Printer-friendly version

The Report Card on Alberta's High Schools: 2006 Edition collects a variety of relevant, objective indicators of school performance into one, easily accessible document so that anyone can analyze and compare the performance of individual schools. The Report Card assists parents when they choose a school for their children and encourages and assists all those seeking to improve their schools.

Printer-friendly version

Report Card on Ontario's Elementary Schools: 2006 Edition 2006-06-01 The Report Card on Ontario's Elementary Schools: 2006 Edition collects a variety of relevant, objective indicators of school performance into one, easily accessible public document so that anyone can analyz

Printer-friendly version

In this third volume of Canada Strong and Free, Mike Harris and Preston Manning propose to revitalize and rebalance Confederation to make Canada the best governed democratic federation federation in the world.

Printer-friendly version

The Report Card on British Columbia's Elementary Schools: 2006 Edition collects a variety of relevant, objective indicators of school performance into one, accessible document so that anyone can analyze and compare the performance of individual schools. The Report Card assists parents choose a school for their children and encourages and assists all those seeking to improve their schools.

Printer-friendly version

This study evaluates the extent to which labour relations laws bring flexibility to the labour market while balancing the needs of employers and employees.

Printer-friendly version

This book is a summary of the latest results of a Fraser Institute project that began in July, 1975. Its objective was to find out how much tax, in all forms, Canadians pay to federal, provincial, and municipal governments and how the size of this tax bill has changed over the years since 1961. In the interim, 13 editions of this book have been published.

Printer-friendly version

In this Fraser Institute Digital Publication, we examine the evidence provided by judicial inquiries and reports and by other scholarly and journalistic investigations of the RCMP. The sources include testimony before the Gomery Commission, the first Report of the Gomery Commission, several reports of the Auditor General, the Report of the Hughes Commission, and several other analyses of the federal police. Whatever the impact of underfunding, it seems clear that politicization is a greater problem, not only for reasons noted above but because it has meant a decline in the core competencies of the Force, namely the enforcement of federal laws. That is, the RCMP as an institution appears to be less capable today than it was in the past as well as less capable than it proclaims itself to be. It is this last problem, the disconnect between image and reality that is at the heart of the federal police.