Description based on: week ending April 12, 2002; title from caption. ; "Canada newscan is a weekly summary of selected Canadian news stories drawn from various Canadian news organizations. They do not necessarily reflect the policies or views of the Government of Canada." ; Loose-leaf. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Includes index. ; English title only 1st Session, 1st Parliament 1867/68-1st Session, 30th Parliament 1975/76. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Absorbed its Journaux du Sénat du Canada, ISSN 0703-2587, issued separately in French, 1st Session, 1st Parliament 1867/68-1st Session, 30th Parliament 1975/76.
The means by which banking is regulated in Canada is quite distinct from the methods which are employed in the United States. Moreover, the jurisdictional boundary between provincial regulation of securities and federal regulation of banking has created a regulatory penumbral zone. Additionally, the fact that the present regulation is largely the product of consultation between the banking industry and the government raises the question of the effectiveness of a regulatory scheme which is essentially consensual. The banking industry in Canada, as 'well as that of the United States, appears to be departing from its traditional role. The extent to which current regulation will be effective in these areas is perhaps the most important question confronted in this comprehensive treatment of Canadian banking.
Title varies slightly. ; Special session of the Dominion Parliament August, 1914.--Before Canadian clubs . December, 1914.--In England, Canada, and the United States July-December, 1915.--In New York City November 18th, 1916.--In Canada and the United Kingdom December, 1916.--In the House of commons, on the Imperial war cabinet, 1917, the Imperial war conference, 1917, and compulsory military enlistment, May 18th, 1917.--In Canada and the United Kingdom, June-September, 1918.--On the treaty of peace. Delivered in the Canadian House of commons on Tuesday, September 2, 1919. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Canada and Cuba have a long historical relationship, in governmental and non-governmental realms alike. While hundreds of Canadian students take part in educational exchanges from a variety of Canadian universities, Canadian/Cuban scholarly ties are not as strong as they are in the US or even the UK. There are a handful of internationally recognized Cuba scholars who have been working in Canada for some decades, among them John M. Kirk, Hal Klepak and Keith Ellis. Cuban scholarship in Canada is still notably scant and it cannot really be classified in generational terms. However it is clear that the work of these senior scholars is bearing fruit, as other scholars located in Canada are increasingly working in Cuban Studies, in both teaching and research. A few of these scholars came together recently to discuss their experiences. This isn't an exhaustive or representative group. The participants in this roundtable conversation include those trained as Cubanists, trained in other fields but with more recent research and/or teaching ties to Cuba, and a Cuban educated in Canada. We came together to discuss what we see as the state of the field in Cuban/Canadian studies today and in the future.
Vols. for issued as Canada. Parliament. Sessional papers (Grad J 103 .H6). ; Report year irregular: ends June 30, 1868-1906; March 31, 1907- ; Mode of access: Internet.
Les autochtones du Canada n'entrent pas dans le cadre du « Multiculturalisme » canadien ; car ce dernier est une politique explicite d'immigration et d'intégration de nouveaux arrivants ; mais ils font partie de la diversité culturelle du pays. Les histoires de grandes conquêtes sont toujours heureuses pour les conquérants ; le sort des conquis est moins aventureuse, et la vision des faits est rarement relaté en intégrant les mêmes éléments. L'arrivée des français et anglais aux XVIème et XVIIème siècles a marqué la fin de l'autonomie des autochtones. Les systèmes politiques, militaires, religieux, et judiciaires des nouveaux arrivants ont conjugués leurs forces et domaines d'expertise afin de déposséder les autochtones de leurs terres d'abord, et dans une certaine mesure, de leur identité culturelle. Malgré la « richesse de la complémentarité », les humains vivent la différence de l'autre le plus souvent comme un danger. Face à une minorité différente, le plus simple pour la culture dominante est de chercher à assurer que l'autre soit « intégré ». Aujourd'hui, au Canada, il y a trois catégories officielles d'autochtones : les Indiens, les Inuits et les Métis. Les Indiens et les Inuits représentent les premiers peuples à avoir colonisé le Canada. Comme il est résumé par Bone (2002), les scientifiques pensent que les premiers humains à avoir colonisé le Canada arrivèrent de l'Asie par le Détroit de Béring il y a environ 30 à 40 ka. Ils ont pu traverser le détroit à pied à la poursuite de gibier puisque le niveau de la mer était de l'ordre de 100 m plus bas à cause d'une période glaciaire (Wisconsinan). Vers -12 à -18 ka, un corridor libre de glace s'ouvra à l'est des rocheuses et ces premiers chasseurs ont pu migrer vers le sud. La colonisation de l'est de l'Arctique fut beaucoup plus tardive. Cette région fut peuplée vers -5 ka lors du retrait des glaciers par des chasseurs qui avaient développé des techniques de chasse en mer (phoques, baleines, autres mammifères marins…). Les statistiques sur la localisation des autochtones au Canada aujourd'hui proviennent du site de Statistiques Canada cité en introduction et dans la rubrique Source des Données.
