cover image: Monitor Vol. 28, No. 1, May/June 2021

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Monitor Vol. 28, No. 1, May/June 2021

30 Apr 2021

So much of the work sitting back to marvel at the idea that out of nowhere overnight but is, in is unseen: the sharing of knowledge, the future contents of my winter fact, part of a large, intricate system resources and food across our pantry, hours of fall canning, and that extends beyond the property largely invisible channels. [...] Prior to this, I had never fungus networks is that I am fascinat- It is my hope that the articles in realized how at the mercy you are to ed by the similarities between these this issue provide a peek behind the last homeowner’s predilections systems and the systems of commu- the curtain, or perhaps below the for RoundUp. [...] The percentage of migrant union, which means that buy the properties from care workers, mostly the youngest and oldest these private landlords, $16.5 million women of colour, who workers are the least likely the largest of which owns The amount that Toronto reported that they were to be part of a union. [...] The attention to public opinion, but when coalition of over 40 organizations, number one constraint, and Canada’s the interests of the wealthy few including Amnesty International, clear priority at the WTO, is the are at stake, the will of the majority Unifor, the United Church and defence of intellectual property (IP) often doesn’t translate into substan- the CCPA, wrote a forceful open rights. [...] This line made by workers forced into of thinking relies on an interpretation of this scene in which these rebels concessions in the first place, back recognize that succeeding in violently stealing power and summarily execut- in the 1930s.” ing anyone who gets in the way of this requires that there be no lawyers to “What’s happening in this space defend the rights of the hapless victims of their.
ISSN
1198497X
Pages
44
Published in
Canada
Series
Monitor

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