Tim Reid Fonds Inventory #391
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Globalization and Its Discontents
Globalization and Its Discontents Report of the annual policy conference of The Group of 78 Cantley, Québec October 1-3, 1999 Table of Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: Themes and Speakers Conclusions and Proposals (Executive Summary) Principal Speakers Sylvia Ostry: The Meaning of Globalization Hon.Jim Peterson: Challenges of Globalization Michael Oliver: Global Goverance: Globalism and the United Nations Panel Presentations Economic Challenges: trade and commerce, financial flows, labour-management Gerald E. Shannon Tim Reid Tony Clarke Globalization and development assistance Roy Culpeper Syed Sajjadur Rahman Brian Murphy Discussion Groups: Global governance issues Biodiversity and sustainability Jean Christie Identity and culture 2 Bernard Ostry Keith Kelly Commercialization of war Ian Smillie Global cooperation and regionalism Ted English John Curtis 3 Acknowledgments The Group of 78's first vote of thanks must go to the speakers, panelists and resource persons whose contributions made this year's policy conference such a success. They are introduced with brief biographical notes in the introduction that follows. The Group is also greatly indebted to the people, mainly members, who helped in many ways to organize and run the conference, which this year drew 78 people, including 59 members. In particular, the Group of 78 would like to thank: Members of the Conference Coordinating Committee: The retiring co-chair, Debbie Grisdale, who presided over the Ottawa office during the summer and supervised the organizational efforts; co-chair Tim Creery (largely in absentia preparing a special conference issue of Newslink) and other members of the coordinating committee: Nancy Drozd, Ted English, Ross Francis, Geoffrey Pearson, Michael Shenstone, Ken Williamson, and Christopher Young. -
Cross-Border Ties Among Protest Movements the Great Plains Connection
University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Great Plains Quarterly Great Plains Studies, Center for Spring 1997 Cross-Border Ties Among Protest Movements The Great Plains Connection Mildred A. Schwartz University of Illinois at Chicago Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly Part of the Other International and Area Studies Commons Schwartz, Mildred A., "Cross-Border Ties Among Protest Movements The Great Plains Connection" (1997). Great Plains Quarterly. 1943. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsquarterly/1943 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Great Plains Studies, Center for at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Great Plains Quarterly by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. CROSS .. BORDER TIES AMONG PROTEST MOVEMENTS THE GREAT PLAINS CONNECTION MILDRED A. SCHWARTZ This paper examines the connections among supporters willing to take risks. Thus I hypoth political protest movements in twentieth cen esize that protest movements, free from con tury western Canada and the United States. straints of institutionalization, can readily cross Protest movements are social movements and national boundaries. related organizations, including political pro Contacts between protest movements in test parties, with the objective of deliberately Canada and the United States also stem from changing government programs and policies. similarities between the two countries. Shared Those changes may also entail altering the geography, a British heritage, democratic prac composition of the government or even its tices, and a multi-ethnic population often give form. Social movements involve collective rise to similar problems. l Similarities in the efforts to bring about change in ways that avoid northern tier of the United States to the ad or reject established belief systems or organiza joining sections of Canada's western provinces tions. -
1 September 29Th, 2015 Toronto, Ontario Professor Bryan Karney
September 29th, 2015 Toronto, Ontario Professor Bryan Karney Chair, Presidential Advisory Committee on Divestment from Fossil Fuels Office of the President Simcoe Hall, Room 206 University of Toronto Toronto, ON, M5S 1A1 [email protected] Dear members of the Presidential Advisory Committee on Divestment from Fossil Fuels, We, the undersigned members of the Massey College community, unite our voices to request your committee to unanimously recommend to President Gertler to instruct the University’s investment managers to stop making new investments in fossil fuel companies and to begin to divest from direct stock holdings in fossil fuel companies. Massey College is a cherished and integral part of the University of Toronto