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         Canadian Ethnic Groups:     more books (100)
  1. Cajun: French language, Ethnic group, Acadians, Maritimes, Giovanni da Verrazzano, Classical antiquity, William Francis Ganong, Cajun music, Cajun cuisine, ... French, List of Cajuns, French Canadian
  2. Voices of Change: Immigrant Writers Speak Out by Jurgen Hesse, 1990-07
  3. Iskwewak - Kah' Ki Yaw Ni Wahkomakanak by Janice Acoose, 1995-05-01
  4. Quebec and the question of immigration: From ethnocentrism and ethnic pluralism, 1900-1985 (Canadas ethnic groups) by Michael D Behiels, 1991
  5. The Anglo-Normans in eastern Canada (Canada's ethnic group series booklet) by Yves Frenette, 1996
  6. THE BELGIANS IN CANADA (CANADAS ETHNIC GROUPS) by CORNELIUS J JAENEN, 1991
  7. THE PORTUGUESE IN CANADA Canada's Ethnic Groups by David HIGGS, 1982-01-01
  8. The West Indians in Canada (Canadas ethnic groups) by James W. St. G Walker, 1984
  9. Settlement, Immigration, Ethnic Groups.(Bibliography): An article from: Historical Studies
  10. The Cambodians, Laotians and Vietnamese in Canada (Canada's ethnic group series) by Louis-Jacques Dorais, 2000
  11. French Canada: An account of its creation and break-up, 1850-1967 (Canada's ethnic group series booklet) by Marcel Martel, 1998
  12. The acculturation of Canadian immigrants: determinants of ethnic identification with the host society *.: An article from: The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology by David Walters, Kelli Phythian, et all 2007-02-01
  13. How the proportion of artificial Canadians varied among regions of Canada and ethnic origins between 1991 and 1996.: An article from: Canadian Journal of Regional Science by Karol J. Krotki, 1997-03-22
  14. Perceptions of democracy in Guatemala: an ethnic divide?(Report): An article from: Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies by Dinorah Azpuru, 2009-10-01

61. Adaptation To Pregnancy In Three Different Ethnic Groups: Latin-American, Africa
Translate this page in Three Different ethnic groups Latin-American, African-American, and Anglo-American,by Regina Lederman and Diana S. Miller, in canadian Journal of Nursing
http://www.cjnr.nursing.mcgill.ca/archive/30/abst30_3_lederman.html
CJNR Home Back Issues Cumulative Index CJNR Abstract Vol. 30, No. 3, Fall 1998 Adaptation to Pregnancy in Three Different Ethnic Groups: Latin-American, African-American, and Anglo-American Regina Lederman and Diana S. Miller Canadian Journal of Nursing Research 30(3): 37-51, 1998
CJNR Home
Back Issues Cumulative Index

62. RACE, MINORITIES AND ETHNIC GROUPS
entity. C. ethnic group Any kind of human group, racial. VI. Some other minoritygroups. 1. canadian separatists. 2. Union of South Africa. 3. Outsiders.
http://www.ualr.edu/~jdrobson/race.htm
RACE, MINORITIES AND ETHNIC GROUPS I. Race Groups of people with distinctive combinations of physical traits that set the off from other groups. Skin color is the principle trait used, although hair, shape of head, eye fold, body build, etc are also used. When we are dealing with the concept of race we may use it biologically to refer to a breeding population or sociologically to refer to a social group. A. Conventional - 3 categories NO OBJECTIVELY CORRECT NUMBER OF RACES CAN BE GIVEN! B. Race as a social fact - a race exists when people say it exists. People act toward each other on the basis of conceptions and ideas about race, not on the basis of the biological entity. C. Ethnic group - Any kind of human group, racial or otherwise, which is socially differentiated to an important degree and has developed its own subculture. These are culturally distinct groups.

