Full video: An in-depth conversation about the future of Canada’s social safety nets

Sarah Schulman and Gord Tulloch are co-authors of a new book called The Trampoline Effect: Reimagining Our Social Safety Nets

Why It Matters

The pandemic is an opportunity to radically reimagine the ways Canadian government and civil society cares for people, say Sarah Schulman and Gord Tulloch — but to do so, both sectors need a deeper understanding of the problems embedded into our social safety nets.

var TRINITY_TTS_WP_CONFIG = {"cleanText":"Full video: An in-depth conversation about the future of Canada\u2019s social safety nets. Last week saw much buzz around the federal government\u2019s big commitments to social safety net programs like child care \u2014 and even hundreds of millions for the \u201csafety net to our safety net,\u201d the charitable and non-profit sector.\u00a0 But, depending on who you ask, it did not radically reimagine what it means to support vulnerable communities or help them flourish. And if there were a time to do so, it\u2019s post-global pandemic.\u00a0 Sarah Schulman and Gord Tulloch are the authors of a new book called The Trampoline Effect: Reimagining Our Social Safety Nets . The book envisions a future where social safety nets don\u2019t catch and trap the peo

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