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Household food wasting in a net‐zero energy neighbourhood: Analyzing relationships between household food waste and pro‐environmentalism Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-04-19 Haley Everitt, Paul van der Werf, Jamie A. Seabrook, Jason A. Gilliland
To address the prominent “value‐action gap” within pro‐environmental behaviour, this novel, cross‐sectional study investigated relationships between household food wasting and pro‐environmentalism. Research was undertaken in 11 neighbourhoods across London, Ontario, Canada, including a net‐zero energy neighbourhood. A direct measurement methodology was used to measure household food waste, and a survey
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Live archives: Freedom of information requests as political methodology Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-04-17 Jeremy J. Schmidt
Freedom of information requests are an important research tool yet receive comparably little methodological scrutiny relative to other methods commonly used by geographers. This article considers two methodological aspects to freedom of information requests. The first is how they operate as “live archives” that take shape as batches of files are compiled in ways that reflect search terms, negotiations
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Housing booms in gateway cities ByDavidLey, West Sussex: Wiley. 2023. 336pages. $41.95 (paperback). ISBN: 9781119853602 Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-04-16 Jean Michel Montsion
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Zapatista stories for dreaming an‐other world By SubcomandanteMarcos, Oakland: PM Press/Kairos. 2022. 160 pages. $23.90 (paperback). ISBN: 9781629639703 Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-04-16 Levi Gahman
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Protecting the prairies: Lorne Scott and the politics of conservation by AndreaOlive, Regina: University of Regina Press. 2023. 280 pages. $32.95 (paperback). ISBN: 9780889779600 Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-04-16 Jennifer Holzer
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Settling beyond big cities: A scoping review of the Canadian literature on immigration to rural and smaller communities Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-04-16 Stacey Haugen, Rachel McNally, Lars K. Hallström
Newcomers are living and working across rural and smaller communities in Canada. However, immigration research and policy are overwhelmingly focused on large, urban centres. Responding to this knowledge gap, this article presents the results from a scoping review of the Canadian literature on immigration outside of Canada's largest cities. An analysis of 90 studies reveals several key trends in the
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Rethinking political symbols: Indigenous nationhood and settler colonialism in the Canada/United States borderlands Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-04-03 James M. Hundley
Straddling the Canada/United States border at its western end is a 67‐foot monument symbolizing 200 years of peace between the two countries. Today, it is frequently used as a site for protest against the state. This article analyzes an environmental protest against energy transmission projects through the Salish Sea by Coast Salish Indigenous nations. I argue that the Coast Salish are using the landscape
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Le quartier : Soutien et générateur des interactions sociales pour l'innovation? Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-03-29 Laurie‐Anne St‐Pierre, David Doloreux, Richard Shearmur, Anthony Frigon
RésuméCet article porte sur la géographie urbaine et les dynamiques de l'innovation à l'échelle du quartier. Il s'agit de s'interroger quant à l'apport des quartiers en soutien à l'innovation et à comprendre, d'une part, dans quelle mesure et comment les entrepreneurs se servent du quartier et des lieux qui s'y trouvent pour obtenir et échanger des connaissances, et d'autre part, les rapports de ce
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Géographies féministes au Québec, intersectionnalité et décolonialisme : Vers une géographie de l'émancipation? Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-03-20 Lama Boustani, Anne Latendresse, Patricia Martin
RésuméApparue au milieu des années 1980, la géographie féministe est demeurée en marge de la géographie du Québec, comme s'il s'agissait d'une branche mineure de la géographie. Or, après avoir intégré des préoccupations liées à la géographie des genres et des sexualités, la géographie féministe s'élargit et se consolide sur les plans théorique, épistémologique et méthodologique en intégrant les approches
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Investigating student perceptions and vulnerability to heat stress in campus residences using Reddit: Climate change, health, and wellbeing Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-03-19 Yuki Yeung, Susan J. Elliott
This exploratory research investigated the sufficiency of existing infrastructure to adapt to high temperatures and explored the perceptions of heat stress from students in on‐campus residences at the U15 Group of Universities in Canada. The prevalence of air conditioning in student residences was used to estimate the adaptive capacity of existing infrastructure, and posts and comments on Reddit relevant
