise regarding how and under what circumstances the judiciary may alter the Constitution on our collective behalf. A better understanding of the debates surrounding modern originalism may help us identify the extent to which constitutional change ushered in through a majority vote of nine jurists, however eminent, is consistent with a commitment to self-governance in a constitutional democracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
7. NATO and Canada, 1990-1993.
- Author
-
WEATHERALL, IAN L.
- Subjects
CANADIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,CANADIAN military ,FOREIGN military bases ,INTERNATIONAL alliances ,20TH century Canadian military history ,TWENTIETH century ,MILITARY relations ,HISTORY - Abstract
In September 1991 the Canadian government announced that it would station a task force in Germany, to continue Canada's participation in NATO's defence of Western Europe. Six months later the government announced that Canada had cancelled the task force, which meant that by 1993 Canada would have no permanent military presence in Europe. Canada's allies were not pleased with the abrupt change, but while expressing their displeasure to Canada, they also thanked Canada for its military contribution during the Cold War, and reassured Canada that they understood Canada would continue to be an active member of the alliance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
8. The Problem of Amenity Migrants in North America and Europe.
- Author
-
Laitos, Jan G. and Ruckriegle, Heidi
- Subjects
AMENITY migration ,INTERNAL migration ,HOME ownership ,CULTURAL property ,HOUSING - Published
- 2013
9. Accountability in a collectivized environment: From Glassco to digital public administration.
- Author
-
Brown, David C.G.
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT accountability ,PUBLIC administration ,INFORMATION technology ,TRANSPARENCY in government ,CIVIL service ,POLITICAL communication ,CANADIAN politics & government, 1945- ,COMPUTER network resources - Abstract
Building on the 1962 Glassco Commission report, this article argues that the duality of collective and individual ministerial responsibility in the Canadian Westminster model is under-recognized and remains highly relevant. While reforms since the 1960s favoured individual responsibility, the growing impact of information and communications technologies ( ICTs) gives renewed significance to collective responsibility. This article reviews accountability challenges arising from ICT-influenced changes in the federal government's organization and relationships, including the shift from a traditional vertical departmental model towards an increasingly horizontal one. Accountability for this re-collectivized environment risks ineffectiveness for two reasons: the prime minister's view of his own role, and Parliament's difficulty in dealing with horizontal issues. If the risks are not recognized, Canadian democracy will be diminished. Sommaire En se fondant sur le rapport Glassco de 1962, le présent article soutient que la dualité de la responsabilité ministérielle collective et individuelle dans le modèle de Westminster au Canada n'est pas suffisamment reconnue et demeure hautement pertinente. Alors que, depuis les années 1970, les réformes ont encouragé la responsabilité individuelle, l'incidence croissante des technologies de l'information et des communications ( TIC) donne une importance renouvelée à la responsabilité collective. Cet article passe en revue les défis de la responsabilité découlant des changements influencés par les TIC dans l'organisation et les relations du gouvernement fédéral, y compris le glissement d'un modèle ministériel vertical traditionnel vers un modèle de plus en plus horizontal. L'imputabilité pour cet environnement re-collectivisé risque d'entraîner l'inefficacité pour deux raisons : la perception qu'a le Premier ministre de son propre rôle, et la difficulté qu'a le Parlement à traiter les questions horizontales. Faute de reconnaître les risques, c'est la démocratie canadienne qui sera perdante. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Rights Adjudication in a Plurinational State: the Supreme Court of Canada, Freedom of Religion, and the Politics of Reasonable Accommodation.
- Author
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CHOUDHRY, SUJIT
- Subjects
FREEDOM of religion ,RELIGION in the workplace laws ,FRENCH language ,JUDGES ,RELIGION & law - Abstract
Copyright of Osgoode Hall Law Journal is the property of Osgoode Hall Law School 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
- 2012
11. Advancing the Canada-US Alliance: The Use of History in Decision-Support.
- Author
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Gladman, Brad W. and Archambault, Peter M.
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL alliances ,CANADA-United States relations ,SECURITY management ,SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 - Abstract
The article focuses on the strategic defense relationship between U.S. and Canada, along with the use of history to understand the complexities of their alliance during the events of terrorism on September 11, 2001. It highlights the changes of the form and the structure of security and defense organizations in Canada and the U.S. It discusses how the new security and defense affect the alliance of both countries.
