Colossal Canadian Failures 2

Colossal Canadian Failures 2
Title Colossal Canadian Failures 2 PDF eBook
Author Randy Richmond
Publisher Dundurn
Pages 195
Release 2006-04
Genre Reference
ISBN 1550026186

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This second entertaining collection offers more evidence that Canada could adopt as its national slogan ?If we don't laugh, we'll cry.”

Dundurn Spring/Summer 2006 Cat

Dundurn Spring/Summer 2006 Cat
Title Dundurn Spring/Summer 2006 Cat PDF eBook
Author Dundurn Press Limited
Publisher Dundurn
Pages 58
Release 2006-01-01
Genre
ISBN 9781550026276

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The Dundurn Group

The Dundurn Group
Title The Dundurn Group PDF eBook
Author The Dundurn Group
Publisher Dundurn
Pages 80
Release
Genre
ISBN 9781550026603

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The Dundurn Group

The Dundurn Group
Title The Dundurn Group PDF eBook
Author Bernd Horn
Publisher Dundurn
Pages 56
Release
Genre
ISBN 9781550027228

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Policy Learning and Policy Failure

Policy Learning and Policy Failure
Title Policy Learning and Policy Failure PDF eBook
Author Claire A. Dunlop
Publisher Policy Press
Pages 172
Release 2020-01-15
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1447352017

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First published as a special issue of Policy & Politics, this updated volume explores policy failures and the valuable opportunities for learning that they offer. Policy successes and failures offer important lessons for public officials, but often they do not learn from these experiences. The studies in this volume investigate this broken link. The book defines policy learning and failure and organises the main studies in these fields along the key dimensions of processes, products and analytical levels. Drawing together a range of experts in the field, the volume sketches a research agenda linking policy scholars with policy practice.

When the Irish Invaded Canada

When the Irish Invaded Canada
Title When the Irish Invaded Canada PDF eBook
Author Christopher Klein
Publisher Anchor
Pages 386
Release 2020-02-18
Genre History
ISBN 0525434011

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"Christopher Klein's fresh telling of this story is an important landmark in both Irish and American history." —James M. McPherson Just over a year after Robert E. Lee relinquished his sword, a band of Union and Confederate veterans dusted off their guns. But these former foes had no intention of reigniting the Civil War. Instead, they fought side by side to undertake one of the most fantastical missions in military history: to seize the British province of Canada and to hold it hostage until the independence of Ireland was secured. By the time that these invasions--known collectively as the Fenian raids--began in 1866, Ireland had been Britain's unwilling colony for seven hundred years. Thousands of Civil War veterans who had fled to the United States rather than perish in the wake of the Great Hunger still considered themselves Irishmen first, Americans second. With the tacit support of the U.S. government and inspired by a previous generation of successful American revolutionaries, the group that carried out a series of five attacks on Canada--the Fenian Brotherhood--established a state in exile, planned prison breaks, weathered infighting, stockpiled weapons, and assassinated enemies. Defiantly, this motley group, including a one-armed war hero, an English spy infiltrating rebel forces, and a radical who staged his own funeral, managed to seize a piece of Canada--if only for three days. When the Irish Invaded Canada is the untold tale of a band of fiercely patriotic Irish Americans and their chapter in Ireland's centuries-long fight for independence. Inspiring, lively, and often undeniably comic, this is a story of fighting for what's right in the face of impossible odds.

Flax Americana

Flax Americana
Title Flax Americana PDF eBook
Author Joshua MacFadyen
Publisher McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Pages 369
Release 2018-10-10
Genre History
ISBN 0773553959

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Farmers feed cities, but starting in the nineteenth century they painted them too. Flax from Canada and the northern United States produced fibre for textiles and linseed oil for paint – critical commodities in a century when wars were fought over fibre and when increased urbanization demanded expanded paint markets. Flax Americana re-examines the changing relationships between farmers, urban consumers, and the land through a narrative of Canada's first and most important industrial crop. Initially a specialty crop grown by Mennonites and other communities on contracts for small-town mill complexes, flax became big business in the late nineteenth century as multinational linseed oil companies quickly displaced rural mills. Flax cultivation spread across the northern plains and prairies, particularly along the edges of dryland settlement, and then into similar ecosystems in South America's Pampas. Joshua MacFadyen's detailed examination of archival records reveals the complexity of a global commodity and its impact on the eastern Great Lakes and northern Great Plains. He demonstrates how international networks of scientists, businesses, and regulators attempted to predict and control the crop's frontier geography, how evolving consumer concerns about product quality and safety shaped the market and its regulations, and how the nature of each region encouraged some forms of business and limited others. The northern flax industry emerged because of border-crossing communities. By following the plant across countries and over time Flax Americana sheds new light on the ways that commodities, frontiers, and industrial capitalism shaped the modern world.