Tuesday, December 16, 2025

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Tuesday, December 16, 2025 | Latest Paper

Book Review

Feature | BY ABBAS RANA | December 8, 2025
Author J.D.M. Stewart says he decided to write his book, The Prime Ministers: Canada’s Leaders and the Nation They Shaped, after meeting a group of Ontario high school students who didn’t know who Lester Pearson was. This experience alarmed him because Ontario requires students to take history in Grade 10. Photograph courtesy of Sutherland House
Feature | BY ABBAS RANA | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY ABBAS RANA | December 8, 2025
Author J.D.M. Stewart says he decided to write his book, The Prime Ministers: Canada’s Leaders and the Nation They Shaped, after meeting a group of Ontario high school students who didn’t know who Lester Pearson was. This experience alarmed him because Ontario requires students to take history in Grade 10. Photograph courtesy of Sutherland House
Feature | BY ELEANOR WAND | December 8, 2025
Canadian journalist Lyse Doucet, pictured recently at The Hill Times' office in Ottawa, lived for many years at Kabul's Intercontinental Hotel as a BBC News journalist. She's compiled the stories of the local hotel staff into a new book, The Finest Hotel in Kabul. The Hill Times photograph by Eleanor Wand
Feature | BY ELEANOR WAND | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY ELEANOR WAND | December 8, 2025
Canadian journalist Lyse Doucet, pictured recently at The Hill Times' office in Ottawa, lived for many years at Kabul's Intercontinental Hotel as a BBC News journalist. She's compiled the stories of the local hotel staff into a new book, The Finest Hotel in Kabul. The Hill Times photograph by Eleanor Wand
Feature | BY DAVID HERLE | December 8, 2025
Then-U.S. president Richard Nixon, left, and then-prime minister of Canada Pierre Trudeau inside the Prime Minister's Office in Centre Block on April 14, 1972. Photograph courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
Feature | BY DAVID HERLE | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY DAVID HERLE | December 8, 2025
Then-U.S. president Richard Nixon, left, and then-prime minister of Canada Pierre Trudeau inside the Prime Minister's Office in Centre Block on April 14, 1972. Photograph courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | December 8, 2025
The Ripper; The Prime Ministers; Universal; The Darkest Nights Brings Longer Days; No I In Team; The Enduring Riddle of Mackenzie King; October 7th; 21 Things; The Finest Hotel in Kabul; and The Coutts Diaries are some of The Hill Times' 100 Best Books in 2025. Book covers courtesy of Biblioasis, Sutherland House, House of Anansi, Penguin Random House Canada, University of Toronto Press, Indigenous Relations Press, and McGill-Queen's University Press
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | December 8, 2025
The Ripper; The Prime Ministers; Universal; The Darkest Nights Brings Longer Days; No I In Team; The Enduring Riddle of Mackenzie King; October 7th; 21 Things; The Finest Hotel in Kabul; and The Coutts Diaries are some of The Hill Times' 100 Best Books in 2025. Book covers courtesy of Biblioasis, Sutherland House, House of Anansi, Penguin Random House Canada, University of Toronto Press, Indigenous Relations Press, and McGill-Queen's University Press
Feature | BY SAMANTHA WRIGHT ALLEN | December 8, 2025
The Enduring Riddle of Mackenzie King is a new collection of essays edited by Patrice Dutil. The former prime minister is pictured in 1932 in Ottawa when he was opposition leader. Image courtesy of Patrice Dutil, photograph courtesy of Library and Archives Canada/Flickr
Feature | BY SAMANTHA WRIGHT ALLEN | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY SAMANTHA WRIGHT ALLEN | December 8, 2025
The Enduring Riddle of Mackenzie King is a new collection of essays edited by Patrice Dutil. The former prime minister is pictured in 1932 in Ottawa when he was opposition leader. Image courtesy of Patrice Dutil, photograph courtesy of Library and Archives Canada/Flickr
Opinion | BY CHRISTOPHER DORNAN | December 8, 2025
In The Crisis of Canadian Democracy, Andrew Coyne fears and foretells the fall of Canada, not through annexation by some demented megalomaniac, but because of our self-worsening, writes Christopher Dornan. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY CHRISTOPHER DORNAN | December 8, 2025
Opinion | BY CHRISTOPHER DORNAN | December 8, 2025
In The Crisis of Canadian Democracy, Andrew Coyne fears and foretells the fall of Canada, not through annexation by some demented megalomaniac, but because of our self-worsening, writes Christopher Dornan. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY JIM CRESKEY | December 8, 2025
