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In response to requests from across the province, The Fraser Institute has developed, and today released, the inaugural Report Card on Alberta's Elementary Schools .

This annual Report Card uses relevant, publicly-available data to rate and rank 757 of Alberta's public, separate, private, charter, and francophone elementary schools. This is the first time in Canada that such a comprehensive report on elementary schools has been widely distributed.

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Given the specific challenges facing Saskatchewan, this study includes both immediate and longer- term recommendations. Immediate Policy Recommendations.

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In this Study, the author makes three points. First, to understand contemporary terrorism, one must consider both the material and the spiritual context within which it has developed. Second, an analysis of recent trends in terrorism might answer the question: what, if anything, is new about early twenty-first century terrorism? Third, the paper considers briefly what might be done.

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The Corporate Capital Tax: Canada's Most Damaging Tax explains the nature of the Corporation Capital Tax and documents the extent to which it is used in different jurisdictions within Canada. The explanation makes it clear that the tax is probably the most damaging of all of the taxes on capital, primarily because it is payable whether or not a company has a profit. In addition, the study provides strong evidence that the tax has detrimental effects on productivity and economic growth.

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This fourth annual Report Card is the only one of its kind to analyze relevant, publicly-available data to rate and rank 270 of Alberta's public, separate, private, and francophone high schools. The Report Card provides an objective benchmark against which schools can improve.

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The existing Canadian securities regulatory system is composed of 13 provincial and territorial securities regulatory authorities (SRAs) as well as various self-regulatory organizations (SROs). The SRAs generally have similar objectives.

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Ever since the beginning of the United Alternative project in May 1998, conservative politics in Canada have revolved around the quest to unite the right. The formation of the Canadian Alliance consumed 1998 and 1999; then, after that party did not do as well as its founders hoped in the 2000 election, a new round of efforts commenced to bring the Alliance together with the Progressive Conservatives