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Search results on "CANADIAN STUDIES":

Essay # 90815 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Study of the Canadian Automobile Industry, 2006.
A discussion regarding the nature of the Canadian automobile industry.
3,150 words (approx. 12.6 pages), 2 sources, AU$ 161.95
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Abstract
This study of the Canadian automobile industry reveals how this industry reflects, in many ways, the complex contradictions of economic development of Canada. While the automobile industry is one of Canada's major industries in terms of revenues and employees, it is not only geographically concentrated in Ontario (and, to a lesser extent, Quebec), but it is also almost entirely dependent upon and external market: the United States. The paper goes on to discuss how much like the Canadian economy as a whole, the Canadian automobile industry developed in a state of dynamic tension with the economic and political forces shaping the economic giant to the south. "
Essay # 2998 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Case Study of the Canadian Department of National Defense, 2001.
Detailed case study of the department of national defense in Canada.
3,419 words (approx. 13.7 pages), 9 sources, AU$ 125.95
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Abstract
This paper presents a case study of Canada's Department of National Defense and reviews the strategic direction and structural organization of the department as well as its history and development. Many tables, diagrams and graphs are included with the paper.

From the Paper
"...Thus, the overall mission and responsibilities of the Department of National Defense ultimately acts to uphold democracy, individual rights and freedoms, peace and order, good government, and a sustainable and stable economy..."
Essay # 100545 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Death of a Salesman" and Canadian Capitalism, 2008.
An analysis of Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman" in relation to studies of Canadian capitalism.
1,705 words (approx. 6.8 pages), 3 sources, MLA, AU$ 72.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at how Arthur Miller's play of 1949, "Death of a Salesman", offers a strong commentary on capitalism's expectation that all persons can and will participate strongly in a capitalist environment. Related ideas are those of capitalism best serving 'human nature' in an assumption that all human beings are decisive; strongly motivated by acquiring success or belongings, and that conforming to a capitalist system will bring rewards. It discusses how, however, as Miller's "Death of a Salesman" indicates, some personalities are not at all suited to this range of activities and also, how capitalism will always leave behind some persons who for whatever reason cannot compete ably, or cannot summon all of their resources for the very competitive approach that is required. The paper discusses the myth of capitalism, as seen in the play, and looks at how it relates to what is happening in Canada.

Outline:
Introduction
Capitalism as a System and Culture
Capitalism's Dream
More on Markets and Opportunities

From the Paper
"In relation to Canadian capitalism, Phillips identified three ways in which the present system has not pleased or served Canadians in, first, the market's failure to provide a level of social services or other social infrastructure for the best or 'equal' welfare of the people, second, its production of social gaps so large that the cohesion of the society is threatened and may very well collapse in immense differences between the income levels and living experiences of the poor and the 'middle' classes, and third, no mechanism in the market system to guarantee or even just promote full employment and economic growth. (Political Economy 20) In short, Canadian capitalism has become rather like its American counterpart that so worships market forces while indiscriminately ostracizing or just leaving behind one sector and then another. "
Essay # 45235 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Identity of Modern Japanese-Canadians, 2003.
Studies the identity of modern Japanese-Canadians using both fictional and real characters as case studies.
5,347 words (approx. 21.4 pages), 36 sources, MLA, AU$ 171.95
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Abstract
This study takes an unusual, exploratory approach to studying issues of identity in the Japanese community in Canada. It looks at two types of modern day Japanese in Canada. First, a young student studying at MIT is used as a real life case study. Second, various fictional depictions of Japanese-Canadians are used to delve deeper into issues of Japanese identity.

