A postal worker is facing disciplinary action after refusing to deliver a homophobic pamphlet. Gwalgen Geordie Dent investigates.
Chris Arsenault chats with an average 23-year-old who's hoping Canada won't send him back to the US to fight in a war he doesn't believe in.
Mary Foster tracks the history of Hezbollah and examines how it became a terrorist organization in Canada.
Brendan Stone investigates the ideology behind 'the responsibility to protect,' and asks who is protecting whom.
Jon Elmer determines that Afghanistan is not a random act of Canadian policy, but an entire foreign policy apparatus acting on a well-articulated plan.
Maya Rolbin-Ghanie explores the place of the "Somalia Affair" in Canadian mythology.
Yuill Herbert examines Canada's international biotech agenda and the government's most recent GM 'victory.'
Harsha Walia examines the work of Canada's development agency in South Asia.
Dru Oja Jay investigates how corporate control of markets goes missing in discussions about "free trade."
Dawn Paley investigates how CIDA's 'development work' is influencing resource extraction in Bolivia.
Cyril Mychalejko investigates the CA4TA, a free trade agreement few Canadians have heard of.
Stewart Steinhauer's response to a genocide attempt in Canada.
Critics say Canada has tacitly or openly supported the US campaign to replace the government of Venezuela. Yves Engler asks why.
Prominent feminists debate the logic of a "humanitarian" war in Aghanistan. Anna Carastathis investigates.
Chris Arsenault drops by the exclusive Canada Club in Bogata, Colombia, and considers the cost of Canada's elite.
Dave Johnson investigates the strong --and growing-- Quebéc-Lebanon solidarity movement.
Looking to address global injustice? Stewart Steinhauer suggests looking under your own two feet.
Pierre Loiselle asks why the Canadian government omitted over half of the Genocide Convention before making it law.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.