The Monitor
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Founded in 1994, the Monitor is the CCPA's bimonthly (six times a year) policy and current affairs magazine, covering issues of critical importance to the related goals of social, economic and environmental justice. To receive the Monitor at home or work, or to subscribe on behalf of a friend, click here to make a donation to the CCPA.
CPP is investing in bombs, tobacco, and corporate criminals
by Peter Gillespie
February 1, 2006 |
National Office Nuclear power badly flawed as alternative to filthy fossil fuels
by Marita Moll
December 1, 2005 |
National Office Social, economic, environmental ills all have the same cause
by Ed Finn
December 1, 2005 |
National Office Our privacy shield is getting badly battered on every front
by Richard Sharp
December 1, 2005 |
National Office Public awakens to assassination of Medicare, but is it too late?
by John Conway
December 1, 2005 |
National Office Supreme Court ruling supports renewed calls for EI reform
by Margot Young, Jane Pulkingham
December 1, 2005 |
National Office Will the spread of fascism in the U.S. spill over into Canada?
by Ed Finn
November 1, 2005 |
National Office Industrial pollution cancer just another cost of doing business
by F.H. Knelman
November 1, 2005 |
National Office Canadian, U.S. gov'ts refusing to probe electricity disasters
by John Wilson
November 1, 2005 |
National Office World oil shortage could trigger next major shift in global power
by Peter Berg
November 1, 2005 |
National Office UN's "responsibility to protect" policy fails humanitarian test
by Michael Byers
November 1, 2005 |
National Office Jurists’ private insurance ruling especially negative for women
by Abby Lippman, Amelie Quesnel-Vallee
October 1, 2005 |
National Office Amazingly rapid economic growth has made China “world’s workshop”
by Asad Ismi
October 1, 2005 |
National Office We’ve got our priorities all wrong. Ecology should always come first
by Robert F. Harrington
October 1, 2005 |
National Office Hurricane Katrina exposes the fatal flaws of U.S. individualism
by Ed Finn
October 1, 2005 |
National Office