Elizabeth and Her Mountain Garden
In: Women: a cultural review, Band 28, Heft 1-2, S. 40-55
ISSN: 1470-1367
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In: Women: a cultural review, Band 28, Heft 1-2, S. 40-55
ISSN: 1470-1367
This article examines a recent amendment to Ontario's mental health legislation that was named "in memory" of Brian Smith, a local television personality killed by Jeffrey Arenburg, a person diagnosed with a mental illness. Rather than evaluating the socio-legal validity of "Brian's Law", it critically attends to the emergent "narrative of commemoration" that helped consolidate collective memory of the event. The genesis of the legislation is traced through public documents that support the "storying" of the murder, inquest, and legislative debate, including the "mythologizing" of Smith and the derisive story of Arenburg. Both representations are essential to the social and political efficacy of this "double-narrative" and the formal process of commemoration. The "legacy" of Brian Smith as exemplar of moral and social responsibility depends upon the alternative public conception of Arenburg, as mentally ill and morally ambiguous. Essentially, this narrative reaches beyond individual experience, and even social memory, and becomes enshrined in law as institutional memory.
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In: Journal of LGBT issues in counseling, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 2-17
ISSN: 1553-8338
In: Probation journal: the journal of community and criminal justice, Band 48, Heft 2, S. 139-142
ISSN: 1741-3079
In: International journal of population data science: (IJPDS), Band 5, Heft 5
ISSN: 2399-4908
IntroductionThe increasing accessibility of data through digitization and linkage has resulted in Indigenous and allied individuals, scholars, practitioners, and data users recognizing a need to advance ways that assert Indigenous sovereignty and governance within data environments. Advances are being talked about around the world for how Indigenous data is collected, used, stored, shared, linked, and analysed.
Objectives and ApproachDuring the International Population Data Linkage Network Conference in September of 2018, two sessions were hosted and led by international collaborators that focused on regional Indigenous health data linkage. Notes, discussions, and artistic contributions gathered from the conference led to collaborative efforts to highlight the common approaches to Indigenous data linkage, as discussed internationally. This presentation will share the braided culmination of these discussions and offer S.E.E.D.S as a set of guiding Indigenous data linkage principles.
ResultsS.E.E.D.S emerges as a living and expanding set of guiding principles that: 1) prioritizes Indigenous Peoples' right to Self-determination; 2) makes space for Indigenous Peoples to Exercise sovereignty; 3) adheres to Ethical protocols; 4) acknowledges and respects Data stewardship and governance, and; 5) works to Support reconciliation between Indigenous Peoples and settler states. S.E.E.D.S aims to centre and advance Indigenous-driven population data linkage and research while weaving together common global approaches to Indigenous data linkage.
Conclusion / ImplicationsEach of the five elements of S.E.E.D.S interweave and need to be enacted together to create a positive Indigenous data linkage environment. When implemented together, the primary goals of the S.E.E.D.S Principles is to guide positive Indigenous population health data linkage in an effort to create more meaningful research approaches through improved Indigenous-based research processes. The implementation of these principles can, in turn, lead to better measurements of health progress that are critical to enhancing health care policy and improving health and wellness outcomes for Indigenous populations.
In: International journal of population data science: (IJPDS), Band 3, Heft 4
ISSN: 2399-4908
IntroductionIn Ontario, First Nations are increasingly seeking population-level data about the health of their citizens. However, First Nations people are not readily identified in standard health administrative data and indirect strategies, such as the use of on-reserve addresses, are limited in scope and validity.
Objectives and ApproachThe Chiefs of Ontario entered into a Data Governance Agreement with the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) that enabled the linkage of the federal Indian Register (IR) to data at ICES. This study examined the impact of the IR linkage on First Nations population estimates and location of residence, measured by postal code or residence code. Overall, and for each First Nation community in Ontario, we compared First Nations population estimates from the ICES data with and without the IR linkage to estimates available from Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC).
ResultsWithout the IR, using only Ontario residence codes or postal codes that were unique to a given community, 62,242 individuals were identified as living in First Nations communities. This is approximately 30% lower than the current INAC on-reserve population estimate of 92,234 for First Nations communities in Ontario. Adding the IR allowed the use of non-unique postal codes as well, resulting in the identification of an additional 15,183 First Nations individuals. It also allowed the identification of over 113,000 First Nations individuals who live outside of First Nations communities, especially in urban areas. Finally, the combination of residence information and the IR permits communities to identify their registered member living within and outside their communities.
