New ebooks From Canadian Indies

Political Science

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Patriation and Its Consequences

Patriation and Its Consequences

Constitution Making in Canada
edited by Lois Harder & Steve Patten
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback Hardcover
tagged : constitutions, canadian, constitutional
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Peacemakers

Peacemakers

How people around the world are building a world free of war
by Douglas Roche
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : peace
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Pearson's Peacekeepers

Pearson's Peacekeepers

Canada and the United Nations Emergency Force, 1956-67
by Michael K. Carroll
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback Hardcover
tagged : post-confederation (1867-), canada
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Permeable Border

Permeable Border

The Great Lakes Basin as Transnational Region, 1650-1990
by John J. Bukowczyk; Nora Faires; David R. Smith & Randy W. Widdis
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover
tagged : economic policy
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Planning for Rural Resilience

Planning for Rural Resilience

Coping with Climate Change and Energy Futures
edited by Wayne J. Caldwell, contributions by Wayne Caldwell; Erica Ferguson; Emanuel Lapierre-Fortin; Jennifer Ball; Suzanne Reid; Paul Kraehling; Eric Marr; John Devlin; Chris White; Tony McQuail; Margaret Graves; Bill Deen; Ralph Martin & Christopher Bryant
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : environmental policy, agriculture & food, global warming & climate change
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Planning the New Suburbia

Planning the New Suburbia

Flexibility by Design
by Avi Friedman
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback Hardcover
tagged : urban & land use planning, city planning & urban development
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Points of Entry

Points of Entry

How Canada’s Immigration Officers Decide Who Gets in
by Vic Satzewich
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover Paperback
tagged : emigration & immigration, canadian, social policy
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Police in Canada

Police in Canada

The Real Story
by John Sewell
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : criminology
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Excerpt

Preface
My interest in policing issues began when I was a member of Toronto City Council during the 1970s and early 1980s. When teaching at York University in the early 1980s, I was asked to devise a course on policing, and that led to my 1985 book, Police: Urban Policing in Canada.
As I turned to other activities my interest did not wane, but there was always a problem of finding a forum for expressing ideas about police. In the late 1990s, I helped establish the Toronto Police Accountability Coalition (TPAC). For more than a decade, this organization has met monthly to try to understand the policing world and to discuss police policies in a constructive manner. It hasn't always been easy. For instance, Toronto police chief Julian Fantino sued me for libel and slander for
what he said was a misinterpretation of a Supreme Court of Canada ruling about the way the Toronto police force carried out strip searches. I had to find money to retain a lawyer and agree to apologize for whatever I had said, but in that apology I stated that I would continue to press for a better strip-search policy to be used by Toronto police. (As noted in this book, we were not successful in reducing the number of strip searches carried out by Toronto police: almost one-third of all those police in canada arrested are strip searched, even though the Supreme Court stated that strip searching should be done rarely.) TPAC has produced a bimonthly electronic bulletin since 2002 (available at www.tpac.ca), and it traces many policing issues in Toronto over this eight-year period.
Then, in 2007, I taught a one-semester course in policing at Ryerson University. This book emerged as a result of that activity. In writing Police in Canada, I have been amazed at just how little has changed
since 1985. Some of the most interesting thinking about police activities occurred in the 1970s and 1980s (as one notes from the essays in David Bayley's recent book, What Works in Policing), and since then it seems most police forces have been closed to experimentation and external study. This makes the case for needed change all that more urgent.
I thank my friend Jim Lorimer for asking me to do this book, and for the editorial assistance of Diane Young at Lorimer's and Alison Reid. This book is dedicated to my long-term colleagues at TPAC, Anna, Richard, Harvey, and Else Marie, who have been strong friends in reviewing and acting on this most important of public policy issues over the years.

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