Alex Neve, author of Universal: Renewing Human Rights in a Fractured World, part of the CBC Massey Lectures series. 'I challenge myself to try not to be one more angry voice joining the multitude of other angry voices …look for where common ground offers space to open dialogue and build understanding,' he writes. Handout photograph
Feature | BY JIM CRESKEY | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY JIM CRESKEY | December 8, 2025
Alex Neve, author of Universal: Renewing Human Rights in a Fractured World, part of the CBC Massey Lectures series. 'I challenge myself to try not to be one more angry voice joining the multitude of other angry voices …look for where common ground offers space to open dialogue and build understanding,' he writes. Handout photograph
Feature | BY ALEX MARLAND | December 8, 2025
The Prime Minister's Office in Ottawa. Investigating the inner workings of cabinet is never easy, given that the institution is designed to operate in secret behind closed doors. Statecraft sets out to examine political leadership, the dynamics of cabinet collegiality, and the stewardship of government, writes Alex Marland. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY ALEX MARLAND | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY ALEX MARLAND | December 8, 2025
The Prime Minister's Office in Ottawa. Investigating the inner workings of cabinet is never easy, given that the institution is designed to operate in secret behind closed doors. Statecraft sets out to examine political leadership, the dynamics of cabinet collegiality, and the stewardship of government, writes Alex Marland. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY CHRISTOPHER DORNAN | December 8, 2025
Marsha Lederman is a columnist and arts correspondent for The Globe and Mail, and also author of Kiss the Red Stairs, a memoir of the Holocaust and her grandparents. She abhors what Hamas planned and executed on Oct. 7, 2023, unforgivable act of butchery. She also detests the politics of Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu, writes Christopher Dornan. Photograph courtesy of Penguin Random House Canada
Feature | BY CHRISTOPHER DORNAN | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY CHRISTOPHER DORNAN | December 8, 2025
Marsha Lederman is a columnist and arts correspondent for The Globe and Mail, and also author of Kiss the Red Stairs, a memoir of the Holocaust and her grandparents. She abhors what Hamas planned and executed on Oct. 7, 2023, unforgivable act of butchery. She also detests the politics of Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu, writes Christopher Dornan. Photograph courtesy of Penguin Random House Canada
Feature | BY IREM KOCA | December 8, 2025
The Darkest Night Brings Longer Days, a memoir by author Sirous Houshmand, features his life story through 1979 Iranian revolution. Handout Photo
Feature | BY IREM KOCA | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY IREM KOCA | December 8, 2025
The Darkest Night Brings Longer Days, a memoir by author Sirous Houshmand, features his life story through 1979 Iranian revolution. Handout Photo
Feature | BY CHRISTINA LEADLAY | December 8, 2025
Bob Joseph
Author Bob Joseph, a Status Indian, feels Indigenous Peoples would thrive if there were more self-government agreements with Canada's over 600 First Nations. "We are totally ready. We just need to take that action," he told The Hill Times. Photograph by Nathan Smith
Feature | BY CHRISTINA LEADLAY | December 8, 2025
Feature | BY CHRISTINA LEADLAY | December 8, 2025
Bob Joseph
Author Bob Joseph, a Status Indian, feels Indigenous Peoples would thrive if there were more self-government agreements with Canada's over 600 First Nations. "We are totally ready. We just need to take that action," he told The Hill Times. Photograph by Nathan Smith
Feature | BY CHRISTOPHER DORNAN | December 4, 2025
The prime ministers: From top left, to right, row by row: Carney, Justin Trudeau, Harper, Martin, Chrétien, Campbell; Mulroney, Turner, Clark, Pierre Trudeau, Pearson, Diefenbaker; St-Laurent, Bennett, Mackenzie King, Meighen, Borden, Laurier; Tupper, Bowell, Thompson, Abbott, Mackenzie, and Macdonald. Photographs courtesy of Commons Wikimedia
Feature | BY CHRISTOPHER DORNAN | December 4, 2025
Feature | BY CHRISTOPHER DORNAN | December 4, 2025
The prime ministers: From top left, to right, row by row: Carney, Justin Trudeau, Harper, Martin, Chrétien, Campbell; Mulroney, Turner, Clark, Pierre Trudeau, Pearson, Diefenbaker; St-Laurent, Bennett, Mackenzie King, Meighen, Borden, Laurier; Tupper, Bowell, Thompson, Abbott, Mackenzie, and Macdonald. Photographs courtesy of Commons Wikimedia
