The 1982 Saskatchewan general election proved to be a fundamental turning point in the province’s history.
Books
Patients at Risk: Exposing Canada’s Health-care Crisis
This book is an exceptionally worthwhile contribution to the Canadian health-care debate.
From Truth Comes Reconciliation: An Assessment of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report
Dedicated to the thousands of people –both Indigenous and non-Indigenous — who were good and honourable servants to the children in Canada’s Indian residential school and hostels.
Indigenizing the University: Diverse Perspectives
Since the release of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s findings, administrators, faculty members and students have heard that universities should be “Indigenized.”
Featured News
There’s Nothing Fair About Canadian Health Care
For the past 14 years, Vancouver surgeon Dr. Brian Day has led the charge for health-care reform, pushing for the right of patients to pay for private care if their health and well-being are threatened as a result of waiting in a stagnant and overburdened public...
Transformers: More than Meets the Eye
The path to net zero, based on the much disputed belief that carbon dioxide is a pollution, is more steep and impractical than most people realize. Replacing fossil fuels with clean electricity will require much more power generation and a greatly upgraded grid to...
Let the People Speak: Oppression in a Time of Reconciliation
Over the past fifty years, Canada’s Indigenous Affairs department (now two departments with more than 30 federal co-delivery partners) has mushroomed into a “super-province” delivering birth-to-death programs and services to First Nations, Inuit and Métis people.
Wealth of First Nations
Adam Smith showed in The Wealth of Nations how prosperity arises from making and trading, rather than taking.
Ideology and Dysfunction in Family Law: How the courts disenfranchise fathers
For several decades now, fathers have faced significant, widespread bias in family courts across Canada.
Admitted but Excluded
Many skilled immigrants who arrive in Canada face regulatory barriers that prevent them from working in the professions for which they were trained.
Birth of a Boom: Saskatchewan’s Dawning Golden Age
Throughout history, no factor has impacted the quality of the lives people live more than the quality of their public policies.