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 Hong Kong is cracking down on dissent
As conflict rages in Gaza, a ‘silent war’ in the West Bank
The capital gains tax, explained
ArriveCan and the government’s outsourcing problem
The stakes of India’s election as Modi seeks third term
What the 2024 federal budget means for you
How a new kind of drug could change the future of Alzheimer’s
City Space: How Halifax’s unhoused crisis got so bad
What we’ve learned from the foreign interference inquiry
Former health minister Jane Philpott’s plan to save health care
Why major economies are trying to woo Vietnam
How seafood from North Korean forced labour ends up in Canada
The big business bet on psychedelic drugs
The deadly challenges of getting aid into Gaza
School boards take on social media giants
Canada’s uncertain AI future
Four reasons why you can’t afford housing
What to know about the upcoming total solar eclipse
How sleep affects our brains
Amid a housing crisis, students build tiny homes for teachers
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Morning Wire
The Daily
Up First
Dobré ráno | Denný podcast denníka SME
Today, Explained