Student Public Policy Papers

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/10294/6601

Browse

Recent Submissions

Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
  • ItemOpen Access
    SIPP Student Public Policy Essays Issue 5 Decemeber 2007
    (Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy, 2007-12) Kamphuis, Charis; Soles, Kama
    Pay Equity and Community Based Organizations in Saskatchewan: Paradoxes and Challenges / The Fragmentation of Citizenship and Community: Disability Rights, Economic (In)Security, and Social Policy
  • ItemOpen Access
    SIPP Student Public Policy Essays Issue 4 November 2006
    (Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy, 2006-11) Gulka-Tiechko, Brayden; Boudreau, René
    The Effects of Religion on Subjective Well-being: An International Comparison / Rehabilitating the Voluntary Sector Initiative: Rethinking Accountability and Creating Capacity
  • ItemOpen Access
    SIPP Student Public Policy Essays Issue 3 October 2005
    (Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy, 2005-10) Visvanathan, Raman; Furkert, Ramona
    Health and Health System Performance Measures and Indicators: Are They Reliable for Evidence-Based Decision-Making? / The Right to Food and Food Security: Should Food Banks be Abolished in Order to Hold Government Responsible?
  • ItemOpen Access
    SIPP Student Public Policy Essays Issue 2 October 2004
    (Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy, 2004-10) Hickey, Daniel J.; Desjarlais, Sharon M.
    The Evolution of Public Drug Benefits in Saskatchewan: 1945 - 2002 / The Future of Restorative Justice in Canada
  • ItemOpen Access
    SIPP Student Public Policy Essays Issue 1 October 2003
    (Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy, 2003-10) Schmeiser, Maximilian D.
    An Econometric Analysis of the Decline in Welfare Cases in Ontario: 1984 – 2002
  • ItemOpen Access
    Saskatchewan's Oil and Gas Royalties: A Critical Appraisal
    (Saskatchewan Institute of Public Policy, 2003-01) Weir, Erin
    This paper provides a critical appraisal of Saskatchewan’s oil and gas royalties and argues that they should be increased. It was written between June and September of 2002 to convince the provincial government to raise its royalties, rather than to criticize its decision, announced on October 7th, 2002, to greatly reduce them. However, the October 7th announcement makes the paper’s analysis and conclusions all the more timely.