• 1867 - Confederation. (matejstranti.com)
  • Macdonald was the most potent figure in bringing about confederation (1867) of the provinces as the Dominion of Canada. (infoplease.com)
  • Among the G-7 nations, Canada faces the stiffest challenges because in addition to scoring poorly on all these counts, it has failed to resolve fundamental constitutional discord over the proper place of Quebec, the second largest provincial gold producer, within the confederation. (goldensextant.com)
  • Heated debate took place in 1964 following the promise of Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson that Canada would acquire its own national flag prior to the centennial of confederation in 1967. (britannica.com)
  • After Britain turned to free trade in the 1840s, customs and excise in Canada became almost exclusively a revenue producer until after Confederation. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • Support for the British Empire and imperialism was strong in much of Canada in the decades after Confederation. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • Britain remained responsible, even after Confederation in 1867, for Canada's external relations . (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • When the South African War broke out in 1899 between Britain and the Afrikaner republics of southern Africa, Canada confronted for the first time since Confederation, the question of whether it would actively help Britain by sending Canadian soldiers to fight in a British imperial war overseas. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • A thoroughly enjoyable read, beginning in 1867 with confederation and industrialization, the book does an excellent job of breaking down how Canada grew through the eyes of the planning community, and how planners grew as a profession alongside our country. (spacing.ca)
  • National day of Canada, it celebrates the anniversary of Canadian Confederation which occurred on July 1, 1867. (unl.edu)
  • The national anthem "O Canada" was proclaimed Canada's national anthem on July 1, 1980, one century after it was first sung in the City of Québec on June 24, 1880. (matejstranti.com)
  • As the single largest investor in Canada's amateur sport system, the Government of Canada plays an important role in this system. (matejstranti.com)
  • Granted, that article should be taken with a grain of salt, but considering the meteoric rise of electronic music over the past few years, and Canada's placement within that phenomenon, I believe it's fair to say that Canada, a country with a population the size of a large state, may be experiencing a Chicago / Detroit moment. (popmatters.com)
  • This book is a history of Canada's role in the world as well as the impact of world events on Canada. (bloomsbury.com)
  • Looking at Canada's international relations from the perspective of elite actors and normal people alike, this study draws on original research and the latest work on Canadian international and transnational history to examine Canadians' involvement with a diverse mix of issues, from trade and aid, to war and peace, to human rights and migration. (bloomsbury.com)
  • With an emphasis on the reciprocal nature of Canada's involvement in world affairs, ultimately it is the first work to blend international and transnational approaches to the history of Canadian international relations. (bloomsbury.com)
  • The author adopts a wide-ranging and multi-dimensional approach to Canada's international history that should be welcomed by Canadians and non-Canadians alike. (bloomsbury.com)
  • [5] [6] Also, the Royal Union Flag remains an official flag in Canada, to symbolize Canada's allegiance to the monarch and membership in the Commonwealth of Nations . (wikipedia.org)
  • He is the author of Canada's Greatest Wartime Muddle: National Selective Service and the Mobilization of Human Resources in Canada during World War II and editor of the 1957-58 volumes of Documents on Canadian External Relations . (ubcpress.ca)
  • Britain also paid for Canada's national defence. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • In 2006, the National Capital Commission, which is in charge of the rules governing monuments and memorials in the Ottawa region, enshrined in formal policy what had been in informal practice not only since the NCC was founded in 1950, but since the city itself became Canada's capital in 1867. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Perhaps the first athletic celebrities were the Canadian scullers who won several international championships.French Canadians by 1700 were influenced by native culture to the degree that they began to measure themselves and their masculinity against their native counterparts by competing against them in such activities as canoeing, snowshoeing, and tobogganing and in the team sport of lacrosse. (matejstranti.com)
  • With the growing importance of French as the main working language of Quebec and increasing dissatisfaction with the linguistic barriers between English and French Canadians, a concerned group of English-speaking parents in St Lambert, outside Montreal, began to meet informally in the early 1960 s to discuss the situation (Lambert & Tucker, 1972). (unavarra.es)
