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Donald Galloway and Mary Anne Waldron the Law Centre Turn
THE UVIC LAW ALUMNI MAGAZINE SPRING 2017 Clean Hearts: An Interview with Chancellor Shelagh Rogers John Borrows Wins National Killam Prize Retirements: Donald Galloway and Mary Anne Waldron The Law Centre Turns 40 2017 Slaughter Cup Champions Vistas is produced by UVic Law at the University of Victoria, British Columbia. The views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect those of UVic Law or the University of Victoria. Editors Doug Jasinski (’93) Marni MacLeod (’93) Julie Sloan, Communications Officer, UVic Law Contributing Writers Alexa Ferguson (2L) Robyn Finley (2L) Ian Gauthier (2L) Gillian Calder, Associate Dean, Academic and Student Relations Leila Geggie Hurst (3L) Freya Kodar (‘95), Associate Dean, Administration and Research Nikola Mende, former Senior Communications and Development Officer, Pacifica Housing Kim Nayyer, Associate University Librarian, Law | Adjunct Associate Professor, UVic Law Andrew Newcombe (‘95), Professor, UVic Law Martha O’Brien (’84) Steve Perks, Assistant Director, The Law Centre Janet Person, Admissions Officer, UVic Law Laura Pringle, Alumni Annual Giving Officer, UVic Law Kean Silverthorn (2L) Julie Sloan, Communications Officer, UVic Law Chris Tollefson (’85), Professor, UVic Law Christopher Vanberkum (2L) Jeremy Webber, Professor and Dean, UVic Law Contributing Photographers Dean Fortin Debbie Preston Libby Oliver UVic Photo Services Design and Layout Skunkworks Creative Group Inc. All photographs appearing in Vistas are subject to copyright and may not be reproduced or used in any media without the express written permission of the photographers. Use may be subject to licensing fees. If you would like information on how to contact individual photographers to obtain the requisite permissions please email [email protected]. -
Broadcasting Taste: a History of Film Talk, International Criticism, and English-Canadian Media a Thesis in the Department of Co
Broadcasting Taste: A History of Film Talk, International Criticism, and English-Canadian Media A Thesis In the Department of Communication Studies Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Communication Studies) at Concordia University Montreal, Quebec, Canada December 2016 © Zoë Constantinides, 2016 CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES This is to certify that the thesis prepared By: Zoë Constantinides Entitled: Broadcasting Taste: A History of Film Talk, International Criticism, and English- Canadian Media and submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of PhD in Communication Studies complies with the regulations of the University and meets the accepted standards with respect to originality and quality. Signed by the final examining committee: __________________________________________ Beverly Best Chair __________________________________________ Peter Urquhart External Examiner __________________________________________ Haidee Wasson External to Program __________________________________________ Monika Kin Gagnon Examiner __________________________________________ William Buxton Examiner __________________________________________ Charles R. Acland Thesis Supervisor Approved by __________________________________________ Yasmin Jiwani Graduate Program Director __________________________________________ André Roy Dean of Faculty Abstract Broadcasting Taste: A History of Film Talk, International Criticism, and English- Canadian Media Zoë Constantinides, -
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's Annual Report For
ANNUAL REPORT 2001-2002 Valuable Canadian Innovative Complete Creative Invigorating Trusted Complete Distinctive Relevant News People Trust Arts Sports Innovative Efficient Canadian Complete Excellence People Creative Inv Sports Efficient Culture Complete Efficien Efficient Creative Relevant Canadian Arts Renewed Excellence Relevant Peopl Canadian Culture Complete Valuable Complete Trusted Arts Excellence Culture CBC/RADIO-CANADA ANNUAL REPORT 2001-2002 2001-2002 at a Glance CONNECTING CANADIANS DISTINCTIVELY CANADIAN CBC/Radio-Canada reflects Canada to CBC/Radio-Canada informs, enlightens Canadians by bringing diverse regional and entertains