20 results
Search Results
2. Trans migrations: Seeking refuge in "safe haven" Toronto.
- Author
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Jacob, Tai and Oswin, Natalie
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IMMIGRATION lawyers , *LGBTQ+ literature , *CANADIAN literature , *REFUGEES - Abstract
Trans and gender nonconforming (TGNC) people who make refugee claims in Canada negotiate a complex nexus of identity, belonging, and citizenship. Drawing on insights from TGNC refugees, immigration lawyers, and frontline workers, in this paper we examine the ways the state controls the trans body through the refugee claims process and in the process of integration into life in Canada, while also highlighting trans refugee methods of survival and resistance. What emerges is an understanding of the ways that refugees navigate the tension between gender, sexuality, and homecoming as both intimately felt and geopolitically managed. We convey TGNC refugee narratives to demonstrate how they both confirm and expand upon the existing literature on Canadian LGBTQ+ refugees. TGNC refugees' experiences at the Immigration and Refugee Board confirm insights from existing LGBTQ+ refugee studies. However, TGNC refugees' day‐to‐day lives differ significantly from LGB refugee lives as recounted in the literature. In TGNC refugees' attempts to access gender‐affirming documentation, healthcare, housing, and income, they confront distinct systems of transgender exceptionalism, border imperialism, and racial and heteropatriarchal capitalism that limit their access to basic necessities and impact how they build home both conceptually and materially. Key Messages: Refugee narratives elicited at the Immigration and Refugee Board follow a logic of "transgender exceptionalism" and often diverge from the complexity of Trans and gender nonconforming (TGNC) refugee experiences.TGNC refugees experience barriers to accessing housing, healthcare, adequate documentation, and employment due to histories and systems of oppression.These narratives demonstrate that the trans refugee homemaking process is implicated in nationalism, but also shows the needs to push against this limiting frame. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Abstracts of Papers to be Presented at the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research.
- Subjects
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PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *ANNUAL meetings , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *CHOLINERGIC mechanisms - Abstract
This article presents abstracts of papers to be presented at the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research held October 12-15, 1995 in Toronto, Ontario. Cardiovascular activation has traditionally been operationalized in terms of single registered variables, it has often been interpreted, however, in terms of underlying functional units or modes of control, such as alpha-adrenergic, beta-adrenergic, and cholinergic activation and their synergistic or antagonistic interactions.
- Published
- 1995
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- View/download PDF
4. Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Fifteenth Annual Meeting of The Society for Psychophysiological Research.
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CONFERENCES & conventions , *ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. , *PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
This article provides certain abstracts of papers presented at the Fifteenth Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, which was held at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Toronto, Ontario, in October 1975. Members of the Program Committee were J. Richards Jennings, James Avcrill, Anne Schell, Neil Schnciderman and Gary E. Schwartz. Symposia and mini-courses comprised most of the day-rime program. Research report accepted for presentation were given and discussed informally at two Science Fairs, one during October 17, 1975 and the other on October 19, 1975.
- Published
- 1976
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5. The Role of Pilot Projects in Urban Climate Change Policy Innovation.
- Author
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Hughes, Sara, Yordi, Samer, and Besco, Laurel
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CLIMATE change , *PILOT projects , *HOUSING , *CLIMATE change mitigation , *ENERGY consumption , *RETROFITTING of buildings , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation - Abstract
Cities are taking a leadership role in addressing global climate change and reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, but policy innovations are needed to help cities move from goals to outcomes. Pilot projects are one means by which cities are experimenting with new ways of governing and financing climate change mitigation. In this paper, we develop a framework for understanding the role of pilot projects in urban policy innovation: their emergence and rationale, and the means by which they ultimately scale up and out to reduce GHG emissions. We use this framework to evaluate a pilot project for retrofitting social housing buildings in Toronto. We find the initial pilot project helped address the challenges of pursuing deep retrofits of social housing. Scaling these lessons up to the city level required overcoming challenges to financing and coordinating a larger project; scaling out to the provincial level revealed institutional and political obstacles to pursuing the co‐benefits of deep building retrofits in social housing. Bridging agents play an important role in both scaling processes. The analysis reveals the additive nature of urban policy innovation and the dynamic interplay of change agents and institutional and political context in innovation processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Governing the Commercial Streets of the City: New Terrains of Disinvestment and Gentrification in Toronto's Inner Suburbs.
