Shaping the Canadian City

Shaping the Canadian City
Author: John C. Weaver
Publsiher: Institute of Public Administration of Canada
Total Pages: 94
Release: 1977
Genre: Canada
ISBN: 0919400469

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Shaping the Urban Landscape

Shaping the Urban Landscape
Author: Gilbert Arthur Stelter,Gilbert A. Stelter,Alan F. J. Artibise
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 447
Release: 1982
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780886290023

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This is a collection of essays focusing on the process of city-building in Canada. The authors weigh the relative broad social, economic and technological trends as they attempt to explain the shaping of this urban landscape.

Shaping the urban landscape

Shaping the urban landscape
Author: Gilbert A. Stelter
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2024
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OCLC:1313783520

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The Shape of the City

The Shape of the City
Author: John Sewell
Publsiher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 278
Release: 1993-12-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781442659308

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Critics have long voiced concerns about the wisdom of living in cities and the effects of city life on physical and mental health. For a century, planners have tried to meet these issues. John Sewell traces changes in urban planning, from the pre-Depression garden cities to postwar modernism and a revival of interest in the streetscape grid. In this far-ranging review, Sewell recounts the arrival of modern city planning with its emphasis on lower densities, limited access streets, segregated uses, and considerable green space. He makes Toronto a case history, with its pioneering suburban development in Don Mills and its other planned communities, including Regent Park, St Jamestown, Thorncrest Village, and Bramalea. The heyday of the modern planning movement was in the 1940s to the 1960s, and the Don Mills concept was repeated in spirit and in style across Canada. Eventually, strong public reaction brought modern planning almost to a halt within the city of Toronto. The battles centred on saving the Old City Hall and stopping the Spadina Expressway. Sewell concludes that although the modernist approach remains ascendant in the suburbs, the City of Toronto has begun to replace it with alternatives that work. This is a reflective but vigorous statement by a committed urban reformer. Few Canadians are better suited to point the way towards city planning for the future.

Shaping the Upper Canadian Frontier

Shaping the Upper Canadian Frontier
Author: Neil Stevens Forkey
Publsiher: Calgary : University of Calgary Press
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2003
Genre: History
ISBN: UOM:39015056920435

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Neil Forkey makes a significant contribution to the growing body of work on Canadian environmental history. Themes of ethnicity and environment in the Trent Valley are brought into wider perspective with comparisons to other areas of contemporary settlement throughout the British Empire and North America. Forkey begins by placing his study within the literature of settler societies of Upper Canada and North America. The Trent Valley's geography, prehistory, and Native peoples, the Huron and the Mississauga, are discussed alongside the Anglo-Celtic migrations and resettlement of the area. Careful attention is devoted to the life and nature writings of Catherine Parr Traill. Her descriptions of life and environmental changes in the Valley point the way to a keener understanding of Canadian attitudes about the natural world during the nineteenth century. Shaping the Upper Canadian Frontier: Environment, Society, and Culture in the Trent Valley is the story of the Trent Valley during the nineteenth century, one of a settler society and a microcosm for wider human and environmental changes throughout North America.

Canada in Cities

Canada in Cities
Author: Katherine A.H. Graham,Caroline Andrew
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 293
Release: 2014-11-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780773596306

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The federal government and its policies transform Canadian cities in myriad ways. Canada in Cities examines this relationship to better understand the interplay among changing demographics, how local governments and citizens frame their arguments for federal action, and the ways in which the national government uses its power and resources to shape urban Canada. Most studies of local governance in Canada focus on politics and policy within cities. The essays in this collection turn such analysis on its head, by examining federal programs, rather than municipal ones, and observing how they influence local policies and work with regional authorities and civil societies. Through a series of case studies - ranging from federal policy concerning Aboriginal people in cities, to the introduction of the federal gas tax transfer to municipalities, to the impact of Canada's emergency management policies on cities - the contributors provide insights about how federal politics influence the local political arena. Analyzing federal actions in diverse policy fields, the authors uncover meaningful patterns of federal action and outcome in Canadian cities. A timely contribution, Canada in Cities offers a comprehensive study of diverse areas of municipal public policy that have emerged in Canada in recent years.

Toronto the Belfast of Canada

Toronto  the Belfast of Canada
Author: William J. Smyth
Publsiher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2015-05-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781442666764

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In late nineteenth-century Toronto, municipal politics were so dominated by the Irish Protestants of the Orange Order that the city was known as the “Belfast of Canada.” For almost a century, virtually every mayor of Toronto was an Orangeman and the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne was a civic holiday. Toronto, the Belfast of Canada explores the intolerant origins of today’s cosmopolitan city. Using lodge membership lists, census data, and municipal records, William J. Smyth details the Orange Order’s role in creating Toronto’s municipal culture of militant Protestantism, loyalism, and monarchism. One of Canada’s foremost experts on the Orange Order, Smyth analyses the Orange Order’s influence between 1850 and 1950, the city’s frequent public displays of sectarian tensions, and its occasional bouts of rioting and mayhem.

Canadian City

Canadian City
Author: Gilbert Stelter
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 518
Release: 1984-12-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780773584853

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The emphasis is on urban society, with new essays on social structure, the family, ethnicity and immigration, and religion. Other sections are devoted to urban growth, the physical environment, and urban government and reform.