March 30, 2015
Violence against Indigenous women, girls and two-spirits: What’s the state of law and the role of advocacy?
A panel discussion hosted by the Aboriginal Law and Feminist Law Students Associations at the University of Toronto.
A series of speeches and lectures from the finest minds of our time. Fresh ideas from speakers of note.
A panel discussion hosted by the Aboriginal Law and Feminist Law Students Associations at the University of Toronto.
On March 4, the Aboriginal Law and Feminist Law Students Associations at the University of Toronto organized a panel event titled “Violence Against Indigenous Women, Girls and Two Spirits: What’s the State of Law and the Role of Advocacy?” to discuss the socio-historical causes of violence against Indigenous women, girls and two-spirited people in Canada…
On March 4, the Aboriginal Law and Feminist Law Students Associations at the University of Toronto organized a panel event titled “Violence Against Indigenous Women, Girls and Two Spirits: What’s the State of Law and the Role of Advocacy?” to discuss the socio-historical causes of violence against Indigenous women, girls and two-spirited people in Canada…
rabble’s Parliamentary reporter Karl Nerenberg launches a new book on Harper, as part of a panel in Ottawa, with Maude Barlow and author Mark Bourrie.
Speeches from Toronto’s Bill C-51 Day of Action.
Recorded on Tuesday, February 24, 2015 in Ottawa, unceded Algonquin territory, by Greg Macdougall, Dr. Pam Palmater speaks on Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women and Girls in Canada.
A panel discussion in Halifax reflecting on Malcolm X’s faith and contribution to the struggle for African-American civil rights.
Malcolm X was assassinated at Harlem’s Audubon Ballroom on February 21, 1965. Fifty years after his death, the complex figure Malcolm X — or, as he called himself after 1949, el Hajj Malik el Shabazz — continues to inspire. On February 21, the Halifax North Memorial Public Library — a location chosen in part for…
Malcolm X was assassinated at Harlem’s Audubon Ballroom on February 21, 1965. Fifty years after his death, the complex figure Malcolm X — or, as he called himself after 1949, el Hajj Malik el Shabazz — continues to inspire. On February 21, the Halifax North Memorial Public Library — a location chosen in part for…
A panel discussion at the Halifax Central Library on January 22, 2015 explores how the legal system in Canada affects and often undermines the standing of Indigenous people.
This forum, on October 3, 2014, brought together parliamentarians, experts and the public, to continue dialogue on renewable energy and clean technology in Canada.
On January 9, the Centre for Ethics in Public Affairs responded to the developing crisis at the Dalhousie Dental School with a panel discussion about violence on Canadian campuses.