- Published
- 2012
12. Legislative Activity in the Canadian House of Commons: Does Majority or Minority Government Matter?
- Author
-
Conley, RichardS.
- Subjects
POLITICAL parties ,LEGISLATION ,POWER (Social sciences) ,POLITICAL science ,CANADIAN politics & government, 1945- ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
This study assesses the impact of majority and minority governments on legislative activity in the Canadian House of Commons. The quantitative analysis spans the 22nd to the 40th Parliaments (1953–2009) and examines legislative productivity and success by government type. The analysis of descriptive data confirms that minority governments are somewhat less productive and successful than their majority counterparts. However, the analysis emphasizes significant variation for majority governments. Neither governing context guarantees success or failure as contextual factors largely condition legislative activity. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Canadian Policy Towards Bangladesh: How Does the North Look at the South?
- Author
-
Haider, Zaglul
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,NATIONAL interest ,HUMAN rights ,DEMOCRACY ,COLD War, 1945-1991 - Abstract
Abstract The goal of the paper is to analyze the Canadian policy towards Bangladesh. In this paper I argue that Canadian approach towards Bangladesh was different in different phases of history. In the liberation war of Bangladesh Canada played a role that went against the interest of Bangladesh and suited with the triple alliance of the US-Pakistan and China. Against the backdrop of Cold War politics, Canadian policy demonstrated the reflection of her national interest. In the dawn of the independence of Bangladesh in the early 1970's Canada revised its policy, immediately recognized the new nation and supported Bangladesh's admission in to the Commonwealth, the United Nations and other international organizations. Since the threshold of Bangladesh's journey Canada emerged as a development partner of the new nation. Apart from significant aid, Canada also provided immigration facilities to the Bangladeshis. All these are consistent with its national interest. I also focus on the Canadian concerns over the violation of human rights and poor governance that gradually eroded the image of Bangladesh among the Canadian policy makers. Finally, I suggest a way out to improve relations between the two countries of the 'North' and 'South'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Grand Strategy, Culture, and Strategic Choice: A Review.
- Author
-
McDonough, David S.
- Subjects
MILITARY strategy ,STRATEGIC planning ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,MILITARY geography - Abstract
The article discusses the grand strategy theory of Carl von Clausewitz applied to the culture and strategic choice of Canada in military strategy during the Cold War. It examines the explanations of the region's war strategy related to the theory of foreign policy and international relations. An overview of the conceptual and methodological challenges to Canada's military strategy is provided. It also explores the strategy applied in North Atlantic Triangle in Ottawa, Ontario wherein the strategy requires industrial, human, and military resources.
- Published
- 2011
15. "In Considerable Doubt"? Canada and the Future of NATO.
- Author
-
Haglund, David G.
- Subjects
NATIONAL security ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,MILITARY policy ,INTERNATIONALISM ,SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 ,CANADIAN foreign relations, 1945- - Abstract
The article focuses on the relationship between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and Canada. It explores how and why is that NATO has managed to retain considerable significance to the Canadian security and defense policy a ten years after the September 11, 2011 terrorists attacks. It highlights the pessimism about NATO's future prospects expressed by Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper. It notes that Canada was more engaged with NATO than it had been since the start of the early 1950s, an engagement that correspond closely with liberal foreign policy doctrine.
- Published
- 2011
16. JUSTICE RAND'S COMMERCIAL LAW LEGACY: CONTRACTS AND BANKRUPTCY POLICIES.
- Author
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Telfer, Thomas G. W.
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL law ,BANKRUPTCY ,CONTRACTS - Abstract
An is presented concerning Justice Ivan Cleveland Rand's contributions for the improvement of commercial law in Canada. It mentions the changes he have made in dealing with bankruptcy and contracts policies based on the constitution. It cites the Rand's efforts in modifying the contract law. Furthermore, his modifications for bankruptcy are also mentioned.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Canada Revenue Agency as separate employer: Anomaly or model for the future?
- Author
-
Brown, David C.G.
