Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Medicine and Health Sciences (543)
- Medical Specialties (249)
- Surgery (241)
- Medical Sciences (57)
- Neurosciences (53)
-
- Arts and Humanities (45)
- Civil and Environmental Engineering (40)
- Engineering (40)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (27)
- Indigenous Studies (16)
- Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies (16)
- History (13)
- Sociology (11)
- Education (10)
- Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration (10)
- Urban Studies (10)
- Urban Studies and Planning (10)
- Music (9)
- Curriculum and Instruction (8)
- Educational Assessment, Evaluation, and Research (8)
- Educational Leadership (8)
- Educational Methods (8)
- Higher Education (8)
- Higher Education and Teaching (8)
- International and Comparative Education (8)
- Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (8)
- Teacher Education and Professional Development (8)
- Canadian History (6)
- Public Administration (6)
- Geography (5)
- Keyword
-
- Canada (249)
- General Surgery (245)
- Periodicals (245)
- Surgery (245)
- Hearing and auditory perception (16)
-
- FMRI (14)
- fMRI (14)
- Mental health (11)
- Novel neuroscience / neuroimaging techniques (11)
- Aging (9)
- MRI (9)
- Indigenous studies (8)
- Neurodevelopment (8)
- Memory (6)
- Neuroplasticity (6)
- Mood and emotion and social behaviour (5)
- Touchscreens (5)
- Alzheimer's disease (4)
- Local government (4)
- London (4)
- Planning (4)
- String quartets (4)
- Brain trauma (3)
- Census (3)
- Climate change (3)
- Demography (3)
- Flood management (3)
- Geography (3)
- Language and speech (3)
- Ontario (3)
- Publication Year
- Publication
-
- Canadian Journal of Surgery (245)
- University of Western Ontario Medical Journal (242)
- Project Summaries (44)
- Water Resources Research Report (40)
- Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor (26)
-
- 2019 Cohort (8)
- Centre for Urban Policy and Local Governance – Publications (8)
- Learning with your Head & Heart (8)
- Purple Guides (8)
- Research Summaries (8)
- History eBook Collection (7)
- The Drs. Whitby Music Collection (7)
- Essay Contest 2000 - 2015 (4)
- Visual Arts eBook Collection (4)
- Archaeology eBook Collection (3)
- UNI-CEN documentation (3)
- DiSC Highlights (2)
- Essay Contest 2016 (2)
- Essay Contest 2017 (2)
- Neuroepidemiology Research Unit Project Summaries (2)
- Proceedings (2)
- Western Urban and Local Governance Working Papers (2)
- Louis Achille Delaquerrière Album (1)
- McIntosh Gallery (1)
- Western Libraries Inclusive Language Guide (1)
- Western Libraries eBook Collection (1)
- Western University Academic Calendars (1)
Articles 31 - 60 of 682
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
The Application Of Community-Based Participatory Research (Cbpr), Riley Kennedy
The Application Of Community-Based Participatory Research (Cbpr), Riley Kennedy
Learning with your Head & Heart
Community-based participatory research is a contemporary research methodology used largely in health research. Community-based participatory research works to balance power and control in research. Indigenous people around the world have had an continue to have an uncomfortable research. Community-based participatory research is viewed as a way to do ethical research with Indigenous people. This project seeks to understand factors that influence community-based participatory research on Indigenous health using a narrative literature review approach.
Indigenous Astronomy As Told By The Haudenosaunee, Sasha Doxtator
Indigenous Astronomy As Told By The Haudenosaunee, Sasha Doxtator
Learning with your Head & Heart
Colonization has greatly reduced the extent to which Indigenous astronomy is presently known and shared. Much sky lore has become lost or fragmented, and the connections between stories, night sky observations, and their relevance is not as obvious as it once was. A detrimental spiral has ensued with many Western-trained scientists being reluctant to share sky lore out of fear of being misunderstood, disrespected, and dismissed.