- Author
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Rankin, Katharine N. and McLean, Heather
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GENTRIFICATION , *URBAN studies , *SUBURBS , *SHOPPING centers - Abstract
This paper explores the commercial shopping street as a site of racialized class struggle. The argument builds around the study of a disinvested inner-suburban neighbourhood in Toronto, which furnishes an ideal case through which to achieve the paper's objectives of, first, identifying commercial space as an important site of contestation over competing suburban futures; second, delineating how processes of racialization inform the economies of commercial gentrification and urban renewal; and third, highlighting the epistemological and theoretical insights that emerge when research is conducted collaboratively, among academic, community, and activist groupings. The paper argues that such commercial spaces play a key role in making the city accessible to vulnerable and marginalized groups. Two competing planning agendas centred on reordering commercial space, meanwhile, spell the almost-certain demise of such arrangements: a 'real estate' vision featuring new condominium developments, and a new urbanist resistance favouring 'green' and 'creative' alternatives. Our engagements with precarious, predominantly immigrant-owned businesses and community-based researchers reveal the complicity of both modes of development planning with processes of displacement and structural racism. Specifying these dynamics as 'racialized class projects' opens up space for intervention and organizing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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7. Municipally managed gentrification in South Parkdale, Toronto.
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Slater, Tom
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INNER cities , *GENTRIFICATION , *CONFORMITY , *COMMUNITY development laws , *MIDDLE class - Abstract
Earlier studies of Canadian inner-city gentrification, especially in Toronto, project an image of the process as being emancipatory: a middle-class reaction to the oppressive conformity of suburbia, modernist planning and market principles. This paper, a case study of gentrification in South Parkdale, Toronto, questions this image by illustrating the role of local context in theory and policy and the consequences of gentrification for vulnerable inner-city populations. Once a desirable residential neighbourhood, South Parkdale experienced disinvestment following the construction of the Gardiner Expressway in the 1960s and also experienced further problems in the 1970s and 1980s following the deinstitution-alisation of psychiatric patients from adjacent hospitals. Discharged patients suffered from a shortage of affordable housing options, and many ended up in substandard rooming houses and bachelorettes, of which South Parkdale has a disproportionate share in Toronto. The neighbourhood's sporadic gentrification since the mid-1980s has intensified in recent years, as the City of Toronto is regularising and licensing the neighbourhood's low-income housing—a major concern for tenants who fear that landlords will use recent provincial legislation on tenancy to attract wealthier residents into their improved buildings. This paper examines this situation with qualitative evidence and argues that gentrification in South Parkdale, driven and managed by neoliberal policy, is far from an emancipatory process and argues for an interpretation of gentrification that looks beyond the experiences of the middle classes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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8. “Common–Sense” Neoliberalism: Progressive Conservative Urbanism in Toronto, Canada.
- Author
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Keil, R.
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LIBERALISM , *URBAN life ,CANADIAN economy - Abstract
This paper argues that urban neoliberalism can best be understood as a contradictory re–regulation of urban everyday life. Based on an analysis of neoliberalism as a new political economy and as a new set of technologies of power, the paper argues that the urban everyday is the site and product of the neoliberal transformation. Governments and corporations play a key role in redefining the conditions of everyday life through neoliberal policies and business practices. Part of this reorientation of everydayness, however, involves new forms of resistance and opposition, which include the kernel of a possible alternative urbanism. The epochal shift from a Keynesian–Fordist–welfarist to a post–Fordist–workfarist society is reflected in a marked restructuring of everyday life. The shift changes the socioeconomic conditions in cities. It also includes a reorientation of identities, social conflicts, and ideologies towards a more explicitly culturalist differentiation. Social difference does not disappear, but actually becomes more pronounced; however, it gets articulated in or obscured by cultural terms of reference. The paper looks specifically at Toronto, Ontario, as a case study. An analysis of the explicitly neoliberal politics of the province’s Progressive Conservative (Tory) government under Mike Harris, first elected in 1995, demonstrates the pervasive re–regulation of everyday life affecting a wide variety of people in Toronto and elsewhere. Much of this process is directly attributable to provincial policies, a consequence of Canada’s constitutional system, which does not give municipalities autonomy but makes them “creatures of provinces.” However, the paper also argues that Toronto’s elites have aided and abetted the provincial “Common–Sense” Revolution through neoliberal policies and actions on their own. The paper concludes by outlining the emergence of new instances of resistance to the politics of hegemony and catastrophe of urban neoliberalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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9. Strategic Migrant Network Building and Information Sharing: Understanding 'Migrant Pioneers' in Canada.
