Academic literature on the topic 'Toronton'

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Journal articles on the topic "Toronton"

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Muhonen, Anu, and Heidi Vaarala. "Suomea Torontossa: yliopisto-opiskelijat ja suomalaiset seniorit palveluoppimisyhteistyössä." Puhe ja kieli, no. 4 (March 1, 2019): 227–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.23997/pk.69151.

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Kuvaamme artikkelissamme yhteisössä toteutettavaa palveluoppimispedagogiikkaa (community engaged service learning pedagogy) Toronton yliopiston suomen kielen ohjelman ja Toronton Suomi-kodin eli suomenkielisen seniorikeskuksen välillä. Osana suomi vieraana kielenä -kurssia opiskelijat vierailevat säännöllisesti Suomi-kodissa, osallistuvat sen toimintaan ja viettävät aikaa suomenkielisten senioreiden parissa. Tutkimme sitä, mitä siirtolaissenioripari (Sirkka ja Pentti) ja kaksi nuorta suomen kielen opiskelijaa (Rosa ja Ilja) ajattelevat ja puhuvat kielestä ja sen oppimisesta erilaisissa kohtaamisissa. Lisäksi pohdimme sitä, millaisia siltoja yhteistyö muodostaa senioreiden ja nuorten välille. Hyödynnämme analyysissa lingvististä etnografiaa niin metodina kuin aineiston keruussakin. Aineiston muodostavat lukuvuonna 2016–2017 tallennetut epämuodolliset haastattelut, spontaanit keskustelutilanteet, niiden ääni- ja videotallenteet sekä opiskelijoiden kirjoittamat reflektiot. Lisäksi aineistona on käytetty kenttämuistiinpanoja ja valokuvia. Tutkimus paljastaa, että senioreiden ja opiskelijoiden kielikäsitykset eroavat jonkin verran toisistaan, mutta kielenoppimiskäsityksissä on myös runsaasti autenttisista oppimisympäristöistä ja kokemuksista johtuvia yhtenevyyksiä. Punaisena lankana kulkee senioreiden menneisyyteen liittyvät muistelot ja opiskelijoiden haaveet suomenkielisestä tulevaisuudesta. Yhteisössä toteutettava palveluoppiminen avaa uusia mahdollisuuksia kielen ja sisältöjen opetukselle yliopistoissa niin ulkomailla kuin Suomessakin ja haastaa vakiintuneita pedagogisinstitutionaalisia rakenteita uudistumaan.
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Marano, Carla. "“We All Used to Meet at the Hall”: Assessing the Significance of the Universal Negro Improvement Association in Toronto, 1900–1950." Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 25, no. 1 (August 28, 2015): 143–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1032801ar.

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This article discusses the unique factors that led the UNIA in Toronto to become a central fixture in the city’s black community and to the Garvey movement as a whole. Beginning in 1919, the Toronto Division served as a secular outlet for blacks in the city to express their concerns over racism, politics, employment, and the community. Using interviews, newspapers, and official UNIA records, this article explains how meaningful this organization was to the growth, security, and well-being of Toronto’s black community. Although this study delves into local history, it is also concerned with transnational relations – primarily, Toronto’s place within the African diaspora. The Toronto Division forged relationships with members around the world while taking part in various UNIA activities that transcended provincial and national boundaries. This article, then, assesses the significance of cross-division cooperation and Toronto’s role in the survival of the Garvey movement in Canada and abroad. Since most members of the UNIA in Toronto were Caribbean immigrants, this essay explores the UNIA’s compatibility with West Indian political and cultural ideals. In this way, this research sets Toronto’s black communities firmly within the African diaspora.
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Desfor, Gene. "Planning Urban Waterfront Industrial Districts." Articles 17, no. 2 (August 6, 2013): 77–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1017653ar.