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Anordissement, autochtonisation et rétention du personnel extrarégional de l'éducation, de la santé et des services sociaux au sein des communautés innues et naskapie de la Côte‐Nord (Québec) Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-03-19 Charlotte Bellehumeur, Laurie Guimond
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Revisiting small and mid‐sized cities in Canada: Old questions, new challenges* Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-03-11 Thi‐Thanh‐Hiên Pham, Jeffrey Biggar, Yolande Pottie‐Sherman
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Revoir les petites et moyennes villes du Canada : questions d'hier, défis d'aujourd'hui* Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-03-11 Thi‐Thanh‐Hiên Pham, Jeffrey Biggar, Yolande Pottie‐Sherman
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The caring city: Ethics of urban design By JulietDavis, Bristol: Bristol University Press. 2022. 238 pp. $158.25 (hardback). ISBN: 9781529201215 Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-02-26 Meriç Kırmızı
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The kids are not alright: Children as objects, audience, and agents in the 2022 Canadian convoy protests Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-02-23 Jamey Essex
Children figure prominently in far‐right movements, ideologies, and conspiracy theories as innocent targets of nefarious and decadent forces, unwitting symbols of social and political decay, and potentially dangerous objects of moral panic. Far‐right movements thus map a wide‐ranging network of concerns about immigration, race, public health, education, and globalization onto children's bodies and
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Environmental philosophy in desperate times ByJustinPack,Peterborough:Broadview Press.2022.186 pages. $26.50 (paperback). ISBN: 97815548145364 Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-02-21 Martina Jakubchik‐Paloheimo
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Parental evaluations of neighbourhood green and play spaces and children's mental health Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-02-19 James A. LeClair
Geographical analyses of mental health problems have been undertaken since at least the 1930s, with such work preoccupied primarily with ecological correlations between the prevalence of mental illness and small‐area variations in socioeconomic status. More recently, parks and other green spaces have emerged as place characteristics of interest for their possible public health significance, as they
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A framework for Indigenous climate resilience: A Gitxsan case study Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-01-29 Janna Deanne Wale, Lael Parrott
Indigenous communities in British Columbia hold deep relationships with their Lands, and are disproportionately affected by climate change. This study assesses resilience of Indigenous communities to climate change with respect to changes in the traditional seasonal round. Through a decolonizing methodology that is inclusive of a two-eyed seeing approach, we develop a culturally appropriate framework
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Perception of beach safety at a destination beach on the Great Lakes Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-01-22 Chris Houser, Alex Smith
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Intensification in the city centre: Barriers to implementation in Regina, Saskatchewan Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2024-01-02 Rylan Graham, Pierre Filion
As cities aim for more sustainable patterns of urbanization, intensification has emerged as a core planning strategy. In 2013, the City of Regina set new intensification targets: absorb 30% of annual population growth through intensification and add 10,000 residents to the city centre by 2035. In the decade since, implementation has been unsuccessful. This study explores the barriers to core area intensification
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Strengthening health-focused climate adaptation in Canada: Barriers and interventions Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-12-22 Desiree Rose, S. Jeff Birchall
Climate change poses a dire threat to human health. Within Canada, extreme heat events are contributing to cardiovascular disease, poor air quality is causing respiratory distress, and changing precipitation patterns are resulting in the spread of vector-borne illness. To minimize these negative health outcomes, adaptation strategies targeted to protecting health are essential. Yet, despite a recognition
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Trajectoires et visées de l'hydrogéomorphologie au Québec Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Thomas Buffin-Bélanger, Félix Lachapelle, Pascale Biron, Maxime Boivin
L'hydrogéomorphologie étudie la dynamique des rivières en se concentrant sur les interactions liant la structure des écoulements, la mobilisation et le transport des sédiments et les morphologies qui caractérisent les cours d'eau et leur bassin-versant. Elle offre un cadre d'analyse et des outils pour une meilleure intégration des connaissances sur la dynamique des rivières pour la gestion des cours
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Social housing stigma in Toronto: Identifying asymmetries between stereotypes and statistical actualities of health, crime, and human capital Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Lindi Jahiu
