Protesters across Canada demand status for all undocumented people. Sarah Rogers finds out why.
Hillary Bain Lindsay learns that McGuinty's recipe for Ontario's poor has left thousands hungry for more.
Youth are hitting the streets to do battle with police once again, but Marco Chown Oved finds that this time, it's a different crowd
Hillary Bain Lindsay discovers that people in the Niger Delta are fighting back against violence, corruption and oppression.
Thousands sing for revolution at the School of The Americas Protest in Fort Benning, Georgia. Carole Ferrari joins the chorus.
Chris Arsenault travels to Chiapas to investigate a Zapatista owned and run boot cooperative that takes 'no-sweat' apparel to a new level.
Hillary Lindsay investigates the new corporate organic landscape and its impact on Canadian farmers.
Carey Jernigan marches for peace in Washington
Shaughn McArthur follows Montréal's Solidarity Across Borders to the US-Canada border, where the Minutemen are now patrolling
Cyril Mychalejko looks at ongoing resistance to Canada's Glamis Gold's open-pit gold mine in Guatemala
Macdonald Stainsby discusses the history of the blockades and the struggle for self-determination at Grassy Narrows.
Benjamin Dangl explains the ongoing struggle for control of Bolivia's natural resources and the current uprising.
Representatives of the Colombian Mineworkers' Union have a message for Maritimers, writes Stuart Neatby: stop buying blood coal.
Darrell Anderson doesn't want to kill innocent Iraqi civilians, and is seeking refuge in Canada. Benjamin Witte looks at his situation and his odds of success.
Rejecting charity and embracing solidarity, Montreal's No One is Illegal works for the "regularization of everyone". Matt Mundy speaks to Jaggi Singh.
11 years after what the New York Times called the first "post modern revolution", Chris Arsenault brings back words and images from Chiapas, Mexico.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.