It has begun.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has called an election for October 19, 2015, kicking off a marathon 11 week election campaign. The longest campaign since the 1870s, believe it or not.
My patient readers may have noticed that over the last few years I’ve posted quite a bit about how science has fared under the current government. Readers will have gathered that I’m not too pleased about that state of affairs. This election signals an opportunity to (hopefully) change direction; if it’s not completely possible to undo all the damage that Harper has done, we can at least hope to stop the bleeding and maybe fix up as much of the destruction as possible.
My small part in all this will be to help the Canadian electorate follow how science, the environment and public health is being discussed both leading up to the election and during the election itself. No doubt many others will also be doing similar things, and I’ll be happy to point to them here, but I’ll be dedicating myself to this task over the coming weeks.
My methodology will be similar to the one I’ve employed before when tracking current issues on this blog. A master post with a rough chronology of what I’ve found, updated periodically as the story develops.
I’ll be flagging issues mostly concerned with science/engineering/technology research funding, the state of government science and scientists and all issues related to the environment. I’ll also be flagging stuff on public health issues. Here I’ll be concentrating on issues around public health research funding and policies rather than the funding and structure of our public healthcare system. While that’s an interesting area, I’ve always treated it as out-of-scope for my list-making and will continue to do so. The line between the structure and funding of the healthcare system and how evidence is used in constructing public health policy can be a bit fuzzy sometimes, so I may end up erring on the side of including edge cases rather than excluding them.
As mentioned, I do plan to update this post periodically, probably about once per week during the campaign.
Most of the items I plan to collect here — and I’m not attempting to be complete, only broadly representative of what’s been published — will be from during the campaign itself. I will however include some from before the campaign starts as well as probably some from after the election itself. For example, the initial post here will by necessity not have much from during the campaign itself.
I will also be posting some of the items here in my Tracking the Canadian War on Science tumblr blog, especially as they apply to the broader issues at play. In fact, those items here will probably be posted on the tumblr first.
As a reminder, my master War on Science chronology post is here: The Canadian War on Science: A long, unexaggerated, devastating chronological indictment. The relevant blog posts here on this blog can be found here.
General
- Science Pledge: A Strong Democracy Needs Strong Science by Evidence for Democracy
- Federal Candidates who have signed the pledge
- Citizens and Organizations who have signed the pledge
- Election Toolkit 2015: On October 19, Your Vote Matters More Than Ever by Debi Daviau, Professional Institute for the Public Service of Canada
- 10 Questions You Should Ask Federal Candidates in 2015 by PIPSC
- True North Smart and Free by Evidence for Democracy (interactive site with incidents in the Conservative war on science)
- Factbox: Canadian parties vie over economy, security, environment by Randall Palmer (Quick summary of basic policies)
Only the Green Party seems to have released a real election platform document that I could find. I’ll keep a lookout for those as the campaign rolls on. If I’ve missed one of the other party’s platform document, please let me know.
The Platforms
- Conservative Party
- Green Party: Vision Green
- Liberal Party
- New Democratic Party
The Campaign
- 2014.07.18. Green Party Talks 2015 Federal Election Strategy As Convention Begins by Althia Raj
- 2014.12.xx. Putting science policy on the radar for next federal election by CAUT
- 2014.12.01. Federal scientists to mount ‘evidence-based’ campaign against government cuts, being muzzled by Rachel Aiello
- 2015.01.xx. Will the Environment be Election Road Kill on the Road to Paris? by David McLaughlin
- 2015.01.01. Naomi Klein on fracking, Indigenous rights and Canada’s federal election by Jenny Uechi
- 2015.01.21. ENVIRONMENTAL TOP 10 for Election Year by Nikita (Nik) Lopoukhine
- 2015.01.22. Top 10 environmental issues for Canada’s next election by Timothy Gillespie
- 2015.02.05. Energy East carries election issues from Quebec to English Canada by David Gray-Donald
- 2015.03.xx. 13 Essential Questions for Election Candidates: Make the environment an election issue this year by asking these key questions by Andrew Reeves
- 2015.04.07. 61% of Canadians say protecting the climate more important than pipelines and tarsands: National poll shows Canadians want leadership on climate protection by Climate Action Network
- 2015.04.15. Canadian research advocates criticize ‘big science’ budget by Ivan Semeniuk
