Dru Oja Jay reads the business section, and finds the news that non-investor Canadians rarely see.
Macdonald Stainsby reviews David Bernans' first book: a novel about war, racism, and hysteria - and the people who fight against them.
Fredericton police are accused of racism after arrests at a "No One Is Illegal" march. Chris Arsenault investigates.
Protesters across Canada demand status for all undocumented people. Sarah Rogers finds out why.
Kim Peterson finds the People of Tobique First Nation resisting corruption, and tracing the problem back to the Indian Act.
Max Liboiron explores sexuality and disability through Belinda Mason-Lovering's photographic essay Intimate Encounters.
Leamington, Ontario was chosen as the "best place to live in Canada" by MoneySense Magazine. Van Ferrier asks, 'For who?'
Henderson, Trafford, Taylor and Besner review new works by McCluskey, Sanger, Babstock and Starnino.
GE trees are considered the new threat to global forests. Katie Shafley wonders why no one knows they're being grown in Canada.
Hillary Bain Lindsay learns that McGuinty's recipe for Ontario's poor has left thousands hungry for more.
Native people aren't 'claiming' anything, says Stewart Steinhauer, it's the federal government that's making a land claim on Six Nations' land.
Au cours de l'entrevue, M. Préval a clairement exprimé sa volonté de faire respecter la souveraineté nationale et de ne servir de marionnette à personne. 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.