63. Multiculturalism
After carrying out studies on ethnic groups and reviewing a large number ofboth canadian and international studies, John Berry and Rudy Kalin, social
http://www.pch.gc.ca/progs/multi/evidence/series1_e.cfm
Minister's page Secretary of State - Amateur Sport Secretary of State (Multiculturalism) (Status of Women) Location: Home - Multiculturalism Subjects A-Z Index Arts and Culture Citizenship and Identity ... Agencies and Corporations

Ethnic Identity Reinforces
Attachment to Canada
Attachment to Canada and Ethnic Identity
One of the most comprehensive surveys on attitudes towards multiculturalism in Canada was conducted by the Angus Reid Group in 1991 (1). About 3,325 Canadians were interviewed and asked a wide range of questions about their ethnic identity and pride in being Canadian. "The statement: 'you can be proud of being Canadian and proud of your ancestry at the same time' received a virtually unanimous believability rating" (1:5). Approximately 95% of Canadians agreed with this statement. Regardless of their ethnic backgrounds, the vast majority (78%) believed that Canadians share many values in common and 91% felt that these values are important in binding people together as a nation. Also, almost three-quarters of Canadians (73%) believed that the multiculturalism policy ensured that people from different backgrounds had a sense of belonging to Canada. It should also be noted that 89% of those interviewed identified themselves as Canadians and only 6% used any other form of identification. Two economic studies of the effects of Canada's multiculturalism policy were carried out by the Economic Council of Canada in the early 1990s (2). These studies concluded that integration (as a central goal of the multiculturalism policy) leads to greater participation of immigrants in the host society while maintaining their cultural identity. Assimilation, on the other hand, puts pressure on them to give up their cultural identity as the price for acceptance by the host society. The reports also suggest that Canada's multiculturalism policy

64. Friendly Fire Kills Canadian Troops
not just one, but two, bombs on the canadian troops at the Afghan interim administrationsucceeds in involving all major ethnic and religious groups in the
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2002/4/18/53826.shtml

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New items all the time Friendly Fire Kills Canadian Troops NewsMax Wires Thursday, April 18, 2002
WASHINGTON In a friendly fire incident, the United States dropped at least one 500-pound, laser-guided bomb on Canadian troops near Kandahar, Afghanistan, killing at least four soldiers, U.S. officials said late Wednesday. Approximately eight other Canadian soldiers were wounded. It is possible that a U.S. Air National Guard F-16 fighter jet dropped not just one, but two, bombs on the Canadian troops at around 1:55 a.m. Thursday, Afghanistan time, according to a statement by U.S. Central Command. A Central Command spokesman, Maj. Bryan Hilferty, said the incident is under investigation, and he expressed condolences to the Canadians' families. In other developments, Afghanistan returns to two traditional symbols of power this week the king and the loya jirga.

65. Conferences, Workshops And Seminars
MarchApril ethnic Research Section - Selected ethnic groups in the Land Use Studies1974 CONFERENCES February ethnic Studies and the canadian Plains.
http://www.cprc.ca/conference.html
Conferences, Workshops and Seminars
As part of its original and continuing education and community out-reach mandate, CPRC has, since 1974, organized, facilitated or partnered with other organizations in delivering numerous conferences, symposia workshops, lectures, meetings and seminars.
CONFERENCE - Managing Changing Prairie Landscapes
This is the 3rd in the series of Plain as the Eye Can See conferences and public forums. This event will be held May 16th and 17th, 2003 at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum, with the theme Managing Changing Prairie Landscapes. As with the last two forums, it will involve many organizations and civic groups and a major peer reviewed publication will be produced.
More Information

CONFERENCE
March: Aboriginal People and the Prairies: Plain As The Eye Can See Public Forum.
CONFERENCE
April: Monitoring for Ecosystem Health Conference April: Plain as the Eye Can See
WORKSHOPS
June: Saskatchewan Research Council Urban and Rural Community adaptations to climate change. CONFERENCE August: Canadian Society for Ecological Economics, (CANSEE) Annual Conference

