Over the last 30 years, the CCPA has provided alternative research and analysis that have been indispensable in exposing the corporate agenda. I don’t know what I’d have done without them.
— Judy Rebick
The final report of the proposal committee for a new union combining the CAW and CEP contains many intriguing ideas, not least being the 5 regional councils, funded by a separate per capita levy, that give the new union the feel of a labour central. All local unions in each region will be required to be members of -- and advance the work of -- their regional council, giving the structures a potentially powerful provincial and regional presence.
If the forthcoming CEP and CAW conventions approve the plan to unite, the report promises "an ambitious program of major organizing initiatives" coinciding with the founding convention of the new union.
Quebec's striking students have raised arguments and concerns that get to the root of the debate about the kind of society we want to build—or the kind of society we areallowing to be dismantled in our name. However, the response to this action has raised another issue. The stereotype of the lazy student (or alternatively, “the hostile protestor” or “entitled generation”) has been an effective weapon of the mainstream media. Nuanced, thoughtful arguments about the strike are routinely dismissed, and demonstrations of solidarity have done little to blunt these recurrent negative student stereotypes, or to broaden the terms of the debate.
The summer 2012 issue of Our Schools / Our Selves, Smashing the Stereotypes: Challenging race and gender in the classroom, examines the ways in which stereotypes (such as racial and gender-based stereotypes) and unfounded negative perceptions limit debate and foster contempt, and how educators and academics are challenging these constraints.
Click here to preview and order Smashing the Stereotypes: Challenging race and gender in the classroom.

Hennessy's Index is a monthly listing of numbers, written by the CCPA's Trish Hennessy, about Canada and its place in the world. For other months, visit: http://policyalternatives.ca/index
Over the last 30 years, the CCPA has provided alternative research and analysis that have been indispensable in exposing the corporate agenda. I don’t know what I’d have done without them.
— Judy Rebick