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Implications of a Moratorium on Public Use of Facial Recognition Technology in Canada | Tech Informed Policy

August 17, 2020 | Since the start of this year, there have been increasing calls for the Canadian government to impose a national moratorium on facial recognition technology. This demand arises from the possibility that law enforcement will use facial recognition to discriminate against certain demographics and worsen discrimination in the justice system.

Published: 26 Aug 2020

New report finding racism at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights was shocking — but predictable | The Conversation

August 10, 2020 | The Canadian Museum for Human Rights has joined the ranks of other Canadian cultural institutions that are facing accusations of discrimination and harassment. Pervasive and systemic bias has been reported in many instances; from inadequate representation of Indigenous perspectives, to the censorship of LGBTQ2+ content, to many other incidents of racism, homophobia, and sexism experienced by staff members.

Published: 12 Aug 2020

Algorithm 'gatekeepers' undermine democracy and health | Montreal Gazette

August 6, 2020 | Social media and other digital platforms have begun to overtake traditional journalism as our primary sources of information. The communications difficulties surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic have demonstrated how this trend will prove to have drastic consequences on the reliability of information in our democracies.

Published: 10 Aug 2020

New report focuses on why invisible infrastructures are key to platform governance reform

A new report released by the Centre for Media, Technology, and Democracy — set to launch this September — outlines an infrastructural approach to social media platforms, and has much to add to the policy space around platform governance of harmful content online.

Published: 6 Aug 2020

COVID-19: Social media users more likely to believe false information

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Montreal, July 29, 2020

A new study led by researchers at 鶹ýվ finds that people who get their news from social media are more likely to have misperceptions about COVID-19. Those that consume more traditional news media have fewer misperceptions and are more likely to follow public health recommendations like social distancing.

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Published: 29 Jul 2020

Max Bell MPP student selected for research fellowship with the Canada West Foundation

The Policy Scholars program is welcoming three exceptional members of the Max Bell School MPP class of 2020 to complete research fellowships with prominent Canadian policy think tanks.

Published: 13 Jul 2020

Can an ad boycott fix Facebook's hate speech problem? | CBC News

July 6, 2020 | Over 800 companies are pulling their ads from Facebook in response to the Stop Hate for Profit boycott, led by civil rights groups who want to remove hate speech from the platform. Will threatening the company's bottom line motivate them into action? Max Bell School Professor Taylor Owen goes on the CBC's Front Burner to discuss the propagation of hate speech on social media.

Published: 8 Jul 2020

Max Bell School partners with the C.D. Howe Institute for Policy Scholars Program

The Policy Scholars program provides Max Bell School MPP students with fellowships working in prominent Canadian policy organizations.

Published: 7 Jul 2020

Canada’s COVID-19 recovery plan | The Current

By how much will the pandemic cause federal spending to rise? How much revenue are we expecting to lose? And how will the Canadian government manage their debt and avoid a financial emergency? As the COVID-19 crisis continues to spread uncertainty across Canada and the around the world, economists and policymakers must ask themselves these questions and devise ways to manage the post-pandemic financial landscape.

Published: 7 Jul 2020

The Institute for Research on Public Policy joins the Max Bell School Policy Scholars Program

Three Policy Scholars, selected from the Max Bell School MPP class of 2020, will receive research fellowships with prominent Canadian policy think tanks.

The Institute for Research on Public Policy (IRPP) has partnered with 鶹ýվ’s Max Bell School of Public Policy as a participating organization in the Policy Scholars program, a series of new research fellowships awarded annually to promising Max Bell School Master of Public Policy (MPP) students.

Published: 2 Jul 2020

Max Bell School Partners launches Policy Scholars Program

Funded through a grant from the Max Bell Foundation, the Policy Scholars program provides Max Bell School MPP students with research fellowships at prominent Canadian policy organizations.

Published: 30 Jun 2020

Anti-Asian Racists Must Pay Legal Price | New Canadian Media

March 19, 2021 | In this article for New Canadian Media, MPP candidate Camilla Liu recounts the racism she has faced and explains why such bigotry must be met with legal consequences.

Read the article.

Published: 25 Jun 2020

Cities in Crisis Need Urgent Federal Support | Policy Magazine

June 19, 2020 | The unfolding economic and public health crisis caused by COVID-19 has revealed cracks in healthcare while underscoring the challenges of Canada's decentralized fiscal federalism. With cities facing increased service delivery pressures and a steep decline in revenues, provinces must invest in municipal economic development on equal footing with the federal government.

Published: 25 Jun 2020

When It’s Measured, it Matters: Disaggregated Race Data in Canada | Policy Magazine

June 17, 2020 | For years, advocates have been criticizing the Canadian government for neglecting to implement race-based data collection in policing, the justice system, health care, education, and employment. This kind of disaggregated data is essential for policy makers, as it exposes hidden data trends and establishes the scope of systemic inequality. In this Policy Magazine article, MPP candidate

Published: 23 Jun 2020

COVID-19 and Canada’s Charities: An Existential Funding Crisis | Policy Magazine

June 18, 2020 | From food banks to women’s shelters, the COVID-19 pandemic has left Canada’s charitable sector overstretched and underfunded like never before. Less funding means less operational capacity at a moment when demand for social services is anything but flattening.

Published: 22 Jun 2020

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