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Skip to Search Results- 9Adamowicz, Wiktor
- 8GAPSSHRC
- 6Boxall, Peter C.
- 3Mukherjee, Ayantika
- 3Phillips, William E.
- 2Holt, Nicholas
- 15Toolkit for Grant Success
- 13Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 13Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 12Toolkit for Grant Success/Successful Grants (Toolkit for Grant Success)
- 12Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology, Department of
- 8Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology, Department of/Project Reports (Resource Economics & Environmental Sociology)
- 3Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation
- 2Physical Education and Recreation
- 1Department of Physical Education
- 1Department of Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology
- 1Department of Rural Economy
- 1Department of Sociology
- 2Spencer-Cavaliere, Nancy (Physical Education and Recreation)
- 1Adamowicz, Wiktor (Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology)
- 1Boxall, Peter (Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology)
- 1Candace Nykiforuk, School of Public Health
- 1Cooper, David J (Accounting)
- 1Danielle Peers, Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation
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1995
Richards, Timothy J., Jeffrey, Scott
This study investigates the use of hedonic pricing to identify the value of relevant production and type traits for dairy bulls in Alberta. A hedonic pricing model is estimated that models semen price as a function of individual production and longevity characteristics for a sample of Holstein...
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2017-11-30
SSHRC Awarded PDG 2018: Globally, most park agencies have little capacity to produce in-house social science or ecological research, or conduct meaningful knowledge exchange with Indigenous and local communities. The goal of this project is to enhance the generation and use of knowledge,...
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Inuit recreation and cultural change [microform]: a case study of the effects of acculturative change on Tununirmiut lifestyle and recreation patterns
Download1978
Investigates contemporary Inuit recreation patterns as results of intercultural contact between traditional Tununirmiut Inuit and Euro-Canadian cultures in the NWT.
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It Might Be ‘Us’ Not ‘Them’: An Autoethnographic Reflexion of Ableist Practices in Adapted Physical Activity
DownloadFall 2021
Adapted physical activity (APA) is an area of scholarship and professional practice situated across the medical, social, and most recently, resistance and radical models of disability. As APA scholars begin to shift towards more critical and social justice lenses of disability and movement...
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2016-10-15
Hvenegaard, Glen, Halpenney, Elizabeth, Gould, Joyce
SSHRC Insight grant awarded 2017: The project aims to determine the short- and long-term outcomes of interpretive programs in Alberta's provincial parks, the factors influencing those outcomes, and the consistency of outcomes with staff perceptions of provincial goals, policies, and strategies. ...
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Fall 2018
The overall purpose of this dissertation research was to gain a better understanding of the meaningful engagement of youth at risk in recreation and leisure contexts. To address this purpose, three studies were conducted. The first study completed explores how youth-led leisure opportunities can...
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2016-02-01
SSHRC Awarded IDG 2016: The project will conduct a critical disability analysis of the discourses and practices of disability inclusion within a wide range of sport and recreation programs in Canada. 'Inclusive movement programs' have been internationally championed as a basic right of people...
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Native Hawaiian Responses to 18th and 19th Century Leisure Discourses and their Haunting Consequences
Download2015-01-21
SSHRC Awarded IDG 2015: The project focuses on historical analysis of indigenous Hawaiians' [Kanaka Maoli] submissions to Hawaiian language newspapers (1834 - 1948). In 19th century Hawaii, missionaries' leisure-discourses were intimately connected with colonial structures and judgments about...
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Non-Timber Values in Canadian Forests: An Assessment of Uses, Techniques and Data Availability
Download1992
In 1989 the Canadian forest industry shipped nearly $50 billion of forest products, generated over $3.5 billion in government revenues, and accounted for $19.5 billion of Canada's trade surplus (Forestry Canada, 1991). The forest provides the products which are used to generate trade surpluses...