Matches 1 - 10.
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This is the moving story of a community who opened its homes to more than 6,000 stranded airline passengers on 9/11/01. "The Day the World Came to Town" is a timeless and heartwarming account of the citizens of Gander, and the unexpected guests who were... [ More...]
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This book offers a wealth of photographs and illustrations, as well as a lively and approachable historical text, in its documentation of a land and its people.
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This second volume in the Illustrated History Canada series relates the eventful, occasionally violent history of the three "prairie" provinces (Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta).
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Border Crossingsis the first Canadian analysis of globalization and internationalization to go beyond broad generalities and recognize that those forces have influenced the various policy fields in very different ways. Throughout the emphasis is on the... [ More...]
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Variously described as an exchange of gifts, a destruction of property, a system of banking, and a struggle for prestige, the potlatch is considered one of the founding concepts of anthropology. However, the author here dismisses such a theory, arguing the... [ More...]
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How did a small French missionary colony become a major pivot of the North American economy and the leading industrial and financial metropolis of Canada in the nineteenth century, dominated by a Victorian bourgeoisie, only to see its role retrenched, by... [ More...]
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"Managing Knowledge is an extensive and eminently readable overview of the most important ideas, tools and current applications of knowledge management. The authors rely on an innovative 'building block' approach and provide a detailed description of... [ More...]
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This autobiography is about William K. Fortman, his father and family, during World War II.
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