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Take Care: Warning Signals for Canada's Health System examines the modern Canadian health care system and exposes the impact of neo-conservative and market-oriented policies.
This is the first book to examine power and control within the Canadian food economy, and to blend historical scholarship with new empirical research on the topic.
Winning Back the Words chronicles the politics of the environmental public hearings on the Alberta-Pacific bleached kraft pulp mill in northern Alberta, and illustrates how the public challenged the authority of experts.
Caring For/Caring About explores the complex nature of caring in Canadian society today by examining current research on women, home care, and unpaid caregiving.
Working people are more knowledgeable and actively engaged in learning than public discussion generally assumes. Two basic assumptions underlie much recent discussion about work and learning: a new "knowledge-based economy" is quickly emerging with new jobs generally requiring greater knowledge and skill; and, a "lifelong learning culture" must be created in order for workers to cope with these employment-related knowledge demands. Virtually every recent public policy statement about employment in every advanced industrial country begins with these assumptions. It implies that most workers suffer from a deficit of necessary skills and knowledge which must be rectified by greater education and training efforts. Hidden Knowledge challenges these assumptions. Through life history interviews and case study research with union members, the actual learning practices of working class people are documented in unprecedented detail.Published Under the Garamond ImprintAvailable in the US through Rowman & Littlefield.
The intelligent citizen's complete guide to the theory and practice of the global market.
Hockey Night in Canada will appeal to all readers interested in the wider implications of sport in our society.
This text looks at globalization through the lens of Atlantic Canadians and their relationship with both the global economy and the country at large.
These essays locate the interrelationships of medicine, nursing and the state with regards to theories of the professions and to globalization.
This important book by one of North America's leading experts in the field of Communication Studies calls into question utopian views of a post-industrial society.
This important book makes a major contribution to the free trade debate. It is the first study to examine the impact of free trade on specific groups of workers, and to analyse the effect on the service sector.
This book presents a multi-faceted approach to a case study of a secondary school, the London Technical and Commercial High School, one of the first vocational secondary schools in the country.
"At last there is a lucid, well-written OB book, which covers key issues required in OB teaching, but which has a mind of its own. Students and faculty will recognize this is more than standard fare." - Bill Cooke, Manchester Business School
"Rev up that Zamboni. Even the most hardened of hockey fans and critics will find something new in Artificial Ice." - Stephen Hardy, University of New Hampshire
This anthology is the first Canadian collection of union research papers on issues of technology and workplace reorganization.
These readings put the issue in a historical perspective to show that "sport" and "leisure" are part of and not separate from the control of the working class by capitalism.
This goundbreaking work, originally published in French, considers the nature and role of over a dozen companies in the manufacturing, mining, and public service sectors, challenging existing theories of multinationals.
This book proposes a substantial revision of the orthodox Marxist approach to understanding group consciousness and action.
First published in 1994, Reading Organization Theory has established itself as a pre-eminent text in its field.
In addition to the myths, this book explores the reality of workfare, examining programs from across Canada, and comparing the experience in the United States.
The Missing News explores the role of newspapers in North America's complex media environment as vehicles for democratic communication.
Sustaining Democracy? asks whether it is worth trying to be objective in the first place by addressing current, and highly topical, debates on the relationship between journalism and democracy in Canada and the United States.
Global Shaping and its Alternatives offers a unique series of reflections on the connections between market capitalism, the politics of alternatives, and the cultural elaboration of social change.
The articles in this book begin from a concern to understand the relation between patriarchy and capitalism and to come to grips with the dissatisfaction many women feel despite the rhetoric of sexual equality which has become commonplace.
">Making a Difference About Difference examines the lives and careers of racial minority teachers and their struggle to negotiate their differences in the workplace.
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