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The process by which one particular section of Toronto's waterfront, Ashbridge's Bay, was developed during the 1889-1910 period is analysed in the context of broader industrialization and urban reform movements. Primary sources, largely from the Toronto Harbour Commissioners' Archives recently opened to the public, and the City of Toronto Archives, provide the basis for the analysis. Evidence demonstrates that Toronto's influential 1912 waterfront plan, crucial in reshaping the lakefront, was built on numerous previous schemes for improving the port, the harbour, and adjacent areas. Ownership of Toronto's waterfront remained under the control of civic authorities more from pragmatic considerations than from a commitment to serve community-wide interests.
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Hermant, Heather. "Talking Boulders." UnderCurrents: Journal of Critical Environmental Studies 14 (January 1, 2005): 19–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.25071/2292-4736/40408.

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There’s a New Boulder in Town is Toronto artist Maura Doyle’s latest installation. With the assistance of University of Toronto geologist James Brenan, Doyle mapped a walking tour of some of Toronto’s ‘erratic boulders,’ and narrates their social-geological biographies through a guidebook.
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Stein, David Lewis. "The Oak Ridges Moraine: A story of nature in the Greater Toronto Urban Region." Ekistics and The New Habitat 71, no. 424-426 (June 1, 2004): 118–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.53910/26531313-e200471424-426236.

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The author, retired urban affairs columnist for the Toronto Star, is currently an Adjunct Professor in the Urban Studies Program at Innis College, University of Toronto. He is working on a book about the evolution of Toronto as a global city and a novel about the inner working of Toronto politics. The text that follows was written by Professor Stein after attending the international symposion on 'The Natural City, " Toronto, 23-25 June, 2004, sponsored by the University of Toronto's Division of the Environment, Institute for Environmental Studies, and the World Society for Ekistics.
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Adams, Annmarie. "Eden Smith and the Canadian Domestic Revival." Articles 21, no. 2 (July 3, 2013): 104–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1016794ar.

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The designer of more than 2500 detached houses in late nineteenth-century and early twentieth-century Toronto, Eden Smith has been hailed as the author of a distinctly Canadian style of domestic architecture. Yet his self-promotion and the reception of his work in both the professional and popular presses of the time emphasize the Englishness of his houses. This paper considers the domestic architecture of Eden Smith as an index of attitudes held by Toronto's upper middle class toward Britain in the early twentieth century. What did the image of an "English house" represent in Edwardian Toronto? Why were these particular qualities attractive to Toronto's landed gentry? Eden Smith's architecture was both distinct and derivative. The language of the elevations was unmistakably British, while the plan of his houses was something completely new. Smith's popularity and his influence on subsequent generations of Canadian house-architects speak eloquently of the willingness of Toronto's middle class to try new things, but only clothed in the auspices of a British past.
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Kouri-Towe, Natalie. "Risk, Desire and Adaptation: The Paradox of Queer Solidarity and the Political Possibility of Death Under Neoliberalism and Homonationalism." Somatechnics 7, no. 2 (September 2017): 185–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/soma.2017.0217.

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In 2015, Queers Against Israeli Apartheid Toronto (QuAIA Toronto) announced that it was retiring. This article examines the challenges of queer solidarity through a reflection on the dynamics between desire, attachment and adaptation in political activism. Tracing the origins and sites of contestation over QuAIA Toronto's participation in the Toronto Pride parade, I ask: what does it mean for a group to fashion its own end? Throughout, I interrogate how gestures of solidarity risk reinforcing the very systems that activists desire to resist. I begin by situating contemporary queer activism in the ideological and temporal frameworks of neoliberalism and homonationalism. Next, I turn to the attempts to ban QuAIA Toronto and the term ‘Israeli apartheid’ from the Pride parade to examine the relationship between nationalism and sexual citizenship. Lastly, I examine how the terms of sexual rights discourse require visible sexual subjects to make individual rights claims, and weighing this risk against political strategy, I highlight how queer solidarities are caught in a paradox symptomatic of our times: neoliberalism has commodified human rights discourses and instrumentalised sexualities to serve the interests of hegemonic power and obfuscate state violence. Thinking through the strategies that worked and failed in QuAIA Toronto's seven years of organising, I frame the paper though a proposal to consider political death as a productive possibility for social movement survival in the 21stcentury.
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MARSH, CHARITY. "‘Understand us before you end us’: regulation, governmentality, and the confessional practices of raving bodies." Popular Music 25, no. 3 (September 11, 2006): 415–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261143006001000.

