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 Javier Martín Vide, Catedrático de Geografía Física, Universitat de Barcelona
El Niño is a recurring climate event with impacts across the globe. It has three phases: one cold (known as La Niña), one neutral, and one warm (El Niño).

In 2026, spring in the northern hemisphere took place in a neutral phase, which followed a relatively mild La Niña. Short-term forecast models indicate that by mid-year it is very likely that we will enter an El Niño phase. This El Niño could become very intense towards the end of the year, with talk of a “super-El Niño”. But…The Conversation (Full Story)

By Robbie Moore, Senior Lecturer in English, University of Tasmania
Amanda Lohrey’s Capture plays out as a sequence of conversations in strange rooms.

The centre of the novel is the consulting room of psychiatrist James Mather, lately stripped of all its therapeutic paintings and suggestive curios to a state of clinical blankness. There is also the apartment where the psychiatrist and his former lover regard each other from “two enormous couches in the centre of the room”. And there are the rooms of a shiatsuThe Conversation (Full Story)

By Ari Mattes, Lecturer in Communications and Media, University of Notre Dame Australia
For a nation obsessed with professional sport, there is a surprising dearth of Aussie sports films. There have been, of course, a handful of memorable ones: The Club (1980), The Coolangatta Gold (1984) and, more recently, The Final Winter (2007).

But apart from the low-budget 2024 film Life After Fighting – understandable if you haven’t heard of it, it made less than A$6,000 at the box office – Beast is the first Australian film to be set in the world of mixed martial arts.

Patton…The Conversation (Full Story)

By Amanda Turnbull-McRae, Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Waikato
As AI models become cheaper and more attractive, they will likely encourage new uses and higher volumes of use – erasing any efficiency gains.The Conversation (Full Story)
By Justine Nolan, Professor of Law and Justice and Director of the Australian Human Rights Institute, UNSW Sydney
Using tariffs to make nations act on forced labour is questionable. Yet there is substance behind the US allegations – including that Australia hasn’t done enough.The Conversation (Full Story)
By Luke Nottage, Professor of Comparative and Transnational Law, University of Sydney; University of Tokyo
Can consumers be confident the products we buy online now are safe? Not really. Changing the law to catch up with other countries would help.The Conversation (Full Story)
By Nicola Postol, Research Fellow, Cerebral Palsy Alliance Research Institute, University of Sydney
Cerebral palsy is the most common disability that starts in childhood, affecting about 50 million people worldwide.

Cerebral palsy can impact a person’s ability to move their body. This can result in mobility problems, muscle stiffness or weakness, and abnormal movements. There are often other neurological issues as well, such as epilepsy or visual impairment.

Physiotherapy can help people…The Conversation (Full Story)

By Gary Mortimer, Professor of Marketing and Consumer Behaviour, Queensland University of Technology
Paul J. Maginn, Director, UWA Public Policy Institute, The University of Western Australia
Small stores, local produce and the return of the personal shopping assistant: supermarkets are starting to look like they did in the 1800s.The Conversation (Full Story)
By Vaughan Cruickshank, Senior Lecturer in Health and Physical Education, University of Tasmania
Tom Hartley, Lecturer in Health and Physical Education, University of Tasmania
For decades, basketball was dominated by super tall players crowding around the basket for easy shots. Then things changed with a stroke of paint.The Conversation (Full Story)
By Amnesty International
Greek police frequently use unnecessary or excessive force against peaceful protesters and journalists resulting in serious physical and psychological injuries, Amnesty International said in a report published today, as it called for a ban on the use of stun grenades in the policing of protests.   Protests are not battlefields: Patterns of unlawful use of force by police and impunity in Greece finds that these deeply disturbing abuses are underpinned by protest legislation that […] The post Greece: Dangerous policing tactics have turned peaceful protests into battlefields      appeared first… (Full Story)
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