- Subjects
CIVIL service personnel management ,GOVERNMENT agency reorganization ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,CANADIAN federal government ,PUBLIC administration - Abstract
In 1999, Revenue Canada became the Canada Customs and Revenue Agency (CCRA), with a governance model that combines traditional ministerial responsibility in program areas and Crown corporation governance in internal management. The greatest changes were in human resources management, where the agency became a separate employer, providing a rare opportunity to design from first principles. This article discusses the factors that led to the single most ambitious federal government “alternative service delivery” project. It then looks at the agency's governance model and the development and implementation of its human resources management regime, which sought to meet agency business requirements while responding to criticisms of the mainstream public-service model. The agency's workforce is on the scale of the larger provincial governments, and it provides extensive support to the provinces and territories, compounding the need for innovative governance and human resources management. The circumstances of moving to agency status and later reinforcements have contributed to its success and make it unlikely that the decision will be reversed, notwithstanding the later return of the Customs function to the mainstream public service. Tensions with broader public-service management objectives make it equally unlikely that the move will be replicated on a large scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Canada and the Bureaucratic Politics of State Fragility.
- Author
-
Desrosiers, Marie-Eve and Lagassé, Philippe
- Subjects
CANADIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,INTERVENTION (International law) ,FAILED states ,BUREAUCRACY ,CANADIAN politics & government, 1980- - Abstract
Canada's 2005 International Policy Statement announced that the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade and the Department of National Defence and the Canadian Forces were committed to “whole of government” interventions in failed and fragile states. This led both the Canadian government and outside observers to declare that Canada was successfully harmonising the aims and practices of its internationally focused departments and crafting a synergised approach to interventions in failed and fragile states. Drawing on Halperin and Clapp's organisational theory of bureaucratic politics, this paper argues instead that the foreign affairs and defence departments embraced the idea of failed and fragile states to reinforce their organisational essences and recycle their existing missions, roles, and capabilities. In addition, the departments used a “whole of government” approach to secure their autonomy, fence their respective functions, and enlarge their unique capabilities, under the guise of greater efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. CIVIL ENFORCEMENT IN CANADIAN SECURITIES LAW.
- Author
-
Nichols, Christopher C.
- Subjects
NATIONAL security ,LAW enforcement ,CANADIAN politics & government ,CIVIL liability ,DISCLOSURE laws ,SECURITY systems - Abstract
Private enforcement of securities laws enhances incentives for issuers and other market participants to comply with their statutory and regulatory obligations, especially their disclosure obligations. Assessing the effectiveness of a jurisdiction's private securities law enforcement regime requires not only quantitative evaluations of enforcement intensity, but also anuanced consideration of the qualitative institutional context within which the jurisdiction's enforcement regime has developed and operates. This article contextualises the regime for civil enforcement of securities law in Canada, focusing principally on statutory civil liability for continuous disclosure violations. The development of this statutory remedy, its apparent strengths and acknowledged weaknesses are considered not only within the context of Canadian public enforcement mechanisms, but also within a broader institutional context, including an examination of complementary developments relating to class actions and lawyers' contingency fees and key shareholder-friendly provisions of Canadian corporate law. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. 50 Years of a Complex but Positive Relationship: Cuba-Canada Relations 1959-2009.
- Author
-
Klepak, Hal
- Subjects
CANADIAN foreign relations ,FOREIGN relations of the United States ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,CUBAN Revolution, 1959 ,INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
The government of Fidel Castro has over this long period maintained correct if not always warm relations with a country which could have been considered one of the least likely to have been in such a position. In 1959 Canada was in a political situation of seemingly exceptional dominance by the United States of its foreign policy and economy. That dependence, in the view of many, has grown even firmer over the last half-century. Yet the relationship between Cuba and Canada, far from flagging, has prospered even though not without headaches as well as ups and downs. This connection is rightly considered extraordinary, but the basic elements of it have remained constant over the years and explain why it has at times flourished and rarely been put in question. The key factor here is that the maintenance of the relationship has always been at least to some degree of mutual advantage for both the states and, in the case of Canada, for the governing party of the time. Other elements come to light as one makes an overview of the fifty years of the relationship but the bedrock of mutual advantage remains present throughout. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Canada and the war in Afghanistan: NATO's odd man out steps forward.
- Author
-
Jockel, JosephT. and Sokolsky, JoelJ.