66. H-ETHNIC Messages For January 1996: QUERY: Canadian Archives On German-Canadian
QUERY canadian archives on Germancanadian theatrical groups? (x. JosefJ. Barton (texbart@merle.acns.nwu.edu) Sat, 13 Jan 1996 113116 -0600
http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~ethnic/archives/logs/jan96/0066.html
QUERY: Canadian archives on German-Canadian theatrical groups? (x
Josef J. Barton texbart@merle.acns.nwu.edu
Sat, 13 Jan 1996 11:31:16 -0600
From: Laurence_Kitching@sfu.ca
Possibly, archivists on this list may be able to tell me
if any particular archives across Canada might contain
newspaper and documentary materials specifically about
German-Canadian groups which put on theatre performances
in towns, villages and cities in Canada since the turn
of the century to the present.
Any information would be greatly appreciated.
Laurence Kitching
kitching@sfu.ca

67. Ethnic Groups Must Share In The Pie
In a nation of separate ethnic groups, a federal system can ensure voicesfor all. Quebec is still testing the limits of canadian federalism.
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-110401starr.story
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... For the Record Editions Print Edition National (PDF) Wireless NewsDirect Extras College Connection Sweepstakes Crossword Horoscope ... Multimedia Archives Enter Keyword(s): Detailed Search SITE MAP Subscription Services Home Delivery Subscriptions NewsDirect Gift Subscriptions College Discount ... Recycler.com LA Times Initiatives Times in Education Reading by 9 LA Times Books LA Times Family Fund ... Inside the Times Partners November 4, 2001 E-mail story Print COMMENTARY Ethnic Groups Must Share in the Pie Photo Galleries Prison Revolt More Photos Message Board What do you think of the U.S. attacks on the Taliban? Complete Coverage The attack on America and the first six months of its aftermath Sept. Oct. Nov. ... April Times Headlines One More Woe for Airlines Equal When Bullets Fly It's Vandalism, Not Art Be Fair to Two-Year Colleges ... Cuddle Up, Mellow Out By S. FREDERICK STARR Even as bombs rain on Kabul and Kandahar, plans for a post-Taliban government in Afghanistan are advancing on every front. Some of these plans should be cause for concern. Afghanistan is multiethnic. Pushtuns are the largest group and Tajiks a distant second, followed by Hazaras, Uzbeks and Turkmens. Any government that is to be legitimate must be organized to ensure fair representation for all. Most Afghans appreciate this and know that on this point, the Taliban's Pushtun leaders have failed miserably. Foreign diplomats scurrying to plan the new government have taken this need to heart.

68. Grade Five Social Studies - Identity (Contemporary Canadian People)
Make connections between the many ethnic populations in Canada and Using a map, identifylanguage groups of the that follow to profile various canadian heroes.
http://www.sasked.gov.sk.ca/docs/elemsoc/g5u13ess.html
Social Studies Grade Five
Unit 1: Identity
Module Three - Contemporary Canadian People
Concepts:
  • Identity, multiculturalism , point of view, heroes
Knowledge Objectives Students will know:
  • that multiculturalism is part of Canada's identity.
  • that our heroes reflect Canada's diversity.
Skills/Abilities Objectives Students will:

  • conduct a survey and tabulate the results.
  • identify various points of view.
  • access, organize and share information about various Canadians including heroes.
Attitudes/Values Objectives Students will:
  • appreciate and value the country's diversity.
Citizen Action Objectives Students may:
  • conduct a survey.
  • nominate, assess and induct heroes into a local Hall of Fame.
Suggested Approaches
  • Teacher and students may choose to take a survey in class to identify the ethnic groups represented. Compare with provincial and national statistics.
  • Research and identify some of the following characteristics of various ethnic backgrounds: language , technologies, recreation, traditions, celebrations , religion, foods, clothing, and lifestyle.