  • Participation was enthusiastically supported by Canadian imperialists but resisted by many others, especially French Canadians. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • [14] In 1867, Alexander Muir composed the patriotic song " The Maple Leaf Forever ", which became an unofficial anthem in English-speaking Canada. (wikipedia.org)
  • Although the 1866 Nationals won 10 games against five defeats, they by no means ranked alongside the Atlantics, Athletics, Mutuals, or the champion Unions of Morrisania, led by handsome young George Wright , the coming baseball hero of the age. (sabr.org)
  • Ottawa, Ontario: Library of Parliament, Parliament of Canada. (wikipedia.org)
  • It has a federal government with: 10 provincial legislatures, 2 territorial legislatures and 1 national parliament located in Ottawa. (unavarra.es)
  • Oil paintings by Raphael of Canadian governors general were reputed to have hung in the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. (biographi.ca)
  • The World's First Gold and Silver Banknotes: The Saga of Treasure Ships and Pirates , Excelsior Collectors Guild (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada), 1988. (encyclopedia.com)
  • Also, and correct me if I'm wrong here, the song from the Canada pavilion in Epcot is not actually your national anthem. (blogspot.com)
  • If you don't know the Canadian national anthem, you haven't been to enough hockey games. (blogspot.com)
  • We would be offended if a Canadian did that to our National Anthem. (blogspot.com)
  • In addition to the flags we offer for purchase, we maintain an archive of the audio and lyrics of the Canada National Anthem, historical information about the Canada flag, demographic data about Canada, and free high resolution images of the Canada flag for use in projects and on websites. (flagdom.com)
  • Anthem, "O Canada! (adlandpro.com)
  • National Indigenous Peoples Day was first established in 1996, and it actually means a lot to me as an Indigenous woman in Canada. (neighboursfriendsandfamilies.ca)
  • There were 140 federally run residential schools in Canada that operated between 1867 and 1996. (canada.ca)
  • Starting from the country's quasi-independence from Britain in 1867, its analysis moves through events in Canadian and global history to the present day. (bloomsbury.com)
  • and they were central to the achievement of national independence through government use of tariff negotiations with other countries. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • Even when Canada gained independence from Britain in 1931, the Union Jack was still used. (flagdom.com)
  • process of Canadian independence from Britain. (adlandpro.com)
  • Yet despite a growing awareness that Canada should become fully independent from Britain, there remained strong British loyalties among millions of Canadians, along with fears that total independence might leave Canada vulnerable to absorption or takeover by the US. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • According to the Official Languages Act, passed in 1969 English and French, official languages of Canada for all purposes of the Parliament and Government of Canada, have equality of status and equal rights and privileges in all the governmental institutions of Canada. (unavarra.es)
  • Asa McKercher is an assistant professor of history at the Royal Military College of Canada. (ubcpress.ca)
  • In the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (1982) public education will be available in all provinces in both official languages, where numbers warrant. (unavarra.es)
  • This imperialism coincided with growing concerns in Canada - whose provinces were once British colonies - about the country's relationship to the already vast and powerful British Empire. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • Canada worked with the United States and Great Britain on the development of the first nuclear weapons, and provided the fuel for the first operational bombs. (ccnr.org)
  • On land, that defaced ensign was used, without authorization, as an unofficial national flag combining Canadian patriotism and loyalty to Britain. (britannica.com)
  • The Mass Casualty Commission was a joint public inquiry between the Governments of Canada and Nova Scotia created to examine the April 2020 mass casualty in Nova Scotia. (bwss.org)
  • This mass casualty was one of the largest mass murders in Canadian history, in which a sole perpetrator, Gabriel Wortman, killed 22 people throughout rural Nova Scotia over a 13-hour period while dressed as an RCMP officer and driving a mocked up RCMP cruiser. (bwss.org)
  • Fortress of Louisbourg: Guide , sketches by Terry Sunderland, Fortress of Louisbourg Volunteers Association and College of Cape Breton Press (Sydney, Nova Scotia , Canada), 1981. (encyclopedia.com)
  • From the 16th century, both the British and the French established colonies in Canada and land disputes between the countries led to four wars between 1689-1763. (flagdom.com)
  • [15] The maple leaf was later added to the Canadian coat of arms in 1921. (wikipedia.org)
  • In the Province of Canada (1841-67), customs was administered by the Finance Department Customs and Inland Revenue, established in 1867 as separate ministries, were united in 1918 and in 1921 became Customs and Excise. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • In 1921, King George V made Red and white have been the official colors of Canada. (flagdom.com)