From the Paper
"Thus, using Bourdieu?s analysis, it is theoretically possible to apply it to the situation of Japanese-Canadians to try to delve deeper into their ethnic self-identity and individual make-up. However, there are various flaws when trying to apply Bourdieu?s work. First, Bourdieu interviewed his participants in some depth for his study in order to get a detailed profile of each. This variety of data about Japanese-Canadians is not currently available for this study and would need to be obtained first-hand. Second, and more importantly, it is not possible to apply the same analysis intended for a Western, European nation such as France to a complex, Oriental nation such as Japan that prides itself on its ?unique? ethnic identity and 90% middle-class (which, if true, renders analysis using economic capital as a variable useless anyhow)."
Essay # 84421 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Housing in the Canadian City, 2005.
This paper studies the problem of housing within Canadian cities and uses Calgary as a case study.
1,800 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 2 sources, AU$ 92.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the issue of affordable housing as it relates to a major Canadian metropolitan center - namely, the city of Calgary. The writer points out that the city has taken positive strides in recent years to alleviate its housing shortfall. That being said, this paper suggests that additional steps can be taken - among them, more aggressively recruiting the private business sector.
Essay # 45218 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Construction of Self: The Identity of Modern Japanese-Canadians, 2003.
Explores the identity of Canadians of Japanese origin living in modern Canada.
20,665 words (approx. 82.7 pages), 133 sources, MLA, AU$ 323.95
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Abstract
The study takes a broad exploratory approach to studying issues of identity in the Japanese community in Canada. Chapter I traces the historical settlement of Japanese-Canadians in Canada with reference to how Canada?s changing attitudes on dealing with immigrants has affected the way in which Japanese-Canadians perceive themselves. Chapter II researches the relationship between language and identity. Chapter III looks at two types of modern day Japanese in Canada. First, a young student studying at MIT is used as a real life case study. Second, various fictional depictions of Japanese-Canadians are used to delve deeper into issues of Japanese identity. The subject matter has not yet been specifically covered in detail by academia (although it has rather more so by fictional writing). Available sources are analyzed closely to try to uncover trends in identity. Sources used vary from academic works (both Japanese and Canadian) on history, sociology, politics, linguistics and psychology; through to personal journal entries and fictional works concerning Japanese identity written by Japanese-Canadian authors.

Introduction
The History Of Japanese-Canadians & Canadian Immigration Policy 1877-2003
The Relationship Between Language And The Formation Of Ethnic Identity
The Real And Illusory Modern Japanese-Canadian
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Thus, using Bourdieu?s analysis, it is theoretically possible to apply it to the situation of Japanese-Canadians to try to delve deeper into their ethnic self-identity and individual make-up. However, there are various flaws when trying to apply Bourdieu?s work. First, Bourdieu interviewed his participants in some depth for his study in order to get a detailed profile of each. This variety of data about Japanese-Canadians is not currently available for this thesis and would need to be obtained first-hand (see ?Recommendations? in Conclusion). Second, and more importantly, it is not possible to apply the same analysis intended for a Western, European nation such as France to a complex, Oriental nation such as Japan that prides itself on its ?unique? ethnic identity and 90% middle-class (which, if true, renders analysis using economic capital as a variable useless anyhow)."
Essay # 73546 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Japanese Canadians in Canada, 2004.
The paper examines the treatment of Japanese Canadians by the Canadian government during and after World War II.
2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 7 sources, MLA, AU$ 103.95
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Abstract
The paper contends that the treatment of Japanese Canadians by the Canadian government during and after World War II was deplorable. The paper then discusses how the Canadian government acknowledged the racist character of these policies in 1988 and offered redress to the Japanese Canadian population.

From the Paper
"Japanese Canadians during the Second World War were forced to contend with a decades-old torrent of racial discrimination that culminated in their internment and forced labor by the Canadian government. The treatment of Japanese Canadians during this period appears particularly cruel-even sinister-when one considers that of the Canadians evacuated from the Pacific Coast of Canada, most were Canadian-born and naturalized Canadian citizens."
Essay # 99970 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Teaching Canadian History, 2007.
The paper looks at the Jack Granatstein's "Who Killed Canadian History?", which discusses how Canadian history should be taught in Canadian schools.
1,216 words (approx. 4.9 pages), 6 sources, MLA, AU$ 53.95
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Abstract
The paper looks at Jack Granatstein's "Who Killed Canadian History?" where he claims that the history of Canada has been seriously damaged by the practice of studying differences rather than commonalities. The paper asserts that Granatstein fails to appreciate that there is ample room for group and particularist histories that do not fit easily within an over-arching historical narrative. The paper maintains that Granatstein fails to recognize that Canadians, living in an evermore diverse society, need to have an ever-expanding and ever-diversifying view of history too.

