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Institution

Government of Canada

GovernmentOttawa, Ontario, Canada
About: Government of Canada is a government organization based out in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Monetary policy & Productivity. The organization has 796 authors who have published 886 publications receiving 21366 citations. The organization is also known as: federal government of Canada & Her Majesty's Government.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Tourism Expenditures Model (TEM) as mentioned in this paper is a short run systems model which at both the national and regional level can provide a detailed analysis of the nature of tourism-related expenditures.

5 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An implementation of Gold-Rabiner parallel processing pitch detector is described and modifications to the original pitch detector that resulted in a more accurate voiced/unvoiced decision are presented.
Abstract: An implementation of Gold-Rabiner parallel processing pitch detector is described. Modifications to the original pitch detector that resulted in a more accurate voiced/unvoiced decision are presented. The modified pitch detector, along with all the tasks required by a real time, full duplex 2400 bit/s vocoder, have been implemented on a single Texas Instruments' TMS-320 microprocessor chip.

5 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The author discusses the impact of telematics in education on the learner, the content learned, and the learning process in the context of three theoretical perspectives - technological determinism, symbolic interactionism and information theory.

5 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The author shows how individual nurses and nurses' associations can, and should, exercise their influence and power in promoting health at local, national and international levels, making primary health care a priority.
Abstract: Nurses in every continent engage in social action. This, the author argues, has been a fact throughout the ages. The major social issues which contribute to health today are economic, energy, environmental and social welfare problems. Other major issues affecting health are population growth, poverty, education, clean water supply, and family planning. The author shows how individual nurses and nurses' associations can, and should, exercise their influence and power in promoting health at local, national and international levels, making primary health care a priority. By using their levers of power, together with technology and communications, nurses can help create a new world health order, the author concludes.

5 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In Doucet-Boudreau v. Nova Scotia (Minister of Education), the Supreme Court upheld the trial judge's order that the province and school boards provide homogeneous French language facilities and programs to secondary school students and, more controversially that they attend a series of reporting hearings to update the court on their progress.
Abstract: “In our view, judicial restraint and metaphors such as “dialogue” must not be elevated to the level of strict constitutional rules to which the words of s. 24 can be subordinated.” It has been ten years since a group of French-speaking parents in Nova Scotia, frustrated with ongoing government delays, stood before the court hoping to realize their constitutional right to send their children to school in French. Little did they know at the time, their case would be headed to Ottawa and would result in one of the sharpest divisions ever between the nine judges of the Supreme Court of Canada.In Doucet-Boudreau v. Nova Scotia (Minister of Education), the Supreme Court upheld the trial judge’s order that the province and school boards provide homogeneous French language facilities and programs to secondary school students and, more controversially, that they attend a series of reporting hearings to update the court on their progress. The trial judge considered these reporting hearings necessary to ensure that the provincial government and French language school board implemented the substance of the order, which required them to comply with their constitutional obligations under s. 23 of the Charter. If the trial judge’s order to retain jurisdiction in Doucet-Boudreau caused a stir, the Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision to affirm that order caused a tempest. In the academic literature, some scholars have suggested that the majority’s decision represents an exception to an established pattern of judicial restraint under s. 24(1) of the Charter. It has been argued that in sanctioning supervisory jurisdiction as a legitimate constitutional remedy, the Supreme Court in Doucet-Boudreau stepped away from well established principles of “dialogue” and mutual respect between the various branches of government and stepped directly into the exclusive territory of the executive.This paper suggests that, in fact, the opposite may be true. That is, in the right case, a remedial order such as the one crafted by the trial judge in Doucet-Boudreau may actually serve to strengthen the dialogue between the courts and the executive. In contrast to a detailed mandatory order enforceable through contempt proceedings, flexible orders like the one in Doucet-Boudreau ensure compliance with constitutional obligations while leaving detailed choices regarding implementation to the executive. Further, looking to the experiences in other common law jurisdictions, it may be argued that there is a relationship between the need for supervisory orders and the health of the democratic process and its institutions.In fleshing out this view, the first part of this paper will review the decision in Doucet-Boudreau and highlight key elements of both the majority and dissenting opinions. Second, this paper will consider the competing views on the importance of Doucet-Boudreau to the dialogue metaphor and questions of judicial activism. This section also considers and explains similar experiences in the United States, India and South Africa. The third part of the paper considers the benefits and drawbacks of three types of orders commonly made in minority language rights cases: (1) detailed mandatory orders enforceable by contempt; (2) flexible mandatory orders with supervisory jurisdiction; and (3) detailed interlocutory orders. Finally, the fourth part discusses the daunting question raised by the aftermath of Doucet-Boudreau: what is the right case for retaining jurisdiction as a constitutional remedy?

5 citations


Authors

Showing all 802 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Kingston H. G. Mills9231329630
David W. Schindler8521739792
Martha C. Anderson7034020288
Hui Li6224614395
Lei Zhang5814621872
Michael J. Vanni5512411714
Cars Hommes5425014984
Richard E. Caves5311524552
John W. M. Rudd51709446
Karen A. Kidd4716310255
Kenneth O. Hill431268842
Steven H. Ferguson432256797
Derwyn C. Johnson411038208
Kevin E. Percy40915167
Guy Ampleman401284706
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20234
20223
202147
202044
201931
201832