- Subjects
CANADIAN military ,CANADIAN foreign relations, 1945- ,21ST century Afghanistan history - Abstract
At the Cold War's close, Canada was NATO's 'odd man out', contributing relatively little to western defence. Today, Canada is the third-largest contributor of combat forces to NATO's efforts in Afghanistan. Canada got into Afghanistan partly as an alternative to getting into Iraq. But fighting the Taliban also serves the Canadian national interest in combating terrorism and has dovetailed well with recent efforts to 'transform' the Canadian military and use it more effectively in overseas development efforts. However, the Canadian commitment to Afghanistan beyond the current February 2009 deadline is in doubt. Public support for the combat dimension of the Afghanistan operations remains weak. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Social and Legal Aspects of Doctoral Training in Canada: Criteria and Consequences of Admission.
- Author
-
Leyton‐Brown, David
- Subjects
DOCTORAL programs ,DOCTOR of education degree ,POSTDOCTORAL programs ,SCHOOL admission ,HIGHER education ,FOREIGN students ,DOCTORAL students ,GRADUATE students - Abstract
Doctoral education in Canada is the constitutional responsibility of provincial governments, which authorize the awarding of degrees by universities, who determine admission criteria and procedures, as well as degree and programme requirements. Admission to a doctoral programme is either with a prior master's degree or by transfer from a master's programme upon excellent academic and research performance. The Canadian doctoral student population includes a high proportion of international students and female students, although both vary by discipline. Tuition fees vary by province, and doctoral students typically receive financial support to cover tuition and living costs through scholarships, teaching assistantships, or research assistantships (from the supervisor's research grants). This article addresses the tensions felt by doctoral students at being both students and employees. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Defense Against Help: Explaining Canada-U.S. Security Relations.
- Author
-
Barry, Donald and Bratt, Duane
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,SELF-help (Law) ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
An essay on international relations between Canada and U.S. It offers a history on the foreign policy of both countries and examine how self-help associated with the country's security practices. It illustrates the importance of defense policy in strengthening the so called U.S.-Canada "security bargain," and discusses the influential effect of defense against self-help strategy in enhancing the country's access to the U.S. market.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The cold war on CANADIAN SOIL: MILITARIZING A NORTHERN ENVIRONMENT.
- Author
-
Lackenbauer, P. Whitney and Farish, Matthew
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,DEW Line ,MILITARISM ,MILITARY sociology ,MILITARY policy ,AIR defenses - Abstract
The article focuses on the history of military activity on Canadian soil, with an emphasis on the North, specifically examining a set of crucial projects and operations that redefined not only physical terrain but associated imaginative understandings of nature. The history of Cold War Canada is littered with suitable examples, from early military exercises and the construction of the Distant Early Warning (DEW) radar line to more recent missile tests and low-level training flights. According to the author, the case of the Cold War Canadian North is similar insofar as militarization was frequently disguised behind loftier goals.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Locked In? Canada's External Constitution under Global Trade Governance.
- Author
-
Clarkson, Stephen
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL trade ,TERMS of trade ,COMMERCIAL policy ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The negotiation of supranational trade regimes may well be considered by historians as one of the most valuable developments which brought the twentieth century to a highly polarized close. At one pole, the specialized community of trade experts hailed these treaties that set up global and continental institutions as giant steps forward in establishing the universal rule of economic law, with a direct, trade-and investment-expanding impact on the world's economy. The prime consequence of economic liberalization was seen in its power-constraining effects on the world's nation states. Environmental non-governmental organizations, for instance, took to attacking the World Trade Organization (WTO) or North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) as powerful forces sapping the capacity of national policy regimes to achieve ecological sustainability. In return for a necessary loss of formal sovereignty, governments calculate that they extract specific benefits from participating in the new continental or global organizations. There is no Canadian law saying that the federal government must treat foreign-owned furniture companies at least as well as it treats Canadian-owned furniture firms. But since the trade agreements extended the national treatment principle from goods to investments and even to services, if any federal or provincial or municipal government discriminates in favor of a nationally or provincially owned firm, the government of Canada is liable to legal attack by another government belonging to NAFTA or the WTO that deems one of its companies in Canada to have suffered unequal treatment. Indeed much of the constraint that the WTO has imposed on the Canadian state that Canada comply with the U.S.-inspired WTO rules on behalf of U.S.-based pharmaceutical and entertainment oligopolists.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Playing by the New Washington Rules: The U.S.-Canada Relationship, 1994-2003.
