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  • Spar 11%
     
    238

    The worker lockout at Regina's Co-op Refinery Complex shows that, left unchecked, corporations will transfer the costs and burdens of the necessary transition to a fossil fuel-free future to workers.

  • Spar 15%
    av Jamie Chai Yun Liew
    253,-

    As nationalism and oppression of minority racialized groups proliferate globally, the plight of stateless people becomes ever more urgent. Legal scholar Jamie Liew explores what statelessness means as a shattering legal condition, lived experience and arena of powerful struggle for genuine justice.

  • Spar 12%
    av D.W.¿ Livingstone
    249,-

    Changes in the class structure and in class consciousness are setting the stage for new class alliances for democratic socialism.

  • av Andrew Crosby
    274,-

    Meticulously documents how real estate investment firms and government colluded to gentrify a racialized neighbourhood and how tenants fought back.

  • av Kimia Eslah
    194,-

    Three Iranian women from different generations working at Toronto City Hall respond to institutional racism while the city champions inclusion.

  •  
    274,-

    Indigenous Peoples have taken physical recreational activity - sport - back from the colonizers. One of very few books to show the two edges of sport: it colonized but is now decolonizing.

  • Spar 12%
    av Baijayanta Mukhopadhyay
    238

    This story of land theft through the course of three diseases exposes how colonialism facilitates illness and profits from it.

  • av Stephanie (University of Leeds) Ross
    274,-

    A key introduction to the history, role, strategies and contributions of unions and the labour movement in Canada, now with a discussion of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the collective power of workers.

  • Spar 12%
    av Daniel N.¿ Paul
    249,-

    4th edition of the history of settler colonialism and the European invasion of Mi'kma'ki the ancestorial unceded territory of the Mi'kmaq people

  • av Katlia
    224,-

    A gripping tale that combines fictional characters with real historical events of a time when the housing system dispossessed Indigenous Peoples across the north

  • av Taslim Burkowicz
    224,-

    A betrayed middle-aged mother embarks on a quest that takes her straight into British Columbia's wildfires and her ancient Moghul ancestry

  •  
    196,-

  • Spar 12%
    av El Jones
    249,-

    Abolition is not only a political movement to end prisons; it is also an intimate one deeply motivated by love.

  • Spar 12%
    av Jordan House
    238

    Prisons dont work, but prisoners do. Prisons are often critiqued as unjust, but we hear little about the daily labour of incarcerated workers what they do, how they do it, who they do it for and under which conditions. Unions protect workers fighting for better pay and against discrimination and occupational health and safety concerns, but prisoners are denied this protection despite being the lowest paid workers with the least choice in what they do the most vulnerable among the working class. Starting from the perspective that work during imprisonment is not rehabilitative this book examines the reasons why people should care about prison labour and how prisoners have struggled to organize for labour power in the past. Unionizing inmate workers is critical for both the labour movement and struggles for prison justice, this book argues to negotiate changes to working conditions as well as the power dynamics within prisons themselves.

  • Spar 10%
    av Lesley Choyce
    217

    After willing himself back to life with sheer stubbornness, ninety-year-old John Alexander MacNeil finds Death sitting at his kitchen table.

  • Spar 10%
    av Jim Silver
    286,-

    This book integrates a sophisticated analysis of contemporary poverty with a full historical account of capitalism.

  • Spar 12%
    av Maxime Aurelien
    238

    The book provides a social history of Montreal's first Haitian street gang and the changing city in which it emerged.

  • av Jen Powley
    260,-

    This book documents Jen Powley's fight for young disabled people to live in the community rather than being institutionalized in nursing homes.

  •  
    432,-

    This book continues the strong tradition of 3 editions of Doing Anti-Oppressive practice but adds new issues and cutting-edge critical reflection of AOP

  • Spar 12%
    av Mostafa Henaway
    238

    This book is about the massive expansion of precarious work under neoliberalism and how migrant workers are challenging the conditions of their hyper-exploitation through struggles for worker rights and justice.

  • av Brandon Doucet
    201

    Dental care in Canada is for those who can afford it. What will it take to make oral health care free?

  • Spar 17%
    av Rehab Nazzal ???? ????
    295,-

    This research-creation project by artist Rehab Nazzal documents the politics of surveillance and mobility in contemporary Palestine through photos, hand-drawn maps and critical essays in English and Arabic.

