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Blog entries by Tim McSorley

posted by Tim McSorley

The G8 & G20 will be coming to Toronto & Huntsville this coming June. What are these organisations? How do they impact our lives & those around the world? What is Canada's changing role within them?

There are lots of questions that need to be answered, and we hope you'll join us in providing some of them this coming May when we launch our G8/G20 special Issue. We've just sent out the call for pitches. Read on for all the info!

 

The Dominion is seeking pitches for our May 2010 special issue on the 2010 G8 and G20 summits taking place in Ontario this coming June. Submit your pitches by Feb. 24.

Some of the issues we hope to cover include:

  • G-8, G-20 Security, both past and present
  • Critical analysis of anti-globalization convergences: Can the radical, labour, green and political left movements work together?  
  • Impacts of global economics on Indigenous communities
  • G-8/G-20’s role in resource exploitation, locally and globally
  • From Copenhagen to the G20, global politics and the ecological crisis
  • Stories from the streets of Toronto and Huntsville
  • The effects of global economic forums on previous host cities (Seattle 1999, London/Pittsburg, Kananaskis, Quebec/Montebello)
  • HIV/AIDS and the G summits

We're looking for pieces in a variety of different of formats, not limited to:

  • briefs (150 to 200 words)
  • articles (800-1000 words)
  • features (1,600 words)
  • info-graphics, graphs and maps
  • comics, and illustrations,
  • Online video and audio content online to supplement the special issue.

The Dominion has a modest budget to pay writers and contributors whose pitches are accepted.

If you've got an idea for something you'd like to contribute for The Dominion's G-8/G-20 special issue, please submit your pitch here:

www.mediacoop.ca/node/add/pitch

. Deadline for pitches is February 24, 2010.

If you do not have a Media Co-op account (which you can also use to post photos, audio, video and stories directly to the Media Co-op site), you’ll need to set one up. It takes about a minute, here:

www.mediacoop.ca/user

.

We'd also invite you to consult and participate in our discussion group where...

posted by Tim McSorley

Hi folks,

We're now accepting pitches for the March 2010 issue of The Dominion. Read on to find out all the salient details...

A penny for your thoughts!

The Dominion / Media Co-op pays two contributors each month to write news features: Pitch us your story!

This month, we are particularly interested in:

- The co-operative movement in Canada
- Canadian involvement in the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign over the continued Israeli occupation of Palestine
- Canadian forces and migration in Haiti

We are also actively looking for (and prioritizing) solutions-oriented news pieces on stories with a Canadian angle. See our writer's guide for suggested topics and for details about writing for The Dominion:

www.dominionpaper.ca/write.

Pitches are welcome from anyone; priority goes to those who have previously contributed.

To pitch an article, fill out the form on this page:

www.mediacoop.ca/node/add/pitch

If you do not have a Media Co-op account (which you can also use to post photos, audio, video and stories directly to the Media Co-op site), you’ll need to set one up. It takes about a minute, here:

www.mediacoop.ca/user

The Dominion / Media Co-op currently pays a flat rate of $100 for accepted stories. Articles are either 800 or 1600 words. Editors reserve the right to suggest changes and edit stories (with your participation, of course!). Pitches should capture the content, tone and style of the story you plan to write; if the content of the article submitted differs significantly from the pitch, editors reserve the right to withhold payment. The Dominion accepts pitches at any time.

Deadline for pitches: February 4
Response to pitches: February 5
First draft deadline for accepted articles: February 15
Final draft deadline: February 21

Our next call for pitches will go out on February 15 and will be for our upcoming special issue on the G8 & G20, slated for May 2010.

Best,

-The Editors

posted by Tim McSorley

On the second day of the UN Climate Negotiations in Copenhagen, climate justice activists occupied a meeting of the House of Commons' Environment Committee, calling on Canada to adhere to its Kytoto Protocol targets and to stop production in the Alberta tar sands.

Six youth members of People for Climate justice entered the committee meeting room. Removing their street clothes they revealed t-shirts with the words 'Climate Action Now.' They were able to move forward and sit-down briefly in the meeting room before being quickly removed by security. All six were detained for about an hour and charged with trespassing, which carries a fine. It is unclear whether the charges will be contested. One protester had all her photos of the event deleted from her camera with no justification given.

Kawina Robichaud, a Yukon Territory resident who took part in the action, said it came in response to "government inaction" on climate change.

The group is calling on the government to agree to meet their Kyoto Protocol targets of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by six per cent by 2012 and to immediately stop all development of the Alberta tar sands. The Conservative government has set its own target of 20 per cent below 2006 levels by 2020, which is much lower than what most believe is necessary to have an impact on climate change. Tar sands development accounts for five per cent of Canada's greenhouse gas emissions and have been identified as a key roadblock to Canada meeting its Kyoto Protocol targets. They are considered the single largest reason Canada's greenhouse gas emissions are increasing, and, on average, production of one barrel of oil from the tar sands produces fives times more GHG emissions than conventional oil sources.

Between 1990 and 2007, Canada saw its emissions increase more than 26 per cent.

Both yesterday and today, Canada was awarded a Fossil Fool award in Copenhagen for blocking negotiations on eliminating climate change. Yesterday, Greenpeace members scaled the parliament building and unfurled banners reading "Stop Climate Inaction" and "Shut Down the Tar Sands."

"We're there because millions are dying around the world and the government doesn't seem to care. We feel like we don't have any other choice," said Robichaud, contacted shortly after the sit-in by The Dominion. "The government's continued failure to act is a crime against humanity and...

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