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In this article I investigate how power is (re)produced on and through the body, specifically on Toronto's raving bodies during the summer of 2000. Toward the end of 1999 and throughout 2000, Toronto's rave culture came under intense surveillance by institutional and discursive authorities such as city councillors, police, parents, community health organisations, public intellectuals, and the mass media. What ensued was a temporary ban of raves in Toronto on city-owned property. In response to this ban, Toronto ravers relied on liberal approaches such as educational programmes and state lobbying as a way to protect their ‘freedom to dance’. In light of these reactions, one of my primary questions is: As rave becomes more normative, what are its own disciplinary mechanisms or techniques of control that are asserted at the site of the raving body?
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Maynard, Steven. "‘The Party with God’: Michel Foucault, the Gay Left and the Work of Theory." Cultural History 5, no. 2 (October 2016): 122–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/cult.2016.0122.

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Revisiting Foucault's month-long stay in Toronto in June 1982, this article explores the reception and appropriation of the first volume of The History of Sexuality by activist-intellectuals associated with the Toronto-based publication, The Body Politic, and some of their fellow travelers. Reading Foucault's introductory volume through the intersecting frameworks of social constructionism, historical materialism, and socialist feminism, gay-left activists forged a distinctive relationship between sexual theory and political practice. If Foucault had a significant impact on activists in the city, Toronto also left its mark on Foucault. Based on the recently rediscovered and unedited transcript of a well-known interview with Foucault in Toronto, along with an interview with one of Foucault's interlocutors, the article concludes with Foucault's forays into Toronto's sexual and political scenes, particularly in relation to ‘bodies and pleasures’ and resistance to the sex police.
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Lemon, James. "Plans for Early 20th-Century Toronto." Articles 18, no. 1 (August 7, 2013): 11–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1017821ar.

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On several occasions in the early twentieth century, advocates of urban planning proposed significant measures for altering the layout of Toronto streets. Planning historians often have proposed that an interest in beautification was superseded by a focus on efficiency by the 1920s, but Toronto's plans largely were lost amidst private development processes and business cycles. Confusion over planning priorities, the short-term perspectives of politicians, and a lack of urgency also impeded city and regional planning. Toronto experienced less planning initiatives than major United-States cities.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Toronton"

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Smith, William Leon. "Torontos : representations of Toronto in contemporary Canadian literature." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2012. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14507/.

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This thesis examines how representations of Toronto in contemporary Canadian literature engage with place and further an understanding of spatial innovation in literature. Acknowledging the Canadian critical tradition of discussing place and space, the thesis moves the focus away from conventional engagements with wilderness motifs and small town narratives. In this way the thesis can be seen to respond to the nascent critical movement that urges engagement with contemporary urban spaces in Canadian literature. Responding to the critical neglect of urban representation, and more particularly, representations of Toronto in Canadian literary criticism, this thesis examines Toronto as a complex and contradictory site of symbolic power across critical, political and popular discourses. Furthermore, this thesis repositions an understanding of Toronto by paying attention to literary texts which depict the city's negotiation of national, local and global forces. The thesis seeks to understand the multiplicity of the city in lived, perceived and conceived forms - seeing Toronto as Torontos. Questioning existing frameworks deployed in Canadian literary criticism, the thesis develops a unique methodology with which to approach the complex issues involved in literary writing about place, drawing on contemporary Canadian criticism and transnational approaches to critical literary geography. The central chapters focus on four texts from the twenty-first century, three novels and one collection of poetry, approaching each text with a critically informed spatial lens in order to draw out how engagements with Toronto develop spatial innovation within literature. The thesis analyses how engaging with Toronto challenges writers to experiment with literary form. In turn the thesis seeks to elucidate the spatial developments achieved through literary writing. The thesis then demonstrates an understanding of the material geography of the city, situating readings with reference to interview material from parties involved in writing, producing and distributing literary depictions of Toronto. Hence it combines traditional literary criticism with a spatially and socially engaged criticism, in order to clearly address the literary geographies of Torontos.
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Zhang, Rong Christine. "Excavation in Toronto." Thesis, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53431.

