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Showing 12257–12272 of 12495 results

Title & Subtitle Abstract Contributors Pages Year Purchase
From
Who's Dreaming?

Who’s Dreaming?

From: Are We Done Fighting?

This chapter provides clarity about how rarely violent conflict and war produce clearcut peaceful results, and how they can amplify the problems at hand rather than resolve them. Then it reminds … 8 $0.80 Add
From
Who's Greatest Together?

Who’s Greatest Together?

From: Stampede

In this chapter, Williams unpacks the theme of the 2012 centenial Stampede, "We’re Greatest Together." 40 $4.00 Add
From
Who's Protecting Whom?

Who’s Protecting Whom?

Child Welfare and Policing Black Families

From: Doing Anti-Oppressive Practice

This chapter looks at the over-representation of Black children in the care of the Ontario child welfare system and the implications of this phenomenon, highlighting structural factors such as … ; ; ; 19 $1.90 Add
From
Whose Child Is This?

Whose Child Is This?

“Surrogacy,” Authority, and Responsibility

From: Surrogacy in Canada

In Chapter 1, Christine Overall, while accepting that the practice of surrogacy may be here to stay, considers the troubling moral issues that arise with respect to women who act as surrogates … 21 $2.10 Add
From
Whose Income Is It?

Whose Income Is It?

From: Income Tax Law, 2/e

Examination of attempts to shift a tax burden from one taxpayer to another, and the attribution rules that may prevent or restrict such attempts. 11 $1.10 Add
From
<p>Whose Jurisdiction Is It Anyway?</p><p>Quebec — 2014</p>

Whose Jurisdiction Is It Anyway?

Quebec — 2014

From: The Right to Die

Is assisted death a health care matter or is it a criminal one? This may seem an odd question, but in the contentious and confusing world of federal-provincial jurisdictional responsibilities, it … 14 $1.40 Add
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Whose Security? Dilemmas of US Border Security in the Arizona-Sonora Borderlands

Whose Security? Dilemmas of US Border Security in the Arizona-Sonora Borderlands

From: Borderlands

The Arizona-Sonera borderlands, especially since September 11, 2001, represent the quintessential example of a civil and criminal social networking revolution, a self-defeating federal border … 33 $2.64 Add
Whose Streets?

Whose Streets?

The Toronto G20 and the Challenges of Summit Protest

In June 2010 activists opposing the G20 meeting held in Toronto were greeted with arbitrary state violence on a scale never before seen in Canada. Whose Streets? is a combination of testimonials … 256 View
Whose Water Is It, Anyway?

Whose Water Is It, Anyway?

Taking Water Protection into Public Hands

The Blue Communities Project is dedicated to three primary things: that access to clean, drinkable water is a basic human right; that municipal and community water will be held in public hands; … 161 View
From
Why?

Why?

From: Power Trap

address the three groups of people who would be most important for the success of a united progressive party: Liberal and New Democrat partisans and currently frustrated and unattached progressives. 17 $1.70 Add
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Why are Mothers Still the Default Parent?

Why are Mothers Still the Default Parent?

From: Motherhood, The Mother of All Sexism

This chapter highlights and critiques the outdated social constructions and everyday sexism that continue to constrain mothers and fathers. It looks at the many challenges of parenthood typically … 33 $3.30 Add
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Why Are P3s?

Why Are P3s?

From: About Canada: Public-Private Partnerships

17 $1.70 Add
From
Why <i>Butterfly</i> Should Stop Committing Literary Hara-kiri

Why Butterfly Should Stop Committing Literary Hara-kiri

From: Bigotry on Broadway

This chapter explores the racism, fetishism/objectification, and misogyny of Madame Butterfly. 9 $0.90 Add
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Why Can’t We Sell Stuff Anyplace?
NEW!

Why Can’t We Sell Stuff Anyplace?

From: Messy Cities

John Lorinc discusses zoning rules that govern commercial activity, and the history of urban retail in cities around the world. 8 $0.80 Add
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Why Change Is Now Possible

Why Change Is Now Possible

From: Power Trap

Points to the climate change issues, finanical crisis, and the wage gap as factors that prime this moment in time as one of change 28 $2.80 Add