More from the Fraser Institute

The Fraser Institute offers several innovative programs and initiatives that encourage improvement and honour achievements.

 

Raymond Addington

Addington Centre for Measurement

Named for the late Raymond Addington, former chairman of the Fraser Institute Board of Trustees, the Addington Centre for the Study of Measurement was established in 2008. The Centre commemorates Mr. Addington by awarding the annual Addington Prize to a person or team who has researched a new, interesting, and important concept in public policy, exemplifying the Fraser Institute’s motto: If it matters, measure it.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

 

Compare School Rankings

Compare School Rankings

Compare School Rankings website provides detailed reports on how each school is doing in academics compared to other ranked schools. It also shows whether the school’s results are improving, declining, or just staying steady over the most recent five years. The Fraser Institute ranks schools using objective, publicly-available data such as average scores on province-wide tests. Rankings are done for Alberta Elementary and High Schools, British Columbia Elementary and Secondary Schools, Ontario Elementary and Secondary Schools, and Quebec Secondary Schools.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

 

Econ Journal Watch

EJW - Econ Journal Watch

Led by George Mason University’s Dan Klein, Econ Journal Watch, a web-based triannual journal and podcast, has provided an outlet for pointed, constructive criticism of professional economics for 15 years, and continues to welcome submissions that challenge articles and arguments appearing in economic journals. Nine Nobel laureates have lent their names to the journal’s advisory council.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

 

Essential Adam Smith

Essential Scholars

Essential Scholars is a project by the Fraser Institute that presents the key ideas of the most influential economists and thinkers of all time in plain language, using contemporary examples for a new generation. At EssentialScholars.org, you can download the books for free and watch entertaining, educational animated videos that bring to life the ideas of Adam Smith, John Locke, F. A. Hayek, Milton Friedman and others.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

 

Fraser Institute Founders' Award

Fraser Institute Founders' Award

The Fraser Institute Founders’ Award, named after founders T. Patrick Boyle and Michael A. Walker, is the Institute’s highest honour. The award is presented annually to individuals in recognition of their exceptional entrepreneurial achievements, generous philanthropic endeavors and dedication to competitive markets. These individuals are role models for the next generation of entrepreneurs and leaders.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

 

Fraser Institute Foundation

Fraser Legacy

The Fraser Institute Foundation works with donors, families, and advisors to facilitate planned giving in support of the Fraser Institute, Canada's leading public policy think-tank. Gifts to the Fraser Institute Foundation ensure the ongoing research and education programs produced by the Fraser Institute will continue to benefit Canadians for generations to come.

 

Troubled Waters for the Canadian Economy

Troubled Waters for the Canadian Economy

As Canadians start to worry more about the state of our economy, the Fraser Institute has assembled a series of studies and op-eds by our researchers that clarify many of the underlying policy problems that continue to encumber our economy. Resolving or even just improving these many policy-based problems that range from higher taxes, larger government, rising deficits and debt, land claim uncertainty, and policies impeding resource development offer the opportunity to improve our economic performance in a challenging economic environment.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

 

Women and Progress

Women and Progress

The Fraser Institute’s internationally-renowned Economic Freedom of the World Index was recently adjusted for gender equality, which resulted in lower scores for countries where women are less economically free than men. WomenandProgress.org was launched in March 2018 to highlight the ways greater levels of economic freedom—the ability of individuals to make their own decisions about what to buy, where to work, whether to start a business or engage in trade—dramatically improve women’s lives around the world.

FOR MORE INFORMATION