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No More Swimming Naked

The Need for Modesty in Canadian Banking

About this Publication

This report, by CCPA research associate and Wilfred Laurier professor Ellen Russell, examines how banks work, why they are inherently prone to instability, and how banking crises spread—even to banks and banking systems that appear to be stable. The report cautions that current regulations have not eliminated problems with risk-taking and overconfident behavior among banks, and since governments have no alternative but to support large banks when systemic stability is threatened, this additional security creates a perverse incentive for banks to increase their appetite for risk.  

Search and Replace

The Case for a Made-in-Canada Fixed-Wing Search and Rescue Fleet

Reports & Studies

Canadian identity, pluralism, and the performing arts

Projects & Initiatives: Education Project

The CCPA Education Project is pleased to present a remarkable education and cultural resource: Pluralism in the Arts in Canada: A Change is Gonna Come, edited by CCPA Research Associate charles c. smith. With narratives coming out of theatre, dance, music and other forms of artistic expression from some of the most renowned Aboriginal and racialized artists, this book gets to the heart of a very needed discussion about Canadian identity, what it is not and is, how this is seen in the public space performance occupies, and how this is lived each day across diverse communities.

Click here to preview and order Pluralism in the Arts in Canada: A Change is Gonna Come.

Green investments will boost economy and set us on path to climate justice

Projects & Initiatives: Climate Justice Project

Today, CCPA released a report by Senior Economist Marc Lee and researcher Amanda Card, which suggests that a new green industrial strategy needs to be at the heart of federal policy-making.

Accelerated oil and gas extraction will boost profits but won't drive major employment gains. Instead, embracing a "green industrial revolution" will allow Canada to meet its climate change commitments while boosting a lacklustre economy.

The report finds that less than 1% of Canadian workers are employed in fossil fuel extraction and production in Canada (oil, natural gas and coal)—and that these jobs come at a high price in environmental and climate terms, accounting for 27% of Canadian greenhouse gas emissions.

The report, A Green Industrial Revolution: Climate Justice, Green Jobs and Sustainable Production in Canada, aims to contribute to a growing conversation about industrial and employment strategies the federal government can use to transition to a sustainable economy and create a new generation of well-paying green jobs.

The principal challenge for Canada and other countries around the world is to de-couple the economy from fossil fuels. The transition to a zero carbon Canada will take several decades, and will have a transformative impact on the nature of work and employment.

Click here to read the full report.

Pluralism in the Arts in Canada

A Change is Gonna Come

Our Schools Our Selves
Projects & Initiatives: Education Project
Price: $30

A Green Industrial Revolution

Climate Justice, Green Jobs and Sustainable Production in Canada

Reports & Studies
Projects & Initiatives: Climate Justice Project
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— Polly Ng, Next Up graduate

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