- Author
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Somerville, Kara
- Subjects
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IMMIGRANTS , *INDIAN diaspora (South Asian) , *EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This article explores the migrant networks that develop between migrants, non-migrants and the larger Indian diaspora. Specifically, it examines the decision to migrate to Toronto, Canada and how this decision is shaped by, and in turn shapes the migrant network. Based on 35 interviews with migrants from Karnataka, South India, two main findings are presented. First, migrants are deliberately choosing settlement countries in which their families are not yet located, thereby becoming 'migrant pioneers' in their country of settlement, which is an attempt to expand their migrant networks globally. Second, the narratives these migrants receive and subsequently impart to others are often inaccurate, which can lead to miscommunication flows among these migrant networks. These findings are considered in light of the large body of research on migrant networks and the ways they develop and transmit information. This paper argues that existing understanding of migrant networks is somewhat static. Findings indicate that these 'migrant pioneers' may be engaging in global risk-diversification strategies for subsequent generations, but may themselves suffer from the more immediate consequences of misinformed networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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10. John Porter Lecture: Waves of Protest--Direct Action, Deliberation, and Diffusion.
- Author
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Wood, Lesley
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POLITICAL movements , *CULTURE diffusion , *SOCIAL movements , *DIRECT action , *PROTEST movements , *FIRST Nations of Canada , *ACTIVISM , *POLITICAL participation , *HISTORY - Abstract
The book Direct Action, Deliberation and Diffusion: Collective Action After the WTO Protests in Seattle argues that the process of diffusion is dependent on social processes in the receiving context. The most important in social movements is an egalitarian and reflexive deliberation among diverse actors. The book traces the direct action tactics associated with the Seattle protests against the World Trade Organization in 1999 and how these spread to activists in Toronto and New York City. It shows how the structure of the political field, racial and class inequalities, identity boundaries, and organizational and conversational dynamics limited deliberation among activists, and thus limited the diffusion of the Seattle tactics. By constraining the spread of the Seattle tactics, this slowed the global justice movement's wave of protest. In this paper, I explore the application of and implications of this model of protest tactic diffusion to the recent Idle No More mobilizations. Le livre Direct Action, Deliberation and Diffusion: Collective Action After the WTO Protests in Seattle fait valoir que le processus de diffusion dépend de processus sociaux dans le contexte de réception. Le plus important pour les movements sociaux est une délibération égalitaire et réflexive entre divers acteurs. Le livre retrace les tactiques d'action directe associés aux manifestations de Seattle contre l'Organisation Mondiale du Commerce en 1999 et comment ils se propagent à des militants de Toronto et de New York. Il montre comment la délibération de la structure des inégalités le domaine politique, raciales et de classe, les limites de l'identité et de la dynamique de l'organisation et de la conversation limitée parmi les militants, et donc limiter la diffusion de la tactique de Seattle. En limitant la propagation de la tactique de Seattle, ce ralentissement de la vague de protestation du mouvement altermondialiste. Dans cet article, j'explore l'application et implications de ce modèle de diffusion protestation de tactique pour les dernières Idle No More mobilisations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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11. Effectively Maintaining Inequality in Toronto: Predicting Student Destinations in Ontario Universities.
