Special issue containing invited papers arising from the symposium “Crossing boundaries and building bridges: integrative zoology” held during the First Joint Meeting of the Canadian Society of Ecology and Evolution, the Canadian Society of Zoologists, and the Society of Canadian Limnologists, Centre Mont-Royal, Montréal, Que., 25–29 May 2014 / Numéro spécial renfermant des articles sollicités découlant du symposium « Franchir les barrières et bâtir des ponts : zoologie intégrative », organisé dans le cadre de la première conférence conjointe de la Société canadienne d’écologie et d’évolution, de la Société canadienne de zoologie et de la Société canadienne de limnologie, au Centre Mont-Royal (Montréal, Qc), du 25 au 29 mai 2014

2015 ◽  
Vol 93 (9) ◽  
pp. iii-iii
1993 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Karim H. Karim

Abstract: Dominant, oppositional, alternative, and populist discourses compete with each other through their respective uses of ethnocultural terminology to develop inclusive or exclusive symbolic constructions of Canadian society. Résumé: Les discours dominant, d'opposition, altérnatif et populiste rivalisent les uns avec les autres par leur utilisation respective de la terminologie ethnoculturelle afin d'élaborer des constructions symboliques de la société canadienne qui englobent ou qui excluent.


Criminologie ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Lachance

The article examines certains aspects of the social control in Canadian society during the French régime in the xvmth century. Based on the finding that the number of cases that went before the king's court for certain types of crime was relatively small, the author concludes that social control was exercised more by the society itself than by its institutions. The justice apparatus had little control over the Canadian people as a whole, due to its lack of sufficient peace officers, the tremendous size of the country and its meagre and scattered population. It was the elite, as models anddefiners of the norms, and the family, as the principal instrument in the regulation of conduct, that played an important role in the social control of Canadian society. It was this system that enabled XViUth century Canada to maintain a very low rate of what we considered serious crimes.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document