Documents found

  1. 3621.

    Other published in Recherches amérindiennes au Québec (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 50, Issue 3, 2020

    Digital publication year: 2022

  2. 3622.

    Other published in Recherches amérindiennes au Québec (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 50, Issue 3, 2020

    Digital publication year: 2022

  3. 3623.

    Article published in Refuge (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 37, Issue 2, 2021

    Digital publication year: 2021

    More information

    This essay adopts a critical perspective of the idea of humanizing refugee research. It argues that much social scientific research is intrinsically dehumanizing, as it simplifies and reduces human experience to categories and models that are amenable to analysis. Attempts to humanize research may productively challenge and unsettle powerful and dominant hegemonic structures that frame policy and research on forced migration. However, it may replace them with new research frameworks, now imbued authority as representing more authentic or real-life experiences. Rather than claiming the moral high ground of humanizing research, the more limited, and perhaps more honest, ambition should be to recognize the inevitable dehumanization embedded in refugee research and seek to dehumanize differently.

    Keywords: refugee research, humanizing research, dehumanization, policy, categorization

  4. 3624.

    Delaume, Chloé

    Entre deux tours

    Other published in Nouvelle Revue Synergies Canada (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 12, 2019

    Digital publication year: 2019

  5. 3625.

    Armand, Françoise, Gosselin-Lavoie, Catherine and Combes, Elodie

    Littérature jeunesse, éducation inclusive et approches plurielles des langues

    Article published in Nouvelle Revue Synergies Canada (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 9, 2016

    Digital publication year: 2016

  6. 3626.

    Article published in Le Naturaliste canadien (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 145, Issue 2, 2021

    Digital publication year: 2021

    More information

    Drones are becoming more accessible and efficient. This article presents a review of recent scientific literature focusing on their use to study wildlife. The 250 publications consulted were grouped into one of 4 categories: wildlife surveys, the behavioural response of wildlife to drones, the study of wildlife behaviour and wildlife protection. The review highlighted the great potential of drones for helping in the survey of animals, especially birds and mammals, and it also revealed the developments underway to allow their use for studying aquatic fauna, amphibians, reptiles and insects. The main impacts of drones on animals are presented and, based on the available information, preliminary recommendations are made to limit their disturbance to wildlife. Drones have multiple advantages and the rapid development of this technology suggests that several of the current limits to their use will soon be overcome. Finally, elements of the Canadian regulations on the use of drones are presented. In conclusion, in the medium-term, drones have the potential to play a significant role in the protection and management of biodiversity.

    Keywords: comportement, conservation, détection, drone, inventaire, behaviour, conservation, detection, drone, survey

  7. 3627.

    Other published in Nouvelle Revue Synergies Canada (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Issue 13, 2020

    Digital publication year: 2020

  8. 3628.

    Other published in Critical Studies in Improvisation (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 14, Issue 1, 2021

    Digital publication year: 2021

    More information

    I'm a dancer who engages improvisation every time I put on my shoes to brush, step, click, and knock the floor. Not surprisingly, my work until March 2020 was primarily with fellow sound-makers, usually folk musicians from Ireland, Scotland, what's now called Canada, and what's now called Appalachia. COVID-19 has forced me to listen to the extemporaneous music I make anew, in the absence of collaborators, within a soundscape of profound uncertainty. In this contribution, I offer a voice from the floor, enunciated by my lowest limbs contacting the surface upon which I stand. This is where my work as an LGBTQ2IA+ improvising step dancer finds its meaning. In this essay, I respond to the incisive queer horizon Thomas F. DeFrantz casts, as "imagining outside of what came before." I share ways I have been thinking about improvisation and offer thoughts on how we might learn from DeFrantz to imagine and improvise “outside of” critically, queerly, and generatively.

    Keywords: improvisation, percussive dance, traditional arts, queerness

  9. 3629.

    Other published in Aequitas (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 27, Issue 1, 2021

    Digital publication year: 2021

  10. 3630.

    Other published in Formation et profession (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 29, Issue 2, 2021

    Digital publication year: 2021