Tolerance.ca
Director / Editor: Victor Teboul, Ph.D.
Looking inside ourselves and out at the world
Independent and neutral with regard to all political and religious orientations, Tolerance.ca® aims to promote awareness of the major democratic principles on which tolerance is based.
Human Rights Observatory
By David Nemer, Associate Professor in the Department of Media Studies, University of Virginia
Betting has turned passion into a transaction, with poor families in Brazil and elsewhere spending money that could have gone to food, transport, diapers, electricity, or rentThe Conversation (Full Story)
By Moira A. McDonald, Associate Dean, Associate Professor, Faculty of Interdisciplinary Studies, Royal Roads University
Ann-Kathrin McLean, School Director & Assistant Professor, Faculty of Interdisciplinary Studies, Royal Roads University
Oreoluwa Adeniyi, Master of Arts in Tourism Management, Royal Roads University
Shimaya Sureshbabu, Master of Arts in Tourism Management, Royal Roads University
Canada’s tourism industry enters the summer riding one of the strongest years on record, but high airfares, rising fuel costs and a troubled geopolitical climate could change this year’s outlook.The Conversation (Full Story)
By Katayoun Shahandeh, Lecturer in Museum Studies, SOAS, University of London
With Iran’s official cultural presence on the international stage increasingly uncertain, the 6th Iranian Contemporary Art Biennale in London, With My Roots, carries significance that extends well beyond the gallery walls.

Held at Mall Galleries from May 22–30, it brings together more than 100 Iranian artists from 17 countries, with over 180 works spanning painting, photography,…The Conversation (Full Story)

By Sam Jelliman, Researcher, Environmental Science, University of East London
Alan Chandler, Dean of the Sustainability Research Institute, University of East London
Europe is rethinking security: as geopolitical tensions rise, Russia looms and climate risks intensify, can restoring nature help defend both nations and the planet?The Conversation (Full Story)
By Juan Alfonso Revenga Frauca, Director experto, Grado de Nutrición Humana y Dietética, Universidad Internacional de Valencia; Universidad San Jorge
One of science’s main roles in society is to probe extraordinary claims, separate fact from fiction, and set the record straight. But it does not always succeed. Indeed, sometimes the exact opposite happens.

“Science” itself can sometimes take things out of context, and present half-truths which, repeated over generations, eventually come to seem like total certainties. These ideas do not necessarily take root because they are true, but because they sound good, seem like common sense, and often carry the authority of being linked to an eminent name.

When it comes to diet…The Conversation (Full Story)

By Charlotte A. Kukowski, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Climate Change Mitigation, University of Cambridge
Kimberly Nicholas, Associate Professor of Sustainability Science, Lund University
Climate action goes way beyond consumption. Find the most effective actions within your current roles, and overcome barriers for you and others to take them.The Conversation (Full Story)
By Gill Plain, Professor of English Literature and Popular Culture, University of St Andrews
Besides wit, style and psychological insight, Christie had the capacity to generate a mood of ‘trustful mistrust’ and deceive her readers in a respectful fashion.The Conversation (Full Story)
By Roman Pavlyuchenko, Lecturer in Marketing, University of Bath
Audiences are not tired of superheroes – they’re tired of stories that no longer speak to the political anxieties that made the genre powerful in the first place.The Conversation (Full Story)
By Andre Spicer, Professor of Organisational Behaviour, Bayes Business School, City St George's, University of London
When Wes Streeting and Andy Burnham announced that they intend to challenge Keir Starmer as prime minister, it felt like the start of a depressingly familiar loop. A leader who had made many great-sounding promises failed to deliver and lost the trust of the public. The public demands he quit, and he may soon be replaced by another leader who also makes impressive pledges.

During the past decade the UK has seen this loop many times. There have been five leaders of the UK government – an average…The Conversation (Full Story)

By Sandra Matz, Professor of Business, Columbia University
Is sharing your data worth what you’re getting out of it? That may be the wrong question to ask when you are thinking about whether to share.The Conversation (Full Story)
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