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Skip to Search Results- 16University of Alberta Copyright Office
- 8University of Alberta Copyright Office/Fair Dealing Week 2017
- 4University of Alberta Copyright Office/Fair Dealing Week 2016
- 3School of Library and Information Studies
- 3School of Library and Information Studies/Journal Articles (Library & Information Studies)
- 3University of Alberta Copyright Office/Fair Dealing Week 2018
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Canada's Current Copyright Environment
2014-05-02
A Presentation for the Northern Alberta Health Libraries Association TRENDS Conference, May 2, 2014
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2020-05-07
Cardozo, P., Scott, E., Greenshields, M.
This presentation begins with a summary of the first survey ever conducted on the job offer negotiations of Canadian academic librarians. Like previous American studies, our results indicated that even in a female-populated profession, women are still less likely to negotiate than men; however,...
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2017-06-09
Joint presentation by Scott Day (MacEwan University) and Amanda Wakaruk (University of Alberta) at the 2017 NEOS Miniconference. Presentation abstract: A refresher on copyright basics followed by an overview of what library employees should know about the upcoming parliamentary review of the...
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Copyright that encourages learning: Subject to a "customary price" or within copyright's "breathing space"?
Download2017-02-23
Presented at the closing panel of Fair Dealing Week 2017 events hosted by the University of Alberta Copyright Office.
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Evaluating wildlife passage use and discovery for small and medium sized mammals in an Eastern Canadian boreal forest
Download2015-08-14
Martinig, April Robin, Desrochers, André , Jaeger, Jochen
Paper presented at the 100th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America in 2015. BACKGROUND/QUESTION/METHODS: While many studies have looked at how large mammals respond to road mitigation measures, few studies have examined the effects on smaller mammals or taken a multispecies...
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2012
Rathi, Dinesh, Shiri, Ali, Lucky, Shannon
This paper reports on the ways in which two national and two public digital libraries from four different countries (Canada, United States, Britain, Australia) have made use of metadata elements and social media features such as social tags and recommendations to support searching, browsing and...