Research on social housing stigma has proliferated due to growing concern over the effects of territorial stigmatization. The stereotyping of social housing as a site of ill-health, criminality, and low human capital stems from empirically ambiguous narratives created and recirculated through popular modes (e.g., social media platforms, news coverage). This paper combines principal component analysis
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Past, present and future revitalization trends in Canadian mid-size city downtowns Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-11-28 Pierre Filion
The article is a critical review of the literature investigating the impact suburbanization has had since the mid-20th century on the downtowns of Canadian mid-size cities and the strategies deployed to revitalize these districts. It demonstrates that large city downtowns are more likely than their mid-size city counterparts to enjoy conditions favourable to their success, hence the need to devise
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In light of transit: Documenting the scales of urban change along the LRT line in Hamilton, Ontario Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-10-13 Rebecca Mayers, Nicole Rallis, Brian Doucet, Caleb Babin
Large-scale transit projects, such as light rail, are transformational for cities due to their ability to attract investment, curb sprawl, and intensify urban areas. In part because of enhancements to the public realm and improved connectivity, areas along new transit lines witness significant growth and investment, making them less affordable for residents already there. However, very little research
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Examining the influence of microclimate conditions on the breakup of surface-based temperature inversions in two proximal but dissimilar Yukon valleys Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-09-25 Nick C. Noad, Philip P. Bonnaventure
Surface-based temperature inversions (SBIs) are frequent and strong in valleys of north-central Yukon, which drive annual average surface lapse rates that are strongly inverted (≤1.19°C 100 m−1) within the first 100 to 150 vertical meters. This study aims to test the relationship of SBI breakup with local microclimate factors determining the influence on surface lapse rate breakup patterns. A field
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(Re)purposing cadasters: When ecclesiastical archives advocate for Indigenous land rights Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-09-20 Léa Denieul-Pinsky
This paper reflects on the potential and limits of repatriating state-sanctioned historical materials and repurposing them as “counter-archives” for Indigenous communities. This proposal aligns itself with the epistemic shift in archival studies which promotes a processual approach to archiving (archive-as-subject) rather than an extractive one (archive-as-source). Instead of taking colonial archives
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La politique nationale de l'architecture et de l'aménagement du territoire du Québec : Une mise en récit mobilisatrice ? Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-09-20 Martin Simard
La publication de la Politique nationale de l'architecture et de l'aménagement du territoire du Québec (PNAAT) interpelle la géographie à plusieurs égards. Cette politique, qui résulte d'un processus d'élaboration de dix-huit mois, est mise en récit autour du paradigme de l'aménagement durable, comme le veut la tendance générale aujourd'hui en aménagement et urbanisme. Or, au Québec, plusieurs politiques
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Associations between socio-demographic factors and change in mobility due to COVID-19 restrictions in Ontario, Canada using geographically weighted regression Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-09-14 Ben Klar, Jason A. Gilliland, Jed A. Long
Transportation research has shown that socio-demographic factors impact people's mobility patterns. During the COVID-19 pandemic, some of these effects have changed in accordance with changing mobility needs adapting to the pandemic, including restrictions on in-person gatherings, closure of in-person businesses, and working from home. We investigate two gaps in current knowledge in this area of transportation
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Addressing sustainability challenges in micro-municipalities: Insights from the study of Quebec's smallest municipalities Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-09-05 Juste Rajaonson, Pénélope Régnier-Sakamoto, Clara Vivin, Myriam Guillemette
Many empirical studies on large municipalities, ranging from thousands to millions of inhabitants, have helped shape the knowledge of sustainability management in developed countries. However, issues and approaches specific to micro-municipalities with fewer than 1,000 inhabitants have been relatively less covered. In this context, this study presents an empirical content analysis of sustainability-related
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Future prospects for backyard skating rinks look bleak in a warming climate Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-09-01 Robert McLeman, Saeed Golian, Conor Murphy, Colin Robertson
