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Mincome, the "Manitoba Basic Annual Income Experiment", was a Canadian guaranteed annual income (GAI) social experiment conducted in Manitoba in the 1970s. The project was funded jointly by the Manitoba provincial government and the Canadian federal government under Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau.
From 1988 to 1995, the Archives co-sponsored the Manitoba History Conferences. [6] Today an occasional lecture on the subject of psychical research or the paranormal has been added. The Archives also maintains a website on the history of the University of Manitoba and helps run yearly tours of historic buildings on campus. [7]
Nagam has a BA (Honours) in Women Studies and Art History and an MA in Native Studies from the University of Manitoba. She received a PhD in Social and Political Thought from York University. [citation needed] Her thesis “Alternative Cartographies: Grafting a New Route for Indigenous Stories of Place” was published in 2011. [1]
The University of Manitoba Libraries (UML) is the academic library system for the University of Manitoba.UML is made up of over a dozen libraries across two campuses—the main campus (Fort Garry) and the urban, health sciences campus (Bannatyne)—as well as one virtual library, the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority Virtual Library. [2]
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... social and cultural history of modern societies at war, ... in political studies, University of Manitoba;
UMP's publishing program is supported by the federal government via the Canada Book Fund, the Council for the Arts, and the Awards to Scholarly Publications Program (funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council); the provincial government via the Department of Sport, Culture, and Heritage, the Manitoba Arts Council, and the ...
The Centre for Christian Studies is a Canadian Protestant theological school in Winnipeg, Manitoba, that is affiliated with the Anglican and United churches of Canada. It is a training centre for those becoming deacons and diaconal ministers; it provides continuing education for ministers and offers a variety of programs and workshops for others seeking to deepen their faith or explore theology.
Rheanna Robinson (born 1976/1977) is a Métis Canadian academic in the fields of Indigenous disability studies, First Nation studies, and Indigenous education. She is an associate professor of First Nations Studies in the Faculty of Indigenous Studies, Social Sciences and Humanities at the University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC).