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Laws and legal implications of public protest
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Working in conjunction with the Council of Canadians as well as OPIRG Peterborough, the object of this research project was to determine the laws and legal implications surrounding public protest as well as what information in regards to these laws needs to be clarified. How the laws have changed in the past 20 years and what went wrong in the Toronto 2010 G20 summit were also questions of interest in this research project., Acknowledgements -- Abstract -- Table of contents -- Glossary -- Introduction -- Background -- Methods -- Criminal code -- Case law and legislation -- How have the laws changed? -- G20 Toronto 2010 -- Interviews -- Conclusion -- Barriers -- Recommendations -- References -- Appendix., Tracy Withrow. --, Includes bibliographic references., FRSC 4890: Forensic-Community-Based Education Research Project.
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No sweat campaigns across the country
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Part 1 : No sweat campaigns across the country : Advances and challenges. -- Part 2 : Is Trent committed to becoming a "No sweat" campus? -- Part 3 : Annotated bibliography of resources for student anti-sweatshop activists., by Tanya Roberts-Davis., Date of project completion : April 2003., Prepared for: OPRIG -Peterborough ; Trent Centre for Community Based Education and Professor Marg Hobbs., CAST 481: Community-Based Research Project
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No-sweat
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No sweat: Final report -- Posters -- Communications strategy for the TCSA -- Resource booklet -- Project wrap up., Bianca Bell. --, Includes bibliographic references., POST 4870Y: Community Based Research Project.
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Trent students against sweatshops action kit
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by Hala Zabaneh. --, Completed for: Ontario Public Interest Research Group (OPIRG); Professor Margaret Hobbs, Trent University; Trent Centre for Community-Based Education., Includes bibliographic references., WMST 482: Community Research Placement.