Canadians with unique, and cultural perspectives into their daily high-impact programming BY, FOR and lives, in English and French, on Television, ABOUT Canadians. Radio and the Internet. • Almost 90 per cent of prime time This past year, • CBC English Television has been programming on our English and French transformed to enhance distinctiveness Television networks was Canadian. Our CBC/Radio-Canada continued and reinforce regional presence and CBC Newsworld and RDI schedules were reflection. Our audience successes over 95 per cent Canadian. to set the standard for show we have re-connected with • The monumental Canada: A People’s Canadians – almost two-thirds watched broadcasting excellence History / Le Canada : Une histoire CBC English Television each week, populaire enthralled 15 million Canadian delivering 9.4 per cent of prime time in Canada, while innovating viewers, nearly half Canada’s population. and 7.6 per cent share of all-day viewing. and taking risks to deliver • The Last Chapter / Le Dernier chapitre • Through programming renewal, we have reached close to 5 million viewers for its even greater value to reinforced CBC French Television’s role first episode. -
CBC IDEAS Sales Catalog (AZ Listing by Episode Title. Prices Include
CBC IDEAS Sales Catalog (A-Z listing by episode title. Prices include taxes and shipping within Canada) Catalog is updated at the end of each month. For current month’s listings, please visit: http://www.cbc.ca/ideas/schedule/ Transcript = readable, printed transcript CD = titles are available on CD, with some exceptions due to copyright = book 104 Pall Mall (2011) CD $18 foremost public intellectuals, Jean The Academic-Industrial Ever since it was founded in 1836, Bethke Elshtain is the Laura Complex London's exclusive Reform Club Spelman Rockefeller Professor of (1982) Transcript $14.00, 2 has been a place where Social and Political Ethics, Divinity hours progressive people meet to School, The University of Chicago. Industries fund academic research discuss radical politics. There's In addition to her many award- and professors develop sideline also a considerable Canadian winning books, Professor Elshtain businesses. This blurring of the connection. IDEAS host Paul writes and lectures widely on dividing line between universities Kennedy takes a guided tour. themes of democracy, ethical and the real world has important dilemmas, religion and politics and implications. Jill Eisen, producer. 1893 and the Idea of Frontier international relations. The 2013 (1993) $14.00, 2 hours Milton K. Wong Lecture is Acadian Women One hundred years ago, the presented by the Laurier (1988) Transcript $14.00, 2 historian Frederick Jackson Turner Institution, UBC Continuing hours declared that the closing of the Studies and the Iona Pacific Inter- Acadians are among the least- frontier meant the end of an era for religious Centre in partnership with known of Canadians. -
“Punk Rock Is My Religion”
“Punk Rock Is My Religion” An Exploration of Straight Edge punk as a Surrogate of Religion. Francis Elizabeth Stewart 1622049 Submitted in fulfilment of the doctoral dissertation requirements of the School of Language, Culture and Religion at the University of Stirling. 2011 Supervisors: Dr Andrew Hass Dr Alison Jasper 1 Acknowledgements A debt of acknowledgement is owned to a number of individuals and companies within both of the two fields of study – academia and the hardcore punk and Straight Edge scenes. Supervisory acknowledgement: Dr Andrew Hass, Dr Alison Jasper. In addition staff and others who read chapters, pieces of work and papers, and commented, discussed or made suggestions: Dr Timothy Fitzgerald, Dr Michael Marten, Dr Ward Blanton and Dr Janet Wordley. Financial acknowledgement: Dr William Marshall and the SLCR, The Panacea Society, AHRC, BSA and SOCREL. J & C Wordley, I & K Stewart, J & E Stewart. Research acknowledgement: Emily Buningham @ ‘England’s Dreaming’ archive, Liverpool John Moore University. Philip Leach @ Media archive for central England. AHRC funded ‘Using Moving Archives in Academic Research’ course 2008 – 2009. The 924 Gilman Street Project in Berkeley CA. Interview acknowledgement: Lauren Stewart, Chloe Erdmann, Nathan Cohen, Shane Becker, Philip Johnston, Alan Stewart, N8xxx, and xEricx for all your help in finding willing participants and arranging interviews. A huge acknowledgement of gratitude to all who took part in interviews, giving of their time, ideas and self so willingly, it will not be forgotten. Acknowledgement and thanks are also given to Judy and Loanne for their welcome in a new country, providing me with a home and showing me around the Bay Area. -
