Drawing on First Peoples Principles of Education, this book highlights the ways in which Indigenous learning and pedagogies parallel the western notion of Slow pedagogy.
Tracing the impact of North America's longest-running women-led theatre company, this book sheds light on the rise, impact, and redefinition of nonprofessionalizing theatre in Canada.
Drawing on interviews with young activists and young people who have experienced homelessness, Burnt by Democracy illustrates how growing wealth inequality has weakened democracy across five Western nations.
Through remarkable stories of innovation, persistence, and achievement, Educating the Body provides a comprehensive history of physical education in Canada.
This book traces the rhetoric that politically active and professionally engaged female physicians used to maintain their presence and strengthen their significance in women's and children's medical spaces in Weimar and Nazi Germany.
Blood of Others offers a cultural history of Crimea and the Black Sea region, one of Europe's most volatile flashpoints, by chronicling the aftermath of Stalin's 1944 deportation of the Crimean Tatars in four different literary traditions.
Designed by instructors with long-standing experience in teaching Korean, this workbook helps students acquire and practice their Korean language skills.
Frontier Science explores the shadowy world of military research and the consequences of employing science to conquer nature in northern Canada during the Cold War.
This book profiles men in Germany and beyond who followed Karl Heinrich Ulrichs and adopted his term "urning" as a personal queer identity in the closing decades of the nineteenth century.
Bringing together the voices, experiences, and expertise of top Canadian scholars, this book helps incorporate sustainability content into social work teaching methods.
Using seventeen cases where researchers applied behavioral interventions in the field, this book identifies not only what works but also what does not work (and why).
Bringing together the voices, experiences, and expertise of top Canadian scholars, this book helps incorporate sustainability content into social work teaching methods.
This captivating ethnographic novel tells a story about global inequality through a rich, poignant, and often humorous portrait of everyday life in the postcolonial Pacific.
This book offers unique insights into the shifts in behaviour and attitudes surrounding the Soviet emancipation of women in the Muslim periphery, Tajikistan.