Public access to government information forms the foundation of a healthy liberal democracy, but because this information can be precarious, it needs stewardship. Government Information in Canada provides analysis about the state of Canadian government information publishing. Practitioners from across the country draw on decades of experience and hands-on practice to offer a broad, well-founded survey of history, procedures, and emerging issues—particularly the challenges posed by the transition of government information from print to digital access. This is an indispensable book for librarians, archivists, researchers, journalists, and everyone who uses government information and wants to know more about its publication, circulation, and retention. This item can also be accessed through the University of Alberta Press website: https://www.uap.ualberta.ca/titles/924-9781772124446-government-information-in-canada TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction: The Evolution of Government Information Services and Stewardship in Canada - Amanda Wakaruk and Sam-chin Li I Historical Overviews 1. Government Publication Deposit Programs: The Canadian Federal, Provincial, and Territorial Landscapes - Graeme Campbell, Michelle Lake, and Catherine McGoveran 2. Official Publications and Select Digital Library Collections at Library and Archives Canada, 1923 to the Present - Tom J. Smyth 3. Parliamentary Information in Canada: Form and Function - Talia Chung and Maureen Martyn 4. Commissions and Tribunals - Caron Rollins II Provincial Landscape 5. Alberta Government Publishing - Dani J. Pahulje 6. Saskatchewan Government Publications Deposit in the Legislative Library - Gregory Salmers 7. Inside Track: Challenges of Collecting, Accessing, and Preserving Ontario Government Publications - Sandra Craig and Martha Murphy 8. Digitization of Government Publications: A Review of the Ontario Digitization Initiative - Carol Perry, Brian Tobin, and Sam-chin Li III Looking Forward: Collaborative Stewardship 9. GALLOP Portal: Making Government Publications in Legislative Libraries Findable - Peter Ellinger 10. The Canadian Government Information Digital Preservation Network: A Collective Response to a National Crisis - Amanda Wakaruk and Steve Marks 11. Web Harvesting and Reporting Fugitive Government Materials: Collaborative Stewardship of At-Risk Documents - Susan Paterson, Nicholas Worby, and Darlene Fichter Contributors Index
The purpose of this presentation is to address Alberta Health Services and the minister of health's decision to cease funding for a public fertility clinic. The presentation will explore fertility and in vitro fertilization at a national, provincial and local level including private and public costs of treatment, government involvement, and how individuals can advocate for this process to be a publically funded initiative. Discipline: Nursing Faculty Mentor: Lisa McKendrick-Calder
Jan Roseneder's piece, War Casualties, the Media, and the Internet, discusses how the immediacy of casualty reports and the graphic details conveyed has alternatively engaged and distanced the Canadian people, while at the same time providing distinct platforms for political parties.The importance of Afghanistan to NATO's credibility and its very existence is examined by Joshua Walker in NATO"s Litmus Test: Prioritizing Afghanistan. Walker argues that events in the mountains and villages of Afghanistan are ultimately where NATO's future will be affirmed.Lara Olson discusses how NGOs are Fighting for Humanitarian Space, looking at problems related to their security in Afghanistan, the militarization of aid, and how NGOs have been made public scapegoats for the failures of the overall aid effort. She explores their efforts to preserve humanitarian space through advocacy and dialogue with the military and with donors.
National security and constitutionalism are often thought to be fundamentally incompatible. Recent reforms in Canada involve creative attempts to recognize constitutional rights to fair procedure within processes in which individuals' rights are in conflict with state security interests, such as security clearance, deportation, or access to information. The procedures examined in this article include in camera and ex parte review by Federal Court judges and the use of the Security Intelligence Review Committee. The analysis draws on interviews with participants and compares these procedures with other situations in which restrictions upon open justice have faced Charter challenge, especially under sections 2(b) and 11(d). It is concluded that the courts have had comparatively little direct influence but, nevertheless, there is respect for constitutional values in some surprising places.