Memo: National Post drops honorifics in house style
“Effective immediately (Wednesday’s paper) we are doing away with honorifics in all print pages of the Post.”
“Effective immediately (Wednesday’s paper) we are doing away with honorifics in all print pages of the Post.”
Defamation, a cause of action intended to protect our reputations, is a weapon politicians and large corporations can and have used to stifle political dissent.
Addressing diversity in Canadian journalism is complicated—at least in part because statistics and the policies informed by them are often the exception and not the rule.
What might have been a short article about the casualties of gentrification becomes a feature on class, family, isolation and belonging.
The Commission resulted in the founding of the National Library of Canada and the Canada Council for the Arts.
How do you maintain a distinct voice when working for different outlets?
Does an election advertising law in Manitoba go too far? And why is the Harper administration hiding the cost of the country’s combat missions?
In hindsight, we should have tightened our comment policy sooner.
On May 1, the Globe and Mail will be increasing its paywall subscription price from $19.99 per month to $23.99.
Mission Invisible concerns itself with the media representation of Muslim communities immediately after the events of Sept. 11, 2001.