151 Ways to Get CE Credits 2018
View metadata,citationandsimilarpapersatcore.ac.uk 151 Continuing Education and Life[long] Learning Ideas for BC Landscape Architects provided by British Columbia'snetworkofpost-secondarydigitalrepositories Katherine Dunster brought toyouby CORE 151 Continuing Education and Life[long] Learning Ideas for BC Landscape Architects © 2018 Katherine Dunster Cover: Gill Sans Shadow 100 pt & Sitka 24/18 Body Text: Aboriginal Sans and Gill Sans MT 11/10/9 Secure open access downloads from: https://kora.kpu.ca/islandora/search/Dunster?type=dismax This is an open access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 - an Interna- tional Public License that permits non-commercial unrestricted use, sharing, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you may not distribute the modifi ed material. To view a copy of this license, visit: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode Quote Sources 1 Julia Child – quoted by Nancy Verde Barr in Backstage with Julia: My Years with Julia Child, (2007, p.246) 2 Eric Hoffer, Refl ections on the Human Condition (1973, Section 32, p.22) 3 John Holt, What Do I Do Monday? (1970, p.22) Notes + Suggestions for Future Editions Send an email (especially if you fi nd a broken link): [email protected] Find something you’re passionate about and keep tremendously interested in it. — Julia Child1 In a time of drastic change it is the learners who inherit the future. The learned usually fi nd themselves equipped to live in a world that no longer exists. -
Nafional Fann Radio Forum on CBC Radio Eleanor Beattie a Thesis the Department Communication Studies Presented in Partial Fulfil
Public Education in the Mass Media: Nafional Fann Radio Forum on CBC Radio Eleanor Beattie A Thesis The Department Communication Studies Presented in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy at Concordia University Montreal, Quebec, Canada 8 Eleanor Beattie, 1999 National Library Bibliothèque nationale du Canada Acquisitions and Acquisitions et Bibliographie Services senrices bibliographiques The author has granted a non- L'auteur a accordé une licence non exclusive licence allowing the exclusive permettant à la National Lhrary of Canada to Bibliothèque nationale du Canada de reproduce, loan, distribute or sell reproduire, prêter, di~6tl'buerou copies of this thesis in microfom, vendre des copies de cette thèse sous paper or electronic formats. la forme de microfiche/nlm, de reproduction sur papier ou sur format électronique. The author retains ownership of the L'auteur conserve la propriété du copyright in this thesis. Neither the droit d'auteur qui protège cette thèse. thesis nor substantial extracts fiom it Ni la thèse ni des extraits substantiels may be printed or othewise de celle-ci ne doivent être imprimés reproduced without the auîhor's ou autrement reproduits sans son permission. autorisation. A5STRACT Public Education in the Mass Media: National Fann Radio Forum on CBC Radio Eleanor Beattie, Ph.D. Concordia University, 1999 The weekly radio program, National Fatm Radio Forum (1940 - 1965) on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is the site of an examination of civic education in the mass media. The archived documentation of NFRF forms the corpus of my research. The subjed of civic education is analyzed through a rhetorical examination of programs on the subject of health delivery, the latter chosen because it shares, with civic education, the topics of cooperativisrn and equity of access. -
Uncovering the Chains the Black and Aboriginal Slaves Who Helped Build New France