  • The establishment of the Canadian federation in 1867 was not accompanied by the creation of a special flag for the country. (britannica.com)
  • When British imperialists founded the Imperial Federation League in 1884, Canadian supporters established branches. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • In 1763, Canada became a British colony and from this period until they adopted their own flag, the Union Jack was flown in Canada. (flagdom.com)
  • to facilitate their development, Macdonald's government decided to construct the Canadian Pacific Railway. (infoplease.com)
  • What type of government does Canada have? (countryreports.org)
  • Like the day of the national apology on residential schools in 2008, I still remember the day it was announced by the government, and I have celebrated it annually in the context of family and community ever since. (neighboursfriendsandfamilies.ca)
  • However, National Indigenous Peoples Day is not about government recognition for me. (neighboursfriendsandfamilies.ca)
  • In 1867 the Nationals strengthened themselves with additional recruits, giving each a patronage government job, and somehow persuaded Wright to join them too. (sabr.org)
  • Many different flags created for use by Canadian officials, government bodies, and military forces contain the maple leaf motif in some fashion, either by having the Canadian flag charged in the canton or by including maple leaves in the design. (wikipedia.org)
  • In recognition of the characteristics of Canadian society as being an 'ethnic mosaic', the federal government has adopted official policies towards bilingualism and multiculturalism. (unavarra.es)
  • The nuclear industry has been directly owned by the Canadian Government from the outset, largely because the technology was perceived as a national policy imperative in a global climate of "extraordinary hope and faith" [ 10 ] about its potential, first as a military tool and then as a great commercial force and energy source. (ccnr.org)
  • While the Canadian Red Ensign was recognized for use on government buildings and as a national flag abroad, many felt that it did not properly identify the distinctive local culture and traditions. (britannica.com)
  • The formation of CN officially began when the Canadian government took possession of the National Transcontinental Railway (NTR) following its completion in May of 1915. (american-rails.com)
  • In 1867 responsibility for the tariff was given to the national government. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • Former residential school students can call 1-866-925-4419 for emotional crisis referral services and information on other health supports from the Government of Canada. (canada.ca)
  • Learn how the Government of Canada is working to advance reconciliation and renew a nation-to-nation relationship with Indigenous peoples, based on recognition of rights, respect, cooperation and partnership. (canada.ca)
  • Childs, Jason and Stevens, Jason (2020) 'A cannabis pricing mistake from California to Canada: government can't tax cannabis optimally', Applied Economics Letters . (uregina.ca)
  • Mr. Smallwood Mr. Chairman, I too have replies to some questions I directed to the Government of Canada, some at the request of members of the Convention, and some others of them at my own instigation. (uvic.ca)
  • Buffalo soldiers, Black soldiers who supported post-Civil War Westward expansion by the US government, arrived in Alaska at the turn of the 20th century along with throngs of prospectors who headed into the Interior and Canada in search of gold and fortune. (anchoragemuseum.org)
  • ARCHIVED - Report on the Government of Canada Stakeholder Consultations on the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control [Heal. (who.int)
  • Celebrating Canadian historical landscape painting at its finest, five outstanding works donated by the Koffler Family are now on view in the Indigenous and Canadian Galleries. (gallery.ca)
  • In these Galleries the parallel and, at times, interrelated stories of Indigenous and Canadian art in Canada are brought together in one unforgettable display. (gallery.ca)
  • The contentious issues of imperialism and colonialism lie at the heart of this thought-provoking text - not least the paradox of the Canadian self-image as a peace-loving, anti-colonial nation, and the reality of the treatment of its own indigenous peoples. (bloomsbury.com)
  • Candace is a doctoral candidate completing research in the Faculty of Education that centers on the experiences of Indigenous women administrators enacting Indigenizing policies in Canadian universities. (neighboursfriendsandfamilies.ca)
  • Unlike some Indigenous peoples, I identify to a certain degree as a Canadian, although it is a complicated and ambivalent relationship to be sure. (neighboursfriendsandfamilies.ca)
  • I wonder how much Canadians know or care to know about this particular 'holiday,' its origins, and their relational responsibilities to Indigenous peoples - after all, we are all Treaty people . (neighboursfriendsandfamilies.ca)
  • On this National Indigenous Peoples Day, I wish that the average settler Canadian appreciated how greatly they have benefited as a result of dishonoured Treaties with Indigenous peoples. (neighboursfriendsandfamilies.ca)
  • There are approximately 78 different indigenous cultural groups in Canada. (unavarra.es)