Each winter, purpose-built outdoor skating rinks are constructed in backyards and community parks across much of Canada and the northern United States. Past research projects that warmer winters will make it increasingly difficult to build outdoor rinks without artificial refrigeration. Here we build upon previous studies by mapping areas of North America where present average January temperatures
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Se nourrir autrement : quelle différence dans l'accès aux systèmes alimentaires alternatifs selon la taille de la ville et ses conditions géographiques? Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-08-09 Mélodie Cantin Lafrance, Thi-Thanh-Hiên Pham
Les systèmes alimentaires alternatifs (SAA), reconnus pour leurs circuits alimentaires réduits, aux retombées positives pour la santé, l'environnement et les communautés locales, offriraient une alternative au système conventionnel en aliments de qualité. Cependant, plusieurs études s'interrogent sur l'accessibilité aux SAA, notamment quand l'insécurité alimentaire persiste dans de nombreuses communautés
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Un classement multicritère des villes du québec pour favoriser la prise en compte de leurs différences Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-08-08 Michel Rochefort, Thi-Thanh-Hiên Pham, Paul-Émile Tchinda, Logan Penvern
When it comes to making planning and development decisions, the concepts of small, medium-sized, or large cities are sometimes used to adapt public policies and instruments, or even to highlight challenges that are specific to certain categories of city. In this article, we take a look at the various dimensions that can be used to characterize cities, so as to empirically test a multi-criteria approach
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Best practices for measuring community resources across Canada: A comparison of coding classifications Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-08-07 Marisa Young, Sean Leipe, Diana Singh
Social scientists, geographers, criminologists, and health scientists are often tasked with finding data to best capture the impact of “community context” on individual outcomes, including residential services, physical resources, and social institutions. One outlet for such data in Canada is Digital Map Technologies Inc. (DMTI) Spatial, which offers a national repository of over one million businesses
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Towards an emotional geoeconomics? Masculinity and emotions among Mexican and Guatemalan temporary agricultural workers in Quebec Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-07-28 Linamar Campos-Flores, Patricia M. Martin
This article explores the emotional geographies underpinning the experiences of temporary agricultural workers who migrate yearly to fields of labour in Canada. The research is based on a transnational qualitative study in Quebec, Mexico, and Guatemala. To provide a theoretical framework for this article, we bring the concepts of geoeconomics and geographies of emotion into conversation. We then briefly
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Food programs in Indigenous communities within northern Canada: A scoping review Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-07-27 Maria Ramirez Prieto, Alissa Sallans, Sonja Ostertag, Sonia Wesche, Tiff-Annie Kenny, Kelly Skinner
Recognizing that limited literature exists regarding food programs in northern Indigenous communities within Canada, this study draws on a range of sources to map and characterize existing food programs in these contexts. A secondary aim assessed the extent to which traditional food was offered through the identified programs, which has implications for cultural appropriateness and, in turn, food sovereignty
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Design thinking for city dashboard development: Recommendations from a study of smart asset management in Sydney, Australia Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-07-20 Christine Steinmetz-Weiss, Nancy Marshall, Kate Bishop, Homa Rahmat, Susan Thompson, Miles Park, Christian Tietz, Linda Corkery
The city dashboard has become an integral component of smart city asset management systems. It leverages data collected from multiple sources to monitor performance and enable evidence-based decision making. This article investigates the use of a design thinking framework to develop a functional and easy to understand city dashboard. The Smart Social Spaces project is used as a case study to illustrate
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Excessive rightsizing? The interdependence of public school closures and population shrinkage Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-07-20 Rachel Barber, Maxwell Hartt, Patricia Collins
Shrinking cities have, by definition, lost population. Rightsizing is a strategic planning approach to mitigate the challenges of population loss by adjusting a municipality's services, amenities, or even footprint to fit a new demographic reality. While studies have documented the unacceptability and ineptitude of municipality-driven rightsizing, public school closures have proliferated and quietly
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Navigating the housing crisis: A comparison of international students and other newcomers in a mid-sized Canadian city Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-07-20 Yolande Pottie-Sherman, Julia Christensen, Maryam Foroutan, Siyi Zhou