community. Our membership represents a diverse and multi-disciplinary community of graduate students, senior scholars, distinguished senior fellows, and eminent members of society beyond the academic world. Prestigious universities like the University of Toronto must rise to the challenge and help lead efforts to stop climate change using the resources at their disposal. By becoming the first Canadian university to divest from fossil fuel companies, in recognition of our shared responsibility to prevent the harmful consequences of climate change, we are convinced that we can set an important example for the rest of the world to rise up to “one of the greatest challenges of our time”.1 On June 4th, 2015, the Presidential Advisory Committee on Divestment from Fossil Fuels published a Consultation Notice and Call for -
Annual Report July 2013-June 2014
Annual Report July 2013-June 2014 Strengthening Canada’s future: A strong public education system is the foundation of our future! thelearningpartnership.ca Board Leadership 2013-2014 BOARD OF DIRECTORS Chair, Kenneth J. Fredeen Susan LaRosa James Politeski Audit and Finance Committee General Counsel, Deloitte LLP Former Director of Education, York President, Samsung Canada Catholic District School Board Chair, Martha Tory Helen Burstyn Donna Quan Deb Craven Principal, Public Projects and John Malloy Director of Education, Ken Gibson Co-Founder, Pecaut Centre for Director of Education, Toronto District School Board Ross Peebles Social Enterprise Hamilton-Wentworth District Martha Tory Akela Peoples Dennis Cochrane School Board Partner, Ernst & Young Past President and Vice Chancellor Mike McKay Nominating & Governance Susan Uchida Committee (Interim), St. Thomas University Former Superintendent of Schools / Vice President, Human Resources, Michael Coté CEO, Surrey School District No. 36 RBC Chair, Andrea O. Nalyzyty Helen Burstyn Sr. Vice President & Chief Bill Morneau Steven Wolff Heather Connelly Commercial Officer, Purolator Inc. Executive Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, Nova Scotia Michael Coté Deb Craven Morneau Shepell Pension Services Corporation Kenneth J. Fredeen Sr. Vice President & Chief Financial Andrea O. Nalyzyty Cornell C.V. Wright Akela Peoples Officer, Purolator Inc. Vice President, Employee Relations, Partner, Torys LLP Akela Peoples Policy & Governance, CIBC President & CEO, The Learning Partnership CORPORATE ADVISORY BOARD Rick Waugh, O.C., Ron Mock, President & CEO, Carol Stephenson, O.C., Glenn Laverty, President & CEO, Chair / Président Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Former Dean, Ivey Business Ricoh Canada Former President & CEO, James Politeski, President, School, University of Western Lloyd Bryant, Managing Director, Scotiabank Samsung Canada Ontario HP Canada Gerald T. -
No - on Pe: WORKING SESSIONS
WORKING SESSIONS: No - On Pe: WORKING SESSIONS Nothing Changes if Nothing Changes: Perseverance Emily Roxworthy, University of California, San Diego Ariel Nereson, University at Buffalo, SUNY Lisa Moravec, Royal Holloway, University of London and Perseveration in Activist Performance The Persistence of Activist Performance in Zoomtopia? Staging Choreographed Crossings, 1954: Louis Johnson and Ilona The Performance of Dressage: Nature Strikes Back! Convenors: Interactive Diversity Theatre during COVID-19 Murai Navigate Broadway Sonja Kuftinec, University of Minnesota Jennifer Parker-Starbuck, Royal Holloway, University of London John Fletcher, Louisiana State University Dani Snyder-Young, Northeastern University Kirsten Pullen, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign Under the Sea: Machinic Crustaceans and Ecological Promises Everything has Changed, Nothing is Different: Digital Mandy Moore’s Extraordinary Choreography: Re-citing and Participants: Performances, Amplified Inequalities, and the Performativity of Repeating Lyrical Dance in Broadcast TV Sarah Standing, New York City College of Technology Virginia Anderson, Connecticut College Socially Distanced Spectatorship The Specter of Animals in Natural Disaster Capitalism Aging with the AIDS Epidemic on Broadway: The Perils of Amy Rodgers, Mt. Holyoke University Nostalgic Performance Bretton White, Colby College Bring Up The Bodies: Dance as Revenant History and Clara Wilch, University of California, Los Angeles Excessive Repetition: Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara, Biennal #00 Performance -
Download Download
