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Download 2.13 MB 103 pages The culmination of a 5-year study based on interviews with recently arrived former refugees finds that securing good housing is…
Forty-seven people died that night—their hopes and dreams obliterated, future wiped out.
Download 542.18 KB 13 pages The Building Sustainable Communities Program After Two Years: Where Did the Money Go? report by Shauna MacKinnon was prompted by…
Priorities for fostering an inclusive recovery in BC Download 1.5 MB52 pages This report examines the ongoing impact of COVID-19 on the BC job market…
Major new study zeros in on first year pandemic job market data READ THE FULL REPORT HERE. VANCOUVER — Some job creation can be expected…
The rush back to some semblance of normalcy is understandable, but this sentiment can’t blind us to the work ahead.
In this new Monitor feature we invite a prominent Canadian to provide a reading list for better understanding a pressing topic.
Media concentration in [the U.S. and Brazil] has reached phenomenal levels, and it is compounded by the massive spread of pernicious fake news.
As it stands right now, political parties in Canada face little oversight or transparency requirements for the data they collect and create about Canadian citizens.
For decades, the media has been circling the issue of sexual violence, mirroring society’s discomfort.
A strong fact-checking industry can stop the normalization of lying and advocate for policy changes. But the weaponization of fact-checking can cause irreversible harm.
Canada is no stranger to dynastic ownership of its media companies
Read the latest research, analysis and commentary on issues that matter to you.
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