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Sep. 16, 2018

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Our cities’ lack of public bathrooms is an urban planning failure that has prevented people from freely using different parts of the city. Seila Rizvic visits the Centre for the Prevention of Radicalization Leading to Violence, a Montreal non-profit that works to bring people back from radicalization, without forcing a reversal of ideology.

Plus: a new cultural centre in Nunavut, built by the community for the community, celebrates contemporary Inuit art.
 
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SOCIETY
How Public Toilets Fail Our Private Needs
Cities are flushing away the chance to make their public spaces liveable
BY LEZLIE LOWE
POLITICS
Even Radical Extremists Deserve a Second Chance
How a Montreal group is working to defuse the rage that fuels extremism
BY SEILA RIZVIC
FILM
Movie Night in Tehran
What it’s like to love films in a country where they’re banned
BY MEHDI M. KASHANI
ARTS & CULTURE
The Future of Inuit Art
A new cultural centre in Nunavut is shaping the next wave of printmaking in Cape Dorset
BY CATHERINE DEAN
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OPIOIDS: A PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS
The Other Side of Fentanyl
I have terminal cancer, and without the powerful painkiller, I live in agony
BY TEVA HARRISON
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POETRY
Forgotten Work
There also was an obit for Oasis; The aging rockers had fused and perished, faces Picassoed, mop tops mixed
BY JASON GURIEL
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EVENTS
Toronto: The Walrus Talks Disruption on Nov. 6
Eight speakers, including musician Mustafa Ahmed and journalist Tanya Talaga, will explore the rapidly-changing landscapes of technology, education, comedy, identity, and more. Presented by Concordia University.
Get your tickets today
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