PORTFOLIO
Meet the Americans who believe Trump was anointed by God.
Dr. Marvin Dunn’s unlikely revolution in Republican Florida
He'll be a great prime minister if he wins. He's also one more man poised to beat a capable woman.
This young mother once struggled to survive. Now she’s a lifeline for Ukraine’s most vulnerable.
For people like me who were hoping for a progressive woman in the White House, Monday’s celebrations felt devastating. Seeking answers, I ventured into two victory parties only a few miles from Trump’s gilded palace.
“With Trump coming back, I am very worried about the safety of migrants,” a charity worker said. “Many will have to return to the dangers they were escaping in their homelands.”
Chris Halls, a 53-year-old college-educated father, is battling a severe opioid addiction. He says his survival depends on Moss Park Consumption Treatment Services, one of the harm reduction sites the Ford government plans to shut down.
Her departure from cabinet marks not an end but a turning point. She will never stop working for a better world.
At the same time as the government is pumping new cash into rehab, it is slashing funding from another pillar of drug recovery: harm reduction.
Every generation has its hope to leave the world a better place.
Kamala is ours.
As Canada rethinks harm reduction, Portugal's novel approach offers valuable insights
I hope we can all be awakened to the need for peace by thoughts of civilians in Lebanon — like the Hemo children who ask only how they can find a safe place to live another day.
A year and a half after devastating earthquakes in February 2023, the ruined towns and cities of Hatay, Turkey’s southernmost province, sit frozen in time in the chaotic aftermath.
Political candidates in Canada and the United States are threatening the independence of their central banks, and voters should be worried.
As Canada grapples with a severe national drug crisis, experts say the country’s prisons are overwhelmed.
We made a promise to the Afghan people of our dedication to equality and justice; so why has Canada simply watched as gains in women’s rights have unravelled
Drinkers might delight in Ontario’s booze bonanza, but Scotland’s strategy is saving lives.
Samia's Canadian children are in danger of dying or becoming victims of violence, but she faces an impossible choice.
On the streets of Victoria, addicts and those who care about them have mixed feelings about the return of criminalization, and they have a warning for Toronto.
Eswatini has the most serious HIV/AIDS problem in the world, and has put serious effort into reducing it. But longstanding beliefs and sexual behaviours, including those of the king himself, stand in the way of progress.
In shantytowns in and around Soweto, democracy has failed to materially transform residents’ lives, 30 years after Nelson Mandela’s triumph.
How women are redefining pilgrimages in the Ukrainian heartland of Jewish history
Desperate to give daughters a safe life, some refugees marry them off early. One organization in Lebanon is showing girls that there is an alternative.
With many buildings condemned or collapsed, residents squat in dangerous structures near grand hotels that host a shrinking number of tourists.
A teacher, a writer and an historian present a small but determined community of resistance toward Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’s culture war against “woke” ideology.
A project racing against time to preserve memories shows potential for artificial intelligence in preserving history.
Scholars have come to share the perspective that this war is a pivotal conflict with consequences for the entire globe
“Just because you don’t talk about it, doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist." Canadian black female professionals feel less supported than their US counterparts.
“I thought I could come to Canada and live for myself,” says a survivor of the Mariupol destruction. “But the war has changed me.”
Civilian victims of Russia’s terror, Oleksandra Ikonnikova and her 6-year-old daughter Nadiia, spend three weeks at a Ukrainian field hospital for the wounded of heart. The survivors learn to become warriors, not victims as a way to fight back against Russian aggression.