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Early Tuesday, lava is shooting 100 feet to 200 feet (30 to 60 metres) into the air as Hawaii's Mauna Loa, the world's largest active volcano, erupts for the first time in nearly 40 years. ()

Fiona D’Arcy, PhD candidate, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences

Classified as: Mauna Loa, Fiona D'Arcy, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
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Published on: 29 Nov 2022

Despite on-going efforts, biodiversity is deteriorating worldwide, and this decline is projected to worsen with business-as-usual scenarios. The will convene governments from around the world in Montreal from December 7 to 19 to agree to a new set of goals for nature over the next decade through the Convention on Biological Diversity process.

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Published on: 25 Nov 2022

Control of the U.S. Congress hung in the balance early Wednesday as Democrats showed surprising strength, defeating Republicans in a series of competitive races and defying expectations that high inflation and President Joe Biden's low approval ratings would drag the party down. (CBC News)

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Barry Eidlin, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology

Classified as: ɬ﷬ experts, US politics, U.S. politics, midterm elections, Elections, Joe Biden, Jason Opal, Department of History and Classical Studies, barry eidlin, Department of Sociology
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Published on: 9 Nov 2022

The Ontario government filed an application with the labour board to stop job action from a union of 55,000 education support workers who walked off the job to defy the passing of a bill that stripped them of their right to strike. On November 3, Ontario used the Constitution’s notwithstanding clause to strip an education workers union of its right to strike in an attempt to avoid disrupting classrooms. However, many schools were closed Friday, and more than a million students were at home, as the union defied the government and walked out.

Classified as: ɬ﷬ experts, barry eidlin, Department of Sociology, union, labour, protest, strike, CUPE, ontario, notwithstanding clause, union dispute
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Published on: 4 Nov 2022

The population of critically endangered North Atlantic right whales continued to decline in 2021, according to the latest estimate that puts the surviving population at 340. ()

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Classified as: right whale, anais remili, ɬ﷬
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Published on: 25 Oct 2022

Canada’s Hydro-Quebec agreed to buy Great River Hydro LLC and its 13 hydroelectric generating stations in a $2 billion deal, expanding its footprint in the northeastern US where it’s been supplying electricity for decades. ()

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Published on: 12 Oct 2022

François Legault has been elected for a second mandate as Quebec premier with a majority government. Addressing supporters at his campaign headquarters, Legault told a large crowd that some of his key priorities will be the economy and tackling inflation. ().

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Classified as: vote, voting, Quebec, Election, Quebec politics, parties, Laws 21, Law 96, bill 21, Bill 96
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Published on: 7 Oct 2022

The World Alzheimer Report 2022 – Life after diagnosis: Navigating treatment, care and support, co-authored by experts from ɬ﷬, focuses on the urgent need for significant improvements to essential post-diagnosis treatment, care and support services for the over 55 million people living with dementia across the globe and robust plans to support the forecast 139 million people by 2050.

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Published on: 21 Sep 2022

Queen Elizabeth, Canada's head of state and the longest-reigning British monarch, has died. Elizabeth became Queen in 1952, at the relatively tender age of 25, and presided over the country and the Commonwealth, including Canada, for seven decades. Those 70 years as monarch were recognized during this year's Platinum Jubilee events, which reached their height in London in early June. ()

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Classified as: ɬ﷬ experts, Peter McNally, School of Information Studies, ɬ﷬ History Project, monarchy, British monarchy, Queen Elizabeth, Queen Elizabeth II, Daniel Béland, ɬ﷬ Institute for the Study of Canada (MISC), department of political science, Benjamin Woodfinden, Brian Cowan, Department of History and Classical Studies
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Published on: 8 Sep 2022

Discount department store Zellers hopes to make a comeback next year, a decade after the Canadian chain shuttered most of its locations. Hudson's Bay Co. says Zellers will debut a new e-commerce website and expand its brick-and-mortar footprint within select Hudson's Bay department stores across the country in early 2023. The company says the relaunched Zellers will offer "a digital-first shopping journey that taps into the nostalgia of the brand." ()

Classified as: ɬ﷬ experts, Zellers, Yu Ma, Desautels Faculty of Management, Bensadoun School of Retail Management, retail industry, Hudson's Bay, retail sector
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Published on: 18 Aug 2022

The first day of Pope Francis's "penitential pilgrimage" began with a heartfelt apology delivered at the site of one of Canada's largest residential schools and ended with blessings and songs at an intimate service in the only designated Indigenous church in Canada. In a morning event in a First Nation community in central Alberta, Pope Francis apologized for members of the Catholic Church who co-operated with Canada's "devastating" policy of Indigenous residential schools.

Classified as: residential schools
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Published on: 27 Jul 2022

Mandatory random COVID-19 testing resumed on Tuesday, July 19 for vaccinated travellers coming into Canada through four major airports. The tests for select passengers landing in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary and Montreal will be completed outside the airports, either through an in-person appointment or a virtual appointment for a self-swab test. ()

Classified as: ɬ﷬ experts, covid-19, COVID-19 pandemic, pandemic, air travel, testing, David Juncker, Department of Biomedical Engineering, michael libman, Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases
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Published on: 19 Jul 2022

Sri Lanka's acting president on Monday declared a state of emergency giving him broad authority amid growing protests demanding his resignation two days before the country's lawmakers are set to elect a new president. Ranil Wickremesinghe became acting president on Friday after his predecessor, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, fled abroad and resigned after monthslong mass protests over the country's economic collapse. ()

Classified as: Sri Lanka
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Published on: 18 Jul 2022

Abortion was already illegal in multiple US states in late June, with bans introduced within hours ofRoe v Wadebeing overturned, as cities erupted in protest at the landmark ruling. It came after theUS supreme court abolished the constitutional right to abortion, more than 50 years after it was established, leaving individual states to decide. It is ultimately expected to lead to abortion bans in about half of the states. ()

Classified as: Pearl Eliadis, Roe v. Wade, ɬ﷬
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Published on: 28 Jun 2022

The mandates may be lifted, but COVID-19 continues to shape how families across Canada mourn. Funeral directors say the COVID-19 pandemic has so altered what it means to mourn that it might be a while before there is any community consensus of how and when to have a funeral. While many families feel the time is right to finally mourn, others feel like too much time has passed, and they no longer plan to hold a service. ()

Classified as: ɬ﷬ experts, Mary Ellen McDonald, faculty of dental medicine and oral health sciences, grief, loss, mourning, covid-19, funerals, grief literacy
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Published on: 22 Jun 2022

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