Making Humanitarian Action Possible
Andrew Gilbert
Navigating the Ethics of River Tourism in the Canadian Arctic
Nancy Doubleday
Using Technology to Manage Health
Norm Archer
Difficult Inheritances: Placing Memorials of Vancouver's Disappeared Women in Context
Amber Dean
Implementation of a Universal Publicly-Funded Drug Plan is Possible in Canada
Katherine Boothe
How Indigenous Elder-Youth Relationships Influence Health and Well-Being
Chelsea Gabel
Effects of Changing Lake Temperatures on Developing Fish Embryos in Lake Huron
Joanna Wilson
Postsecondary Pathways of High School Students with Special Education Needs
Karen Robson
A Conversation With the Past Through Modern Mummification
Andrew Wade
Listening to the Brain When the Body Cannot Speak
John Connolly
The Right to be Involved
Chris Sinding
Social Worker Overload: Using Digital Media for Worker Advocacy
Tara La Rose
The Costs of Bankruptcy
Jiaping Qiu
Mothering with HIV : Experiences of Health and Social Surveillance of Mothers living with HIV
Saara Greene
The Political Lives of Migrants
Peter Nyers
A New Wrinkle in Biosensors
Leyla Soleymani
Serious Fun at a Jewish Summer Camp
Celia Rothenberg
Six Nations Community Health
Sonia Anand
The History of Infant and Maternal Public Health Care in the British Caribbean
Juanita De Barros
Aboriginal Healing Through Community Building
Bonnie Freeman, L. William Lee
Using Recuperative Thickening Technology to Boost Biogas Production
David Latulippe
PAWSing Student Stress
James Gillett
Raising Awareness of Human Interconnections with the Sea
Chris Myhr
Literary History of Six Nations of the Grand River
Rick Monture
The implementation of a universal publicly funded drug plan is important for Canada. Although adopting this policy will be difficult, it is possible to overcome some of these barriers.