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This thesis is about silence; about emptiness; about absence. "Should we be surprised by the fact that architectural form can be found in the plan of the city? Yes, if one considers the fact that there is no architectural intervention in the design of the plan. No, if one considers architecture as not just the practice of a specific form of "writing", but primarily as an art of "reading." It is the "reading subject," the principle that generates the architecture of the city by displacing its plan to 'another' realm. The realm of the urban text." M. Gandelsonas "The Unconscious of the City"
Master of Architecture
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Römer, Jürgen. "The Toronto blessing /." Åbo : Åbo akademis förlag, 2002. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb39144764r.

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Whitzman, Carolyn Harris Richard. "The dreams attached to places : from suburb, to slum, to urban village in a Toronto neighbourhood, 1875-2002 /." *McMaster only, 2003.

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Pannu, Mobushar A. "Traffic calming within Metropolitan Toronto." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape8/PQDD_0001/MQ45593.pdf.

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Paillot, Patricia-Léa. "La Communauté grecque de Toronto." Bordeaux 3, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990BOR30035.

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A travers cinq chapitres, cette these se propose d'observer l'evolution et la composition de la communaute grecque de toronto, et de montrer que l'ethnicite est un processus. Partant d'une perspective historique, le premier chapitre montre comment les groupes d'origine se sont rassembles puis consolides sur une meme surface urbaine. Le deuxieme chapitre cerne la structuration de la cummunaute dans le temps et l'espace et demontre que la communaute spatiale des annees 60 est devenue une communaute sociale. Le troisieme chapitre centre son attention sur la structure interne de la communaute qui s'est chronologiquement organisee autour de trois axes : l'eglise orthodoxe, les associations et les medias. Le quatrieme chapitre etudie l'influence de l'emigration sur la famille grecque ; de type transitionnel, la famille a un comportement situationnel. Confrontes a deux systemes de valeurs contradictoires, les enfants sont soumis a un desir de continuite grecque et a une volonte de conformite canadienne. Le cinquieme chapitre elargit la these a l'interaction avec la societe canadienne et etudie l'impact du multiculturalisme dans le secteur educatif de la communaute grecque et s'interroge sur la viabilite de ce type de programme
The objective of this ph. D. Thesis is to study the evolution and the composition of the greek community of toronto and to show that ethnicity is a process. The first chapter is a historical survey of the greek immigration in the us and canada ; it evolves around the concentration of the greek population on the urban space of toronto. The second chapter focuses on the multiple greek identity and the greek neighborhood ; it demonstrates that the spatial community of the beginning has become a social community nowadays. The third chapter describes the internal structure of the greek community based on the orthodox church, associations and the ethnic press. The fourth chapter highlights the metamorphosis of the greek family under the influence of emigration and the problem of children faced to two contradictory sets of values. The fifth chapter widens the thesis to the interaction with the canadian society at large and studies the impact of multiculturalism on the greek education and wonders about the feasibility of this political platform
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Psihopeda, Maria. "Ethnic enclaves in urban Canada : a comparative study of the labour market experiences of the Italiana and Jewish communities in Toronto." Thesis, McGill University, 1990. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=60108.

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This thesis is a comparative, data-based analysis of the labour market experiences of the Italian and Jewish populations of Toronto at the end of the 1970s, beginning of the 1980s. It also provides historical and empirical information on the emergence and development of ethnic enclaves, and assesses whether such distinct enclave economies constitute channels for upward mobility for the Italian and Jewish individuals who participate in them.
The historical findings provide evidence for the distinctiveness of an enclave labour market within these two ethnic communities. The empirical evidence reveals however, that participation in the enclave economies is quite low for Toronto's Jewish and Italian communities. The evidence does not indicate that participation in the enclave is associated with either economic benefits or losses. However, informal networks and ethnic ties have strong positive effects on enclavic participation.
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Briozzo, Florence. "Les italiens a toronto, 1971-1991." Paris 3, 1993. http://www.theses.fr/1994PA030030.