Examining Indigenous Learner Recruitment And Retention Strategies Through An Environmental Scan Of Canadian Medical Schools, Sebastian Deagle
Examining Indigenous Learner Recruitment And Retention Strategies Through An Environmental Scan Of Canadian Medical Schools, Sebastian Deagle
Learning with your Head & Heart
The 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) of Canada’s Calls to Action Report outlined the need to better resolve the disparities in health status between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Canadian population. IN response, several Canadian medical schools began implementing recruitment and retention strategies to increase Indigenous matriculation. This is crucial, as Indigenous physicians are more likely to practice – and provide culturally-competent and comprehensive primary care – in Indigenous communities than physicians of other ethnicities. Therefore, enhancing Indigenous medical workforce development programs will have a strong return on investment in terms of improving the health status of Indigenous populations. However, while …
Indigenous Representation In Cinema, Nathaniel Ninham
Indigenous Representation In Cinema, Nathaniel Ninham
Learning with your Head & Heart
Indigenous people are underrepresented offscreen on film-sets, and misrepresented onscreen. This has always been true in cinema and progress towards proper representation has been incredibly slow.
This has effects both on Indigenous people, and how the rest of society views them. It limits career opportunities for Indigenous filmmakers, restricts Indigenous role models on film, and reinforces cultural misunderstandings in society.
Figure 7.5 Incorporated Area Population And Special Districts, Tri-County Area, 1860-2000.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 7.5 Incorporated Area Population And Special Districts, Tri-County Area, 1860-2000.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Until the 1920s, the proportion of the tri-county population living in incorporated areas generally increased as municipalities annexed suburbanizing areas. As annexation waned and more growth occurred in unincorporated areas, especially in Multnomah County, special districts proliferated. The proportion of the population living in municipalities has increased and reliance on special districts has decreased with new municipal incorporations and annexations since the 1970s.
Figure 7.4 Cumulative Number Of Special Districts In The Tri-County Area, By Type, 1917-56.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 7.4 Cumulative Number Of Special Districts In The Tri-County Area, By Type, 1917-56.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Years in parentheses indicate when legislative authorization of each type of district occurred. The general pattern is one of rapid adoption of special districts following their authorization.
Figure 7.3 Municipal Organization And Urban Growth In Portland, 1940-60.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 7.3 Municipal Organization And Urban Growth In Portland, 1940-60.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: While before 1940 most physical urban development had occurred within the corporate boundaries of Portland, Milwaukie, and Oregon City, extensive residential subdivision occurred in unincorporated portions of Multnomah, Clackamas, and Washington Counties between 1940 and 1960. Boundaries of incorporated municipalities circa 1961 are overlaid. Municipal boundaries are approximate – comparison of contemporaneous maps suggests that the smaller municipalities undertook a number of annexations in the early 1960s.
Figure 7.2 Administrative Boundaries And Urbanization In Portland And The Willamette Valley.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 7.2 Administrative Boundaries And Urbanization In Portland And The Willamette Valley.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
No abstract provided.
Figure 7.1 Portland Population By Zone, 1860-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 7.1 Portland Population By Zone, 1860-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
The City of Portland captured most growth in the tri-county area, and in the Willamette Valley as a whole, through the 1920s. Portland’s population levelled off after the 1940s, as most growth flowed to other parts of Multnomah, Clackamas, and Washington Counties, and in other communities to the south.
Figure 6.5 Regional Districts In The Lower Mainland, 1967.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 6.5 Regional Districts In The Lower Mainland, 1967.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: The provincial government divided the Lower Mainland into four regional districts in 1967. They assumed joint authority over the Official Regional Plan when the Regional Planning Board was dissolved in 1969.
Figure 6.4 Lower Mainland Regional Planning Board Evolving Land-Use Concept, 1963-66.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 6.4 Lower Mainland Regional Planning Board Evolving Land-Use Concept, 1963-66.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: The schematic “cities in a sea of green” land-use concept in the 1963 Chance and Challenge report (top) was the basis of the zoning in the 1966 Official Regional Plan (bottom).
