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John Marshall defines urban systems analysis as a study of the spatial organization of networks of urban centres at regional, national, and international scales. In this introduction to the subject he presents a framework for its study.
A modern edition of the French texts is presented beside the English on facing pages. In an extensive commentary, Sargent-Baur identifies the poet's literary and historical allusions, as well as place-names, legatees, and biographical data.
The fourth volume of James Earys' highly acclaimed history of Canadian defence and external affairs studies the government's role in forming the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
A student and general reader guide to the middle period, or the most imperial era, of Byzantium's history. Jenkins strives to provide a connected account of what actually went on in the East Roman Empire.
A classic account of Charles the Great and the heyday of Frankish rule in Europe, evaluating the achievements and failures of the empire which has been called 'the first Europe.' Reprinted from the 1968 edition, translation first published in 1957.
Rumble offers a comparative study based on the concept of 'aesthetic contamination,' which is fundamental to the understanding of Pasolini's poetics.
As the supply/cost crunch tightens, issues related to energy become increasingly compelling. This is a guide for the general public to the fossil fuel crisis facing Canada, and Ontario in particular.
This is Ontario's story, a collective biography of her people, a history of her development as a province. Illustrated by Adrian Dingle, this refreshing study, with its emphasis on the personal, offers an enduring portrait of a province.
Despite abundant hardships, pioneer life in Upper Canada was romantic and colourful, and Mr. Guillet brings vividly to life the early settlers and their experiences.
This study explores the policy options a provincial government might consider in extending health care coverage to prescription drugs and dental care.
This volume, the last in a twenty-volume series of the Atlantic Economic Studies Program, summarizes the conclusions expressed in the previous studies with such topics as the growth of world markets and changing trade patterns, free trade alternatives for Canada, and the structure of the Canadian economy.
This lavishly illustrated book relates the story of the Canadian farm and farmer from the primitive to the machine age.
This volume deals with a group of cuneiform tablet inscriptions, transliterated and translated, which are in the British Museum and belong to a type of literature which has hitherto been very little known.
In Toronto in 1970 the Addiction Research Foundation held a symposium on schedule-induced and schedule-dependent phenomena. This book contains those contributions to the symposium that focused on phenomena associated with schedules of reinforcement.
This important volume presents the symposia and panel discussions held at the VIII International Congress for Microbiology, Montreal, 1962.
n this survey of current literature on chronic alcoholism and alcohol addiction, the authors are interested not only in those individuals who are unable to give up alcohol but also in the more numerous abnormal drinkers, all of whom are potential secondary addicts.
This collection of eight essays in honour of the distinguished Canadian Germanist G.W. Field shedS new light on specific problems.
This volume consists of papers given by geophysicists, botanists, and astronomers at a symposium on continental drift, held at the annual meeting of the Royal Society of Canada in Charlottetown in June 1964.
Mr. Gattinger records the development of the Ontario Veterinary College and the profession it serves.
Dr. Fox has decided views on the benefits which are conferred on the industrial and commercial life of a country and feels that if the history of monopolies were better understood, much of the antagonism against them would tend to disappear.
In this study of early Greek lyrics, Fowler attempts to determine the extent that Homer and epic poetry generally influenced the lyric poets, studies the organization of individual poems, and explores the nature of genres in the archaic period, starting from the vexed question of the definition of elegy.
This volume discusses the various types of educational organizations, their purposes, the scope and nature of their activities, and their contributions to education. It includes professional organizations, and various groups with a direct or peripheral interest in education in its broaded definition.
This volume contains the papers presented at the Department of Parasitology in the School of Hygiene of the University of Toronto 1970 symposium, held to stimulate discussion of the significance of ecological problems presented by parasites and to develop means of attacking some of these problems.
This volume, which includes a number of essays examining women's legal status and access to the courts, is a comprehensive and fascinating examination of legal history in two Canadian provinces.
This volume deals with innovative developments of many different kinds in the local school systems in the years up to 1970. The major purpose is to show what may be expected from an educational organization that gives local authorities a certain amount of leeway to depart from standard procedures.
Professor Eliot has not only made a substantial contribution to our knowledge of ancient Athens but has come to important conclusions about Kleisthenes' constitution of the tribes.
This book brings together the work of forty-eight geodesists from twenty-five countries. They discuss various new electromagnetic distance measurement (EDM) instruments - among them the Tellurometer, Geodimeter, and air- and satellite-borne systems - and investigate the complex sources of error.
Included are Grant's early reviews, a brief journal written as he recovered from tuberculosis in 1942, his earliest social and political writings, and his DPhil thesis on the Scottish philosopher John Oman.
This lavishly illustrated book relates the story of the Canadian farm and farmer from the primitive to the machine age.
Dr Forsey traces the evolutions of trade unions in the early years and presents an important archival foundation for the study of Canadian labour.
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