  • Indigenous peoples across Canada can also go to The Hope for Wellness Help Line 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for counselling and crisis intervention. (canada.ca)
  • Learn about the unique history, languages, cultural practices, and spiritual beliefs of Indigenous peoples in Canada. (canada.ca)
  • Learn more about the tools and programs in place to help support the reclamation, revitalization, maintaining and strengthening of Indigenous languages in Canada. (canada.ca)
  • As of 2012, Canada contains roughly 35 million people, a couple mill shy of the population of California, but spread out across an area larger than the entire United States Empire, spanning 9.9 million square kilometres (aka 6.1 million miles). (popmatters.com)
  • What is the population of Canada? (countryreports.org)
  • Canada is a relatively young nation, founded in 1867 with a population of approx. (unavarra.es)
  • 2000 French immersion schools, i.e. 6% of the total school population in Canada. (unavarra.es)
  • Months of public and parliamentary debate resulted in approval (December 1964) of the new Maple Leaf Flag, which became official by royal proclamation on February 15, 1965, and is now broadly supported by the Canadian population. (britannica.com)
  • After the initial 6 weeks of escalating antianginal therapy pre-randomization, 24% (i.e. 48 out of 200) of the population were Canadian Angina Class 1 or 0 consistent with the overall pre-randomization exercise times of approximately 7 METS or completion of standard Bruce Stage 2. (medscape.com)
  • That shield replaced the 1868 original in Canadian ensigns three years later. (britannica.com)
  • The 11-pointed maple leaf was designed by George Stanley and has been a national emblem of Canada since 1868, when it was used on the coat of arms. (flagdom.com)
  • Writers Union of Canada (national chair, 1990-2000), Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History. (encyclopedia.com)
  • July 25, 1867: The most important game in baseball history? (sabr.org)
  • If you would like a detailed history of the railroad there are several excellent titles out there, such as Mr. Murray's previously mentioned and the much more thorough " History Of The Canadian National Railways " by author G.R. Stevens. (american-rails.com)
  • They research the history of a Canadian community and create and illustrate a team name and logo reflective of its past. (canadashistory.ca)
  • Brainstorm: What other Canadian sports team's names and/or logos reflect the history of their area? (canadashistory.ca)
  • This is a commemorative site, remembering millions of people who lived and died under a terrible political regime that has never existed in Canada and is slipping into the ash bin of history. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Within the introduction of the book, titled Fundamentals of Planning , editor Ren Thomas talks to why planning is significant and why case studies are important, then quickly jumping into a brief history of planning in Canada. (spacing.ca)
  • This leads into the beginning of master planned communities in Canada, and Thomas highlights the major points in world history and how this affected planners as a profession. (spacing.ca)
  • LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, In a paper headed 'The Component Parts of our Nationality,' we strove some time since to place on record the results of our researches in Canadian History, and thus to dispel some of the prejudices, entertained as to the origin of the first settlers on Canadian soil. (electricscotland.com)
  • On September 30, we encourage all Canadians to wear orange to honour the thousands of Survivors of residential schools. (canada.ca)
  • Returning home after the London Conference, Cartier steps off a Grand Trunk train and delivers this speech to a crowd approaching 10,000 waiting at the Montreal's Bonaventure Station, declaring "Canada will become a nation, stretching from one ocean to the other. (macdonaldlaurier.ca)
  • The maple leaf has been used as a Canadian emblem since the 18th century. (wikipedia.org)
  • In building on this mix of French and native traditions, the French Canadiens expressed not only their masculinity and identity through sports, but also built a sense of national identity that contrasted sharply with the Anglo spirit of sports for bourgeois gentlemen during the Victorian era.Much of Canadian historiography on sports education deals with the linkage between sports education and the construction of a national identity. (matejstranti.com)
  • Canada, this writer's home and native land, is the second largest country in the world in terms of landmass. (popmatters.com)
  • In 1892 this shield became a badge on the British Red Ensign, which served as a special civil ensign (later called the Canadian Red Ensign) for Canadian vessels. (britannica.com)
  • Changing industrial conditions made Macdonald the advocate of a protectionist policy (known as the National Policy), and he was returned as prime minister in 1878 and served until his death. (infoplease.com)
  • During the three weeks of their Western tour, the Nationals made a show of maintaining their amateur status by refusing payments of any kind, even declining reimbursement for travel expenses. (sabr.org)
