The Beauty in Brokenness: Redefining Self Compassion and Mental Illness: Dylan Stirewalt at TEDxTerryTalks 2013
When Dylan turned 3, her mother gave her custody to her father and started a long journey that would see her struggle with homelessness and mental…
Read articleChildren from around the world and where they sleep.
I always find this kind of photojournalism incredibly compelling (for instance, one of my favourite books to give as a present is Menzel D’Aluisio’s Hungry Planet).…
Read articleINFOGRAPHIC: Is Food a Right?
On October 7, 2013, Gordon Neighbourhood House hosted the West End Food Festival. One of the numerous events part of this festival included a panel discussion…
Read articleKatic: DTES Neighbourhood Council Doesn’t Support PiDGiN Picket
Here’s a bit of breaking news on the PiDGiN controversy: The DNC shares many of the goals of the anti-gentrification protesters, but feels that the specific…
Read articleFenn: Brandon’s Bucket and the People’s Pickle
This weekend, Gordon Katic and I spoke with Brandon Grossutti, the owner of the controversial PiDGiN restaurant, about his alleged theft of a papier-mâché pickle. The…
Read articleKatic: Social Housing in the DTES
With the spate of anti-gentrification protest in the Downtown East Side, all eyes are once again on Vancouver’s housing problem. Proponents of development call for a…
Read articleMix it up in 2012
It’s the first week of the year, first week of the term… A time of reflection and projection. A time to mix things up and try…
Read articleStreet Papers: A Unique Platform for Marginalized Voices
One of the cool things I discovered this past Saturday at Media Democracy Day is Megaphone, a Vancouver street paper sold by low-income and homeless vendors that provides a voice for people on the Downtown Eastside.
Street papers are a growing movement. According to Sean Condon, Editor-in Chief of Megaphone, there are over 100 street papers worldwide. The first was created in New York in 1989 when someone came up with the idea of printing a paper to be sold by homeless people as a means of employment. It worked and now there are a number of street papers all over the world in both developed and developing countries that not only provide employment to low-income and homeless individuals, but also frequently provide them with a voice.
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Hope in Shadows: Bryce Doersam talks to Peter Thompson
By marion benkaiouche,
Have you ever wondered about the men and women who sell calendars around Vancouver as winter rolls around? Hope in Shadows is a photography competition for…
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