Walrus journalist Nicholas Hune-Brown retraces the steps that led to his ground-breaking investigation—probing exploitative ...
To help achieve reconciliation, we need a free, strong media where people in Canada can get accurate information, hear ...
The population is older and dwindling, local coverage is being cut back and there are fewer working journalists. One entrepreneur thinks solid reporting can turn the tide — but is that enough to ...
There are fewer journalists in Canada today than 15 years ago — but not as few as you might think, according to data from the 2016 census, the most recent and comprehensive data available. Indeed, ...
Over the last 10 years, the number of media outlets in Canada has dwindled — and not enough new media outlets have sprung up to replace them. According to data collected by the Local News Research ...
Canadian newsrooms and media coverage are not truly representative of our country’s racial diversity. We acknowledge that journalism outlets have made efforts to address this worrying gap, but glaring ...
In a decision released Wednesday, an arbitrator ruled that the public broadcaster “acted improperly” in firing CBC Manitoba journalist Ahmar Khan after he set off “a chain of events” with his tweet ...
On Aug. 11, 2022, a group of journalists broke journalism’s well-accepted (though criticizable) golden rule: do not publicly do activism. The cause was important, though. After a few weeks of ...
It’s no secret that the journalism industry in Canada is in a state of crisis. From widespread distrust in media to the financial volatility brought on by digital journalism, most attention has been ...
This story was funded by the J-Source Patreon campaign. University journalism programs across Canada say they need more money, staff and time to properly educate students about Indigenous history and ...
Camille Dundas is working to reshape how people in Canada think about, hear and report on Black stories, a mission that Mary Ann Shadd Cary began more than 150 years ago. Dundas headlined the ...
Every two weeks starting April 30, newsrooms across Canada are receiving cheques in the mail with their share of the $100 million paid by Google as a result of the Online News Act. The group in charge ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results