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The Index of Economic Disparity: Measuring trends in economic disparity across Canadian Census Subdivisions and rural and urban communities Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-06-22 David Weaver, Tamara Krawchenko, Sean Markey
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Plus difficile d'être élu dans une petite municipalité? Perceptions de la fonction élective par certains élus municipaux québécois Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-06-15 Sandra Breux, Rodolphe Parent
Au Québec, 75% des élu·e·s municipaux de la province exercent leurs mandats dans des municipalités de moins de 10 000 h. Si l'on sait que la taille démographique de la municipalité est susceptible d'influencer le parcours et le profil des élu·e·s municipaux et plus généralement la professionnalisation de la fonction élective, rares sont les écrits qui, à notre connaissance, documentent la fonction
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Les géographes du Québec et la question professionnelle : essai d'interprétation sociohistorique, 1945–2000 Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-06-12 Raphaël Pelletier
L'étude de l'histoire contemporaine de la géographie au prisme de la sociologie des professions permet de s'intéresser aux « trajectoires professionnelles », et ce, à titre d'objets. Par l'analyse de documents d'archives, trois périodes ont pu être établies, montrant ainsi les particularités contextuelles des débats entourant la présence des géographes dans le milieu professionnel. De 1945 à 1962,
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COVID-19 in Chihuahua, Mexico: Assessing its spatial behaviour through the inverse distance weighted interpolation technique Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-05-23 Jesús S. Ibarra-Bonilla, Federico Villarreal-Guerrero, Alfredo Pinedo-Alvarez, Jesús A. Prieto-Amparán
This study focused on the spatial evolution of COVID-19 in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico. Data were retrieved from governmental databases and analyzed by means of GIS, applying the inverse distance weighted (IDW) method. The period of December 2019 through November 2021 was split into eight seasons. The root mean square error (RMSE) was used to assess the reliability of the interpolations, showing
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L'étude des milieux de vie et de leurs populations : les chantiers d'une géographie historique environnementale au Québec Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-05-16 Stéphane Castonguay
L'histoire environnementale contribue à la géographie historique au Québec par l'attention qu'elle porte aux dimensions spatiales et matérielles des rapports entre la société et l'environnement. Cette contribution que peut caractériser l'appellation de «géographie historique environnementale » se remarque par une série de travaux qui enrichissent notre compréhension des rapports entre les populations
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Dynamiques hydrogéomorphologiques historiques et actuelles d'une rivière perturbée par les activités de la drave et analyse des impacts d'un démantèlement de barrage Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-05-11 Marianne Bouchard, Maxime Boivin
Au Québec, la dynamique fluviale de la rivière des Escoumins a été perturbée par l'industrie forestière pendant plus d'un siècle. Un barrage a notamment été construit près de l'embouchure en 1846, puis démantelé en 2013. Ces perturbations ont entraîné des répercussions importantes sur l'équilibre du cours d'eau et sur l'habitat du saumon atlantique. Cette étude propose donc de caractériser la dynamique
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Le développement de la géopolitique au Québec : du tropisme national à l'étude de dynamiques plurielles Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-05-07 Frédéric Lasserre
Au Québec, la géopolitique n'a pas suscité, comme domaine de recherche, de vifs débats épistémologiques comme en France ou ailleurs dans le monde. A la croisée des écoles française et anglo-saxonne, la géopolitique québécoise a connu un développement progressif, avec quelques pionniers dans les années 1960, pour s'ancrer dans le paysage disciplinaire de la géographie dans les années 1980. La sous-discipline
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Beyond perception: Spatial analysis of detached ADU potential on residential lots in Windsor, Ontario Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-04-10 Sarah Cipkar, Hanna Maoh, Terence Dimatulac, Frazier Fathers, Shereen Arcis, Anneke Smit
This paper analyzes the spatial potential of detached additional dwelling units (ADUs) in Windsor, Ontario. A new GIS model, which integrates various geoprocessing commands in ArcGIS 10.8.1, is developed to calculate whether the minimum allowable size of a detached ADU can fit within the total buildable area of a residential property, based on the setbacks, the lot coverage requirements, and other
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Flood risk mapping in southwestern Nova Scotia: Perceptions and concerns Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-03-30 Samantha C. Howard, Kate Sherren
Flood risk mapping allows for informed decision making regarding personal and community planning. Resistance to flood risk mapping can be driven by potential decline of property values. This paper explores resistance to flood risk mapping through the lens of climax thinking. Climax thinking is a novel theory guiding explorations of resistance to proposed land use changes. The aim of this study was
