It's a term that describes both social and economic factors
What is socioeconomic?
Mahatma Gandhi led this 24-day march that demonstrated civil disobedience and nonviolent protest
What is the Salt March?
She wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Who is Mary Wollstonecraft?
Universal design refers to accessibility for all people who are using 1. physical and digital spaces or 2. just physical spaces
What are physical and digital spaces?
1. She
was forcibly removed from the Roseland Theatre in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia in 1946, which was a province in which
2. this African-Canadian village
was located and which served as an escape from the racism of the time
Who is Viola Desmond and what is Africville?
It's a term that describes the fair allotment of opportunities and resources based on individual need rather than equal distribution
What is equity?
This feminist wave represented a break from the seemingly tranquil suburban life depicted in popular culture
What is the second wave of feminism?
He is known, among other endeavours, for his work as host and narrator of The Nature of Things
Who is David Suzuki?
Pollution, poverty, and immigration to cities can all be associated with 1. the Industrial Evolution, or 2. the Industrial Revolution
What is the Industrial Revolution?
It's the term for colonial populations who are excluded from positions of power
What is subaltern?
Nelson Mandela helped to end the South African system of this through negotiations with President F. W. de Klerk
What is apartheid?
He was appointed to head of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 1995
Who is Desmond Tutu?
Landfills being disproportionately placed near typically marginalized communities is an example of 1. ecocriticism, or 2. environmental racism
What is environmental racism?
It describes the ability to control others' thoughts, behaviours, and actions as well as the distribution of resources
What is power?
In 1876, Dr. Emily Stowe founded the first Canadian suffrage organization to help combat this type of oppression that is found within structures and norms
What is systemic?
She is the current national chief of the Assembly of First Nations
Who is Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak?
The availability of and access to food in sufficient quantity and nutritional quality is a definition of 1. food sovereignty, or 2. food security
What is food security?
It's a term defined as the dominance of one class over another in a way that is supported by legitimizing norms and ideas
What is hegemony?
In 1973, the Government of Canada began recognizing these formal Indigenous assertions of legal right to ownership or control over specific land
What are land claims?
Her work contributed to passing the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
Who is Judy Heumann?
An approach to justice that, through dialogue and healing, emphasizes empowerment for the harmed and both responsibility and redemption for the harming party is known as 1. restorative justice, or 2. rehabilitative justice
What is restorative justice?