is learned throughout the country which helps make a nation smarter and more educated resulting in Canada having the knowledge that other country’s will want to gain from us. Without a proper education people will work in low-paying jobs that can be attained right after high school such as a McDonald’s cook‚ maids‚ and grocery clerks; which creates poverty. Is this really the reason the government wants us to all invest in education or is there a dark secret that we don’t know about? I don’t think
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EU and Canada EU-Canada trade negotiations The negotiations for a Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement concluded among others‚ that: most‚ if not all industrial‚ agricultural and fisheries duties will be eliminated when the agreement enters into force; the EU and Canada will foster closer contacts in the field of technical regulations; Canada will recognise a list of EU car standards‚ from which EU car exports to Canada will benefit; EU companies will have better access to key Canadian
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take precedence over any other” Trudeau established that multiculturalism in Canada needed to be recognized as part of the heritage of the Canadian culture and at the same time accept the fact that immigration has broaden the diversity of cultures in Canada. Canadian Heritage‚ The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom‚ Ottawa. Accessed January 27‚ 2011 on the Canadian Heritage website. http://www.pch.gc.ca/pgm/pdp-hrp/canada/frdm-eng.cfm The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms “recognizes the
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thirteen percent of the population in 2001" (Statistics Canada (2005). Retrieved February 14‚ 2006‚ from http://142.206.72.67/02/02a/02a_006_e.htm ) ‚ one can see why the process of integration can‚ and has been‚ an uneasy one. Xenophobic patterns of behavior are almost exclusively found in locals "from less educated strata" (Roland Eckert in Theodor Hanf‚ 1999‚ p. 50). With an employment rate of only 6.6% ( Statistics Canada (2005). Retrieved February 14‚ 2006‚ from http://www
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somewhat foreboding term “expropriation” in Canada describes the right of the government (the Crown or one of its agencies) to legally take real property (lands) that is in private hands and apply it for a greater public use or benefit. This concept is called “compulsory purchase” in the United Kingdom‚ and “taking” or “condemnation” under the power of “eminent domain” in the United States. All land in Canada started off belonging to the Crown. The government did not need all the land and could not possibly
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I believe that Canada prides themselves on being a very equal country for the most part‚ equality is “the state of being equal “(Collins English Dictionary‚ 2015) no matter what race or gender you are. As much as Canada prizes itself of this equality I don’t believe it is present in Canada’s education system. If you look at schools in Canada‚ it is easy to see that they change dramatically from facility to facility. Poor or not as developed towns/cities seem to not have as many resources available
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more than the name of our province. The word means ‘our land’ in Inuktitut‚ and it is a reflection of Canada‚ from its distinctive culture and way of life‚ to its vast and beautiful expansiveness. Its greatest assets are the welcoming communities that have banded together to conquer the simultaneously awe-inspiring and often harsh northern landscape. Nunavut is the youngest territory in Canada‚ becoming recognized through the Nunavut Act and the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement Act in 1999‚ yet its
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activities that are not part of its goal. A law is “grossly disproportionate” when the effect of the law is much harsher than the benefits of achieving its goal. These are all points which relate back to the famous Bedford V. Canada case. In the Bedford case‚ the governments and the laws they put in place threaten health and bodily integrity of sex workers across the country. In the Bedford case‚ it was a unanimous decision on behalf of the court‚ they agreed with the applicants that the criminal
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RESEARCH PAPER Prostitution in Canada Table of Contents Introduction 3 History of prostitution in Canada 3 Definition of prostitution 4 * What is prostitution? 4 * Causes of women entering prostitution 4 * Troubled childhood 5 * Homelessness‚ poverty‚ employment and drugs 5 * Friends 6 * The most dangerous places 6 Consequences of prostitution 7 * Health and Safety Risks 7
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Retrieved from http://tutor2u.net/business/external/economy_inflation.htm Datamonitor Datamonitor. (2011). Kraft foods‚ inc. Retrieved fromhttp://360.datamonitor.com/Product?pid=9D3A31A2-39BA-41C7-90D7-A5CCE6384A97&view=Overview The Government of Canada‚ Health Canada Jenson‚ H. H.‚ Kesavan‚ T.‚ & Johnson‚ S. R. (1992). Measuring the impact of health awareness on food demand. Review of Agricultural Economics‚ 14(2)‚ pg. 299-312. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/1349509?seq=12 JLP Ken
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