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | December 3, 2025
Comedian Mark Critch has written a new book 'Sorry Not Sorry: An Unapologetic Look at What Makes Canada Worth Fighting For.' Photograph by Duncan DeYoung, courtesy of Penguin Random House
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | December 3, 2025
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | December 3, 2025
Comedian Mark Critch has written a new book 'Sorry Not Sorry: An Unapologetic Look at What Makes Canada Worth Fighting For.' Photograph by Duncan DeYoung, courtesy of Penguin Random House
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | November 10, 2025
The Taking of Vimy Ridge: First World War Photographs of William Ivor Castle, by Carla-Jean Stokes, looks at the 150 photographs taken by Castle at Vimy Ridge. Book cover courtesy of Wilfrid Laurier Press University Press
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | November 10, 2025
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | November 10, 2025
The Taking of Vimy Ridge: First World War Photographs of William Ivor Castle, by Carla-Jean Stokes, looks at the 150 photographs taken by Castle at Vimy Ridge. Book cover courtesy of Wilfrid Laurier Press University Press
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | October 28, 2025
Prime Minister Mark Carney, left, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, and former prime ministers Justin Trudeau and Stephen Harper. We are indoctrinating our election candidates and our future elected officials to think that the party knows best, that the leader is always right, says Alex Marland. The Hill Times photographs by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | October 28, 2025
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | October 28, 2025
Prime Minister Mark Carney, left, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, and former prime ministers Justin Trudeau and Stephen Harper. We are indoctrinating our election candidates and our future elected officials to think that the party knows best, that the leader is always right, says Alex Marland. The Hill Times photographs by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY PATRICE DUTIL, STEPHEN AZZI | September 29, 2025
Top left, left to right: Carney, Trudeau, Harper, Martin, Chrétien, Campbell, Mulroney, Turner, Clark, Trudeau, Pearson, Diefenbaker, St. Laurent, Bennett, King, Meighen, Borden, Laurier, Tupper, Bowell, Thompson, Abbott, Mackenzie, and Macdonald. Photographs courtesy of Commons Wikimedia, Government of Canada
Feature | BY PATRICE DUTIL, STEPHEN AZZI | September 29, 2025
Feature | BY PATRICE DUTIL, STEPHEN AZZI | September 29, 2025
Top left, left to right: Carney, Trudeau, Harper, Martin, Chrétien, Campbell, Mulroney, Turner, Clark, Trudeau, Pearson, Diefenbaker, St. Laurent, Bennett, King, Meighen, Borden, Laurier, Tupper, Bowell, Thompson, Abbott, Mackenzie, and Macdonald. Photographs courtesy of Commons Wikimedia, Government of Canada
Feature | BY SERGIO MARCHI | September 29, 2025
Anti-government protesters stand outside the West Block and on Wellington Street on the House's first day back on Sept. 15, 2025. A 2022 Angus Reid poll found that almost 60 per cent of Canadians did not trust their government, that's up from 47 per cent registered five years earlier, writes Sergio Marchi. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY SERGIO MARCHI | September 29, 2025
Feature | BY SERGIO MARCHI | September 29, 2025
Anti-government protesters stand outside the West Block and on Wellington Street on the House's first day back on Sept. 15, 2025. A 2022 Angus Reid poll found that almost 60 per cent of Canadians did not trust their government, that's up from 47 per cent registered five years earlier, writes Sergio Marchi. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | September 24, 2025
The nominees are: The Prince: The Turbulent Reign of Justin Trudeau, by Stephen Maher; The Knowing, by Tanya Talaga; Canada’s Prime Ministers and the Shaping of a National Identity, by Raymond Blake; Health for All, by Jane Philpott; and The Adaptable Country: How Canada Can Survive the Twenty-First Century, by Alasdair Roberts. Book covers courtesy of Penguin Random House Canada, UBC Press, Harper Collins Canada, McGill-Queen’s University Press and Simon & Schuster
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | September 24, 2025
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | September 24, 2025