  • av Kathy Absolon-King
    307,-

    "Indigenous methodologies have been silenced and obscured by the Western scientific means of knowledge production. In a challenge to this colonialist rejection of Indigenous knowledge, Anishinaabe researcher Kathleen Absolon describes how Indigenous researchers re-theorize and re-create methodologies. Understanding Indigenous methodologies as guided by Indigenous paradigms, worldviews, principles, processes and contexts, Absolon argues that they are wholistic, relational, inter-relational and interdependent with Indigenous philosophies, beliefs and ways of life. In exploring the ways Indigenous researchers use Indigenous methodologies within mainstream academia, Kaandossiwin renders these methods visible and helps to guard other ways of knowing from colonial repression. This second edition features the author's reflections on her decade of research and teaching experience since the last edition, celebrating the most common student questions, concerns, and revelations."--

  • av Martha Paynter
    346,-

    "Abortion and contraception are often understood as the central aspect of reproductive justice. But there is much more involved, from bodily autonomy, to freedom from sexual violence, to freedom to define the size and make up of our families, and to the right to parent the children we choose to have in safe and sustainable communities. While Canada has constitutionally affirmed aspects of reproductive liberation, it also has a colonial history of reproductive oppression and practices ongoing carceral policies that criminalize disproportionately Indigenous and racialized people, threatening their access to reproductive justice. This illustrated, accessible book will tell the empowering stories behind the struggles for reproductive justice in Canada, celebrating past wins and revealing an abolitionist path forward."--

  • av Kimia Eslah
    223,-

    A story for every immigrant struggling between cultures, every youth rebelling against parents, and every woman facing assault alone.

  • Spar 17%
    av Jessica Antony
    480,-

    "Power and Resistance debunks the dominant neoliberal, hyper-individualist approach to society's problems, which claims that people are poor because they are lazy, environmental crises stem from individuals' consumption habits, and Indigenous Peoples are oppressed because they refuse to assimilate. We argue that it is social inequality and oppression that are the underlying causes of "social problems." Certain groups have the power to push through agendas that benefit them but harm other groups and society as a whole. Solving these issues is not about individual action: it requires changing the very structures of our society. In this volume, we dig down to the roots of these "social problems" through case studies and contemporary examples, offering effective paths towards social justice. The seventh edition of Power and Resistance includes new chapters on anti-Black racism in schools, Indigenous Peoples and mental health, food security and sovereignty, and work in the gig economy."--

  • av David Milward
    281,-

    "The horrors of the Indian Residential Schools (IRS) are by now well-known historical facts. And they have certainly found purchase in the Canadian consciousness in recent years. The history of violence and the struggles of survivors for redress resulted in a Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), which chronicled the harms inflicted by the residential schools and explored ways to address the social fallouts that have been left behind. One of those fallouts is the crisis of Indigenous over-incarceration. The residential schools may not be the only harmful process of colonization that fuels Indigenous over-incarceration. But it has been and continues to be a critical cause behind Indigenous incarceration, and arguably the most critical factor of all. It is likely that for almost every Indigenous person who ends up incarcerated, the residential schools will form an important part of the background, even for those who did not attend the schools. The legacy of harm the schools caused provide vivid and crucial links between Canadian colonialism and Indigenous over-incarceration. This book provides an account of the ongoing ties between the enduring traumas caused by the residential schools and Indigenous over-incarceration."--

  • av Brenda A. Lefrancois
    539,-

    A cutting-edge critical social work textbook that unites social work theory with practice.

  • av Ajay Parasram
    169,-

    "Are you a white person with questions about how race affects different situations, but you feel awkward, shy, or afraid to ask the people of colour in your life? Are you a racialized person who is tired of answering the same questions over and over? This book is for you: a basic guide for people learning about racial privilege. In Frequently Asked White Questions, Drs. Alex Khasnabish and Ajay Parasram answer ten of the most common questions asked of them by people seeking to understand how race structures our everyday. Drawing from their lived experiences as well as live sessions of their monthly YouTube series, Safe Space for White Questions, the authors offer concise, accessible answers to questions such as, "Is it possible to be racist against white people?" or "Shouldn't everyone be treated equally?" With humour and compassion, this book offers relatable advice and a practical entry point into conversations about race."--

  • av Susan C.A Boyd
    354,-

    The only book-length Canadian history of the harm done from criminalizing heroin users and addicts, the most horrendous being overdose epidemics caused by poisoned drugs.

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