- 2015.04.22. Most Canadians Support Carbon Pricing, See Climate as Election Issue: New Poll by Carol Linnitt
- 2015.04.30. Obama unlikely to unveil Keystone move during Canada election by David Ljundgren
- 2015.04.30. Stephen Harper draws up election 2015 strategy on climate change by Chris Hall
- 2015.05.13. NDP Leader Outlines Vision for Energy and the Environment by Global Public Affairs
- 2015.05.15. Public Service Week gets political ahead of election by Kathryn May
- 2015.06.15. Elizabeth May Reveals Green Party’s Major Climate Change Election Platform by Jim Bronskill
- 2015.06.26. Trudeau vows Liberal environment plan will ‘be putting a price on carbon’ by Daniel Leblanc and Andrea Woo
- 2015.07.01. This Election’s about Canada’s Frighteningly Near Future: Where will we be in less than a generation? The trends are alarming by Ian Gill
- 2015.07.15. Agriculture researchers aim to put sector on election agenda by Kelsey Johnson
- 2015.07.22. New GreenPAC Keen On Making Environment An Election Issue by Kristy Kirkup
- 2015.07.28. Olivia Chow announces candidacy by Fram Dinshaw
- 2015.07.30. What Canadians Want the Party Leaders to Talk About During the Election Campaign: Issues that Matter to them Personally by Ipsos
- 2015.07.31. Will the War on Science Become an Election Issue? by James Wilt
- 2015.07.31. Federal science, tech announcements home in on Canada’s Arctic by CBC News
- 2015.08.02. Everything you need to know about the parties’ platforms, from taxes and terrorism to the environment by Jason Fekete, Ian MacLeod, Lee Berthiaume
- 2015.08.02. Factbox: Canadian parties vie over economy, security, environment by Randall Palmer
With any luck, the Conservatives will lose the coming election handily and I can re-orient my weird list-making mania towards something more enjoyable.
This list is just a start towards documenting the election conversation about science-related topics. As usual, if I’ve missed anything important or if I’ve made any errors, please let me know in the comments or at jdupuis at yorku dot ca. If you don’t want to use my work email, you can reach me at dupuisj at gmail dot com.
from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1JJdoAN
It has begun.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has called an election for October 19, 2015, kicking off a marathon 11 week election campaign. The longest campaign since the 1870s, believe it or not.
My patient readers may have noticed that over the last few years I’ve posted quite a bit about how science has fared under the current government. Readers will have gathered that I’m not too pleased about that state of affairs. This election signals an opportunity to (hopefully) change direction; if it’s not completely possible to undo all the damage that Harper has done, we can at least hope to stop the bleeding and maybe fix up as much of the destruction as possible.
My small part in all this will be to help the Canadian electorate follow how science, the environment and public health is being discussed both leading up to the election and during the election itself. No doubt many others will also be doing similar things, and I’ll be happy to point to them here, but I’ll be dedicating myself to this task over the coming weeks.
My methodology will be similar to the one I’ve employed before when tracking current issues on this blog. A master post with a rough chronology of what I’ve found, updated periodically as the story develops.
I’ll be flagging issues mostly concerned with science/engineering/technology research funding, the state of government science and scientists and all issues related to the environment. I’ll also be flagging stuff on public health issues. Here I’ll be concentrating on issues around public health research funding and policies rather than the funding and structure of our public healthcare system. While that’s an interesting area, I’ve always treated it as out-of-scope for my list-making and will continue to do so. The line between the structure and funding of the healthcare system and how evidence is used in constructing public health policy can be a bit fuzzy sometimes, so I may end up erring on the side of including edge cases rather than excluding them.
As mentioned, I do plan to update this post periodically, probably about once per week during the campaign.
Most of the items I plan to collect here — and I’m not attempting to be complete, only broadly representative of what’s been published — will be from during the campaign itself. I will however include some from before the campaign starts as well as probably some from after the election itself. For example, the initial post here will by necessity not have much from during the campaign itself.
I will also be posting some of the items here in my Tracking the Canadian War on Science tumblr blog, especially as they apply to the broader issues at play. In fact, those items here will probably be posted on the tumblr first.
As a reminder, my master War on Science chronology post is here: The Canadian War on Science: A long, unexaggerated, devastating chronological indictment. The relevant blog posts here on this blog can be found here.
