THE FOLLOWING PAPERS ARE ALL AVAILABLE FOR SAME DAY DELIVERY VIA
YOUR CHOICE OF E-MAIL OR FAX! ALL SUBJECTS ARE ONLY $10.95/pg
PLUS FREE BIBLIOGRAPHY -- REGARDLESS OF TOPIC AREA! MAKE YOUR SELECTION BELOW:
|
Papers On Canadian Studies
Page 5 of 23
|
|
Business and Government in Canada
[ send me this paper ]
This is a 3 page paper discussing business and the Government of Canada relations. Historically, the Canadian government maintained a close relationship with businesses within Canada in that for the large part the Canadian government controlled and owned most of the major business sectors within the country such as natural resources, agriculture, and the transport industries to name a few. This ideology led to a nationalization of the country especially prior and during the years of World War II when Prime Minister Mackenzie King provided a great deal of financial investments in the development of business opportunities within Canada. By the second half of the 20th century, Canada had become a social and welfare state which began to take its toll on the economy and government. During the 1970s and 1980s, “downsizing” and the start of privatization of governmental industries began to take place. Today, the relationship between the Canadian government and business has changed significantly. Through financial support and trade policy, the Canadian government provides assistance to businesses which will encourage national and international investment in Canada. These businesses are those which are in high demand in the global market place and are those which are considered innovative, service-oriented, research, technology and knowledge-based in addition to the already established industries.
Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: TJCanbg1.rtf
Business and Government in Canada: Issues of Government Relations, The Role of Elites, Government Intervention, Regulation and Deregulation
[ send me this paper ]
This is a 3 page paper discussing business and government in Canada in regards to government intervention, business relations, the roles of elites and regulation. The history of Canadian business involves a great amount of government intervention within the business industry to the extent that most historical Canadian business ventures are those which had high government involvement such as the Canadian Pacific Railway and Air Canada. However many business critics believe that this intervention is based on the Canadian government’s basic belief that the government can do a better job of controlling the economic interests of business which is contrary to those within the business industry who believe that free markets and competition actually do a better job of distributing goods and services. The practice of the government however changed in the 1980s when pressure from the corporate elite within Canada lead to a new approach in government relations with business and industry which became one of deregulation, privatization, and assistance within the competitive marketplace.
Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: TJCango1.rtf
Business Law in Canada
[ send me this paper ]
This 4 page paper examines business law as it exists in Canada. Several issues are broached including contract law and professional liability. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: SA517Can.rtf
Canada - Labor Issues
[ send me this paper ]
This 8 page paper addresses this question: Should companies who profit from "slave labor' pay reparations? First, clarification, the term is used euphemistically, not literally. The topic deals with individuals who are paid below minimum wage without benefits or overtime. The essay first provides data reporting the numbers and percentage of persons who fit this description. Wal-Mart is used as an example of a company that perpetuates low wages. Even so, the writer argues against the reparation proposal and cites employment standard laws as justification for this position. Bibliography t 8 sources.
Filename: PGlwwg.rtf
Canada and France
[ send me this paper ]
A 7 page paper which examines the history and evolution of Canada and France. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: RAcanfrn.rtf
Canada and Muslims
[ send me this paper ]
This 3-page paper seeks to examine the status of Muslims in Canada and what effects the Canadian lifestyle has on their culture. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: HVCanMus.rtf
Canada and the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis
[ send me this paper ]
A 10 page contention that while the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis composed the first real threat to North American territory since the bombing of Pearl Harbor in World War II, the reaction of the two countries most threatened by this crisis was considerably different. The U.S. reaction was swift yet perhaps somewhat premature. Canadian reaction was considerably slower. Concludes that while many criticize Canada's reaction to the Cuban Missile Crisis and the U.S. request for Canadian alert, her caution was actually prudent given the threat of all-out nuclear world war as a result of U.S. actions and the concerns for Canadian sovereignty in regard to the control of her military. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: PPCanMis.rtf
Canada and the United States: "Uneasy Bedfellows"
[ send me this paper ]
A 7 page research paper on whether America will overtake Canada with its cultural imperialism. The writer explains that Canada has improved economically, and has a national identity that will keep it separate. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Filename: Canadaus.wps
Canada in Letters by Charlotte Gray
[ send me this paper ]
A 5 page paper which examines the themes of survival and power as seen in Charlotte Gray’s Canada: A Portrait in Letters. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: RAcaatt.rtf
Canada's Independent Streak
[ send me this paper ]
This 3 page paper examines Canada's early history and its relationship to the American Civil War. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: SA812Can.rtf
Canada's Labor Relations Board
[ send me this paper ]
5 pages. The Canada Labor
Relations Board has had some controversies in its past which are
included in this paper. The purpose, role and functions of
Canada's Labor Relations Board are clearly defined herein, and a
thesis statement is presented as to the qualities of this
government entity and whether it is more clearly defined as being
a well run organization or less clearly organized than it should
be. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: JGAcndla.wps
Canada's Long Path to Gender Parity
[ send me this paper ]
This 6 page paper provides an overview of the issue of Canada's struggle for gender parity. This paper outlines the historical factors and internal issues that have led to this problem. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: MHCanHCG.rtf
Canada's Role in Promoting Global Competition and Trade
[ send me this paper ]
This 9 page paper looks at Canada's economy as well as its role in terms of trade. The nation's ideology on competition is explored. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: SA332Can.rtf
Canada, Social Class, and Inequality
[ send me this paper ]
In thirteen pages this paper discusses the impact of social inequality upon the class structure of Canada in a comprehensive overview that examines its impact upon prestige, power, and wealth, and also considers the role resource ownership places upon the Canadian class structure from a conflict sociological perspective. Seven sources are listed in the bibliography.
Filename: TGcansoc.rtf
Canada: Little Tolerance For Hybridized Identity
[ send me this paper ]
8 pages in length. Pearl Harbor created fear in the hearts of all North Americans; in order to quell that fear and maintain control over its political, social and economic concerns, Canada worked hard to harshly dissuade any hybrid Japanese residents from becoming spies. These tactics, considered to be over-reactive at best and downright inhumane at worst, included the complete and utter downgrade of a once-participatory and mainstreamed population by forcing Japanese Canadians to forfeit their property, and, after being deprive of liberty, the men "were impressed into forced labor and the women and children transported to ghost towns and abandoned mining camps in the interior of the country to fend for themselves" (Milton 8). The disturbing sting of this sudden intolerance for an individual's hybrid identity has lasted long after the initial reason for its original existence, rendering Canada yet another in a long list of countries where the melting pot of multiculturalism has become an unwelcome entity, an element of modernity painfully portrayed in Wayson Choy's "Jade Peony" and Joy Kogawa's "Obasan." Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: TLChybrd.rtf
Canada: Race And The Media
[ send me this paper ]
7 pages in length. Canada's multiracial community, which includes Black, Hispanic, Asian and Aborigines populations, is subject to a significant amount of stereotypical abuse at the hands of contemporary media. Clearly, the racial bias that exists within the media – particular in television but also clearly apparent in music, advertisements and all other entities – is not necessarily created by the media as a negative influence but is actually perpetuated from a basis of social reality. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Filename: TLCCanRc.rtf
Don't see what you need?
CLICK HERE for
customized research paper assistance instead!
|