Matt Brennan reviews Jamaica to Toronto, raising questions about Canada's pop past.
After months of resistence, the Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug First Nation have been awarded a legal victory in Ontario.
Trafford, Taylor and Henderson review new works by O'Donnel, Hartog and Ewart.
Hillary Bain Lindsay asks why Eastern Canada is being flooded with proposals for liquefied natural gas terminals, and why so many communities are resisting them.
Canadian firms help make for F-16s, F-15s and Apache helicopters used to bomb Lebanon and assassinate Palestinians, reports Dru Oja Jay.
Dahr Jamail tours the war-torn Lebanese capital of Beirut with a member of Hezbollah.
Prime Minister Harper called Israel's attack on Lebanon 'measured.' Chris Arsenault talks to a father who hopes his family is still safe.
Dan Freeman-Maloy examines the Canadian media's coverage of violence in the Middle East, and finds it unbalanced, and racist.
What are the real costs of private health care? A Harvard study finds Canada's public system cheaper - and better - than the private system in the US.
As the media circus around the alleged terrorism plot in Canada subsides, Stefan Christoff asks why critical questions are not being posed.
Chris Arsenault interviews professor Thom Workman about the minimal minimum wage hike in New Brunswick and its impacts.
Podcasts are changing the way we see and hear museums. Tim McSorley listens in.
Chileans worry the Pascua Lama mine will pollute their water and destroy their way of life. Rob Maguire learns that Canada is involved.
Gaining access to publicly funded abortions in New Brunswick has never been easy. Chris Arsenault discovers it's now more difficult than ever.
Tracy Glynn investigates a recent rash of violent deaths around a Tanzanian mine owned by Canada's Barrick Gold.
Canadian journalists are embedded with soldiers in Afghanistan. But, Dru Oja Jay asks, are there other threats to accurate coverage?
A St John's bottlers' strike has revived an age old debate: who benefits from new technology? Jacob Fergus investigates.
Ben Sichel and Jenny Peirce talk about poverty with people in suits at the World Urban Forum.
Moira Peters exchanges her gardening gloves for a pair of salad tongs, finding the pickings for a summer salad in unlikely places.
Trafford, Hart, Simmers and Besner review new works by Mérot, Hage, Bowling and Friesen.The Dominion is a monthly paper published by an incipient network of independent journalists in Canada. It aims to provide accurate, critical coverage that is accountable to its readers and the subjects it tackles. Taking its name from Canada's official status as both a colony and a colonial force, the Dominion examines politics, culture and daily life with a view to understanding the exercise of power.