General
- Science Pledge: A Strong Democracy Needs Strong Science by Evidence for Democracy
- Federal Candidates who have signed the pledge
- Citizens and Organizations who have signed the pledge
- Election Toolkit 2015: On October 19, Your Vote Matters More Than Ever by Debi Daviau, Professional Institute for the Public Service of Canada
- 10 Questions You Should Ask Federal Candidates in 2015 by PIPSC
- True North Smart and Free by Evidence for Democracy (interactive site with incidents in the Conservative war on science)
- Factbox: Canadian parties vie over economy, security, environment by Randall Palmer (Quick summary of basic policies)
Only the Green Party seems to have released a real election platform document that I could find. I’ll keep a lookout for those as the campaign rolls on. If I’ve missed one of the other party’s platform document, please let me know.
The Platforms
- Conservative Party
- Green Party: Vision Green
- Liberal Party
- New Democratic Party
The Campaign
- 2014.07.18. Green Party Talks 2015 Federal Election Strategy As Convention Begins by Althia Raj
- 2014.12.xx. Putting science policy on the radar for next federal election by CAUT
- 2014.12.01. Federal scientists to mount ‘evidence-based’ campaign against government cuts, being muzzled by Rachel Aiello
- 2015.01.xx. Will the Environment be Election Road Kill on the Road to Paris? by David McLaughlin
- 2015.01.01. Naomi Klein on fracking, Indigenous rights and Canada’s federal election by Jenny Uechi
- 2015.01.21. ENVIRONMENTAL TOP 10 for Election Year by Nikita (Nik) Lopoukhine
- 2015.01.22. Top 10 environmental issues for Canada’s next election by Timothy Gillespie
- 2015.02.05. Energy East carries election issues from Quebec to English Canada by David Gray-Donald
- 2015.03.xx. 13 Essential Questions for Election Candidates: Make the environment an election issue this year by asking these key questions by Andrew Reeves
- 2015.04.07. 61% of Canadians say protecting the climate more important than pipelines and tarsands: National poll shows Canadians want leadership on climate protection by Climate Action Network
- 2015.04.15. Canadian research advocates criticize ‘big science’ budget by Ivan Semeniuk
- 2015.04.22. Most Canadians Support Carbon Pricing, See Climate as Election Issue: New Poll by Carol Linnitt
- 2015.04.30. Obama unlikely to unveil Keystone move during Canada election by David Ljundgren
- 2015.04.30. Stephen Harper draws up election 2015 strategy on climate change by Chris Hall
- 2015.05.13. NDP Leader Outlines Vision for Energy and the Environment by Global Public Affairs
- 2015.05.15. Public Service Week gets political ahead of election by Kathryn May
- 2015.06.15. Elizabeth May Reveals Green Party’s Major Climate Change Election Platform by Jim Bronskill
- 2015.06.26. Trudeau vows Liberal environment plan will ‘be putting a price on carbon’ by Daniel Leblanc and Andrea Woo
- 2015.07.01. This Election’s about Canada’s Frighteningly Near Future: Where will we be in less than a generation? The trends are alarming by Ian Gill
- 2015.07.15. Agriculture researchers aim to put sector on election agenda by Kelsey Johnson
- 2015.07.22. New GreenPAC Keen On Making Environment An Election Issue by Kristy Kirkup
- 2015.07.28. Olivia Chow announces candidacy by Fram Dinshaw
- 2015.07.30. What Canadians Want the Party Leaders to Talk About During the Election Campaign: Issues that Matter to them Personally by Ipsos
- 2015.07.31. Will the War on Science Become an Election Issue? by James Wilt
- 2015.07.31. Federal science, tech announcements home in on Canada’s Arctic by CBC News
- 2015.08.02. Everything you need to know about the parties’ platforms, from taxes and terrorism to the environment by Jason Fekete, Ian MacLeod, Lee Berthiaume
- 2015.08.02. Factbox: Canadian parties vie over economy, security, environment by Randall Palmer
With any luck, the Conservatives will lose the coming election handily and I can re-orient my weird list-making mania towards something more enjoyable.
This list is just a start towards documenting the election conversation about science-related topics. As usual, if I’ve missed anything important or if I’ve made any errors, please let me know in the comments or at jdupuis at yorku dot ca. If you don’t want to use my work email, you can reach me at dupuisj at gmail dot com.
from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1JJdoAN
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