January/February 2018 cover
  • Magazine

    Capturing the long arc of struggle and resilience

    The stories in this issue embody the continuity of struggles past.

  • Magazine

    The Fishy Atlantic Fossil Fix

    Nature tourism won’t save Newfoundland and Labrador’s fishing industry from oil’s hegemony.

  • Magazine

    Showing Up for Faculty

    It was the faculty’s first strike since 1989. Predictably, the administration tried to pit the students against the faculty, but the deep relationships between students and faculty flipped the power dynamic.

  • Magazine

    Six Reasons We Need Pharmacare

    Universal pharmacare would ensure that everyone who needs medicine gets it.

  • Magazine

    A broad vision for reproductive justice

    Thirty years after the Morgentaler decision, reproductive rights fall short of full reproductive justice – including the freedom to have and raise children in safe and healthy communities.

  • Magazine

    Running the Fascists Out of Town

    A history of anti-racist organizing in Canada lives on in today’s radical antifascist activism

  • Magazine

    Saskatchewan’s Earthbound Climate Action

    In oil-producing southeast Saskatchewan, people’s doubts about climate change reflect the real economic pressures they face.

  • Magazine

    Racism, death, and hard truths in a northern city

    In her new book, Seven Fallen Feathers, journalist Tanya Talaga delves into the stories of seven Indigenous students in Thunder Bay whose lives were cut short.

  • Magazine

    The Myth of the Age of Entitlement

    James Cairns unpacks the “entitled millennial” trope in his new book.

  • Magazine

    The Cost-Benefit Analysis of Getting Around Town

    It takes a lot of forethought, time, and energy to plan a life without a vehicle.