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Skip to Search Results- 7Kolkman, John
- 6Edmonton Social Planning Council
- 4Ahorro, Joseph
- 3Public Interest Alberta
- 2Moore-Kilgannon, Bill
- 1Alberta College of Social Workers
- 5Canada, Alberta
- 5Poverty--Statistics
- 4Poverty--Prevention
- 3Poverty
- 3Poverty--Government policy
- 2Canada, Alberta, Edmonton
- 7Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)
- 4Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Poverty and Social Assistance (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 3Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Children, Youth and Family (Edmonton Social Planning Council)
- 1Edmonton Social Planning Council (ESPC)/Cultural Diversity (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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2011
Co-published by the Edmonton Social Planning Council, the Alberta College of Social Workers and Public Interest Alberta, \"In This Together : Ending Poverty in Alberta\" identifies the need for a province-wide poverty reduction strategy in Alberta. It also discusses how the Government of Alberta...
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2010
Kolkman, John, Ahorro, Joseph, Varlen, Kory
Developing a comprehensive strategy to reduce if not eliminate poverty in Alberta.
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2011
Edmonton Social Planning Council, Ahorro, Joseph, Pinkoski, Jayda, Kolkman, John
The Edmonton Social Planning Council’s flagship publication Tracking the Trends contains the latest data of all the important social and economic trends affecting Edmonton. These trends are in the areas of education, employment, cost of living & housing, income, poverty, and government income...
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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.