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Les italiens emigrent au canada en grand nombre apres 1945, et beaucoup d'entre eux se regroupent a toronto. En 1971, cette immigration est terminee, comment ces immigrants, au depart non anglophones, s'adaptent-ils a leurs nouvelles conditions de vie (repartition geographique, vie familiale, travail et mibilite sociale)? quelles structures propres creent-ils (aglise, presse, vie associative)? comment interviennent-ils dans la vie publique (vie politique, problemes linguistiques d'une minorite allophone dans un pays officiellement bilingue anglais-francais)?
Many italians emigrate to canada after 1945, and a high proportion of them settle in toronto. By 1971, this immigration wave is over, how do these non-english speaking immigrants manage to adapt to their new life (geographical distribution, family life, work and social mobility)? what institutions do they generate (churches, media, associations) ? what part do they take in the life of the city (political activity, linguistic problems of a non-english-speaking minority in a in a country that has two official languages, english and french) ?
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Robertson, David W. "A 'patient-centred' medical school curriculum : medical students' views and practice." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.324348.

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McGuire, Liam. "The ten cities of Toronto : patterns of socio-economic inequality and polarization throughout the Toronto Census Metropolitan Area." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/43211.

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The Greater Toronto Area (G.T.A.), Canada’s largest urban region, is currently facing a strenuous experience of inequality and polarization. In the contexts of social, political, and economic landscapes, the Toronto region is becoming increasingly defined by a spatial divergence of social classes, a divergence that threatens the ability of many citizens to access the resources their wealthier neighbours enjoy. In the context of an increasingly unequal urban landscape, this thesis employs a critical quantitative and theoretical approach to explore the Greater Toronto Area, home to more than six million people. Following an introduction to the issues facing the G.T.A., chapter two explores the mechanics of a capitalist housing market, and examines the effects of a neoliberal urban governance strategy on the city. Chapter three outlines a multidimensional quantitative methodology to explore the presence of social inequality and polarization, whereby chapter four introduces a taxonomy of neighbourhoods, materializing social divides through the domains of housing, citizenship, wealth, and labour. Critical to this examination is the exploration of the gentrifying downtown, the declining inner suburbs, and the rapidly expanding outer suburbs. The fifth chapter more closely examines the relationship between immigration and housing in the G.T.A., mapping and analyzing the relationships between new residents and housing affordability stress. The results deepen an understanding of social inequity in the G.T.A., spatializing divisions between immigrant groups as they navigate the turbulent housing market. Finally, the thesis reflects on the challenges facing Canada’s largest urban region, arguing for new conceptualizations of our urban areas, and new conversations about urban housing strategies. These arguments strive to set a context for new urban governance strategies grounded in an interest of truly just and equal cities for all residents, challenging the existing social divisions that divide our cities today.
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Books on the topic "Toronton"

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Martinez, Buck. The last out: The Toronton Blue Jays in 1986. Toronto: Fitzhenry and Whiteside, 1986.

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Mitchell, Scott. Secret Toronto: The unique guidebook to Toronto's hidden sites, sounds & tastes. Toronto: ECW Press, 1998.

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Mitchell, Scott. Secret Toronto: The unique guidebook to Toronto's hidden sites, sounds & tastes. Toronto: ECW Press, 2002.

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Curnoe, Lynda. Toronto/London/London/Toronto. [Toronto]: Lyricalmyrical, 2004.

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Ojamaa, Triinu. 60 aastat eesti koorilaulu multikultuurses Torontos: 60 years of Estonian choral singing in multicultural Toronto. Tartu: Eesti Kirjandusmuuseumi Teaduskirjastus, 2011.

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Benson, Sara. Toronto. 2nd ed. Melbourne, Australia: Lonely Planet Publications, 2004.

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Toronto. Singapore: APA Publications, 2000.

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Johnson, Lorraine. Toronto. London: Dorling Kindersley, 2005.

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Toronto. New York: Empire, 2002.

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Johnson, Lorraine. Toronto. London: Dorling Kindersley, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Toronton"

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Lorinc, John. "Toronto." In Encyclopedia of Quality of Life and Well-Being Research, 6689–96. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0753-5_3031.

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Tong, Vincent. "Toronto." In Cities and Affordable Housing, 129–39. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003172949-12.

