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Full bibliography 12,975 resources
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Compilation of recent English/French publications on Canadian labour history that emphasize the period 1800-1975. Materials pertaining to the post-1975 period may also be included, although more selectively. [See the database, Canadian Labour History, 1976-2009, published at Memorial University of Newfoundland.]
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The article reviews the book, "Making Native Space: Colonialism, Resistance, and Reserves in British Columbia," by Cole Harris.
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The Chinese have constituted the largest immigrant group entering Canada since 1987. This paper focuses on the paid work experience of Chinese immigrant women from Hong Kong and Mainland China who were highly educated, skilled professionals in their home country. It demonstrates that these immigrant women are being deskilled in Canada and this deskilling is complicated by the contradictory processes of globalization and economic restructuring, with its polarizing effects along axis of gender, race, ethnicity, class and citizenship. Gendered and racialized institutional processes in the form of state policies and practices, professional accreditation systems, employers' requirement for “Canadian experience” and labor market conditions marginalize Chinese immigrant women. As a result, they are being channeled into menial, part-time, insecure positions or becoming unemployed. In order for Chinese immigrant women to become equal and active participants in Canadian society the provision of inclusive programs and policies is necessary.
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The article reviews the book, "The Making of a Policeman: A Social History of a Labour Force in Metropolitan London, 1829-1914," by Haia Shpayer-Makov.
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The article reviews the book, "A Poetics of Social Work: Personal Agency and Social Transformation in Canada, 1920-1939," by Ken Moffatt.
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The article reviews the book, "Unequal Freedom: How Race and Gender Shaped American Citizenship and Labor," by Evelyn Nakano Glenn.
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The article reviews the book, "Labour before the Law: The Regulation of Workers' Collective Action in Canada, 1900-1948," by Judy Fudge and Eric Tucker.
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The article reviews the book, "The Politics of Whiteness: Race, Workers, and Culture in the Modern South," by Michelle Brattain.
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The article reviews the book, "State Work: Public Administration and Mass Intellectuality," by Stefano Harney.
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The article reviews the book, "Values at Work: Employee Participation Meets Market Pressure at Mondragon," by George Cheney.
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The article reviews the book, "La santé des femmes au travail en Europe : des inégalités non reconnues," by Laurent Vogel.
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In the fall and winter of 1919-1920, in response to vigorous lobbying by A.J. Andrews and others on behalf of the Citizens’ Committee of 1000, the Canadian state, through Orders in Council in 1919 and 1920, became the paymaster for a private prosecution of the Winnipeg strike leadership charged at the end of the strike with seditious conspiracy. The prosecution was initiated under provisions of the Criminal Code that allowed for prosecutions by private citizens or organizations, subject to the consent of the Attorney General of Manitoba. The federal government paid Alfred J. Andrews and his associates in the Citizens’ Committee fees for services rendered during the strike, when, as leading figures in the Committee, they led the campaign against Winnipeg’s working-class revolt. The Department of Justice also paid $12,332.00 to the Winnipeg based McDonald Detective Agency for work associated with the prosecution. This federal largesse allowed Andrews to secure two juries almost certainly tainted by pre-trial investigations ordered by Andrews. The unity of purpose forged by Winnipeg’s business elite and the federal state illuminates the tendency of the liberal state and capital to forge a common front against perceived threats to the status quo in moments of extremis.
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The article reviews the book, "La mondialisation et ses ennemis," by Daniel Cohen.
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The article reviews the book, "Réfléchir la compétence : approches sociologiques, juridiques, économiques d’une pratique gestionnaire," edited by Arnaud Dupray, Christophe Guitton and Sylvie Monchatre.
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Behind the recent emergence of of "whiteness" as a prevalent category of scholarly analysis lies the story of two intertwined intellectual traditions and their belated acceptance in the American academy. One of these traditions is antiracist Marxism; the other is the black antiracist tradition. Both have commented on white identity and white racism in ways that presage the insights of the explosion of whiteness studies that followed David Roediger's key text, "The Wages of Whiteness." In this essay, I will provide a brief overview of the two aforementioned traditions before proceeding to evaluate the post-"Wages" scholarship. Hopefully, my discussion will contextualize the whiteness phenomenon by pointing to its roots. I also hope to demonstrate that although some of the whiteness scholarship is less than perspicacious, the work of Roediger et al. constitutes a meaningful intervention into the historiography of race in American history. Finally, my intent here is to build upon and respond to Eric Arnesen's helpful survey of the whiteness field. --From author's introduction
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Editorial introduction to the theme of the issue.
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The article reviews the book, "The Color of Work: The Struggle for Civil Rights in the Southern Paper Industry, 1945-1980," by Timothy J. Minchin.
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"Racism, Eh?" is the first publication that examines racism within the broad Canadian context. This anthology brings together some of the visionaries who are seeking to illuminate the topics of race and racism in Canada through the analysis of historical and contemporary issues, which address race and racism as both material and psychic phenomena. Fundamentally interdisciplinary in nature, this text will be an invaluable resource for undergraduate and graduate students, academics studying or practicing within the Humanities and the Social Sciences, and anyone seeking information on what has been a little explored and poorly understood Canadian issue."--Publisher's description. Contents: Part 1 Institutional Racism -- 1 Penn and Teller Magic -- 2 Lance Belanger's Tango Lessons -- 3 The Black Occupational Structure in Late-Nineteenth-Century Ontario -- Part 2 Crime and Justice -- 4 Raising Raced and Erased Executions in African-Canadian Literature -- 5 Examining Racism and Criminal Justice -- 6 Criminological Research on "Race" in Canada -- Part 3 First Nations -- Of Land, Law and Power -- 7 Across a Boundary of Lava -- 8 Treaty Federalism -- 9 Navigating Discrimination -- Part 4 Race, Place and Nation -- 10 Adrift in the Diaspora -- 11 Racism Between Jews -- 12 Local Colour -- Part 5 Complexity of Intersectionallity and Performance of Racial Identity -- 13 Speak White! -- 14 Jack Canuck Meets John Chinaman -- 15 Performing Desire -- Part 6 Popular Culture -- 16 Race In-Out of the Classroom -- 17 Other Canadian Voices -- 18 (Re)Visioning Histories -- Part 7 Production and Representation -- 19 Each Sentence Realized or Dreamed Jumps Like a Pulse with History and Takes a Side -- 20 Articulating Spaces of Representation -- 21 The "Hottentot Venus" in Canada -- 22 Racial Recognition Underpinning Critical Art -- Part 8 Multiculturalism -- 23 But Where Are You REALLY From? -- 24 Social Cohesion and the Limits of Multiculturalism in Canada -- 25 Racialising Culture-Culturalising Race -- 26 Re-articulating Multiculturalism.
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The article reviews the book, "Plateaus of Freedom: Nationality, Culture, and State Security in Canada, 1940-1960," by Mark Kristmanson.
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The article reviews the book, "Nelson Pereira dos Santos," by Darlene J. Sadlier.
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