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3562.More information
The penal provisions for environmental protection under the Fisheries Act has proven to be the most important federal legal regime against the pollution of Canadian waters. This study attempts to illustrate how penal law contributes to the development of environmental law. In the first place, we will examine the components of the prohibitions to altering the quality of the marine environment found in the Fisheries Act. Thereafter, we look into the defences available to polluters. The study of these penal provisions and the voluminous case law issuing there from makes it possible to extract clear and general principles that are useful in the development of this new area of law.
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3566.More information
This article offers a way of teaching the literary myth to French as a Second Language students. As it takes into account the language barrier, the learners’ profiles and the vast corpus of the literary myth, it suggests a medium to make students « enter » the myth: through the hero. While insisting on the essential role of the central character, this article reduces the definition of the literary myth, and it offers a theoretical approach, which is based on class discussions and written assignments.
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3568.
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3570.More information
AbstractThe title of this essay uses Jean-Claude Charles's neologism, “ enracinerrant ”, to describe Emile Ollivier's writings (taken as a whole) that are both “ rooted ” and “ wandering ” between spheres of the real and the imaginary, in works of fiction as well as in critical essays. The name of the Montreal neighbourhood where the author lives is used to question his “ marginal ” status and to focus on the hyphenated identity of this “ rooted migrant ” who operates, as do many of his characters, from a standpoint of differing, multiple identities and imaginations, both Haitian and Québécois.