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  • - Inside the Fight Against Capitalist Mega-Sports in Los Angeles, Tokyo and Beyond
    av Jules Boykoff
    271

    "The need for critical writing about the Olympics has never been more important and no one does it more effectively or incisively than Jules Boykoff. Here he shows us not only the potential harm of the LA 2028 Summer Games but the activists who are bringing this reality to light." -- Dave Zirin

  • av David Camfield
    291

    An anti-capitalist, anti-authoritarian introduction to the history of the USSR, China, and Cuba that asks: Were they actually on the road to communism?

  • av Jamie Brownlee
    317

    Interrogating the consequences of psychedelic capitalism, Brownlee and Walby point to what could be gained from a just and equitable psychedelic future rooted in the public interest.

  •  
    301

    An incisive guide to how we can reframe social innovation towards the goal of societal transformation through compelling examples of community-engaged action.

  • av Rae Baker
    301

    Tenants narrate their struggles for housing justice as the catastrophes of COVID-19, precarity, and racist police violence converge.

  • av Arnel M. Borras
    291

    This book uncovers the root causes of health and health care inequities, including unequal wealth and power among policy advocates, the dominance of big business and neoliberal state policies.

  • av Smokii Sumac
    271

    A journalistic poetry collection reflecting on Palestinian and Indigenous solidarities, genocides, life and liberation.

  •  
    291

    No-holds-barred exposure of Ford Nation giving billions to corporations and insecurity to everyone else.

  • av Zeina Sleiman
    271

    Yasmine enters Lebanon escaping a messy divorce and seeking the family, culture, and connection that her Palestinian mother hid during their life in Toronto. It's 2006, and she's meeting her cousin Reem for the first time after connecting over social media. Reem teaches Arabic and lives in a refugee camp with her mother and sister. Her brother Ahmed lived there too until he went to Syria for work and then disappeared. When Yasmine receives a package of mysterious letters suggesting her father might still be alive, the cousins embark on a discovery of political secrets no one in the family wants them to know. Complicating her questions about identity, belonging, and healing even further, Yasmine runs into Ziyad - an old flame who's incidentally taking Reem's class. Though the cousins' lives could not be more different, Yasmine and Reem must learn from each other as they navigate abusive relationships, grief, displacement, and war. Set amid the arid glamour of Lebanon's beaches and urban landscapes, Where the Jasmine Blooms is at once a political historical thriller and a Muslim feminist love story. Turn-of-the-century Arab politics feature prominently, echoing loudly even twenty years later.

  • av Griffin Bjerke-Clarke
    267

    Felix Babimoosay is his most recent name, and it seems better than any other name he's been offered. He journeys ever forward across a sharp landscape of flat plains, stung by insects, wind, and thirst. Unable to remember his past, he doggedly walks alone through the decaying world until he is pursued by a threatening man claiming a bounty on Felix's head. Felix's irritation spurs a slow memory of the days he left behind, until he stumbles into a corrupted town and a city of talking crows that push him to move beyond his lost memories. Sparse and dreamy, Griffin Bjerke-Clarke's debut novel explores memory, identity, trauma, and healing through a timeless journey. Métis storytelling methods and elements of horror infuse He Who Would Walk the Earth, an anti-colonial western that powerfully evokes a mood reminiscent of twentieth-century classics like Waiting for Godot. This book unsettles as much as it stokes, dystopian in Felix's apathy yet optimistic in the way he addresses challenges along his listless way. In the end, Felix must learn from his earnest mistakes as he begins to understand that agency requires collaborating with those around him.

  •  
    517

    A critical analysis of the Canadian state as an active agent in shaping and navigating political-economic change.

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    391

    Third edition of a successful child welfare text that highlights decolonial and transformative approaches to child welfare practices.

  • av Agnes R. Pascal
    301

    Firsthand narratives from Northern and Indigenous cancer survivors and caregivers offer compassionate advice and insightful analysis about healthcare in rural northern communities.

  • av Emma Battell Lowman
    291

  • av OmiSoore H. Dryden
    257

    Through storytelling, theorizing and discourse analysis, this book investigates how racist and homophobic nation-building policies became enshrined in blood donation.

  • av Peter Ives
    241

    We need to rethink free speech to better address diverse goals from knowledge production to democratic participation and individual expression.

  • av Andi Vicente
    241

    A Balikbayan box with much more than t-shirts and toothpaste -- One Box is filled with promises of reunification.

  •  
    301

    A unique collection of stories about how movements against environmental and climate injustice globally converge into broader struggles for overcoming the racist, patriarchal and colonial structures of global capitalism while creating worlds of life, dignity and justice.

  • av Laine Halpern Zisman
    251

    A practical guide to navigating the politics, challenges, choices and opportunities in 2SLGBTQ+ fertility, conception and family building in Canada.

  • av Jon Careless
    261

    A historical account of a public housing community struggling and persevering in the face of stigmatization, oppression and urban revitalization.

  •  
    237

    Thyme Travellers brings together fourteen of the Palestinian diaspora's best voices in speculative fiction, the first collection of its kind in Canada.

  • av Ted Richmond
    247

    A comprehensive overview of the anatomy of the Canadian non-profit sector providing critical analysis of key social policy and political issues.

  • av Sarah Marie Wiebe
    247

    A story of mothering amidst a climate crisis to shape futures that will flourish under the politics of care.

  •  
    281

    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.

  • av Jamie Chai Yun Liew
    301

    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.

  • av D.W.¿ Livingstone
    291

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

  • av Andrew Crosby
    281

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

  • av Kimia Eslah
    241

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

  •  
    281

    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.

  • av Baijayanta Mukhopadhyay
    281

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

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