69. Dominion Institute - Great Canadian Questions
of the unity debate and the persistent squabbles about what and who is really canadian. tobe, there is, A sense of the intrusion of the ethnic groups into an
http://www.schoolnet.ca/greatquestions/e/q2_klein_2.html
Web services by:
Français

Pier 21 Article Two by Naomi Klein Last week, Neil Bissoondath wrote that we in Canada have made such a fetish of other cultures and traditions that for many of us, "Canadianness is only skin deep." Our "real" selves are rooted in idealized versions of elsewhere, anywhere but here. The description struck a chord with me. As the child of two Jewish Americans of Eastern European descent, I have often looked elsewhere (to the U.S., Israel, Europe) and felt the strange arbitrariness of nationality, felt it to be very unreal indeed. Mr. Bissoondath suggests that the unreality of our Canadianness flows from ignorance: we lack identity as a nation because we have no connection to our past. But what if, in trying to forge a deeper connection with this place, our past is not our friend, but our enemy? What if to know Canada's history - not the feel-good, heroic version, but the messy, often wrenching truth - is to know that one's inclusion in this country has only ever been skin deep? For many Canadians, particularly those not of British or French descent, that is exactly what they would find if they looked at the nation's past, and even much of its present. Canada has forged an identity grounded in a lie. The lie holds that we possess an essential national character beyond our common history of stolen land and immigration; that we are not, in fact, a nation of proud mutts, outcasts and adventurers.

70. Anastasia's Dissertation
The remigration of second generation Greek canadians challenges the efforts ofthe canadian government to preserve the cultural heritage of ethnic groups.
http://www.uweb.ucsb.edu/~panagako/dissert.html
DISSERTATION PROPOSAL
Locating Identities in the Diaspora:
Perspectives on Remigration among Second Generation Greek Canadians
Anastasia N. Panagakos
Anthropology, UC Santa Barbara
Calgary, Alberta - Canada
Eleohori, Arkadia - Greece
SUMMARY
This project investigates remigration among second generation Greek Canadians and how the influences of family, community and society shape the decision to remain in Canada or migrate to Greece. Using methods such as interviews and participant-observation, I explore such factors as age, gender, class, education, travel to Greece, and involvement in the Greek community and larger Canadian society. The objective is to understand remigration as a result of ethnic identity formation in Canada and its consequences on the individual and the community.
RESEARCH TOPIC
Born and raised in a privileged society with access to higher education, advanced medical care, and economic advantages unparalleled in much of the world, what motivates these individuals to abandon their place in Canadian society for an uncertain future in Greece, a country with fewer economic opportunities and a history of political instability? In this project I explore the possible influences of ethnic identity in contributing to this emerging form of migration. Ethnic identity is shaped by immigrant parents, Canadian institutions such as public schools, the Greek Canadian community, and interactions with Greece through satellite television and the Internet (Scourby 1982, Kourvetaris 1997, Tastsoglou and Stubos 1992, Moskos 1989, Xenocostas 1991). This study will help to identify which of these factors lead some to migrate to Greece while others choose to remain in Canada.

71. Census: Ethnocultural Portrait: Definitions
latter are considered part of the canadianborn or Japanese, Koreans and other visibleminority groups, such as ethnic origin, as defined in the Census, refers
http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census01/products/analytic/companion/etoimm/def.

Analysis series
Ethnocultural portrait
Definitions
The foreign-born population Immigrants of the 1990s refer to immigrants who came to Canada between 1991 and Census day, May 15, 2001. Visible minorities : The 2001 Census provides information on the characteristics of people in Canada who are members of a visible minority, as defined by the Employment Equity Act. The Act defines visible minorities as "persons, other than Aboriginal peoples, who are non-Caucasian in race or non-white in colour". Under this definition, regulations specify the following groups as visible minorities: Chinese, South Asians, Blacks, Arabs, West Asians, Filipinos, Southeast Asians, Latin Americans, Japanese, Koreans and other visible minority groups, such as Pacific Islanders. Ethnic origin , as defined in the Census, refers to the ethnic or cultural group(s) to which the respondent's ancestors belong. An ancestor is someone from whom a person is descended, and is usually more distant than a grandparent. Ethnic origin pertains to the ancestral "roots" or background of the population, and should not be confused with citizenship or nationality. A single ethnic response occurs when a respondent provides one ethnic origin only. For example, in 2001, 726,300 people stated that their only ethnic origin was Italian. Since 1981, when respondents were first permitted to report more than one ethnic origin in the census, a distinction has been made between single and multiple responses.