The nominees are: The Prince: The Turbulent Reign of Justin Trudeau, by Stephen Maher; The Knowing, by Tanya Talaga; Canada’s Prime Ministers and the Shaping of a National Identity, by Raymond Blake; Health for All, by Jane Philpott; and The Adaptable Country: How Canada Can Survive the Twenty-First Century, by Alasdair Roberts. Book covers courtesy of Penguin Random House Canada, UBC Press, Harper Collins Canada, McGill-Queen’s University Press and Simon & Schuster
Feature | BY ALICIA WANLESS | September 11, 2025
Alicia Wanless is the director of the Information Environment Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and author of The Information Animal: Humans, Technology and the Competition Reality, published this year. Book cover and author photo courtesy of Hurst Publishing
Feature | BY ALICIA WANLESS | September 11, 2025
Feature | BY ALICIA WANLESS | September 11, 2025
Alicia Wanless is the director of the Information Environment Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and author of The Information Animal: Humans, Technology and the Competition Reality, published this year. Book cover and author photo courtesy of Hurst Publishing
News | BY ABBAS RANA | August 24, 2025
Former chief statistician Munir Sheikh has penned his second novel entitled, '2047: The Story of an American Revolution'. He spoke to The Hill Times about the book, and why he stepped away from his role as Canada's chief statistician in 2010. Photograph courtesy of Munir Sheikh
News | BY ABBAS RANA | August 24, 2025
News | BY ABBAS RANA | August 24, 2025
Former chief statistician Munir Sheikh has penned his second novel entitled, '2047: The Story of an American Revolution'. He spoke to The Hill Times about the book, and why he stepped away from his role as Canada's chief statistician in 2010. Photograph courtesy of Munir Sheikh
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | June 30, 2025
Mark Carney
On June 9, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Canada would spend and extra $9-billion on defence this fiscal year, to finally reach the military alliance's then-two per cent of GDP spending target. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | June 30, 2025
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | June 30, 2025
Mark Carney
On June 9, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Canada would spend and extra $9-billion on defence this fiscal year, to finally reach the military alliance's then-two per cent of GDP spending target. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | June 26, 2025
Prime Minister Mark Carney
Prime Minister Mark Carney. In his new book, Andrew Coyne says he tries to show that centralized power is ‘worse here than in other countries.’
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | June 26, 2025
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | June 26, 2025
Prime Minister Mark Carney
Prime Minister Mark Carney. In his new book, Andrew Coyne says he tries to show that centralized power is ‘worse here than in other countries.’
Feature | BY BRYCE C. TINGLE | May 19, 2025
Author Bryce C. Tingle on why he wrote this book: 'Business corporations are among the most important and powerful institutions in our society, but most Canadians don’t actually know how they are governed and who gets a say in what they do.' Book cover and author photograph courtesy of Cambridge University Press
Feature | BY BRYCE C. TINGLE | May 19, 2025
Feature | BY BRYCE C. TINGLE | May 19, 2025
Author Bryce C. Tingle on why he wrote this book: 'Business corporations are among the most important and powerful institutions in our society, but most Canadians don’t actually know how they are governed and who gets a say in what they do.' Book cover and author photograph courtesy of Cambridge University Press
Seized By Uncertainty: The Markets, Media and Special Interests That Shaped Canada’s Response to COVID-19, by Kevin Quigley, Kaitlynne Lowe, Sarah Moore, and Brianna Wolfe, published by McGill-Queen's University Press. Book cover and author photographs courtesy of McGill-Queen's University Press
Seized By Uncertainty: The Markets, Media and Special Interests That Shaped Canada’s Response to COVID-19, by Kevin Quigley, Kaitlynne Lowe, Sarah Moore, and Brianna Wolfe, published by McGill-Queen's University Press. Book cover and author photographs courtesy of McGill-Queen's University Press
Feature | BY JAMES B. KELLY | May 5, 2025
James B. Kelly: 'This book should be read by any prime minister or premier that contemplates using Section 33 of the Charter of Rights, in a pre-emptive fashion.' Book cover and author's photo courtesy of UBC Press
Feature | BY JAMES B. KELLY | May 5, 2025
Feature | BY JAMES B. KELLY | May 5, 2025
