News
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News
CSU and ASFA Adopt Position Against Bill 21
Student associations take up positions against proposed “discriminatory” bill.
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Students Denounce ‘Inaction’ on Campus Sexual Violence
Students decry the university’s inaction on sexual violence.
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McGill University Retires Redmen Name After Students Decry Racist Connotations
On Friday morning, McGill University’s Principal and Vice-Chancellor Suzanne Fortier announced that the name is being retired immediately.
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Thousands Denounce Secularism Bill as Xenophobic
Thousands of people took to the streets this Sunday to protest the CAQ government’s proposed secularism bill.
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A New Migrant Detention Centre Is Being Built in Laval as Quebec Hardens Stance on Immigration
The migration detention centre is set to open in 2021, as the CAQ’s policies are strengthening to generate barriers for immigration.
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Concordia Launches Action Plan to Indigenize and Decolonize University
Concordia’s Indigenous Directions Leadership Group has just launched a 39 point action plan created in part as a response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission calls to action.
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CSU Election Results: Cut the Crap Disqualified, Runners Up Elected
The Concordia Student Union’s Chief Electoral Officer Florian Prual has announced the updated election results.
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Number of Ineligible Voters Found on Elector List Withheld
Chief Electoral Officer Florian Prual says he won’t be providing The Link with a count of how many non-students were invited to vote in the Concordia Student Union’s general elections.
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Cut the Crap Slate Disqualified After Being Voted in
The Concordia Student Unions’ incoming executive team were caught campaigning during polling period during the 2019 general elections. The Chief Electoral Officer announced Friday afternoon that Cut The Crap’s entire slate have been disqualified.
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Timeline of the Opioid Crisis in Canada
This timeline examines the catalysts that generated an opioid epidemic in Canada, and services and circumstances that sprung from the growing death toll. It looks into factors that furthered the epidemic—with the introduction of new opioids, government policies, and initiatives, such as safe injection sites, aimed to help diminish the rates of opioid-related deaths. This is not all encompassing of every event or factor leading to the growing death toll in Canada due to opiates, as well as all of the initiatives aimed to relieve this toll.