Patrick Webber
Patrick Webber is an independent researcher, born and raised in New Brunswick. He was previously Research Coordinator for the New Brunswick New Democratic Party (2012–16), and has conducted research projects for other organizations and campaigns. He earned his MA in History at the University of New Brunswick. He also currently contributes articles on political issues to Inroads: A Journal of [...]
Sylvain Charlebois
Dr. Sylvain Charlebois is a renowned scholar for his work on food policy, safety, distribution, and security. He is author of the book Food Safety, Risk Intelligence and Benchmarking. He acts as special advisor to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), to Health Canada on food safety issues, and to Agriculture and Food Canada on agricultural policy.
Mark Raymond
Dr. Mark Raymond obtained his doctoral degree in resource and environmental economics from the University of Guelph. Mark currently serves as the Chairperson for the Department of Economics at the Sobey School of Business and is the former Associate Dean for the School. He has completed multiple resource and environmental-based research projects for various organizations and has published numerous articles [...]
Canada’s Urban Areas: descent from affordability
By WENDELL COX (Principal of Demographia) Canada is a nation of wide open spaces, yet it has high urban area densities recently driven higher by a redefinition of urban area criteria (Note 1). Canada's largest urban area (population centre) is Toronto, with a population of 5.4 million continues to be the densest of the 59 with more than 50,000 residents. Toronto [...]
Harry Koza
AIMS Fellow in Financial Markets Harry Koza is Senior Analyst for Canadian markets at Thomsonreuters’ IFR Markets. At various times in his career Mr. Koza has been a prospector, metallurgist, project manager, engineer, mining promoter, as well as an institutional bond salesman for fifteen years before joining Thomson Financial. His particular interests are high-yield and distressed securities, and corporate bonds in general. [...]
Meredith McDonald
Research Fellow Meredith McDonald specializes in politics and public policy. Her most recent article (co-authored with Ted Morton), “The Siren Song of Economic Diversification: Alberta’s Legacy of Loss,” was published by the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary. She previously worked for the federal government, including roles with the minister of state of foreign affairs, the environment [...]