Canada’s largest Chinatown has been under siege for over a century: first by race riots, then by poverty and most recently by the threat of development. We’re telling the story of why Chinatown, Vancouver, is one of Canada’s most resilient neighbourhoods, forced to evolve and adapt in the face of horrific racism. The future of Chinatowns everywhere should be in the hands of the people who live, work and find community there. So what does the future hold for a neighbourhood constantly in flux?
This episode of The Globe and Mail’s City Space podcast is available to stream wherever you get your podcasts.
Questions? Comments? Ideas? Email us at thedecibel@globeandmail.com
How a group of Buddhist monks bought up a chunk of PEI
Ukrainian refugees fled to Poland. Now thousands are leaving
Can a 4 billion year-old asteroid reveal the origins of life?
A Dollarama executive, a luxury home and a World Heritage site
Why it’s so hard to bring food prices down
Will 3.45 million new homes solve Canada’s housing crisis?
What’s behind the delays in Canada’s courts?
Introducing: In Her Defence, a new true crime podcast
The view from India after allegations of killing in Canada
Your Ontario Greenbelt questions, answered
Trudeau accuses India of involvement in Canadian’s murder
Coup contagion – why Africa’s had nine coups in three years
A Trudeau-Poilievre showdown as Parliament resumes
Lessons from the massive daycare E.Coli outbreak in Calgary
A multi-billion dollar bet on natural gas
What you need to know about COVID this fall
Australia resolved its news standoff with Meta. Could Canada?
The first criminal trial for ‘Freedom Convoy’ leaders
How international students became big business for schools
Canada’s wildfires dwarf emissions from all other industries
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Morning Wire
The Daily
Up First
Dobré ráno | Denný podcast denníka SME
Today, Explained