Spencer Low
18Feb/130

A new mixed-raced generation is transforming Toronto

A new mixed-raced generation is transforming Toronto: Will the city be the world’s first post-racial metropolis? shar.es/YQGpt

Click on the image for 10 interviews with mixed-race Toronto children (from TorontoLife.com)

26Oct/120

Bilingual? In the Greater Toronto Area one-third are, but not necessarily in English/French

Bilingual? In the Greater Toronto Area one-third are, but not necessarily in English/French - bit.ly/R5It2x @TorontoStar

Mila Astorga-Garcia, managing editor of the Philippine Reporter said the increase in Canada's growing non-official-language bilingualism is partially due to changes Ottawa made to put more emphasis in immigrant selection on language proficiency and recruitment of skilled workers, who tend to be better educated.
(Andrew Francis Wallace for the Toronto Star)

 

3Sep/110

The world’s most liveable cities 2011: Australia and Canada dominate, is this biased?

The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) recently released their 2011 ranking of the world's most (and least) liveable cities. The big news was that Vancouver has, finally, been dethroned by both Melbourne and Vienna, and the hand-wringing reaction in British Columbia was immediate. It should be pointed out that the difference between the top three scores was only one-tenth of one percent: 97.5 for Melbourne, 97.4 for Vienna and 97.3 for Vancouver.  Vancouver cried foul about being penalized on infrastructure because a highway on Vancouver ISLAND experienced periodic closures (it's, facetiously, like London losing points for road problems on the Isle of Wight), but the EIU pointed out that the recent hockey riots in Vancouver hadn't been factored in. I wonder how that will affect the 2012 ranking...

Interesting (personally), Toronto was ranked #4, followed by Calgary.  In fact, seven of the top 10 cities are Australian and Canadian, with Auckland in New Zealand rounding out the list.  This reinforces a 2010 complaint levelled by the New York Times that "the Economist clearly equates livability with speaking English", although that advantage doesn't seem to help American or British cities…

So, is liveability is in the eye of the inhabitant? Or the statistician?

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Filed under: Geopolitics No Comments
16Aug/110

The world’s most expensive cities according to UBS

New York is no longer in the Top 10 given the slide in the US dollar; however, wages and hence purchasing power are still amongst the highest in the world. Interestingly, only 2 Eurozone cities are in the Top 10, while Toronto is now #9.

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Filed under: Miscellaneous No Comments