Ht-Logo-gigapixel-icon
Saturday, November 23, 2024
Canada’s Politics and Government News Source Since 1989
Saturday, November 23, 2024 | Latest Paper

Sarah Doyle

Let’s hard-wire inclusion into Canada’s innovation economy

Opinion | BY SARAH DOYLE | October 1, 2018
Automation promises to enhance productivity, but according to research from the Brookfield Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, people with lower incomes and education, and in certain communities, such as manufacturing or mining towns, will face the brunt of the resulting job disruption. Photograph courtesy of WolfVision GmbH
Opinion | BY SARAH DOYLE | October 1, 2018
Opinion | BY SARAH DOYLE | October 1, 2018
Automation promises to enhance productivity, but according to research from the Brookfield Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, people with lower incomes and education, and in certain communities, such as manufacturing or mining towns, will face the brunt of the resulting job disruption. Photograph courtesy of WolfVision GmbH
Opinion | BY SARAH DOYLE | October 1, 2018
Automation promises to enhance productivity, but according to research from the Brookfield Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, people with lower incomes and education, and in certain communities, such as manufacturing or mining towns, will face the brunt of the resulting job disruption. Photograph courtesy of WolfVision GmbH
Opinion | BY SARAH DOYLE | October 1, 2018
Opinion | BY SARAH DOYLE | October 1, 2018
Automation promises to enhance productivity, but according to research from the Brookfield Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, people with lower incomes and education, and in certain communities, such as manufacturing or mining towns, will face the brunt of the resulting job disruption. Photograph courtesy of WolfVision GmbH