- Author
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Davies, Scott, Maldonado, Vicky, and Zarifa, David
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RIGHT to education , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *SOCIAL status , *EDUCATION , *EQUALITY , *HIGHER education , *ECONOMIC conditions of college students , *SOCIAL conditions of college students - Abstract
L'accès aux universités prestigieuses, les mieux classées et dotées de ressources, quoique peu étudié, représente une dimension additionnelle des inégalités en éducation au Canada. La théorie de l'inégalité maintenue efficacement (IME) soutient que les groupes favorisés vont dominer l'accès aux institutions les mieux classées peu importe le palier scolaire. Cet article teste cette hypothèse en utilisant les données uniques de milliers d'élèves du Conseil Scolaire Public de Toronto (TDSB) qui ont été suivis à partir de la neuvième année jusqu'à leur entrée dans un établissement postsecondaire. Ces données ont ensuite été associées aux données de classement des universités, de leur revenu, de leurs dépenses et de leurs fonds de dotation. Une série de modèles statistiques à niveaux multiples indique que l'entrée dans la hiérarchie universitaire ontarienne tend à refléter les inégalités dans l'accès général aux universités. Les femmes, les étudiants d'origine asiatique, et les étudiants issus des quartiers ayant des statuts socio-économiques élevés sont plus susceptibles d'entrer dans les universités les mieux classées et dotées de ressources; tandis que les étudiants qui s'identifient comme Noirs et hommes, sont moins susceptibles d'entrer dans ces institutions. Les avantages du statut socio-économique élevé et de l'origine asiatique sont seulement partiellement expliqués par les variables académiques comme variables médiatrices. Ceci suggère que le statut culturel joue un rôle dans l'élaboration du choix universitaire, alors que le sexe ainsi que les autres inégalités raciales sont dus en grande partie aux processus du parcours académique. Access to highly ranked, prestigious, and well-resourced universities represents an additional yet understudied dimension of educational inequality in Canada. The theory of effectively maintained inequality contends that advantaged groups will dominate access to the best-positioned institutions within any credential tier. This paper tests this hypothesis using unique data on thousands of Toronto District School Board students that were tracked from Grade 9 to their entry in Ontario postsecondary institutions, and then linked to data on university rankings, incomes, expenditures, and endowments. A series of multilevel models shows that entry into Ontario's university hierarchy tends to mirror inequalities in general access to universities. Female, Asian-origin, and students from higher socioeconomic neighborhoods are more likely to enter higher ranked and better resourced institutions, while students who self-identify as black and male are less likely to enter such institutions. High socioeconomic status and Asian-origin advantages are mediated only partly by academic variables, suggesting that status cultures play a role in shaping their university choices, while gender and other racial inequalities emerge largely through academic processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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12. 'Participation', White Privilege and Environmental Justice: Understanding Environmentalism Among Hispanics in Toronto.
- Author
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Gibson‐Wood, Hilary and Wakefield, Sarah
- Subjects
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ENVIRONMENTAL justice , *ENVIRONMENTALISM , *POLITICAL participation , *LATIN Americans , *ENVIRONMENTAL activism , *SOCIAL history ,RACE relations in Canada ,ONTARIO politics & government - Abstract
The environmental justice movement has highlighted not only the unequal distribution of environmental hazards across lines of race and class, but also the white, middle-class nature of some environmentalisms, and broader patterns of marginalization underlying people's opportunities to participate or not. There is a significant body of work discussing Hispanic environmental justice activism in the US, but not in Canada. This paper draws on interviews with representatives of organizations working on environmental initiatives within the Hispanic population of Toronto, Canada to explore definitions of and approaches to environmentalism(s) and community engagement. Four interrelated 'mechanisms of exclusion' are identified in this case study-economic marginalization; (in)accessibility of typical avenues of participation; narrow definitions of 'environmentalism' among environmental organizations; and the perceived whiteness of the environmental movement. Taken together, these mechanisms were perceived as limiting factors to environmental activism in Toronto's Hispanic population. We conclude that the unique context of Toronto's Hispanic community, including contested definitions of 'community' itself, presents both challenges and opportunities for a more inclusive environmentalism, and argue for the value of 'recognition' and 'environmental racialization' frameworks in understanding environmental injustice in Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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13. IN/VISIBLE GEOGRAPHIES: ABSENCE, EMERGENCE, PRESENCE, AND THE FINE ART OF IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION.
