Re-defining the university as the site of colonial and racial injustice, this collection examines the numerous ways in which racialized and Indigenous women and queer scholars contest the institution's power and authority.
University of Toronto Press Bücher






Transformative Politics of Nature examines political barriers to land and wildlife conservation and presents possible transformative pathways forward that address both proximate and fundamental factors from Western and Indigenous perspectives.
The latest title in the Behaviourally Informed Organizations series offers practical advice on how best to successfully design, deliver, and evaluate efficient cash transfer programs.
Written by a team of experienced innovators and researchers, Transform with Design provides unique case studies with lessons learned by organizations when building their innovation muscle.
This book presents conversations between academic and community leaders, sharing lessons and opportunities around ethical leadership, management, and governance processes.
Drawing on insights from leading scholars and policy practitioners, the book considers intergovernmental cooperation at the summit level and across multiple policy fields during the COVID-19 pandemic to assess how effectively governments served Canadians.
Curated by best-selling author Barbara H. Rosenwein, A Short Medieval Reader offers an exceptionally alluring and affordable set of primary sources for understanding the Middle Ages.
This book brings notions of play and place as cultural constructions into conversations about language and literacy.
This path-breaking collaboration by leading Black scholars examines the complexities of Black life in Canadian post-secondary education.
This edited collection explores how the value of training and skills invested in internationally educated health professionals is transferred, and transformed, and in some cases tarnished, at all stages of the international migration process.