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From the archives

24 Sussex Dive

On some very late homework

City Limits

That shrinking feeling

The Grey Plateau

When the world stopped five years ago

Issues

January–February 2010

Cover art and pictures throughout the issue by Aimée van Drimmelen. Aimée van Drimmelen is a Canadian artist and illustrator living in Montreal. She has exhibited her artwork, including illustrated drumskins, in Montreal and New York City. To see more please visit http://aimeevandrimmelen.com.

A Shameful Track Record

The Olympic movement plays fast and loose with basic democratic values

Laura Robinson

Blind Oracles

Researchers have developed models to predict everything from earthquakes to pandemics. The trouble is, they don't work

David Orrell

Troubling Tactics

Can money pay the price for the Holocaust?

Norman Ravvin

Our Healthiest Industry?

Organized crime is flourishing in Canada, just as it always has

Stephen Schneider

The Myth of Chindia

Rising regional tensions undermine a new book’s rosy forecast for Asia

Jonathan Holslag

The Real Tariq Ramadan

A Catholic theologian’s portrait of the controversial Islamic thinker

Charles Blattberg

Quebec’s Abstract Radicals

Sixty years on, the Automatistes finally make it to English Canada

Patricia Smart

Blaze of Glory

Canada’s first gold-medal snowboarder tells his side of the story

Kevin Sylvester

Navigating Imperial Rivers

The hitherto untold story of 60 Mohawk paddlers and the siege of Khartoum

Desmond Morton

A Woman Who Prevails

The most formidable Canadian heroine since Hagar Shipley

Joan Givner

Enforcing Terrible Secrets

This year’s Giller winner revisits the Roman Catholic sex scandals

Ray Guy

Studying Supper

An academic discipline emerges from the kitchen table

Judy Stoffman

Moral Vision, Empirical Rigour

The Vertical Mosaic helped establish a distinctively Canadian sociology — one now struggling for survival

Neil McLaughlin

Poet’s Corner

Dispatches from the Olympic Games

Priscila Uppal

A Pragmatic Manifesto

Can Quebec's social democrats make markets serve equality?

Andrew Gibson