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.