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A study of the Point St. Charles shops of the Grand Trunk Railway in Montreal, 1880-1917 /Hoskins, Ralph F. H. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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1979 : reading the tax-shelter boom in Canadian film historyUrquhart, Peter January 2004 (has links)
More certified-Canadian feature films were shot in Canada in 1979 than in any other year. The height of what has become known as the "tax-shelter boom," 1979 stands as a remarkable moment in the history of the Canadian cinema, with 70 features shot in a year in which Hollywood produced only 99 films. The extant history of the Canadian cinema has largely ignored this moment, and in this thesis I argue that the slim treatment of the period by critics represents a "received wisdom," consistently repeated, but seldom scrutinized, and that this received wisdom is representative of the culturally nationalist impulse which has coloured the entire historiography of the Canadian cinema. Because many of the films produced during the boom were in the style of Hollywood genres, the "received wisdom" presents the entirety of the tax-shelter boom as a cultural and industrial near-disaster for the Canadian cinema, and this thesis, partly a revisionist history, explores not only those conclusions, but also provides critical discussion of them. / I begin by presenting the received wisdom, the existing account, on the period. This is followed by a chapter which situates the tax-shelter boom in a history of state intervention in the feature film industry. Following this, I provide analysis of the contexts surrounding the tax-shelter boom, including critical discussion of articles and reviews from the contemporaneous popular press, and of the industry discourse. I then turn my attention to the texts themselves, which the received wisdom more or less ignores, and provide three thematically-organized chapters of textual analysis: the first organized around readings of gender and genre in the films, the second on the prevalent theme of "selling out," which is central to numerous films of the period, and a third chapter which explores the place of Quebec in the films of the period. / The thesis concludes with an analysis of the material effects of the government policies which led to the boom, and concludes that in this respect too, the received account of the period---once again, as a failure---needs to be reexamined.
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Public liability : insurance regulation and the creation of the Insurance Corporation of British ColumbiaWallace, Jason David 30 November 2009 (has links)
In 1974, the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia (ICBC) began the exclusive sale of automobile insurance to the motorists of British Columbia. Created by Dave Barrett, Robert Strachan, and the New Democratic Party government of British Columbia, the corporation was controversial and denounced by many as a socialist encroachment into the economy for purely ideological reasons. Previous studies of the ICBC have done little to dispel this notion because they focus on its operations rather than its inception. The ICBC, however, was more than just a product of New Democratic Party ideology. It had its origins in historical precedent that paved the way for greater government intervention in the economy, in questionable insurance industry ethics, in the W.A.C. Bennett government's bumbling over regulating the insurance industry, and in the failure of the industry to organize an efficient resistance to the creation of the ICBC.
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Colonies, condoms and corsets : fertility regulation in Australia and CanadaFalconer, Louise Morag 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis investigates Australian and Canadian legislation that regulated women's
reproduction in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century and offers some explanation
for their enactment.
At the turn of the twentieth century, Australia and Canada enacted a series of laws that
were aimed at limiting the control women could exercise over their reproductive functions.
From the 1880s through to the first decade of the twentieth century, legislation that
prohibited the advertisement of contraception, regulated maternity homes as well as
criminal laws that proscribed abortion were promulgated by Australian and Canadian
parliaments. This thesis investigates why such legislative activity occurred and proposes
that the initiation of these measures targeting abortion, infanticide and birth control cannot
be disassociated from the highly gendered and racialised rhetoric resonating throughout the
British Empire. Concern about racial integrity, heightened by a fear generated by the
declining birth rate, promoted a climate in which exercising control over women's fertility
was seen as warranted. White women's reproductive capabilities were a vital ingredient in
keeping the settler colonies of Australia and Canada white and British — white women
were expected, quite literally, to give birth to the nation. As this thesis shows, when women
did not adhere to these expectations of maternity, the law was used in an attempt to monitor
and regulate their reproductive activities. / Law, Peter A. Allard School of / Graduate
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1979 : reading the tax-shelter boom in Canadian film historyUrquhart, Peter January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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A study of the Point St. Charles shops of the Grand Trunk Railway in Montreal, 1880-1917 /Hoskins, Ralph F. H. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Essai sur les politiques sociales et le travail domestiqueGauthier, Anne, 1952- January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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Canada's Chinese immigration policy and immigration security 1947-1953Vibert, Dermot Wilson January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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François Marie Perrot and the Isle Perrot.Wardleworth, Eleanor Scott. January 1931 (has links)
No description available.
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John Neilson of Lower Canada (1818-1828).Bateson, Nora. January 1933 (has links)
No description available.
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