- Author
-
Thompson, John Herd
- Subjects
CANADIAN foreign relations ,FOREIGN relations of the United States ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
The article examines bilateral relations between the United States and Canada from 1994-2003. The United States applied the basic principles of its foreign policy to Canada. Considered in comparison with the present ill will, U.S. and Canadian approaches to international issues appear to have been more harmonious throughout the eight years of ex-President Bill Clinton's administration than they actually were. Canada consistently denied the U.S. assertion that communist Cuba remained a threat to North American security. Canada's crusade for a world ban on anti-personnel landmines culminated in the multilateral Land Mines treaty signed by more than one hundred countries in Ottawa in 1997; the United States, however, was notably not among them. Canada remains the most important foreign consumer of American popular culture, importing more than $4 billion of cultural commodities annually, four times the value of U.S. cultural imports from Canada.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The multi-level state: Canada in the semi-periphery of both continentalism and globalization.
- Author
-
Clarkson, Stephen
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,POLITICAL science ,CIVIL society - Abstract
Focuses on the accelerating globalization and fragmentation of the state of the state in Canada. Redistribution of governmental functions; Interconnections evolving governmental forms with civil society; Analysis of the dynamics that links the level of governance with civil society.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Canadian-American Relations: Time for Cassandra?
- Author
-
Roussel, Stéphane
- Subjects
FOREIGN relations of the United States ,CANADIAN foreign relations ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,CONFLICT management - Abstract
Analyzes the state of Canadian-American relations as of Summer 2000. Achievement of harmony between the two countries; Identification of the structural and situational factors in the relations; Examination of the factors influencing the state of the relation; Roots of the 'remarkable relationship' between the Canadian and American governments; Means and mechanisms for conflict management.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The 1987 National Forest Sector Strategy and the search for federal role in Canadian forest policy.
- Author
-
Howlett, Michael
- Subjects
FOREST policy ,FORESTS & forestry ,FEDERAL government ,DELEGATED legislation ,POLITICAL science ,FEDERAL regulation ,PROVINCIAL governments ,CONSTITUTIONS - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Public Administration 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
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The application of Canadian and U.S. trade remedy laws: irreconcilable expectations?
- Author
-
Skogstad, Grace
- Subjects
FREE trade ,TRADE negotiation ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,BIAS (Law) ,PROTECTIONISM ,ADMINISTRATIVE courts ,COMMERCIAL policy - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Public Administration 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
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Canadian Federalism: The Entanglement of Meech Lake and the Free Trade Agreement.
- Author
-
Gibbins, Roger
- Subjects
FEDERAL government ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,FREE trade ,FREE ports & zones ,TERMS of trade ,ELECTIONS ,FILIBUSTERS (Political science) ,CONTRACTS - Abstract
In retrospect, 1988 may turn out to be a pivotal year in the evolution of Canadian federalism. The November genera/election was dominated by an intense national debate over the proposed Free Trade Agreement with the United States. Although the Free Trade Agreement was seen to have important ramifications for Canadian federalism, coherent discussion of those ramifications became blurred in the face of a much broader and emotionally partisan debate. Concerns about the nature of Canadian federalism were instead absorbed by, and in part displaced by, an emerging national debate on the Meech Lake Constitutional Accord. The Accord had been reached by the eleven first ministers in 1987, but by the end of 1988 it had yet to receive legislative ratification in Manitoba and New Brunswick. In the aftermath of the 1988 election, debates over free trade and the Accord have become progressively entangled. While this entanglement did not alter the outcome of the free trade debate, it has had important consequences for the Meech Lake Accord, and thus for the future of Canadian federalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
32. A GUIDE TO CANADIAN PRESSINGS.
- Author
-
McCullough, Peter S. M.
- Subjects
TEST pressings (Sound recordings) ,SOUND recording industry ,RECORD collecting - Abstract
The article presents a guide to pressings of Canadian record labels. It states that the most perplexing issue for most record collectors in Canada is usually accurate identification of original and later Canadian issues from the 1950s and 1960s. Differences between Canadian and U.S. labels are discussed. The colour and design characteristics of most original Canadian shadow labels of the 1950s and 1960s are summarized. U.S. labels issued in Canada include Atco, Carlton, and Deluxe.
- Published
- 2010
33. ASK THE EXPERTS.
- Subjects
BOATS & boating ,WATERWAYS ,LOCOMOTION - Abstract
The article presents questions and answers related to boating including the size of cleats to be installed on a dock, things to bring when going on a trip through the Radeau Waterway in Canada and ways to make a boat steer easier.