72. Introduction: ARL Annual Salary Survey 1995-96
from the US university member libraries; canadian law prohibits the identificationof canadians by ethnic category. treated in three distinct groups staff in
http://www.arl.org/stats/salary/1995-96/intro.html
ARL Annual Salary Survey 1995-96
INTRODUCTION
The ARL Annual Salary Survey 1995-96 reports salary data for all professional staff working in ARL libraries. It is the most comprehensive and thorough guide to current salaries in large U.S. and Canadian academic and research libraries, and a valuable management and research tool that describes salaries for librarians. This year's publication follows the general format of previous years with the following changes. Three questions from Part I of the survey instrument were withdrawn this year. These questions asked libraries to report revised beginning, average, and median salaries for the previous year, and the revised figures were what had been reported in Tables 5, 7 and 9. The ARL Statistics and Measurement Committee, with feedback from the Salary Survey Coordinators in ARL institutions, agreed that these data were no longer useful. The title of this year's publication also reflects this change, in that the year is "1995-96" instead of "1995" to reflect that the data are being reported only for fiscal year 1995-96. Tables 5, 7, and 9 are simply reprints rather than revisions. Another minor change was implemented in Table The first group of libraries includes those institutions that report over 120 staff positions instead of over 124. Readers who compared their institutions against the first and second groups should note this change, which was made because the number of cases otherwise is disproportionately small in the first column.

73. Reference Reports 2001 Census: Ethnic Groups 2001 Highlights
Among particular ethnic groups, levels of median personal annual income varied widely. incomewere reported by those identifying as canadian ($26,000), South
http://www.stats.govt.nz/domino/external/pasfull/pasfull.nsf/7cf46ae26dcb6800cc2

74. Reports On Selected Racial/Ethnic Groups Special Focus: Maternal And Child Healt
to classify infants into racial/ethnic minority groups. states did not have ethnicinformation included Indians, Aleuts, Eskimos, Alaskans, and canadian Indians
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00001671.htm
Reports on Selected Racial/Ethnic Groups Special Focus: Maternal and Child Health Contribution of Birth Defects to Infant Mortality Among Racial/Ethnic Minority Groups, United States, 1983
References
  • CDC. Contribution of birth defects to infant
  • mortalityUnited States, 1986. MMWR 1989;38:633-5. 2. CDC. Years of potential life lost before ages 65 and 85United States, 1987 and 1988. MMWR;39:20-2. 3. Lynberg MC, Khoury MJ, Oakley GP. The contribution of birth defects to infant mortality, United States, 1986. Presented at the American Public Health Association 117th Annual Meeting. October 22-26, 1989, Chicago, Illinois. 4. Hall JG, Powers EK, McIlvaine RT, Ean VH. The frequency and financial burden of genetic disease in a pediatric hospital. Am J Med Genet 1978;1:417-36. 6. CDC. Economic burden of Spina Bifida - United States, 1980-1990. MMWR 1989;38:264-7. 7. Erickson JD. Racial variation in the incidence of congenital malformations. Ann Hum Genet 1976;39:315-20. 8. Myrianthopoulos NC. Racial differences. In: Malformations in children from one to seven years: a report from the Collaborative Perinatal Project. New York: Alan R. Liss, Inc., 1985:55-64. All MMWR HTML documents published before January 1993 electronic conversions from ASCII text into HTML. This conversion may have resulted in character translation or format errors in the HTML version. Users should not rely on this HTML document, but are referred to the original