Pelletier won't give money to Glendon Slater said opposed to grants By BOB WARD plied pressure on us. They. interfere in a province'sed shod over provincial edu any part of the University At the recent Liberal Par have not done this~ in fact ucation if it was obvious that cational jurisdiction" Pe1 must be distributed by the ty convention in Ottawa~ Ge they h!iv~ done quite the con- the provincial government ltier declared, Hso I wish York administration." rardPelletiertold PRO TEM trary. ' . involved wanted us to keep the pressure Titn Reid has "If he won't go to bat that Ontario Education Min Though Tim Reid~ the Li out." put on us here in Ottawa for Glendon what can the ister WilliamDavisand York beral education critic in On Though he admitted that concerning Glendon would be federal government do?" University President David tario~ has said that Davis is there were constitutional directed to where the real Pelletiero reiterated Tim Slater did not want Glendon not the •stumbling block' in problems in giving any mon problem lies, in the Ontario Reid's advice saying that if to receive federal grants the funding of Glendon issue ey to any educational insti education department." Glendon wants any money to bolster the· bilingual pro Pelletiersaid that Davis and tution, he saidthat they won't When asked what Slater's from the federal govern gram. Slater have been saying Hone be solved if "certain pro position was~ Pelletier said ment's fund for bilingualism, HIf they wanted the fe thing in pUblic and contrary vincial governments and that Hthe President of York then Hthe faculty and stu deral government to give inprivate.. -
Biographies, Governors, 2004
Biographies of the Members of the Governing Council, 2004 - 2005 Vivienne Poy .................................................................................................... 3 Rose M. Patten ................................................................................................ 4 John F. (Jack) Petch ........................................................................................ 5 Robert M. Bennett ........................................................................................... 5 Holly Andrews-Taylor....................................................................................... 6 Mary Beattie .................................................................................................... 6 Philip H. Byer ................................................................................................... 7 Pamela Catton ................................................................................................. 7 John Challis ..................................................................................................... 8 Shaun Chen ..................................................................................................... 9 PC Choo ........................................................................................................ 10 Brian Corman ................................................................................................ 11 W. Raymond Cummins .................................................................................. 11 Brian Davis ................................................................................................... -
Glendon College
Volume 4, issue 1 Winter/Spring 2007 BMO FINANCIAL GROUP DONATED $1.25 MILLION TO GLENDON COLLEGE GLENDON OPENS FIRST BILINGUAL SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS IN CANADA CLAUDE R. LAMOUREUX : TEACHERS' PENSION CHIEF ADVISES GLENDON GRADUATES SOUVENIR ALBUM GLENDON COLLEGE 40TH ANNIVERSARY The Glendon Magazine Volume 4, Issue 1 Winter/Spring 2007 A year of great achievements Publisher and Editor: Marie-Thérèse Chaput, Director, Office of Advancement, There have been so many exciting developments in 2006 that we held Alumni & External Relations. back out the publication of this edition of the magazine in order to include Contributors: Elisabeth Abergel, Alain y h the latest major news. Amongst these the announcement of the new p a Baudot, Alexandre Brassard, Carrie Brodi, r g bilingual Glendon School of Public Affairs, unique in its kind in Canada, o Cathy Carlyle, Karen Campbell, Marie- t o h is of such importance that it extends well beyond Glendon, York and even Thérèse Chaput, Jenny Pitt Clark, Julia P e g r Ontario. Drexler, David Fuller, Michiel Horn, Marika o e G Kemeny, Boubacar Ly, Kenneth McRoberts, f f In 1966, Escott Reid inspired young people to pursue their studies at o e Tim Reid, The Honourable Mr. Justice G Glendon. Forty years later, Principal Kenneth McRoberts, supported by Douglas Rutherford, Abbey Sinclair. Marie-Thérèse Chaput dedicated committee members, has worked tirelessly to renew Glendon Special contributors: Alain Baudot Édition and ensure that the College achieves its full potential. Glendon School of Public Affairs has du Gref; Christiane Beaupré, Le Métropoli- become the favoured location for a development that is truly Canadian.