Search
Skip to Search Results- 11Edmonton Social Planning Council
- 11Kolkman, John
- 5Community Trends Working Group
- 4Ahorro, Joseph
- 3Public Interest Alberta
- 2Moore-Kilgannon, Bill
- 11Poverty--Statistics
- 10Canada, Alberta, Edmonton
- 6Economic indicators
- 6Human services--Forecasting
- 6Income--Statistics
- 6Population--Statistics
- 16Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)
- 7Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Poverty and Social Assistance (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 7Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Children, Youth and Family (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 3Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Housing (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 1Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Aboriginal Peoples (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 1Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Cultural Diversity (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
-
Tracking the trends: future directions for human services in Edmonton. Special feature on aboriginal people.
Download1993-05-01
Community Trends Working Group
The fourth edition includes a special section on trends and service implications for Aboriginal peoples.
-
Tracking the trends: future directions for human services in Edmonton. Special feature on families with children.
Download1990-06-01
Community Trends Working Group
This second edition includes a focus on the social trends and service implications for families with children.
-
Tracking the trends: future directions for human services in Edmonton. Special feature on immigrants.
Download1991-09-01
Edmonton Social Planning Council
\"Tracking the Trends looks at the major social and economic trends likely to influence human services in Edmonton- now and in the near future. The 1991 [3rd] edition has, as its special focus, trends and service implications as they affect Edmonton's immigrant population.\"
-
We can do better: toward an Alberta child poverty reduction strategy for children and families
Download2008-11-01
Edmonton Social Planning Council, Kolkman, John
A new provincial report on Child and Family poverty released today by the Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC) reveals that 77,595 children are living in families below Statistics Canadas Low Income Cut Off (LICO). This means one in ten children in Alberta live below the poverty line.