From the Paper
"In fairness to Jack Granatstein, there are various problems afflicting public memory in Canada - or at least there were in 1998 when his tome was released. For instance, one online source notes that a 1997 Angus Reid poll found only one-third of Canadians knew that Remembrance Day commemorates the end of World War One whereas a scant five percent knew that the Upper and Lower Canada rebellions took place in 1837. More unsettling, given its political relevance today, only 10 percent of Canadians between the ages of 18 and 24 who were contacted by pollsters knew what the Quiet Revolution was all about and 17 percent of respondents - nearly one out of every five - inexplicably claimed Tennessee Williams and Andy Warhol were Canadian. To this melange of error and misunderstanding could be added numerous other instances drawn from the same survey. The end result of all of this, in the view of Dr. Granatstein, will be - may already be fast becoming - disaster."
Essay # 84736 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Canadian Health, 2005.
This paper compares and contrasts Canadians' health and the Canadian health care system with that of other OECD countries.
1,575 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 0 sources, AU$ 80.95
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Abstract
The paper points out that in this context it must be acknowledged that cross country comparisons of statistics may sometimes produce more questions than answers. The paper offers an example: If we compare Canada's maternal mortality statistics with those of Norway for 2000 we find that while Canada only had 6 deaths per 100, Norway had 16. The paper considers that Norway's Scandinavian neighbour only had 2 per 100,000, together with the fact that there appears to be no obvious parallel with infant mortality, health expenditure, or number of doctors and therefore must admit that this statistic stands as a puzzling anomaly.

From the Paper
"A comparison and contrast analysis of the health of Canadians and the Canadian health care system with that of other OECD countries is necessarily qualified by the differences in definition and approach to health care issues as a consequence of distinct wellness and health care cultures in different countries. To cite just one example, with respect to acute and long-term bed, the OECD report Health at a Glance: OECD Indicators 2003, notes that caution is required in making cross-country comparisons of long-term care beds."
Essay # 113234 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Unfunded Infrastructure of Canadian Municipalities, 2009.
An examination of the unfunded infrastructure in Canadian municipalities and what is being done to address this issue.
10,170 words (approx. 40.7 pages), 11 sources, APA, AU$ 266.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the unfunded and underfunded infrastructure of Canadian municipalities and the risk this poses. It examines how the infrastructure of Canadian municipalities fell into a state of such disrepair and why funding became an issue in the first place. The paper then discusses what is being done in Canada to address this critical problem. The paper contains graphs and figures.

Table of Contents:
Abstract
Introduction
Statement of Problem
Purpose of Study
Significance of Study
Research Questions
Methodology
Theoretical Framework and Rationale
Literature Review
Findings of the Study
Conclusion

From the Paper
"This study concludes that Canada has failed to fund its municipalities in a manner in which they were enabled to correctly fund and support infrastructure development and maintenance and that this problem is well-acknowledged in Canada. Reassessment has been ongoing in Canada and plans are now well underway for addressing this problem. Canada appears to have come to the realization that other means and methods of public infrastructure funding such as those noted to be successful in the United States, will be required if Canada is to repair existing infrastructure and properly maintain that infrastructure in the years to come. If the local governments are to gain and sustain autonomy then these municipal governments must necessarily consider the options for funding municipal infrastructure development and maintenance and the funding necessary to effectively and efficiently provide for costs associated with infrastructure development and maintenance."
Essay # 85487 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, 2005.
An interpretation of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms by the Canadian courts.
3,375 words (approx. 13.5 pages), 3 sources, AU$ 173.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (hereafter referred to as the Charter's is part of the Constitution Act, 1982) and is fundamental legislation used by the Canadian courts to protect the human rights of Canadian citizens. The paper discusses how like all legislation, the Charter is complex and may be interpreted in different ways. Over the years, the courts have been charged with attempting to interpret it in the best interests of Canadians.
Essay # 90520 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Canadian Airline Industry, 2006.
An essay examining the Canadian airline industry and the role that the Canadian government should be playing in that industry.
1,575 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 4 sources, AU$ 80.95
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Abstract
This essay examines a number of issues regarding the complex interactions of government and market with respect to the Canadian airline industry. Beginning with a brief outline of the respective roles of government and market in economic theory, the paper argues that the Canadian government has an important role to play in the Canadian airline market with regard to promoting competition.

