This article originally appeared at CleanEnergyCanada.org. When the leaders of Ontario and Quebec met this past summer, they planted the seeds of a
Since a growing number of economic decisions are being made based in part on sustainability-related information, ensuring the reliability of such data
This article was originally published in The Wall Street Journal’s Washington Wire. When news broke that the U.S. had signed a far-reaching
Inequality is a stubborn problem A new study that analyzed the correlation between education and surnames in England between 1170 and 2012
The Rowe School of Business at Dalhousie University hosted the Ethics in Action conference last weekend in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The event encouraged business
A Canadian Olympian-turned-lawyer received the second annual Scotiabank Ethical Leadership Award last week for his role in the fight against doping in
It’s not a commission in the traditional sense – that is, one established by and in the service of government – but
China commits to cutting coal The Chinese government announced yesterday that it will cap its coal use by 2020 in order to uphold
This post was written by the Institute for Transportation & Development Policy and originally appeared on its website. Charting a strong course for the
U.S. makes $3-billion climate pledge President Obama declared that the United States will contribute $3 billion to a fund that will help