Borduas’s revolution • Alzheimer’s dilemmas SPUR FESTIVAL Ottawa and Vancouver preview! $6.50 Vol. 22, No. 4 May 2014 Lawrence Hill Uncovering the chains The black and aboriginal slaves who helped build New France. ALSO IN THIS ISSUE Jocelyn Maclure Why democracy needs protests Candace Savage A prairie pilgrimage Jonathan Kay Reviving the Enlightenment PLUS: NON-FICTION David Milligan on debunking our “historical illiteracy” + Christopher Dummitt on a West Coast riot + Molly Worthen on coexistence through religious limits + David MacDonald on a made-in-Canada church + Jennifer Jeffs on regulating the markets since 2008 + Denise Donlon on the Tales of Bachman Publications Mail Agreement #40032362 FICTION Claire Holden Rothman reviews Wonder by Dominique Fortier + Roger Seamon Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to LRC, Circulation Dept. reviews Life Class by Ann Charney PO Box 8, Station K Toronto, ON M4P 2G1 POETRY Shane Neilson + Elizabeth Ross + Crystal Hurdle + Kayla Czaga Literary Review of Canada 170 Bloor St West, Suite 710 Toronto ON M5S 1T9 email: [email protected] reviewcanada.ca T: 416-531-1483 • F: 416-531-1612 Charitable number: 848431490RR0001 To donate, visit reviewcanada.ca/support Vol. 22, No. 4 • May 2014 EDITOR Bronwyn Drainie [email protected] CONTRIBUTING EDITORS 2 Outthinking Ourselves 15 May Contain Traces Mark Lovewell, Molly Peacock, Robin A review of Enlightenment 2.0, by Joseph Heath A poem Roger, Anthony Westell Jonathan Kay Kayla Czaga ASSOCIATE EDITOR Judy Stoffman 4 Market Rules 18 Under the Volcano POETRY EDITOR A review of Transnational Financial Regulation A review of Wonder, by Dominique Fortier, Moira MacDougall after the Crisis, edited by Tony Porter translated by Sheila Fischman COPY EDITOR Jennifer Jeffs Claire Holden Rothman Madeline Koch 7 The Memory Thief 19 Making It ONLINE EDITORS Diana Kuprel, Jack Mitchell, A review of The Alzheimer Conundrum: A review of Life Class, by Ann Charney Donald Rickerd, C.M. -
Stó:Lō-State Relations and Indigenous Literacies in British Columbia, 1864–1874 Megan Harvey
Document generated on 09/30/2021 3:31 a.m. Journal of the Canadian Historical Association Revue de la Société historique du Canada Story People: Stó:lō-State Relations and Indigenous Literacies in British Columbia, 1864–1874 Megan Harvey Volume 24, Number 1, 2013 Article abstract The Stó:lō are a group of approximately 28 different communities, which share URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1024997ar a common language and culture in what is now generally known as the Lower DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1024997ar Fraser Valley of southwestern British Columbia. Between 1864 and 1874, Stó:lō and neighbouring tribes presented four petitions to the colonial and (after See table of contents 1871) federal government. The survival of so many Indigenous texts from this era that speak directly to the state offers a rare interpretive opportunity. In a relatively brief period of time, colonial and then provincial authorities rapidly Publisher(s) obtained increased control over both lands and people in the emerging province. Simultaneously, Halkomelem-speaking peoples in the region swiftly The Canadian Historical Association / La Société historique du Canada developed new cultural literacies, among which was a facility with one of the central technologies of settler power: writing. As we will see in the following ISSN discussion, the earliest forms of Indigenous writing we have for this period are about land and Stó:lō peoples’ relationships with settler authorities. This series 0847-4478 (print) of petitions traces an important shift in settler-Indigenous relations, while also 1712-6274 (digital) revealing a great deal about Indigenous ideas around literacy and how settler appropriation of Stó:lō land was challenged from the very earliest days. -
KARC Newsletter Dec 1979 to Summer 1980