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Musterd, Sako, Wim Ostendorf, and Matthijs Breebaart. "Canada: Toronto." In The GeoJournal Library, 163–78. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-2365-7_8.

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Albers, D., G. Alexanderson, and Constance Reid. "Toronto 1924." In International Mathematical Congresses, 18–19. New York, NY: Springer New York, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-8710-7_9.

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Albers, D., G. Alexanderson, and Constance Reid. "Toronto 1924." In International Mathematical Congresses, 18–19. New York, NY: Springer New York, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4684-0299-5_9.

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Dhar, Satish. "7. Partial Amalgamation, Full Sprawl." In Toronto Sprawls, 56–64. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442685062-011.

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Dhar, Satish. "8. The Suburbs beyond the Suburbs." In Toronto Sprawls, 65–71. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442685062-012.

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Ingle, Jeanne Carey. "Intentional Inclusion." In Advances in Educational Marketing, Administration, and Leadership, 1–22. IGI Global, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-8025-7.ch001.

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Finding models and insight into the best and most effective strategies and programs to teach English language learners in respectful and equitable ways is a persistent topic in practitioner and educational research. This chapter shares the voices and work of Toronto educators whose embrace of multiculturalism and multilingualism has contributed to the academic success of English language learners and refugee children in the Toronto schools. Through a series of interviews and classroom observations, the author explored the practices and programs used to support and empower these young English language learners. The chapter presents three major themes that emerged from this study: teacher mindset, family engagement, and targeted refugee education. These themes shed light and provide a deeper understanding for educators of the why and the how of Toronto's success. Educator takeaways are shared.
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"Chapter 1. Urban Transformations." In Toronto, 1–11. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9780812209181.1.

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"Chapter 7. Polycentricity." In Toronto, 105–22. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9780812209181.105.

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Conference papers on the topic "Toronton"

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"Downtown Toronto map." In 2010 IEEE International Symposium Antennas and Propagation and CNC-USNC/URSI Radio Science Meeting. IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aps.2010.5561436.

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Lim, Joe. "University of Toronto Mississauga." In the 35th annual ACM SIGUCCS conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1294046.1294097.

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"Suggested restaurants in Toronto." In 2010 IEEE International Symposium Antennas and Propagation and CNC-USNC/URSI Radio Science Meeting. IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/aps.2010.5561995.

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Paterson, Scott, Craig Sheriff, and James Ferguson. "Metrolinx’s Toronto Electrification Project: Phase 1 — The Engineering Survey." In 2017 Joint Rail Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/jrc2017-2319.

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Metrolinx, Toronto’s rail authority currently has 200 engineering projects underway with a value of $16 billion. One of the largest projects is a $4 billion Electrification Project for the Toronto commuter rail lines. In support of the engineering design of the project, in November of 2015 Tulloch Engineering was contracted to provide a complete engineering survey of six Metrolinx railway commuter corridors originating from Union Station in Toronto, Canada. Tulloch used a unique combination of mobile LiDAR, static LiDAR, and conventional infill ground survey to complete the project. LiDAR, which stands for Light Detection and Ranging, is a surveying method that measures distance to a target by illuminating that target with a laser light. Using LiDAR technology provided significant advantages to the Electrification Project over using convention ground survey techniques. Metrolinx is a Canadian crown corporation responsible for the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area’s GO Transit rail and bus commuter system. GO Transit trains currently carry 190,000 commuters per day. Electrification of Metrolinx GO Transit rail commuter rail corridors requires the upgrading of infrastructure and providing a means of getting the electricity to the trains which includes new electrical substations, overhead power lines and new equipment. The electrification is part of the GO Regional Express Rail program, which will expand the capacity of the GO rail network to provide customers with faster, more frequent and more convenient service to and from dozens of stations in core sections of the GO rail network throughout the day, evenings and weekends. Electrification is planned for most of Metrolinx commuter rail corridors by 2022–2024. The engineering technical and program management consultant for the Electrification Project is Gannett Fleming. An initial requirement for Metrolinx Electrification project is an up to date engineering survey to enable the preliminary engineering design. Our survey project involves surveying approximately 170 miles of railway corridor for 6 GO Transit tracks originating from Union Station in downtown Toronto. Our mobile LiDAR survey system was mounted on a GO Transit hi-rail truck; with most of the surveying occurring at night due to the heavy train traffic and since LiDAR is an active sensor. Tulloch provided a unique hybrid surveying approach, using mobile LiDAR surveying to collect all the visible features in the corridor, followed by conventional ground surveys to fill in missing features obscured from the LiDAR system’s field of view and static LiDAR surveys for some of the bridges inaccessible with mobile LiDAR. This is the first time Metrolinx has contracted an engineering survey using these multiple survey technologies. This survey approach reduces delivery timelines, limits track disruptions, and greatly improves safety. A major advantage of mobile LiDAR surveying for the GO-Transit rail corridors is that collection can occur at night when train activity is low and in a fraction of the time it takes to survey using conventional ground crews. This enabled project schedules to be advanced, as base mapping was completed in about 60% of the normal time required for the engineering survey. Using mobile scanning on the tracks reduced safety risks associated with on track field surveys. In addition, the resultant LiDAR point cloud can be revisited in the office, and additional features and critical information picked up without having to send field crews back to do so. The homogeneous nature of the point cloud, combined with the conventional in-fill survey provides a rich, full feature data set that can be used at various stages in the engineering design process.
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Istrate, Emanuel, and R. J. Dwayne Miller. "A Holography Course in Toronto." In Education and Training in Optics and Photonics. Washington, D.C.: OSA, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/etop.2009.etc2.