  • Canadian National subsequently made a counterproposal of $33.7 billion to acquire KCS. (american-rails.com)
  • Mention was made, in your address, of the national feelings that have inspired my main political actions. (macdonaldlaurier.ca)
  • But gradually as the country matured, and as it made sacrifices on Britain's side in overseas wars, imperialist loyalties declined and Canadians demanded and won full autonomy within the empire. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • July, the designated National French-American Heritage Month and was established to honor the significant contributions made to the country by people of French descent. (unl.edu)
  • While its significant historical contributions have perhaps not been as widely recognized as they ought to be, Canada has quietly been at the forefront of electronic music since its inception and shows no signs of retreat. (popmatters.com)
  • One of the book's most significant contributions is simply its focus on Canada and Canadian-American relations in the 1940s and 1950s, a subject that has received relatively little attention from historians and other scholars. (ubcpress.ca)
  • The Canadian Flag was adopted on February 15th, 1965 and is often referred to as "The Maple Leaf" or "L'unifolie," which translates as "one-leafed" in French. (flagdom.com)
  • [20] These colours became "entrenched" as the national colours of Canada upon the proclamation of the Royal Standard of Canada (the Canadian monarch's personal flag) in 1962. (wikipedia.org)
  • Chavez initiated the National Farm Workers Association in 1962, attracting attention to the migrant farm workers' plight by organizing boycotts of products including grapes and lettuce. (geneabloggers.com)
  • The Canadian Directory of Parliament 1867-1967. (wikipedia.org)
  • Parliament of Canada. (wikipedia.org)
  • [2] It is the first flag to have been adopted by both houses of Parliament and officially proclaimed by the Canadian monarch as the country 's official national flag . (wikipedia.org)
  • By 1919 the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada (AAU) presided over all leadership and provided international recognition. (matejstranti.com)
  • In France, the Canadian-managed Juno Beach Centre does offer donors recognition. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • The consequences of tobacco use are important to both Canadians and citizens in other countries, particularly those in the developing world. (who.int)
  • It earned pop culture status with Canadian Broadcasting's 1985 release of the "Anne Of Green Gables" series starring Megan Follows as Anne Shirley. (american-rails.com)
  • In 1964, Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson formed a committee to resolve the ongoing issue of the lack of an official Canadian flag, sparking a serious debate about a flag change to replace the Union Flag . (wikipedia.org)
  • In 1964, the Prime Minister announced that Canada should have its own flag, which sparked a debate that resulted in the creation of a new flag. (flagdom.com)
  • Agitation for a distinctive Canadian flag increased following World War II . (britannica.com)
  • Estimates prepared in the several departments for the information of members of the Canadian Cabinet Committee appointed to meet the Delegation from the Newfoundland National Convention. (uvic.ca)
  • The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation has become the permanent archive for the statements, documents and other materials the Commission gathered. (canada.ca)
  • But the centre is a museum and not located on the same site as the Bény-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery. (theglobeandmail.com)
  • Certainly, Canada has produced some revolutionary electronic music minds over the years. (popmatters.com)
  • Building on its legacy, and coinciding with the resurrection of electronic music into mainstream consciousness, in the past five years Canadian electronic efforts have ramped up a notch. (popmatters.com)
  • Married in 1867 at 20, the Westinghouses died three months apart in 1914, after 47 years of marriage. (pittsburghquarterly.com)
  • This would be a particularly interesting choice for the coming years, when Canada is facing up to NATO for its Afghanistan pullout in 2011. (torontolife.com)
  • During his early years in Lower Canada Raphael sustained himself by commissions for portraits and artwork related to photography. (biographi.ca)
  • Under the title 'Les Ecossais en France,' &c., there- appeared, some time since, a French work, in two robust quarto volumes the result of twenty-five years of conscientious research by a French savant, Monsieur Francisque Michel. (electricscotland.com)
  • Using data from the 2015 National Health Interview Survey on adults (age ≥ 18 years) who self-identified as non-Hispanic Asian, non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic, or non-Hispanic White in the U.S. (n = 17,492), the associations of work-life interference with self-rated health, psychological distress, and body mass index (BMI) were assessed using multiplicative interaction terms. (bvsalud.org)
  • Thomas Lauder Brunton was the first to describe the effectiveness of amyl nitrate for angina pectoris in the Lancet in 1867, [ 2 ] followed by William Murrell who 12 years later, in the same journal, reported on the benefits of nitroglycerin in this condition. (medscape.com)
