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Skip to Search Results- 63Edmonton Social Planning Council
- 7Kolkman, John
- 5Community Trends Working Group
- 4Ahorro, Joseph
- 4Public Interest Alberta
- 2Moore-Kilgannon, Bill
- 42Canada, Alberta
- 21Poverty--Statistics
- 20Canada, Alberta, Edmonton
- 14Economic indicators
- 14Poverty
- 13Social indicators
- 64Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)
- 21Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Poverty and Social Assistance (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 16Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Children, Youth and Family (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 9Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Community Development and Planning (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 7Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Health (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 4Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Women (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
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2012-11-01
Achieving the Promise: Ending Poverty in Alberta focuses on child and family poverty in Alberta during the post-recession period. Despite the incredible wealth in our province, there are still thousands of Albertans who are struggling to make ends meet. This report shows that more work needs to...
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2002
Edmonton Social Planning Council
This edition continues to identify emerging trends by reporting comparative data for the indicators first introduced and measured in 1997.
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1998
Edmonton Social Planning Council
Edmonton LIFE is a collaborative, ongoing project that has established a shared definition of quality of life in Edmonton. The project provides an accessible and comprehensive report measuring health, environmental, economic and social indicators.
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1989-11-01
Edmonton Social Planning Council
This package includes a brief overview of the Edmonton Social Planning Council, an article on poverty in Edmonton written by Peter Faid, the May 1989 issue of Alberta Facts (on child poverty) and various back issues of the ESPC's publication \"first reading\".
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1995
Burrows, Bill, Edmonton Social Planning Council
The Family Budgeting Guide is designed primarily to assist low-income families and their counsellors determine basic income needs. It is intended as a tool for efficient budgeting of limited resources, and as a benchmark for those developing or reforming income security programs.