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Canada's Ocean Supercluster initiative: A national policy in regional clothing? Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-03-12 Richard Shearmur, David Doloreux, Iryna Fil-Kristensen
Since the late 1980s, there has been no explicit regional policy in Canada. Indirectly, though, equalization payments, industrial policies, as well as regional agencies encouraging the adoption of federal industrial and innovation policies, impact regional economies. In 2017, the federal government appeared to alter its approach: the Supercluster initiative was announced, drawing upon the idea that
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COVID-19, mental health, and rurality: A pilot study Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 Leith Deacon, Silvia Sarapura, Wayne Caldwell, Sara Epp, Miranda Ivany, Jacob Papineau
COVID-19 has caused enormous economic and social disruptions that may have lasting effects on employment, income, and working conditions. Critically, these disruptions often have a negative impact on mental health. While significant research has examined the relationship between COVID-19 and mental health, most of these studies focus on urban centres. This paper presents results from a pilot study
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Understanding the historic legacies of empire from the timbers left behind: Towards critical dendroprovenancing in the British North Atlantic Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-02-21 Kirsten Greer, Adam Csank, Kirby Calvert, Margot Maddison-MacFadyen, Andrew Smith, Kimberly Monk, Sabrina Morrison
The forests of British North America were integral to Britain's maritime empire. Many of these timbers exist today as wooden beams and flooring at historical dockyards and garrisons such as the Royal Naval Dockyard of Bermuda. In this paper, we investigate what timbers from this Dockyard can tell us about interconnections and empire-building throughout the North Atlantic region. To do this we drew
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Identifying metro station types based on transfer purposes: An application of bike-sharing data in Xiamen, China Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-02-17 Haiyan Shao, Cheng Jin, Jing Xu, Yexi Zhong, Mengxin Qiu
With the networking of urban rail transit and the large-scale development of bike-sharing, metro and bike-sharing connection has become the preferred way of daily travel for residents of Xiamen. Current studies mainly identify metro station types based on node and place orientation, lacking behaviour-based investigation. To fill this gap, this study aims to explore the classification of metro stations
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A few “big players”: Systems approach to immigrant employment in a mid-sized city Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-02-15 Mary Crea-Arsenio, K. Bruce Newbold, Andrea Baumann, Margaret Walton-Roberts
Canada's immigration policy is regarded globally as a best practice model for selecting highly skilled migrants. Yet, upon arrival many immigrants face challenges integrating into employment. Where immigrants settle is one factor that has been shown to impact on employment integration. In Canada, regionalization policies have resulted in more immigrants settling in small to mid-sized cities. It is
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Residential segregation and inequality: Considering barriers to choice in Toronto Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-02-14 Natasha Goel
Segregation of visible minorities has persisted throughout time in Toronto. In examining these concentrations, the literature has been heavily focused on the notion that visible minorities are choosing to live in proximity to their respective ethno-racial groups and that these are spaces of aspiration rather than marginalization in Canada. This paper raises questions about the assertion of “self-segregation”
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L'agrandissement de la communauté Uashat mak Mani-utenam : regard sur une collaboration dans la durée entre une université et une communauté innue Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-02-14 Élisa Gouin
Cet article présente une étude de cas ayant pour but de cerner les facteurs de succès et les effets d'une collaboration entre des étudiants en architecture et une communauté autochtone. Cet exercice, qui s'inscrit dans le contexte d'une relation collaborative de plusieurs années, a été effectué dans le cadre d'un atelier en design urbain mené par l'École d'architecture de l'Université Laval et la communauté
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Origine, développement et ancrage territorial des microbrasseries artisanales : le cas de l'Est-du-Québec Can. Geogr. (IF 1.482) Pub Date : 2023-01-10 Félix Garneau, David Doloreux, Richard Shearmur
Cet article porte sur le développement d'une nouvelle industrie, à savoir l'industrie brassicole dans la région périphérique de l'Est-du-Québec. Son objectif consiste à comprendre et décrire les principales activités des microbrasseries pour déceler leur apport au développement des régions de l'Est-du-Québec, à savoir le Bas-Saint-Laurent et Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine. Les résultats de notre analyse