- Published
- 2010
34. Four Fatalities Among Several Undocumented Indian Nationals Apprehended At U.S.-Canada Border.
- Subjects
DEMOCRATS (United States) ,GENOCIDE ,CANADA-United States relations ,ELECTRONIC health records ,SOUTH Asians ,AWARD winners ,SIKHS ,ROLE models - Abstract
The article discusses about the fatalities due to freezing temperatures, some Indian nationals were apprehended by U.S. Border Patrol, and some found dead by Canadian law enforcement in January 19, 2022.
- Published
- 2022
35. Untitled.
- Subjects
AIR forces - Published
- 2021
36. Canadian Newsletter.
- Author
-
Rinehart, Alan and Adams, Bruce
- Subjects
MUSIC industry ,SOUND recordings ,GUITARISTS ,FLUTE players - Abstract
The article reports on several updates in Canadian music industry. Topics mentioned include the release of the flute and guitar recording of guitarist Davis Joachim and flautist Eric Wilner, the performance of chamber opera El Cimarrón by Hans Werner Henze in Vancouver, and features the composer Michael Conway Baker.
- Published
- 1984
37. Certificates: A Survey of Our Status and Review of Successful Programs in the U.S. and Canada. A Collection of Papers Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Council of Graduate Schools (37th, Washington, DC, December 1997).
- Author
-
Council of Graduate Schools, Washington, DC.
- Abstract
This collection of conference papers examines some of the broad issues as well as specific institutional approaches to postbaccalaureate certificate programs. The first paper, "A Survey of Graduate Certificate Policies, Procedures, and Programs" (Wayne Patterson), reports on a survey of the members of the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS) and their stand on graduate certificate programs. The next four papers analyze programs at specific institutions and illustrate the considerations and challenges presented by certificate programs; they are: (1) "Graduate Certificates at Indiana University and Considerations for Graduate Educators" (Sheila Cooper); (2) "The NJIT Graduate Certificate Program" (Gale Tenan Spak); (3) "Graduate Certificate Programs at Arizona State University" (Bianca L. Bernstein); and (4) "Graduate Certificate Programs at the University of Colorado-Boulder" (Carol B. Lynch). The final paper, "Graduate Diplomas and the Ontario Council on Graduate Studies Appraisal Process" (David Leyton-Brown), analyzes ways bring nondegree graduate study into the appraisal process. Six appendices present data on and brief descriptions of the member institutions of the CGS that have certificate programs, an overview of the New Jersey Institute of Technology graduate certificate offerings, together with a profile of the 1997 class, and the approval process and primary elements of certificate programs proposals at Arizona State University. (RAB)
- Published
- 1998
38. Academic Mobility in a Changing World: Regional and Global Trends. Higher Education Policy 29.
- Author
-
Blumenthal, Peggy
- Abstract
This volume contains papers on regional and global trends that affect the political factors which are changing the context within which academic mobility occurs: (1) "Introduction" (by Peggy Blumenthal and others); (2) "Political Dimensions of Regionalism in a Changing World" (David Leyton-Brown); (3) "Economic Dimensions of Regionalism" (Gary Hufbauer and Anup Malani); (4) "Cultural Dimensions of Regionalization" (Robert Picht); (5) "International Education from the Perspective of Emergent World Regionalism: The Academic, Scientific and Technological Dimension" (Malcolm Skilbeck and Helen Connell); (6) "Developments in the Internationalization of Higher Education in Europe" (Gisela Baumgratz-Gangl); (7) "Regional Cooperation and Mobility in a Global Setting: The Example of the European Community:" (Alan Smith); (8) "Academic Mobility Programmes in a Regional Context: A German Viewpoint" (Karl Roeloffs); (9) "East-West Academic Mobility within Europe: Trends and Issues" (Ladislav Cerych); (10) "The Hungarian Experience of Academic Cooperation with North America and the European Community" (Tamas Lajos); (11) "Academic Mobility in Russia" (Stanislav Merkurlev); (12) "International Cooperation Activities of Canadian Universities: North American and Other Current Trends" (Eva Egron-Polak); (13) "The Future of Educational Exchange in North America: A View from the United States" (Stanley N. Katz); (14) "From Threat to Opportunity: A New Perspective for the Development of International Education in North America" (Sylvia B. Ortega Salazar); (15) "Academic Mobility and Exchange in Brazil" (Eunice Ribeuro Durham); (16) "Japan and International Academic Mobility in Asia and the Pacific" (Yoshiya Abe); (17) "Academic Mobility in South-East Asia and the Role of Thai Higher Education" (Wichit Srisa-An); (18) "International Education in Australia: Historical Trends, Current Developments and Challenges for the Future" (Elizabeth Anderson); (19) "International Academic Cooperation in the Arab Region: Past, Present and Future" (Salah Morsi); (20) "Regional Cooperation and Mobility in Higher Education: The Implications for Human Resource Development in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Relevance of Recent Initiatives to Europe" (Anthony Smallwood and T. L. Maliyamkono); (21) "Research on Academic Mobility and International Cooperation in Higher Education: An Agenda for the Future" (Ulrich Teichler); (22) "Academic Mobility in a Changing World: Concluding Reflections on the Issues at Stakes" (Crauford D. Goodwin); and (23) "Bibliography" (Albert Over). The bibliography contains about 1,500 references. (JB)