James B. Kelly: 'This book should be read by any prime minister or premier that contemplates using Section 33 of the Charter of Rights, in a pre-emptive fashion.' Book cover and author's photo courtesy of UBC Press
Feature | BY PAMELA CROSS | April 28, 2025
Author Pamela Cross' book, And Sometimes They Kill You: Confronting the Epidemic of Intimate Partner Violence is one of five books on this year's Donner Prize shortlist, and considered one of the best public policy books of the year. Book cover and photograph courtesy of
Feature | BY PAMELA CROSS | April 28, 2025
Feature | BY PAMELA CROSS | April 28, 2025
Author Pamela Cross' book, And Sometimes They Kill You: Confronting the Epidemic of Intimate Partner Violence is one of five books on this year's Donner Prize shortlist, and considered one of the best public policy books of the year. Book cover and photograph courtesy of
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | April 21, 2025
Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre, pictured April 12, 2025, making an announcement on a campaign stop at the Tomlinson Environmental Services shop in Nepean, Ont. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | April 21, 2025
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | April 21, 2025
Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre, pictured April 12, 2025, making an announcement on a campaign stop at the Tomlinson Environmental Services shop in Nepean, Ont. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY DAN BREZNITZ | May 2, 2022
Author Dan Breznitz, author of Innovation in Real Places: Strategies for Prosperity in an Unforgiving World, published by Oxford University Press. 'Innovation is the whole progression of taking new ideas and devising new or improved products and services. It comes in all stages of the production of goods and services, from the first vision, de­sign, development, production, sale, and usage to the after-sale.' Images courtesy of the Donner Prize
Feature | BY DAN BREZNITZ | May 2, 2022
Feature | BY DAN BREZNITZ | May 2, 2022
Author Dan Breznitz, author of Innovation in Real Places: Strategies for Prosperity in an Unforgiving World, published by Oxford University Press. 'Innovation is the whole progression of taking new ideas and devising new or improved products and services. It comes in all stages of the production of goods and services, from the first vision, de­sign, development, production, sale, and usage to the after-sale.' Images courtesy of the Donner Prize
Feature | BY ALEX MARLAND | December 20, 2021
A must-read for anyone interested in the Senate is Constitutional Pariah: Reference re Senate Reform and the Future of Parliament (UBC Press), by Emmett Macfarlane. Grounded in the Supreme Court’s reference decision in 2014 about electing Senators and setting term limits, Constitutional Pariah branches into a detailed examination of the role of the Senate and the fallout of that landmark decision, writes Alex Marland. Image courtesy of Pixabay
Feature | BY ALEX MARLAND | December 20, 2021
Feature | BY ALEX MARLAND | December 20, 2021
A must-read for anyone interested in the Senate is Constitutional Pariah: Reference re Senate Reform and the Future of Parliament (UBC Press), by Emmett Macfarlane. Grounded in the Supreme Court’s reference decision in 2014 about electing Senators and setting term limits, Constitutional Pariah branches into a detailed examination of the role of the Senate and the fallout of that landmark decision, writes Alex Marland. Image courtesy of Pixabay
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | December 20, 2021
Michael Wernick served as clerk of the Privy Council between 2016 and 2019. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | December 20, 2021
Feature | BY PETER MAZEREEUW | December 20, 2021
Michael Wernick served as clerk of the Privy Council between 2016 and 2019. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | December 20, 2021
This year's list of 100 best books includes an eclectic mix of books about Canadian politics, the machinery of government, Indigenous issues, anti-Black racism, public affairs, reconciliation, Canadian history, memoirs, national security, Canadian foreign policy, the pandemic, and much more. Image compilation by Serena Masonde/photographs from The Hill Times files and handouts
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | December 20, 2021
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | December 20, 2021
This year's list of 100 best books includes an eclectic mix of books about Canadian politics, the machinery of government, Indigenous issues, anti-Black racism, public affairs, reconciliation, Canadian history, memoirs, national security, Canadian foreign policy, the pandemic, and much more. Image compilation by Serena Masonde/photographs from The Hill Times files and handouts
