Stewart Steinhauer's response to a genocide attempt in Canada.
Looking to address global injustice? Stewart Steinhauer suggests looking under your own two feet.
Stewart Steinhauer examines the profits of oil companies operating in Saddle Lake Cree Nation, and asks why some criminals never go to jail.
As the media circus around the alleged terrorism plot in Canada subsides, Stefan Christoff asks why critical questions are not being posed.
What will it take for Canada to finally recognize First Nations' land rights, asks Gerald McIvor.
Native people aren't 'claiming' anything, says Stewart Steinhauer, it's the federal government that's making a land claim on Six Nations' land.
Anna Kirkpatrick questions the ideology behind the Fraser Institute's Annual School Ranking.
"Harmless cartoons" are more than they seem when one explores the social and political context in which they appear says Harsha Walia
Stewart Steinhauer sets readers straight on the meaning of anarchy and how 'panarchy' offers some hope for the future.
Derrick O'Keefe asks what it would take to compel NDP leader Jack Layton to bring up Canada's involvement in Haiti.
In a continuing series on genocide and colonization, Stewart Steinhauer explains "how to deconstruct a Canadian Indian in the privacy of your own home"
In Port-au-Prince, Andréa Schmidt asks why no one is discussing the use of a biometric identification system in Haiti's upcoming but oft-delayed elections.
In his second in a series, Stewart Steinhauer looks at oil companies on indigenous land in Alberta, and the mantra of "jobs jobs jobs"
Justin Podur asks what it means to be a refugee, and why the title is considered disparaging in the USA
Opposition parties and the press are using the sponsorship scandal to trash the Liberals, but Duff Conacher asks: why they aren't pushing for real reforms?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.