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This paper discusses that the reason why Quebec joined Confederation was because they believed their nationality would be protected within the new Canada. 10.5 pgs. 13 f/c. 12b.
Pages: 10.5
Bibliography: 12 source(s) listed
Filename: 2470 Quebec Confederation.doc
Price: US$93.98
37.2479 Saving The N.H.L. In Canada.
This report looks at some of the Canadian hockey teams being forced to relocate if they don't receive substantial government tax breaks. This report will present the pros and cons of such an alternative and to recommend a solution. 9 pgs. 27 f/c. 8b.
Pages: 9
Bibliography: 8 source(s) listed
Filename: 2479 Saving NHL Canada.doc
Price: US$80.55
38.2490 Rave Youth and Substance Abuse.
This paper discusses the rave phenomenon and how its taken over the Canadian youth. The main problem this paper addresses is that this phenomenon has become inter-related with drug-use, and the most popular drug being Ecstasy. 5 pgs. 10 f/c. 8b.
Pages: 5
Bibliography: 8 source(s) listed
Filename: 2490 Rave Youth Drugs.doc
Price: US$44.75
39.2683 Babies and Social Construction.
In Nations are Built of Babies, Cynthia Comacchio analyses the campaign to minimize infant and maternal mortality in early 20th-century Ontario Canada. The Canadian medical profession utilized science experts to try to implement what became known as "scientific motherhood." The effort to socially construct "scientific motherhood" was all about moulding Canadian families to be compatible with industrial capitalism. By teaching and regulating women's "child-rearing' expertise, male elites believed that they could engineer a society that served their interests. Thus, all of this was really about the enforcement of certain ideological values and the implementation of social control. 7.5 pgs. 11 f/c. 6b.
Pages: 7.5
Bibliography: 6 source(s) listed
Filename: 2683 Babies Social Construction.doc
Price: US$67.12
40.4166 British Columbia, 1849-1871: Prelude to Confederation.
This paper discusses the evolution of British settlement on the Pacific coast of North America from the Oregon Treaty (1846) to the Confederation of British Columbia (1871). It traces the evolution from a fur trade station to a colony and then a province. It focuses on conflict with American ambitions in Oregon and Washington and the impact of the gold rush of 1858. It also includes a biography of Sir James Douglas, the colonies governor and the local Hudson's Bay Company Superintendent. 10 pgs. Bibliography lists 11 sources.
Pages: 10
Bibliography: 11 source(s) listed
Filename: 4166 BC Prelude Confederation.doc
Price: US$89.50
41.4175 Why Nova Scotia Failed to Join the American Revolution.
This paper discusses why Nova Scotia failed to join the American Revolution. It discusses the social, political, economic, geographic, as well as religious factors that led to Nova Scotians' lack of attachment to revolutionary ideology in the colonies. 9 pgs. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Pages: 9
Bibliography: 5 source(s) listed
Filename: 4175 Scotia American Revolution.doc
Price: US$80.55
42.8019 The Cultural Divide between French and Native Peoples.
This essay will argue that the relationship between the French and the Native People in the novel "Black Robe" is defined by the difference between the division between a Colonizing People and a Native People. However, it is interesting to see how this relationship is shown from both sides. Both the French and the Native peoples make use of each other in trade and in wars for their own purposes. As well, both Peoples appear to have equal contempt for each other's cultures. However, as this essay will show, in the end the French dominate the Natives and conquer them body and soul. 2 pgs. Bibliography lists 1 source.