- Published
- 1996
39. Companies put up the 'no-smoking' sign.
- Subjects
SMOKING cessation ,EMPLOYEE health promotion ,COST control ,EMPLOYEE morale - Abstract
The article reports on the increasing number of U.S. and Canadian companies that are paying their workers to stop smoking on the job in May 1978, which is based on the data released by the Dartnell Institute of Business Research in Chicago, Illinois. The companies claim that smoking is both physically unhealthy for workers and economically unhealthy for businesses. According to the Group Against Smoking Pollution (GASP) research director James R. Smith, reducing smoking can cut absenteeism, lower cleanup and maintenance costs and improve worker morale.
- Published
- 1978
40. Researchers Provide Psychiatric Care From Afar.
- Author
-
Hampton, Tracy
- Subjects
TELEMEDICINE ,MENTAL health ,CHILD psychology ,CHILD mental health services ,ANXIETY disorders ,OPPOSITIONAL defiant disorder in children ,MEDICAL telematics - Abstract
This article reports on the field of telemedicine, which attempts to address the issue of those patients who need the latest advances in clinical treatments to overcome medical conditions, but are without access to it. Researchers in Canada are testing a program in which mental health care is provided from afar to children with conditions such as oppositional defiant disorder and anxiety disorders. Patrick McGrath, PhD, founder of the program, commented on how often the mental health care providers actually see the children.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Jurassic Carbonate Bank evaluation.
- Author
-
Kidston, Arthur G., Brown, David E., Smith, Brenton M., and Altheim, Brian
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT agencies ,PETROLEUM geology ,ISLANDS ,OFFSHORE oil & gas industry ,PETROLEUM prospecting ,OIL wells ,CARBONATES - Abstract
The article reports that the 2005 study by the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board documents the geology of the Upper Jurassic Abenaki Formation carbonate platform, located along the edge of the continental margin, offshore Nova Scotia. Within the Abenaki, three main depositional facies are recognized: an inner low-energy shelf, an outer high-energy shelf, including the bank edge, and a deeper water foreslope. Of the 28 wells drilled from 1970-2004 on the Abenaki Platform in the study area, 10 were bank-edge wildcats, seven were delineation wells at the Deep Panuke Field, and 11 other wells were drilled either landward or basinward of the margin.
- Published
- 2007
42. ASHRAE, CaGBC Partner to Advance Sustainability.
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE buildings ,SUSTAINABLE development ,COMMUNITY development ,STRATEGIC alliances (Business) - Abstract
The article reports on a strategic alliance between the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Airconditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) and the Canada Green Building Council (CAGBC) to advance sustainable buildings and sustainable community development. The organizations will cooperate on the development and maintenance of technical standards, marketing, and communications.
- Published
- 2006
43. Ductless Shipments in Canada on Increase.
- Subjects
AIR conditioning industry ,HEATING & ventilation industry ,AIR conditioning ,HEATING equipment industry - Abstract
The article reports on the growth of ductless split system shipments in Canada for the first quarter of 2006. According to the Heating, Refrigeration & Air Conditioning Institute (HRAI) of Canada, ductless shipments increased from 6,095 in the first quarter of 2005 to 9,876 in the first quarter of 2006. The article highlights the HRAI's reports on the heating, refrigeration and air conditioning industries in Canada.
- Published
- 2006
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