Sustaining voices
McGill delegates to Powershift, a major climate conference in Washington, D.C., relay the energy and spirit of today’s environmental movement
McGill delegates to Powershift, a major climate conference in Washington, D.C., relay the energy and spirit of today’s environmental movement
Pakistani human rights lawyer Asma Jilani Jahangir was awarded the Litvack Award for Aboriginal Human Rights Tuesday evening at Chancellor Day Hall for her “distinguished… Read More »Pakistani lawyer honoured
Devimco scales down its $1.3- billion plan to demolish historic neighbourhood
Visiting professors dish the dirt on Japanese hegemony
First Nation community downstream from tar sands experience abnormally high rates of rare cancers
After spending nine days as an international observer in rural Mexico, K.R. gains a deeper understanding of the triumphs and struggles of the Zapatista movement
With a deficit of $10-million in the current fiscal year, McGill senators learned yesterday that the University must reduce its operating costs by $12- to… Read More »News Brief: McGill’s $10-million deficit forces cuts
Burlesque life drawing class promotes positive body image
Julie Doiron’s fragile songs have the intimacy of a basement tape session
Put aside the politics to spice up your life on the dance floor – no strings attached
Running annually since the nineties, Sexual Assault Centre of McGill Students’ Society (SACOMSS)’s art show “Fire with Water” seeks to douse the pain of sexual… Read More »Culture Brief: This zine is a safe space
McGill launched the Institute for the Study of International Development (ISID) on Monday with an inaugural conference focusing on the future of development. ISID will… Read More »New development studies institute redefines vision
Shatner 103 renovations begin this June
Earlier this semester, two fellow activists writing on behalf of the McGill Anti-Racist Coalition sought to challenge academic content that creates oppressive learning environments or… Read More »Hyde Park: Dismantling the Ivory Tower goes beyond identity politics
Erin O’Callaghan explores Canada’s less than progressive family policies