    75. Ethnic Studies
    canadian ethnic Studies Association (CESA) CESA is a nonprofit interdisciplinary intergrouprelations and the cultural life of ethnic groups in Canada. Once
    http://www.jsu.edu/depart/library/graphic/ethnic.htm
    Ethnic Studies
    See also:
    Race Relations

    Sociology

    Xenophobia
    Table of Contents Asian American and Asian Studies Black Studies Latino/Chicano Studies Native American Studies ... Resources Asian American and Asian Studies
    Back to Table of Contents
    • Asian American Policy Review
      • "Founded in 1989, the Harvard University Asian American Policy Review is the first academic journal in the country dedicated soley to examining social issues and public policies affecting the Asian Pacific American community. As the journal enters its ninth year, it remains dedicated to providing a forum for meaningful public debate."
      • Asian Studies WWW Virtual Library
        • The Asian Studies WWW Virtual Library is "a global collaborative project which provides access in bibliographic and in hypertext terms to networked scholarly documents, resources and information systems concerned with a given field of expertise. In the case of Asian Studies WWW VL all links are inspected and evaluated before being added to this archipelago of the networked knowledge." This page is divided into three broad categories: Asian-Pacific Global Resources, Regional Resources, and Individual Countries/Territories Resources.
        • Japanese American Relocation Digital Archive
          • "This collection of 222 photographs from the Hearst Collection of the Los Angeles Examiner in the USC Regional History Collection, documents the relocation of Japanese Americans in California during World War II. It provides a glimpse into the lives of Japanese immigrants and native born Japanese Americans (a.k.a. Nisei) residing in California from 1921 to 1958, with primary emphasis on 1941-1946."

    76. Ethnocultural And Social Characteristics Of The Canadian Population - 1996 Censu
    Ethnocultural and Social Characteristics of the canadian Population. containsprofiles of visible minorities, immigrants, and ethnic groups.
    http://uregina.ca/datalibrary/census96/dimension/ethno.html
    Ethnocultural and Social Characteristics of the Canadian Population
    contains profiles of visible minorities, immigrants, and ethnic groups. As well, data are given for the labour market experience of graduates, the diversity of households, and families. The data in this directory is part of the Dimensions Series Census data on this subject is also available as part of the Nation series providing a portrait of all of Canada broken down by province and the Profile series which presents data for smaller geographic areas. Only the Beyond 20/20 tables have been retrieved to the local archive. Raw ascii files are available. The data is stored in Beyond 20/20 browser . The 4.2 software will be able to access tables previously released by Statistics Canada in either Beyond 20/20 4.1 or IVISION software. Use of the 1996 Census tables is limited to U of R faculty, staff and students for administrative, teaching and research uses only. Please consult the full agreement.
    Tables
    Selected Demographic, Cultural, Educational, Labour Force and Income Characteristics of the Total Population by Age Groups (6) and Sex (3), Showing Visible Minority Population (14) for Canada, Provinces, Territories and Census Metropolitan Areas, 1996 Census (20% Sample Data)
    Cat. No. 94F0009XDB96003 10,225 KB

    77. Facts About Suicide In New Brunswick In 1997
    There were no suicides among Native canadian females, while there were 11 suicidesamong all other ethnic groups (ageadjusted rate of 2.6 per 100,000).
    http://www.gnb.ca/0208/suicide97-e.asp
    Health and Wellness
    Provincial Epidemiology Service
    Home
    Services
    Department
    Facts about Suicide in New Brunswick in 1997
    Introduction
    Suicide was the first cause of death among New Brunswickers aged 25 to 29 years in 1996. It accounted for 27% of all deaths in this age group (1). Previous analysis showed an increasing trend in the adjusted overall suicide rates from a low of 9.5 per 100,000 population in 1987 to a high of 16.2 per 100,000 population in 1995 (2). In 1996, a reduction in the unadjusted overall and male suicide rates was reported (3). The overall suicide rate in New Brunswick (12.3 per 100,000 population) for that year was lower than the national average (13.1 per 100,000 population) for the same period (2). In 1996 the overall suicide rate for New Brunswick ranked fourth after the Northwest Territories, Yukon Territory, and Quebec (4). The Provincial Epidemiology Service (PES) of New Brunswick produces reports on suicide periodically. The aim of PES activities in the field of suicide is to monitor suicide, and to identify population groups at high risk of suicide in the province. At the same time, PES is committed to assist health professionals in developing suicide prevention strategies and interventions.