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Istrate, Emanuel, and R. J. Dwayne Miller. "A holography course in Toronto." In Eleventh International Topical Meeting on Education and Training in Optics and Photonics, edited by K. Alan Shore. SPIE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2208076.

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7

"THE TORONTO SIZE EFFECT SERIES." In SP-328: Shear in Structural Concrete. American Concrete Institute, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.14359/51711146.

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Levine, Richard M. "Recent work on the Toronto toolkit." In the international conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/166197.166236.

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Clement, Andrew, Joseph Ferenbok, Roxanna Dehghan, Laura Kaminker, and Simeon Kanev. "Private sector video surveillance in Toronto." In the 2012 iConference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2132176.2132222.

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Knight, Judy, Richard C. Rich, Gerry Winters, and Bruce Toro. "Greater Toronto Airports Authority: Parking Garage." In 26th International Air Transportation Conference. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/40530(303)18.

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Reports on the topic "Toronton"

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Doyle, V. M., and K. G. Steele. Geoscape Toronto. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/214141.

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Doyle, V. M., and K. G. Steele. Géopanorama de Toronto. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/214176.

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Hill, Jenny, and Kanwal Aftab. University of Toronto Scarborough Valley Land Trail. Landscape Architecture Foundation, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31353/cs1700.

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Kiss, F., and M. Coyle. Aeromagnetic residual total field survey, Toronto, Ontario-New York. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/211412.

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Knight, R. D., D. A. J. Stepner, R. E. Gerber, S. Holysh, and H. A J Russell. Geochemistry of surficial sediment cores, Greater Toronto Area, southern Ontario. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/311222.

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Sharpe, D. R., M. J. Hinton, and H. A. J. Russell. Groundwater resources in the Oak Ridges Moraine, Greater Toronto area. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/216697.

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Maloley, M. J. Thermal remote sensing of urban heat island effects: greater Toronto area. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/263392.

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Kenny, F. J., J. Paquette, H. A. J. Russell, A. Moore, and M. J. Hinton. Digital elevation model, Greater Toronto Area, southern Ontario, and Lake Ontario bathymetry. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/210231.

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Nowak, David J., Robert E. III Hoehn, Allison R. Bodine, Eric J. Greenfield, Alexis Ellis, Theodore A. Endreny, Yang Yang, Tian Zhou, and Ruthanne Henry. Assessing urban forest effects and values: Toronto's urban forest. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/nrs-rb-79.

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Sharpe, D. R., P. J. Barnett, T. A. Brennand, D. Finley, G. Gorrell, H. A. J. Russell, and P. Stacey. Surficial geology of the Greater Toronto and Oak Ridges Moraine area, southern Ontario. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/209298.

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