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | November 5, 2021
Former Senator Don Oliver, who is also a former deputy Senate Speaker, pictured Feb. 9, 2012, in the Senate Chamber. Sen. Oliver retired on Nov. 16, 2013, and has recently written a book about his life. 'I wanted to write a short book about some of my life’s experiences and how I dealt with anti-Black systemic racism in Canada. I outlined some specific steps I took through lived experiences of turning anger into action to attempt to bring racism to an end. My hope is that the book can become a call to action for our leadership in all levels of our society.' The Hill Times photograph by Jake Wright
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | November 5, 2021
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | November 5, 2021
Former Senator Don Oliver, who is also a former deputy Senate Speaker, pictured Feb. 9, 2012, in the Senate Chamber. Sen. Oliver retired on Nov. 16, 2013, and has recently written a book about his life. 'I wanted to write a short book about some of my life’s experiences and how I dealt with anti-Black systemic racism in Canada. I outlined some specific steps I took through lived experiences of turning anger into action to attempt to bring racism to an end. My hope is that the book can become a call to action for our leadership in all levels of our society.' The Hill Times photograph by Jake Wright
Feature | BY OBADIAH M. | October 18, 2021
Die Walking: A Child’s Journey Through Genocide is a book written by a Rwandan author living in East Africa under the pseudonym Obadiah M. Photograph courtesy of House of Anansi Press
Feature | BY OBADIAH M. | October 18, 2021
Feature | BY OBADIAH M. | October 18, 2021
Die Walking: A Child’s Journey Through Genocide is a book written by a Rwandan author living in East Africa under the pseudonym Obadiah M. Photograph courtesy of House of Anansi Press
Feature | BY LYNN GEHL | October 14, 2021
Author Lynn Gehl, pictured, questions whether legislative reform in Canada is ultimately an opportunity to make things worse at the level of policy and in practice for Indigenous people. Photograph courtesy of Nik K. Gehl
Feature | BY LYNN GEHL | October 14, 2021
Feature | BY LYNN GEHL | October 14, 2021
Author Lynn Gehl, pictured, questions whether legislative reform in Canada is ultimately an opportunity to make things worse at the level of policy and in practice for Indigenous people. Photograph courtesy of Nik K. Gehl
Feature | BY CHLOE GIRVAN | September 27, 2021
Ronald J. Deibert: 'The title was suggested to me by Philip Coulter, CBC radio producer, based on that old concept of resetting a computer. The idea of resetting to remove the unintended consequences of our work. The internet is flawed right now and needs to be restructured. We need to back up, reverse course, and move forward in a new way.' Images courtesy of the Writers' Trust of Canada
Feature | BY CHLOE GIRVAN | September 27, 2021
Feature | BY CHLOE GIRVAN | September 27, 2021
Ronald J. Deibert: 'The title was suggested to me by Philip Coulter, CBC radio producer, based on that old concept of resetting a computer. The idea of resetting to remove the unintended consequences of our work. The internet is flawed right now and needs to be restructured. We need to back up, reverse course, and move forward in a new way.' Images courtesy of the Writers' Trust of Canada
Feature | BY CHLOE GIRVAN | September 27, 2021
Karin Wells, author of The Abortion Caravan: When Women Shut Down Government in the Battle for the Right to Choose, talks about her book. Photographs courtesy of the Writers' Trust of Canada
Feature | BY CHLOE GIRVAN | September 27, 2021
Feature | BY CHLOE GIRVAN | September 27, 2021
Karin Wells, author of The Abortion Caravan: When Women Shut Down Government in the Battle for the Right to Choose, talks about her book. Photographs courtesy of the Writers' Trust of Canada
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | September 27, 2021
Alex Marland: 'Party discipline is much stricter for government-side backbenchers for all sorts of reasons, in particular, the confidence convention.' Photograph courtesy of Alex Marland
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | September 27, 2021
Feature | BY KATE MALLOY | September 27, 2021
Alex Marland: 'Party discipline is much stricter for government-side backbenchers for all sorts of reasons, in particular, the confidence convention.' Photograph courtesy of Alex Marland