- Author
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Bain, Alison L.
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ART , *GROUP identity , *IDENTITY (Psychology) - Abstract
In this paper I draw on interviews with professional visual artists in Toronto, Canada to reconstruct an occupation-specific reading of the urban landscape. I use a detailed examination of one specific occupational identity to reveal the intricate relationship between self, work, and context at different spatial scales. The underlying mechanism that supports the articulation and negotiation of artistic identities, I argue, is the sustained tension between absence and presence, visibility and invisibility within different spaces of the urban fabric. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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14. NURSING AND HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT AND POLICY The urban geography of SARS: paradoxes and dilemmas in Toronto's health care.
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Affonso, Dyanne D., Andrews, Gavin J., and Jeffs, Lianne
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SARS disease , *GEOGRAPHY , *NURSING practice , *COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
affonso d.d., andrews g.j. & jeffs l. (2004) Journal of Advanced Nursing 45(6), 568–578 The urban geography of SARS: paradoxes and dilemmas in Toronto's health care Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) has impacted heavily on both Canada's society and its health care system. Quite unexpectedly, hospitals and health care workers became facilitators of disease diffusion. This experience has demonstrated the need for a comprehensive disease control strategy. The aims are threefold. First, to examine the subtle and changing spatial characteristics of SARS during the short but critical period of its rapid spread in the Greater Toronto Area. Second, to make salient three paradoxes, and their associated dilemmas, faced by nurses and other health care professionals challenged with caring for the sick and containing the rapid spread of the disease. Third, to propose some ways of approaching these dilemmas, as well as some broader preventative and mitigating strategies. The crosscutting concepts of ‘clinical uncertainty’ and ‘flow of human contacts’ are used to explain disease transmission characteristics and urban spatial diffusion and to guide the particular strategies developed. Evidence for the paper comes from public health records, governmental and non-governmental health statements and the initial epidemiological research on SARS. Direct insights are also gained from recent first-hand experiences of Toronto's health care system during the crisis. The concepts of clinical uncertainty and the flow of human contacts provide in-depth insights that complement the findings of large-scale epidemiological studies, and help operationalize their general calls for enhanced control measures. The comprehensive disease control strategy proposed includes the creation of a hospital infrastructure specific to the containment of biological threats; an advisory coalition of disease control specialists; the development of a biological threat-and-containment simulation laboratory and three specific programmes in patient safety, risk assessment and community mobilization. It is argued that containment alone, while a necessary and urgent priority, cannot be seen as an end in itself and might better be understood as one possible trajectory within a comprehensive problem-solving strategy. The experiences in Toronto may offer insights to other cities and countries that currently lack such strategies and hence may be vulnerable to similar outbreaks of dangerous infectious diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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15. “Cultivating Children as You Would Valuable Plants:” The Gardening Governmentality of Child Saving, Toronto, Canada, 1880s–1920s.
- Author
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Xiaobei Chen, Joanne
- Subjects
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GARDENING , *CHILD care , *SOCIAL movements , *CHILDREN , *MIDDLE class - Abstract
Gardening metaphors with English middle-class overtones were widely used in the late nineteenth-century child saving writings in Toronto, Canada to explain and promote the ideal mode of parenting and the objective of child saving. An analysis of gardening metaphors contributes to understanding mechanisms of bio-power on the site of child saving. This paper argues that the child saving movement attempted to install a mode of proper parental control that can be described as “the gardening governmentality”– it was primarily positive/productive (yet without excluding repressive elements), individualized, intelligent, and localized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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16. Toronto Inc? Planning the Competitive City in the New Toronto.