Figure 6.3 Lower Mainland Municipal Boundaries, 1929.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 6.3 Lower Mainland Municipal Boundaries, 1929.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Municipal boundaries shown are those immediately prior to the amalgamation of Vancouver, South Vancouver, and Point Grey and the incorporation of Hope in 1929.
Figure 6.2 Administrative Boundaries, Urbanization, And Policy Areas In Vancouver.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 6.2 Administrative Boundaries, Urbanization, And Policy Areas In Vancouver.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Since 1995 the Lower Mainland has been divided into two regional districts. The Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR), established in 1973, prohibits urban development in much of the region. Urban development has been largely contiguous and compact, forming discrete settlements in the ALR’s “holes.”
Figure 6.1 Vancouver Population By Zone, 1890-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 6.1 Vancouver Population By Zone, 1890-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Until the 1940s, virtually all growth in the Lower Mainland occurred in the City of Vancouver, after which growth dramatically accelerated in surrounding communities. While most has occurred in the western end of the Lower Mainland – on Burrard Peninsula and elsewhere within the jurisdiction of the Greater Vancouver Regional District – better transportation accessibility has facilitated growth to the east.
Figure 5.6 New Municipal Incorporations In The Twin Cities, 1950–59.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 5.6 New Municipal Incorporations In The Twin Cities, 1950–59.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Forty-one municipalities were incorporated between 1950 and 1959, spurring the creation of the Minnesota Municipal Commission.
Figure 5.5 New Municipal Incorporations By Type, 1870-1970.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 5.5 New Municipal Incorporations By Type, 1870-1970.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
No abstract provided.
Figure 5.4 Municipal Organization And Urbanization In The Twin Cities, 1900.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 5.4 Municipal Organization And Urbanization In The Twin Cities, 1900.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Only large lakes are shown.
Figure 5.3 Municipal Organization And Urbanization In The Twin Cities, 1870.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 5.3 Municipal Organization And Urbanization In The Twin Cities, 1870.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Only large lakes are shown. The northern portion of Dakota County was annexed to St. Paul in 1874, becoming part of Ramsey County in the process.
Figure 5.2 Administrative Boundaries And Residential Urbanization In The Twin Cities.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 5.2 Administrative Boundaries And Residential Urbanization In The Twin Cities.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Historical land use data for the seven-county Twin Cities region are consistently available only for residential land. While radiating out from the centre, the pattern of fringe urban development has been discontiguous.
Figure 5.1 Twin Cities Population By Zone, 1860-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 5.1 Twin Cities Population By Zone, 1860-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: A long-term chart of population growth in concentric zones of the region – the central cities, the remainder of Hennepin and Ramsey Counties, the outer five counties of the seven-county region, and the twelve contiguous “collar counties” in Minnesota and Wisconsin – shows that the central cities captures the vast majority of population growth through the 1930s. Their population declined from the 1950s through the 1980s, marginally increasing in the early 2000s. The 1940s were a point of inflection – thereafter, all population growth occurred outside the central cities in the extremities of Hennepin and Ramsey, and also in …
Figure 4.6 The Toronto Centred Region Development Concept, 1970.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 4.6 The Toronto Centred Region Development Concept, 1970.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: The Toronto-Centred Region scheme divided the Toronto region into three numbered zones: (1) the “lakeshore urbanized area,” including Metro; (2) the “commutershed,” to be preserved for recreational and agricultural uses; and (3) the “peripheral zone,” to which economic activity would be directed. The Parkway Belt crosscuts Zone 1.
Figure 4.5 The Toronto Region, 1954.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 4.5 The Toronto Region, 1954.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Only selected lower-tier municipalities are represented and labelled. The planning area of the Metropolitan Toronto Planning Board encompassed an area approximately double that of Metro Toronto itself, in Peel, York, and Ontario Counties. With the exception of the western half of Toronto Township in York County, the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (MTRCA, established in 1957) included all of this area and also the headwaters of the Humber, Don, and Rouge Rivers to the north.
Figure 4.3, 4.4 Urbanization And Boundary Change In Southern York County, 1834-41.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 4.3, 4.4 Urbanization And Boundary Change In Southern York County, 1834-41.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
No abstract provided.
