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Skip to Search Results- 40Edmonton Social Planning Council
- 13Sustainable Forest Management Network
- 11Adamowicz, Wiktor
- 9Novak, Frank
- 8Adewale, A.
- 8Birdsell, J.M.
- 110Sustainable Forest Management Network
- 71Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)
- 70Sustainable Forest Management Network/Project Reports (Sustainable Forest Management Network)
- 44Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology, Department of
- 44Oil Sands Research and Information Network (OSRIN)
- 30Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology, Department of/Project Reports (Resource Economics & Environmental Sociology)
- 280Report
- 35Article (Published)
- 11Thesis
- 6Conference/Workshop Presentation
- 5Book
- 2Conference/Workshop Poster
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2012
For much of the history of Alberta’s tar sands, a series of visual conventions have shaped Canadian imaginaries of the resource, the emergence of the non-conventional oil industry, and the mining of oil. We introduce a series of archival images dating from 1880 until the opening of Great Canadian...
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2013-06-17
Edmonton Social Planning Council, Inter-City Forum on Social Policy
The Government of Alberta suspended the Summer Temporary Employment Program (STEP) as part of Budget 2013. In response, the InterCity Forum on Social Policy (ICFSP) administered a survey to gauge the impact that the elimination of STEP would have on organizations in municipalities across...
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Improving practice in public participation in sustainable forest management : proven approaches, knowledge needs and research projects : proceedings of a workshop of the Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) Network Halifax, Nova Scotia 19-20 October 2001
Download2002
Sustainable Forest Management Network
Workshop Proceedings 2002-5
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2011
Co-published by the Edmonton Social Planning Council, the Alberta College of Social Workers and Public Interest Alberta, \"In This Together : Ending Poverty in Alberta\" identifies the need for a province-wide poverty reduction strategy in Alberta. It also discusses how the Government of Alberta...
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1988
The heavy oils produced from the Alberta oil sands contain cyclic organic compounds together with sulphur and nitrogen. Upon thermal treatment they have the potential to form carcinogenic, mutagenic, and toxic compounds. Recovery of oil by in-situ combustion processes, such as the Combination of...