From the Paper
"The Canadian airline industry may be seen as an example of an industry in which the roles of government and the market are not only complex and highly integrated, but also highly controversial as well. In large measure, this is due to the limited size of the Canadian domestic airline market, and the public demand for geographical coverage spanning a continent. This mixture of political forces with market forces is further complicated, in the Canadian context, by the issue of Canadian nationalism which manifests itself in the market in barriers to investment by foreign capital in the Canadian airline industry."
Essay # 89481 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Canadian Film Industry, 2006.
A review of the independent Canadian film industry.
5,625 words (approx. 22.5 pages), 10 sources, AU$ 289.95
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Abstract
This paper reviews the Canadian film industry, one that is said to be a composite of three different unique bodies that have combined to create a dynamic film environment; albeit not a uniquely Canadian one. The paper goes on to discuss how while the indigenous Canadian film industry is still extant it might be described as moribund at best. If not for governmental support for the indigenous film industry, independent Canadian film making might already be extinct. The Canadian film industry is relatively healthy overall but the figures indicate strictly indigenous Canadian films, outside of one or two major production houses, may suffer revenue and market difficulties in the years ahead.
Essay # 99945 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Who Killed Canadian History?", 2007.
An analysis of the concepts of teaching Canadian history and Jack Granatstein's book "Who Killed Canadian History?".
1,267 words (approx. 5.1 pages), 6 sources, APA, AU$ 55.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at whether or not the fragmentation of Canadian history over the course of time has been bad for Canada, as historian, Jack Granatstein suggests in his book "Who Killed Canadian History?" Ultimately, the author of the paper takes the view that Granatstein's book raises some worthwhile points, but fails to consider all the ways in which a new approach to teaching history has engaged minority students and compelled those in the majority to take a more thoughtful look at their own past.

From the Paper
"Additionally, critics of Granatstein's work argue that he fails to appreciate that the proper role of education is not simply to give students dry "facts" but to teach them the skills they need to critically assess those facts and to arrive at their own conclusions after systematically amassing and analyzing the available evidence. Suffice it to say, proper teaching (at least in the social sciences) is about having students critically engage the "big" questions which will eventually confront them as voting adults; it is not about giving them questions which have already been answered."
Essay # 89226 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
When Does an Immigrant Become a Canadian?, 2006.
Using actual conversations with immigrants to Canada, this paper examines when immigrants to Canada feel they have become Canadian.
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 0 sources, AU$ 57.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at what distinguishes an immigrant from a Canadian, and argues that this occurs, over time. The paper refers to several works to indicate educated notions of Canadian society as excluding or racist, in contrast with testimony from everyday immigrant Canadians. Becoming Canadian seems largely a process of osmosis, so that a person realizes they no longer think like persons where they came from, or otherwise are changed by the experience of living in Canada. Testimony provided by immigrants, in every case, contradicts what educated immigrant theorists have argued about Canadian society.

From the Paper
"This paper owes to conversation with immigrants to Canada on the topic of when they knew they had become Canadians. Several people said they had become Canadian without realizing it, till an experience of their old culture or country made them see that they were different, that they thought differently and that their minds referred to Canada as home. Much academic literature refers marginalization, or adaptation versus assimilation, as in Eva Karpinski's collection of short stories, poems and essays on what it means to be Canadian that stresses how authors feel they do not belong or are opposed, somehow, in Canada."
Essay # 90671 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Canadian Agriculture, 2006.
A look at the importance of the Canadian agricultural industry to that of the overall strength of the Canadian economy.
2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 2 sources, AU$ 115.95
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Abstract
Canada's economy is performing at a median point on the international level. Canada is unique in that it demonstrates the lowest investment share in GNP but also the greatest net exports. In other respects, Canada occupies the international middle ground in virtually every category. Canada, along with other nations who wish to compete internationally now understands that competitiveness must now be defined in a broader, international context. This paper examines the Canadian agricultural industry in terms of its significance to the health and success of the Canadian economy. The paper goes on to discuss the importance of the United States to Canada's economy, pointing out that the United States is currently Canada's largest export market, the main reason being that "Canada's agriculture and agri-food industry has benefited from greater and more secure access to the U.S. market under the NAFTA".
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Papers [1-16] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>