  • no self-respecting Canadian would even dream that red thing was supposed to be a maple leaf. (blogspot.com)
  • Out of three choices, the maple leaf design by George Stanley , [4] based on the flag of the Royal Military College of Canada , was selected. (wikipedia.org)
  • [16] The use of the maple leaf by the Royal Canadian Regiment as a regimental symbol extended back to 1860. (wikipedia.org)
  • [17] During the First and Second World Wars , badges of the Canadian forces were often based on a maple leaf design. (wikipedia.org)
  • [18] The maple leaf would eventually adorn the tombstones of Canadian military graves. (wikipedia.org)
  • vertically striped red-white-red national flag with a large central red maple leaf. (britannica.com)
  • The Canadian National Railway shares many similarities with the Consolidated Rail Corporation. (american-rails.com)
  • The historic Canadian National Railway logo. (american-rails.com)
  • all nationals, while healthcare coverage health policies and strategies to preserve remains optional for expatriates and their health. (who.int)
  • Their only child, George Westinghouse III, worked for his father but moved to California in 1916 and then to Canada shortly after his parents' death. (pittsburghquarterly.com)
  • Family life in Canada is as diverse as the country. (countryreports.org)
  • What makes Canada a unique country to travel to? (countryreports.org)
  • Canada is the second largest country in the world in land area and has large mountain ranges and extensive coastlines. (countryreports.org)
  • it is the anniversary of the British North American Act when Canada became its own country and independent from England. (blogspot.com)
  • French and British Canadians are unequally distributed across the country. (unavarra.es)
  • Although Cartier acknowledges special duties to the French-Canadian community he leads, Cartier contends all faiths and communities must be respected in Canada, declaring: "in a country consisting of different races who hold various beliefs, all rights must be protected, and all faiths respected. (macdonaldlaurier.ca)
  • Canada must be a country, not of licence, but of liberty, and all liberties must be protected by the law. (macdonaldlaurier.ca)
  • If we're looking at balance, women have a few more turns before things are even (23 to be exact, and that's just since Canada became a country). (torontolife.com)
  • Over 6 pages of authors have contributed to Planning Canada: A Case Study Approach , all learned individuals from different parts of the country speaking to specific case studies-real-life examples of planning exercises implemented in their own communities and across Canada. (spacing.ca)
  • They represent estimates of the additional cost of extending "ordinary" Canadian services, supplied by these departments, to Newfoundland in a "typical" year. (uvic.ca)
  • Answer: It is not clear from the question what statement of the Honourable Mr. Duplessis is referred to, but in any case the letter of October 29, 1947, from the Prime Minister of Canada to His Excellency the Governor of Newfoundland, with its enclosure, is not modified thereby in any particular either with regard to clause 2 of the enclosure or any other clauses. (uvic.ca)
  • In 1867 the Montreal Lacrosse Club, headed by Dr. Its "Policy on Women's Sport" called for equality. (matejstranti.com)
  • His policy as prime minister was dominated by the vigorous attempt to build Canada. (infoplease.com)
  • As they grappled with issues including constitutional reform, transit policy, national security, the arrival of television, white supremacy, and postwar domesticity, Canadians were ever mindful of the unfolding American experience and its influence. (ubcpress.ca)
  • and Canadian, American, and global foreign policy. (ubcpress.ca)
  • Led by George Monro Grant , George Robert Parkin , George Taylor Denison and others, the movement mixed Christian idealism and anti-Americanism with the principle that Canada (and other dominions such as Australia and New Zealand) should participate in foreign policy decisions at the imperial level. (thecanadianencyclopedia.ca)
  • What countries border Canada? (countryreports.org)
  • The United States, Russia and Canada are among the countries attempting to claim jurisdiction over Arctic territory, alongside the Nordic nations. (expat.ru)
  • This is key as well because many of the resources available to planning students in Canada come from other countries, most consistently the US, which works, but limits certain aspects since the rules, regulations, and procedures specific to our nation are not the same as others outside our borders. (spacing.ca)
  • On March 21, 2021 rival Canadian Pacific announced it would be acquiring Kansas City Southern for $25 billion. (american-rails.com)
  • Galushko, Viktoriya , Çule, Monika and Gray Richard (2020) 'Western Canadian producers' attitudes towards wheat breeding funding', Canadian Journal of Agriculture Economics . (uregina.ca)
  • Events listed relate to Canadian women with a few extra items added to give the timeline perspective. (famouscanadianwomen.com)
  • The second was a commercial phase during which the technology appeared to be blossoming world-wide, and in which the Canadian nuclear establishment reduced its research commitment proportionally to an increasingly commercial thrust. (ccnr.org)