- Author
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Kipfer, Stefan and Keil, Roger
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URBAN planning , *URBAN renewal , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
This paper analyses recent developments in urban planning in the City of Toronto. A municipality of 2.4 million inhabitants that makes up the inner half of the Greater Toronto Area, the City of Toronto was consolidated from seven municipalities in 1998. Planning practice, discourse, and “vision” in the new City of Toronto are shaped by the city’s bid for the 2008 Olympics, related proposals for waterfront redevelopment, and preparations for a new official plan. In the context of comparative debates on trends in local governance, we see current planning strategies in Toronto as one of several strategic sites in which Toronto is consolidated into a “competitive city.” Historically, the formation of the competitive city in Toronto must be seen as a result of the impasse of postwar metropolitan planning in the early 1970s, the sociospatial limitations of downtown urban reform politics in the 1970s and 1980s, and the neoliberal restructuring and rescaling of the local state in the 1990s. Theoretically, we draw on the global city research paradigm, regime and regulation theory, and neo-Gramscian urban political theory to suggest that planning the competitive city signals shifts in the sociopolitical alliances, ideological forms, and dominant strategies that regulate global-city formation. These constellations and strategies threaten to reconstitute bourgeois hegemony in Toronto with a series of claims to urbanity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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17. Ethical decision-making processes used by health care providers.
- Author
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Grundstein-Amado R
- Subjects
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DECISION making , *MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL ethics - Abstract
This paper reports the results of a study conducted with 18 health care providers (HCPs) in two Toronto hospitals. The study examined and assessed how these HCPs make clinical-ethical decisions in the light of a theoretical model of clinical-ethical decision making. Nine nurses and nine doctors were interviewed through two-phased, in-depth, semi-structured interviews. The results suggest that, in relation to the two major elements of the model, namely the ethical component and the decision theory component, the HCPs did not follow a consistent and systematic pattern of ethical decision making. Differences emerged between their actual self-reported behaviour and their potential moral capability (i.e. their abstract thought process). The general picture that emerged was that decisions were made in a narrow, habitual manner, through the elimination of the most significant and demanding elements of the process. HCPs' ethical approaches affected the entire process of the decision making: their perception of the problem, their search for and selection of information and evidence, and their development of alternatives and resultant consequences. It is suggested to (a) further investigate and understand the subjective realities of the individuals involved in the decision making processes, their values and the meaning they ascribe to their choices, and (b) to establish extensive educational programmes to enhance HCPs' decision-making capacity and subsequently promote an effective and responsible professional practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Trends in the development of alcohol and drug treatment services in Ontario: a replication and extension of a previous study.
- Author
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Rush, Brian and Tyas, Suzanne
- Subjects
- *
ALCOHOLISM , *DRUG abuse treatment - Abstract
This paper summarizes the major trends in the development of alcohol and drug treatment services in Ontario from 1979 to 1989. Data were obtained from all treatment services in the province by surveys undertaken in 1980, 1983, 1986 and 1989. Supplementary archival data are included on the use of American treatment programs by Ontario residents over a similar time period. Across the period of analysis, there has been a rapid increase in the number of alcohol and drug programs (130 to 217), their total cost ($44.4 million to $77.1 million) and the total treatment caseload (30 356 to 61 622). With respect to different types of services, the largest growth in capacity has occurred for specialized assessment/referral centres. Use of short-term residential resources within the province has risen slightly but this has been augmented by a rapid increase in the use of similar programs in the United States. Contrary to expectations from research evidence and provincial policy initiatives, only modest gains have been experienced with non-residential treatment alternatives compared to the increases in availability and utilization of residential treatment programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. MEETING 35th Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research.
- Subjects
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MEETINGS , *PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) , *BRAIN - Abstract
This article presents information on the 35th Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research (SPR), as of January 1, 1995. The meeting will be held during October 11-15, 1995 in Toronto, Ontario. The official call for papers and further information about the location of the meeting will appear in the March 1995 issue of periodical "Psychophysiology." Registration and travel information may also be obtained from SPR Management Office, 1010 Vermont Avenue, NW Suite 1100, Washington DC.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
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20. FIFTEENTH ANNUAL MEETING SOCIETY FOR PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAL RESEARCH.
- Subjects
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CONFERENCES & conventions , *ANNUAL meetings , *HOTELS , *PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents an announcement regarding fifteenth annual meeting of society for psychophysiological research from October 16, 1975 at Hyatt Regency hotel in Toronto, Ontario. Information regarding registration and submission of papers is also given in the article.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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