THE KINGSTON AMATEUR Nm'JS A Monthly Publication of the Kingston Amateur Radio Club, P.O. Box 1402, Kingston, Ontario, K7L SC6 Editor: Steve Cutway, VE3GRS Volume V, No.7, Summer 1980 SUl'1MER EVENTS The family picnic and barbecue on Saturday, June 14th at Melody Lodge on Cranberry Lake turned into a non-event as only six people showed up. Quite the opposite can be said about Training Exercise Kingston One, held Tuesday, June 17th, which saw eighteen participating stations grapple with such simulated emergencies as a hostage taking, (not only of our Mayor, but also of a local amateur), a boat fire, a break-in and some suspicious characters, including an interfering senior DOC official from Ottawa, cleverly portrayed by Bob, VE3SV; a nosy amateur tourist, played expertly by John, VE3LGS, and a visiting American amateur. The exercise, while a success in itself, was outdone by the festivities which followed both at 370 King St. West, and at the Root Cellar at St. Lawrence College. But the undisputed star of the evening was Bill, VE3DWV, who carried out his role as the visiting American amateur with originality and humour. In fact, a good deal of imagin ation was demonstrated throughout the exercise. Congratulations to all. Ham radio did not go to the dogs after all, the weekend of June 20-22, as reported would be the case in the May issue of the Kingston Amateur News. The dogs took care of themselves. However, the Kingston and District Kennel Club may calIon us for assistance next year. If they do, we'll be ready. -
Reconciliation & the Way Forward
companion to RECONCILIATION & RECONCILIATION "Speaking My Truth" THE WAY FORWARD Reconciliation & the Way Forward is a collection of essays and personal reflections that looks at the issues of reconciliation between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal peoples in Canada. As a follow-up volume to Speaking My Truth: Reflections on Reconciliation and Residential School, this text seeks to reframe debate by proposing a shift of focus onto civil society and those individuals who have made significant contributions to the formal and informal processes of truth and reconciliation. RECONCILIATION & Reconciliation & the Way Forward asks, “What’s next?” WAY & THE The last decade has transformed our collective understandings of the THE WAY FORWARD Indian Residential School System and its lasting impacts on generations of peoples. Survivors have lead this process of rewriting history by sharing their experiences and their resilience. As the Aboriginal Collected Essays & Personal Reflections Healing Foundation, the Settlement Agreement, and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission wrap up, it is vital to reflect on what has been accomplished, but it is also crucial to consider the way forward and work that still needs to be done. FORWARD Reconciliation & the Way Forward builds on the leadership of Survivors by providing insight into how individuals from across the fields of health care, education, justice, visual arts, and literature take up the healing path and their thoughts on creating a shared, transformative vision of Canada. edited by SHELAGH ROGERS -
A Review of the Policy Framework for Local and Community Television Programming, Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2015-421 (Ottawa, 14 September 2015)
6 November 2015 John Traversy Secretary General CRTC Ottawa, ON K1A 0N2 Dear Secretary General, Re: A review of the policy framework for local and community television programming, Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2015-421 (Ottawa, 14 September 2015) 1 The Forum for Research and Policy in Communications (FRPC) is a non-profit and non- partisan organization established to undertake research and policy analysis about communications, including telecommunications. We request the opportunity to appear before the Commission at its 25 January 2016 public hearing in this proceeding, to address the submissions of other parties and to respond to evidence and questions from the CRTC. 2 The Forum supports a strong Canadian communications system that serves the public interest. We welcome the opportunity to respond to the questions raised by the CRTC in its review of the policy framework for local and community television programming, and look forward to reviewing other parties’ submissions. We may seek the right to respond to evidence set out by the CRTC and others after 5 November 2015. 3 Our comments are attached. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact the undersigned. Sincerely yours, Monica L. Auer, M.A., LL.M. [email protected] Executive Director 613.526.5244 Ottawa, Ontario www.frpc.net Putting the ‘local’ back into local TV Comments by Forum for Research and Policy in Communications (FRPC) on A review of the policy framework for local and community television programming Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC