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Böcker utgivna av University of British Columbia Press

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  • - Stories of Engagement, Empowerment, and Mobilization
     
    391

    Researchers engaged in community-based participatory research share stories about their work with marginalized communities, offering insights and imparting valuable lessons that will inspire others doing research with an eye to social justice.

  • - The Life and Times of Laura Marshall Jamieson
    av Veronica Strong-Boag
    747 - 1 001

    The Last Suffragist Standing is an unprecedented study of a pioneering Canadian suffragist and politician and an illuminating work on the history of feminism, socialism, internationalism, and activism in Canada.

  • Spara 31%
    - British Family Correspondence and the Settler Colonial Everyday in British Columbia
    av Laura Ishiguro
    777

    The first substantial study of family correspondence and settler colonialism, Nothing to Write Home About elucidates the significance of trans-imperial intimacy, epistolary silence, and the everyday in laying the foundations of settler colonialism in British Columbia.

  • Spara 11%
    - Everyday Narratives of Muslim Canadians
    av Jennifer Selby, Amelie Barras & Lori G. Beaman
    1 007

    By showing how Muslim Canadians successfully navigate and negotiate their religiosity in their everyday lives, Beyond Accommodation critiques the reasonable accommodation framework and proposes an alternative picture of how religious difference is worked out.

  • - Indigenous Politics, Gender, and the Union of BC Indian Chiefs
    av Sarah A. Nickel
    1 137

    Assembling Unity traces the history of pan-Indigenous unity in British Columbia through political negotiations, gendered activism, and the balance and exercise of power.

  •  
    1 007

    Bringing together the world's leading scholars on the subject, Military Education and the British Empire explores distinct national narratives within a comparative context to expose the role of military education in maintaining empire.

  • - Life beyond Settler Colonialism
    av Joseph Weiss
    391 - 1 397

    Countering colonial ideas about Indigenous peoples being frozen in time and without a future, this provocative book explores the ways in which members of the Haida Nation are shaping myriad possible futures to address the dilemmas that come with life under settler colonialism.

  • - The Federal Bureaucracy in the Digital Age
    av Amanda Clarke
    1 007

    Opening the Government of Canada provides a vivid and compelling account of the central challenge facing governments in the digital age: abandoning their "Closed Government" traditions to become more open, networked, and collaborative.

  • - Canadian Masculinities across Time and Place
     
    1 401

    The first published collection devoted entirely to historical studies of Canadian masculinity, Making Men, Making History pushes the boundaries of what it has meant to be a man in Canada.

  • - Confronting Ruination in Postindustrial Places
     
    471

    The Deindustrialized World opens a window on the experiences of those living at ground zero of deindustrialization and examines confrontations with the ruination of people and places on a global scale.

  • - Identity and Memory in an Irish Diaspora Neighbourhood
    av Matthew Barlow
    387

    This vibrant biography of Griffintown, an inner-city Irish Catholic neighbourhood in Montreal, brings to life the history of Irish identity and collective memory in this legendary enclave.

  • - Politics, Activism, Culture
     
    501

    This wide-ranging collection examines the historical roles of Indigenous women, their intellectual and activist work, and the relevance of contemporary literature, art, and performance for an emerging Indigenous feminist project.

  • - Local Knowledge, Colonial Encounters, and Social Imagination
    av Julie Cruikshank
    497

    Focusing on these contrasting views of glaciers between Aboriginal peoples and European visitors in northern Canada and Alaska, Julie Cruikshank demonstrates how local knowledge is produced, rather than discovered, through colonial encounters, and how it often conjoins social and biophysical processes.

  • - The Living Legacy of Inuit Clothing
    av Betty Kobayashi Issenman
    681

    Betty Kobayashi Issenman is a well-known specialist in Inuit clothing, a subject on which she has written and lectured extensively. From 1978 to 1988 she researched and catalogued the Artic clothing collections at the McCord Museum in Montreal, Quebec, and in 1988-1989 she was the guest curator at the museum of an exhibition of Inuit clothing called ¿Ivalu: Traditions du vetement inuit/Traditions of Inuit Clothing.¿

  • - Transforming Suicide Research and Prevention for the 21st Century
     
    497

    Critical Suicidology introduces alternative approaches to suicide prevention, approaches that don't pathologize inequality and distress but rather take into consideration the social, political, and cultural contexts of people's lives.

  • - LGBTQ Teens and Bullying in Schools
    av Donn Short
    281

    Am I Safe Here? treats LGBTQ students as the experts in their own schools, revealing that, to achieve safety and equity, nothing less than a total culture change is needed.

  • - Women and Planning in Canada
    av Sue Hendler
    391

    A compelling new perspective on Canada's planning history that offers a counter-narrative to the "official" story of the profession, one that has generally overlooked the contributions of women and the Community Planning Association of Canada.

  • - Canadian Homonationalisms and the Politics of Belonging
     
    381

    This book contends that Canada's acceptance of "gay rights" obscures and abets multiple forms of oppression and details how, in the fight for equality and inclusion, some LGBTQ communities gain acceptance within the mainstream, and as a result become complicit in a system that fortifies white supremacy, furthers settler colonialism, advances neoliberalism, and props up imperialist mythologies.

  • - Opium, Medicine, and the Origins of Canada's Drug Laws
    av Dan Malleck
    417

    This intoxicating look at the history of drug regulation in Canada reveals how a variety of social and political forces converged at the turn of the twentieth century to transform both public attitudes toward, and access to, narcotics.

  • - Cultural Entrepreneurs in China and Southeast Asia, 1900-65
     
    1 117

    The first critical analysis of Chinese "cultural entrepreneurs," businesspeople whose entrepreneurial endeavours in China and Southeast Asia the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries transformed the cultural sphere.

  • av Professor Daowei Zhang & Peter H. Pearse
    617

    This book covers the basic economic principles and concepts and their application to modern forest management and policy issues.

  • - Empowering Communities and Sustainable Businesses
     
    1 241

    A comprehensive look at how Canadians are responding to the forces of globalization through collectively owned enterprises.

  • - Haida Material Heritage and Changing Museum Practice
    av Cara Krmpotich & Laura Peers
    421

    The story of a transformative visit by members of the Haida Nation to British museums housing their cultural artifacts.

  • - Sharing Life Stories of Survival and Displacement
    av Steven High
    1 117

    Drawing on a collaborative research project, this book provides an alternative model for how oral and public histories should be recorded and curated.

  • av Danielle Labbe
    407

    An engaging study of the rapid urbanization of a former village subsumed by the expanding city of Hanoi.

  • - History, Technology, and the Making of Northern Environments
     
    1 117

    Northscapes examines concepts of North and the way in which different northern environments are shaped by the intersection of technology and human societies.

  • - Testimonies from Imperial Japan's Sex Slaves
    av Peipei Qiu
    387

    This is the first English-language book to record the experiences and testimonies of Chinese women abducted and detained as sex slaves in Japanese military "comfort stations" during Japan's 1931-45 invasion of China.

  • - The Ancient Heritage of the Nuu-chah-nulth, Ditidaht, and Makah
    av Alan D. McMillan
    417

    This book examines over 4000 years of culture history of the related Nuu-chah-nulth, Ditidaht, and Makah peoples on western Vancouver Island and the Olympic Peninsula.

  • av Olena Hankivsky
    471

    Over the last twenty years, the feminist ethic of care has had a significant impact on the study of ethics and political philosophy. Hankivsky develops the concept of a publicly viable ethic of care, and applies it to several Canadian social policy issues.

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