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The Jewish Immigrant Aid Services : an ethnic lobby in the Canadian political systemKilpatrick, Anne January 1995 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to examine the Jewish Immigrant Aid Services (JIAS) as an example of an ethnic lobby in the Canadian political system. The research explores how in-group and external political factors influence the techniques and effectiveness of JIAS within the immigration policy arena. Specifically, this paper examines how JIAS' lobbying efforts are influenced as a result of issues emerging from within the organization (e.g. structure, hierarchy, leadership, etc), and those arising from within the organization's constituency: Canadian Jews as a whole, and other organizations within the Jewish polity. Further, the broader context of public opinion and the Canadian immigration system are explored to determine how each affects JIAS' advocacy efforts. The political system is examined from the perspective of the structure and agendas operating at three levels of government involved in the development and implementation of immigration policy (the Department of Immigration, Legislative and Senate committees on immigration and employment, and the Cabinet).
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"This is not a peace pipe" : towards an understanding of aboriginal sovereigntyTurner, Dale A. (Dale Antony), 1960- January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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The magic solution : the cross-media ownership directionBartley, Allan, 1950- January 1984 (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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English Canada and the Election of 1917.Ferraro, Patrick January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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Loyalty, Ontario and the First World WarPaterson, David W. (David William) January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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The Jewish Immigrant Aid Services : an ethnic lobby in the Canadian political systemKilpatrick, Anne January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Canada and the Empire during Joseph Chamberlain's tenure as Colonial Secretary, 1895-1903Page, Robert J. D. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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Modernizing colonialism : an examination of the political agenda of the First Nations Governance Act (2002)Dupuis-Rossi, Riel. January 2007 (has links)
In this thesis, I argue that the First Nations Governance Act (FNGA) shares the colonial aspirations of other pieces of historical legislation in the Canadian context. The FNGA attempted to have First Nations' local governing structures mirror those of the Canadian state. As a result, this piece of legislation fails to recognize and respect the jurisdictional authority of First Nations over their own internal socio-political structures and systems. The FNGA is therefore a colonial assault on First Nations' jurisdiction in the realm of governance undermining the right to self-government and self-determination of First Nations. / I demonstrate this by examining three major issues dealt with in the FNGA: the status of historical and modern Canada-First Nations treaties, the jurisdiction of First Nations governance authority as well as control over band membership and Indian status classification systems.
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Competing visions of equality and identity : Quebec’s Bill 101 and federal language policyPatel, Nazeer 11 1900 (has links)
Language has become a central feature of the debate surrounding Canadian
identity. The Canadian project is an example of a state struggling to find a means of
accommodating linguistic difference. This struggle is epitomized by the language
legislation in Quebec as well as by federal bilingualism. Language legislation is
ultimately aimed at promoting and protecting identity.
An examination of language legislation as promoted by Quebec and the federal
government reveals a different orientation toward the concept of equality. Language
policy thus presents both a vision of community and a political argument. Federal
language policy promotes a vision of Canada in which English and French are juridically
equal. Politically, this vision of community denies Quebec is distinct.
Quebec's language policy, on the other hand, asserts the importance of protecting
Quebecois culture against the majoritarian impulses of a larger Canadian identity. As a
result, Quebec's language legislation incorporates Quebec's different position in Canada
into a definition of equality. Recognition that Quebec has a right to protect its language
is tantamount to an acknowledgement that Quebec is a distinct society in Canada. The
language debate thus embodies competing visions of equality that relate to a specific
identity.
The national unity issue plaguing Canada cannot be resolved through a
commitment to equality as similar treatment. The problem of language planning, in
Canada, revolves around finding a way to acknowledge and promote the local aspirations
of the Quebecois, without creating an inequitable language environment for the English
linguistic minority in Quebec.
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