Figure 4.2 Administrative Boundaries, Urbanization, And Policy Areas In Toronto.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 4.2 Administrative Boundaries, Urbanization, And Policy Areas In Toronto.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
No abstract provided.
Figure 4.1 Toronto Population By Zone, 1850-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 4.1 Toronto Population By Zone, 1850-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Most growth in the Toronto region occurred within the City of Toronto itself until the 1920s. The creation in 1954 of Metropolitan Toronto and its planning board (the MTPB), which exercised extraterritorial jurisdiction over an area twice the size of Metro itself, contained most growth into the 1970s. From the MTPB’s dissolution in 1974 to the province’s enactment of the Growth Plan for the Greater Golden Horseshoe in 2006, virtually all population growth occurred outside Metro Toronto (after 1997, the amalgamated City of Toronto) in the rest of the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area, and also in the surrounding …
Figure 1.4 Density Balance Index Scores By City Size Group, 1970-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 1.4 Density Balance Index Scores By City Size Group, 1970-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: Higher Density Balance Index (DBI) scores indicate more sprawling urban form; lower scores indicate more compact urban form. This box plot shows the distribution of metropolitan DBI scores for each year within each country, separating small and large metros. The top and bottom of the solid bar indicate the metropolitan areas that are at the 25th and 75th percentile. (Half of the metros’ area lies within each bar.) The white line within each bar indicates the median metro. The “whiskers” indicate the tails of the distribution. The box plots indicate that Canadian cities are generally denser than American cities, …
Figure 1.3 Local Government Complexity, 2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 1.3 Local Government Complexity, 2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: The proportion of the metropolitan area’s population accounted for by the central city (plotted on the x-axis) indicates its relative weight within the region. The number of general-purpose governments (GPGs), not including counties, per 100,000 residents (y-axis) is another measure of government complexity. Less governmentally complex metropolitan areas are therefore found at the bottom left of the graph, while more complex cities are found at the upper right. Nationwide, the average population of metropolitan GPGs is considerably smaller in the United States, while the number of GPGs per 100,000 people is considerably higher. Excluding central cities from these measures …
Figure 1.2 Central Cities And Suburbs As A Proportion Of National Population, 1930-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 1.2 Central Cities And Suburbs As A Proportion Of National Population, 1930-2010.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: American metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) tend to be territorially larger than Canadian census metropolitan areas (CMAs), meaning that the American suburban share of the national population is correspondingly larger than it would be if MSAs were defined according to Statistics Canada’s criteria.
Figure 1.1 Population And Housing Growth, North America, 1860-2000.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 1.1 Population And Housing Growth, North America, 1860-2000.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: A dramatic increase in the number of new urbanites and the amount of new urban housing occurred after the Second World War in both Canada and the United States. By virtue of the latter’s much greater size, American urban population and housing growth has outstripped Canadian in absolute terms, decade over decade. However, the proportion of each country’s population living in urban settlements has been about the same over the past 150 years. The statistical definition of “urban” population has changed over time in both countries but generally refers to the population in settlements of over a thousand people. …
Figure 7.6 Administrative Boundaries And The Urban Growth Boundary In The Portland Region.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Figure 7.6 Administrative Boundaries And The Urban Growth Boundary In The Portland Region.Pdf, Zack Taylor
Shaping the Metropolis: Institutions and Urbanization in the United States and Canada by Zack Taylor
Note: The Columbia Region Association of Governments (CRAG) included local governments within five counties spanning the Oregon–Washington state line. After 1973, Washington, Clackamas, and Multnomah Counties and their associated cities were mandatory members of CRAG. Clark County and the cities of Columbia County in Washington State were voluntary associate members, as were Tri-Met, the Port of Portland, and the State of Oregon. The boundaries of the old Metropolitan Service District (established in 1970), Tri-Met (1969), and Portland Metro (1979) overlapped to a large extent but were not identical. The major difference between the current Urban Growth Boundary and the 1977 …