Conclusion/ImplicationsUsing the IR in combination with geographic residence information, made possible through the Data Governance Agreement signed between Chiefs of Ontario and ICES, will provide First Nations communities with more accurate and complete population estimates, which is key to the production of useful and relevant First Nations-specific health research.
In: Women: a cultural review, Band 28, Heft 1-2, S. 1-6
ISSN: 1470-1367
In: Human services organizations management, leadership & governance, Band 38, Heft 2, S. 178-192
ISSN: 2330-314X
In: Impact assessment and project appraisal, Band 19, Heft 4, S. 297-309
ISSN: 1471-5465
In: International journal of population data science: (IJPDS), Band 5, Heft 5
ISSN: 2399-4908
IntroductionWhile First Nations communities are well aware of the unique health challenges and requirements of their populations, research evidence is often needed to support this knowledge. First Nations communities face continual challenges accessing data pertaining to the health of their people that is held by the government or other organizations.
Objectives and ApproachThrough the Applied Health Research Question (AHRQ) program at ICES, First Nations communities in Ontario, Canada, have an avenue to access vital population health information about their people. While keeping questions of privacy, data sovereignty, data governance, and the OCAP® principles at the forefront, First Nations partners are active members and collaborators on community driven projects that are of importance to their communities. An Indigenous health data training program has also been developed to run concurrently with these projects, to enhance research knowledge and capacity within partner First Nations communities.
ResultsFirst Nations community partners are the main drivers in deciding and refining the research questions for their projects. They are engaged throughout the project process to ensure the production of results that suit the specific needs of the partners. Project results are only shared with the partners, who utilize and disseminate them as appropriate within their communities.
Conclusion / ImplicationsWith access to previously difficult to access population health data sources, First Nations communities are able to use health system data as an additional tool to better plan and implement community health programs, to lobby for additional funding, and ultimately to contribute to positive policy change.
In: American Indian culture and research journal: AICRJ, Band 44, Heft 2, S. 89-100
First Nations people in Canada have demonstrated and continue to demonstrate persistent and resilient cultural, linguistic, and traditional endurance: survivance. The devastation resulting from centuries of health pandemics such as smallpox, influenza, cholera, tuberculosis, measles, and scarlet fever reinforce the ongoing resilience of First Nations people, cultures, and traditions in Canada. Despite the history of pandemic-related trauma and a myriad of social, political, environmental, and health challenges, as well as the added burden that COVID-19 is placing on the healthcare system in Canada, First Nations' organizations and leadership are enacting their inherent rights to sovereignty and governance. While First Nations are bracing for the expected negative impacts of COVID-19, they are doing so in ways that respect and honor their histories, cultures, languages, and traditions. First Nations are acting to protect some of the most vulnerable people in their communities including elders, knowledge keepers, and storytellers who carry with them irreplaceable traditional and cultural knowledges.
In: The B.E. journal of economic analysis & policy, Band 7, Heft 1
ISSN: 1935-1682
Abstract
We develop a model of the household that includes pets. We use over twenty years of data from the Consumer Expenditure Survey to consider pet ownership and expenditures for single and married households. Households with very young children are less likely to own pets and have lower pet expenditures, showing a substitute relationship. Households with older children are more likely to own pets, suggesting a complementary relationship. However, households with more children show reduced pet spending, evidence of a substitute relationship. Surprisingly, when the effect of income on pet ownership and pet spending are jointly considered in computing the income elasticities, women in married households have smaller income elasticities for pet expenditures than do men. This finding is the opposite of what has been found for women and men with regard to expenditures on children.
Books and other materials are often challenged, censored, or banned on the grounds that they are inappropriate for children and teens, and the most commonly-cited reasons include sexual content, objectionable language, and violence. But throughout history, books have also been challenged on political grounds. In the realm of Young Adult literature, the censoring of political topics is sometimes less overt.
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Rusty on your political theory? Chomsky who? Here are some people and philosophies you need to know.
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The following resources represent a selection of starting points for finding information about dystopian literature, political movements, activism opportunities, and current radical thought.
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