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Anti-intellectualism and Information Preferences during the COVID-19 Pandemic | OSF Preprints

May 14, 2020 | The COVID-19 pandemic necessitates widespread voluntary and sustained public compliance with expert-guided public health directives, like social or physical distancing. Understanding which citizens seek out and engage with expert messages regarding COVID-19 is thus of central importance. Anti-intellectualism - the generalized distrust of experts and intellectuals 鈥 is likely to be a dominant factor.

Published: 21 May 2020

Prospective Economic Costs Undermine Expectations of Social Distancing | OSF Preprints

May 20, 2020 | The COVID-19 pandemic has placed an extraordinary burden on governments and citizens alike. In order to contain the spread of the pandemic and limit its effect on health care systems, citizens have been asked to forego social and economic activity to protect others at a tremendous cost to themselves.

Published: 21 May 2020

Forget about schools 鈥 open the summer camps in spring | The Globe and Mail

May聽6, 2020 |聽Camps are the solution to many of the problems the school reopening is designed to solve, while significantly mitigating the risks of exposure and transmission. Going to camp gets children out of the house and lets their parents return to work.鈥 Andrew Potter, Associate Professor at the Max Bell School of Public Policy, explains how mass childcare and summer camps are a precursor to restarting the economy in the face of COVID-19.

Published: 7 May 2020

The coronavirus is costing us more than just our health and economy | The Conversation

May 6, 2020 | 鈥淐ivil liberties are not designed only for times of peace and stability. They assume special, even critical, importance during public emergencies.鈥 In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic and emergent lockdown policies, Pearl Eliadis discusses the importance of upholding civil liberties.

Published: 6 May 2020

Do not allow Saudi Arabia鈥檚 flogging ban to distract from the repression that still exists | The Globe and Mail

April 30, 2020聽| In this op-ed, Irwin Cotler argues that while the recent reforms in Saudi Arabia should be welcomed, the international community, Canada included, cannot give Saudi Arabia a pass.

Published: 5 May 2020

Give me liberty, and give me death? The enduring legacy of America鈥檚 penchant for freedom | The Globe and Mail

April 23, 2020 | For centuries Americans have battled others, and each other, in the name of freedom, sometimes weaponizing the word, sometimes twisting the notion out of recognition. David Shribman comments on the shifting definition of American liberty, and what it means in the context of the current protests against COVID-19 lockdown measures.

Published: 27 Apr 2020

A Post-COVID-19 Digital Bretton Woods | Project Syndicate

April 17, 2020聽| The digital age has completely disrupted global governance. Now that COVID-19 has disrupted nearly everything else, it is time to start planning for what comes next, say Max Bell School professor聽Taylor Owen and聽Rohinton P. Medhora.

Published: 22 Apr 2020

Opinion: The dangers of governing Quebec by decree | Montreal Gazette

April 22, 2020 | History has shown that human rights do not co-exist easily with states of emergency. With Quebec鈥檚 declaration of a state of emergency, Pearl Eliadis expresses the need to consider how these extraordinary measures will impact the most vulnerable among us.

Published: 22 Apr 2020

Chris Ragan on Climate Change and Carbon Pricing | Culture at Crossroads

April 16, 2020 | With climate change being one of the most contentious issues in the 2019 federal election, it has become evident that Canadians are concerned with reducing the national carbon footprint. Despite this, policy responses to this issue have not been united. In this podcast, Max Bell School Director Chris Ragan elaborates on the nuances of environmental policy, and how it serves both the economy and the climate.聽

Published: 16 Apr 2020

It's not a crime to disagree with health officials | National Post

April 15, 2020 | In public health discourse, there is a lack of contrarianism, dubbed heterodoxy, that is almost completely missing from the national conservation. Andrew Potter elaborates on the need to question the official response to the pandemic, and the narrowness of the options that we are being given for getting back to normalcy.

Published: 16 Apr 2020

COVID-19 is helping to unite Canadians like nothing has in years 鈥 and we'll need unity for what's to come | CBC News

April 9, 2020 |聽Canada's response to the COVID-19 pandemic stands in marked contrast to that of the United States, and the crisis seems to be helping to unite Canadians like no other event in years. Read what聽Peter Loewen,聽Taylor Owen and Derek Ruths had to say.

Published: 15 Apr 2020

We are at war with COVID-19. We need to fight it like a war | The Globe and Mail

April 8, 2020 | From restrictions on civil liberties, to the command economy, to the rationing of key supplies, to the hoarding of food and medicine, to the daily body counts 鈥 the world is gearing up to fight the war against COVID-19. Andrew Potter discusses the framing of this idea, and the potential for readjusting our resources and mindsets.

Published: 8 Apr 2020

As Ottawa moves to cushion the economic blow of COVID-19, what shape will the stimulus package take? | The Globe and Mail

March 16, 2020 | In an attempt to alleviate the blow that COVID-19 has taken to the Canadian economy, Finance Minister Bill Morneau has plans to release a fiscal stimulus package. Kevin Page, Canada鈥檚 First Parliamentary Budget Officer, discusses how this stimulus package will come into fruition.

Published: 27 Mar 2020

Canada's Federal Government is on the ropes in coronavirus crisis | National Post

March 16, 2020 | The world has been swept by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, with various governments drafting immediate contingency measures. Andrew Potter presents his analysis of the Canadian government鈥檚 current initiatives.

Published: 27 Mar 2020

The Afghanistan mission Canada can鈥檛 be allowed to forget | The Globe and Mail

March 14, 2020 | Canadian soldiers have been at the forefront of the Afghanistan Mission for almost 13 years now. Nearing the end, Andrew Potter, a professor at the Max Bell School of Public Policy, comments on Canada鈥檚 under-recognition of military service.

Published: 27 Mar 2020

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