Family Studies
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Is demographic collapse a good idea?
5 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 21, 2026Generic semaglutide to hit Canadian pharmacies this week at a fraction of the cost of Ozempic
5 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 21, 2026Music as therapy — singing through tears
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 20, 2026Designated encampments are a poor solution
5 minute read Wednesday, May. 20, 2026The overall shrinking of public space and degradation of the policy environment on use of public space is contributing to people experiencing homelessness being less safe — and contributing to interest in ideas like designated encampments. Unfortunately, this direction fails to centre the interests of people living unhoused. Further, we forget too easily that any consideration of land use on Treaty 1 land needs to start with historic claims and ancestral rights.
Among people experiencing homelessness, Indigenous people are overrepresented. Many people are living unsheltered on their own ancestral territories. Having endured intergenerational theft that started with land (transferred to settlers whose descendants now enjoy generational wealth), and continued with limits on movement, ability to make money, access to education and more, they are now actively surviving homelessness. Yet, the limits on their person continue.
Recent years have seen the closure and limits on use of public space throughout the downtown and broader city. These include Portage Place mall, the Millennium Library and Winnipeg Transit, and previously through the closure of downtown single-room occupancy hotels and their barrooms.
For some time, the city has been telegraphing an intention to limit access to outdoor public space according to housing status. At every opportunity, those cautioning against this move have raised the problem of limiting those with ancestral rights, and further limiting free movement of citizens on public land. The latter has been decided through B.C. legal process, and suggests the City of Winnipeg’s exposure to risk as it moves forward.
It takes a village to raise — and educate — a child
6 minute read Tuesday, May. 19, 2026The oft-quoted saying, “it takes a village to raise a child,” resembles an African proverb. In the Yoruba language, the saying goes “two eyes birth a child, but 200 eyes raise it.”
Over the past several decades, that saying has come to mean something entirely different from what villagers meant, in Africa and in the small town where I grew up. The saying meant two, equally important things. It meant the community has a stake in ensuring that children are properly cared for, but the saying also meant that children must be taught and understand their obligations to the community at large.
The 200 eyes raising the child in the village did not look away when the parents or a child failed to observe community standards. When a child disrespected someone in the community, they were corrected. The village had a clear code of conduct that governed what was expected behaviour. These mores, or societal expectations, were understood and enforced by both parents and community members.
Everyone needs to understand their society’s written and unwritten rules. It is our obligation to teach our children the expectations we have of each other.
$61-M investment in high-speed Internet planned for northern First Nations
4 minute read Preview Friday, May. 15, 2026Moose Hide Campaign against gender-based violence starts national conversations
5 minute read Preview Friday, May. 15, 2026Supreme Court recognizes intimate partner violence as a legal basis for civil damages
5 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 16, 2026Health officials working to control hepatitis A outbreak in province
4 minute read Preview Monday, May. 11, 2026The future you is no distant stranger
6 minute read Saturday, May. 9, 2026The longevity industry wants your money. Red-light-therapy panels. Continuous glucose monitors. Cold-plunge tubs. Peptide stacks. IV drips. Supplements with names you can’t pronounce.
It’s a billion-dollar industry built on one very human fear: getting old, falling apart and running out of time.
And look, some of that stuff has merit. But here’s what nobody selling a $600 bio-hacking device wants to admit — the most powerful longevity tools you’ll ever use are free. And you already know what they are.
I turned 41 this year.
New craft exhibition gives artists licence to lighten up
6 minute read Preview Friday, May. 8, 2026Hep A outbreak in province’s North makes its way to Winnipeg, officials scrambling to vaccinate people at high risk
3 minute read Preview Friday, May. 8, 2026Relocation of program for young moms earns poor marks
5 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026The Winnipeg School Division is facing backlash over plans to relocate its holistic education program for pregnant teenagers and young moms.
Starting in September, the Adolescent Parent Centre — an off-campus program that’s been housed at 136 Cecil St. since 1989 — will operate inside a North End high school.
“One of the big reasons I wanted to go is because I knew I’d be in a school surrounded by a bunch of people who were in the exact same situation as me,” said Billie Pryor, a 2023 graduate who enrolled when she, then 14, was pregnant with the first of her three children.
Pryor, 20, said the student population, free on-site daycare rooms and distance from traditional high schools, where gossip is commonplace and physical fights break out, were part of its appeal.
U of M fundraising $30K for dedicated breastfeeding space
4 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 7, 2026Parents irked after school ditches Mother’s Day
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 6, 2026Discount stores drive Loblaw’s Q1 profit and sales, raises quarterly dividend
4 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 7, 2026An important step for provincial child care
5 minute read Preview Monday, May. 4, 2026Structured approach needed with tech
4 minute read Monday, May. 4, 2026Families need our help and support. Technology has done many things to better our world; from life-saving medical advances to connecting people across the world to efficiencies in our everyday lives.