    78. Editor's Column
    This paper, from Eric Thomas (Concordia), assesses the CBC's programming for thegrowing number of ethnic groups which are diversifying canadian culture.
    http://www.wlu.ca/~wwwpress/jrls/cjc/BackIssues/17.3/editor.html
    Editor's Column
    Volume 17, Number 3, 1992
    Back to the Table of Contents
    The Canadian Communication Association's tenth conference in Charlottetown was a great success even though participation was not as strong as it is during those years when the Learneds meet in the centre of the country. However, it is exactly these east- and west-coast venues which draw our attention to geography as an important factor in the theorizing about and the practice of Canadian communication studies. The meeting was poignant as well because it focused on the issue of ``Nation and Community,'' a debate which has not only preoccupied all of us throughout the past year, but which has yielded a number of interesting papers which we look forward to publishing in future issues. Journal for the coming year. Finally, on a sadder note, I regret to inform our readers of the death of the Journal's founder and first editor, Earle J. Beattie. After a successful career as a journalist in Canada and abroad, Professor Beattie taught at Ryerson Polytechnical Institute, the University of Western Ontario, and York University. He retired from York University in 1982. It was Earle Beattie's vision and enthusiasm for the field of communication studies that got this Journal started in the mid-1970s and kept it going in the difficult early years. The best tribute I believe we can pay to Earle is to keep the

    79. XIICourse Descriptions, Sociology And Anthropology
    An examination of the interrelationships among canadian ethnic, racial andlinguistic groups including their locations in the canadian mosaic.
    http://www.uoguelph.ca/undergrad_calendar/12soan.shtml
    2003-2004 Undergraduate Calendar XIICourse Descriptions, Sociology and Anthropology Department of Sociology and Anthropology. The Department of Sociology and Anthropology offers three types of courses: sociology courses with the prefix SOC*; anthropology courses with the prefix ANTH*; and departmental courses with the prefix SOAN*. The departmental category of courses recognizes the fact that the disciplines of sociology and sociocultural anthropology have developed in tandem and it is possible to identify large areas of overlap and convergence in the work of practitioners both historically and in the present. Departmental courses include most of the core theory and methods courses as well as many elective courses. They contribute equally to the subject matter of sociology as well as the subject matter of sociocultural anthropology for purposes of the undergraduate programs of study in both disciplines. Please see the course listings for Anthropology and for Sociology in this section SOAN*2040 Globalization of Work and Organizations F,W(3-0)

    80. UVic Course: ANTH 335
    530, 540, 542, 550. 552, 560, 590, 598. 599. ANTH 335. Units 1.5, (30). Canadianethnic groups. An anthropological perspective on the ethnic groups of Canada.
    http://web.uvic.ca/calendar2002/CDs/ANTH/335.html
    Search Calendar Search UVic.ca
    GENERAL INFO

    UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS

    GRADUATE STUDIES

    CONTINUING STUDIES
    ... Course Titles Anthropology (ANTH)
    ANTH 335
    Units:
    Canadian Ethnic Groups
    An anthropological perspective on the ethnic groups of Canada. The groups will be studied in the context of the wider literature of race relations, minority groups, and ethnicity. Prerequisites: or or 321, or permission of the instructor.
    Undergraduate course in Anthropology offered by the Department of Anthropology in the Faculty of Social Sciences
    Fields of Study ACAN ADMN ADMW AE ... University of Victoria , BC, Canada TOP Last updated on Fri, Aug 16, 2002 previous next

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