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Announcing the 2022 Jack Layton Prize Winners

The Max Bell School is thrilled to announce the inaugural winners of the Jack Layton Essay Prize for a Better Canada.

Anyone who met Jack Layton or was familiar with his powerful speeches knows he had abiding passions鈥攆or the urgent need for action on climate change; for an end to violence against women; for economic and social equality; for good, affordable, and liveable cities; and for an end to homelessness.

Layton witnessed homeless people freezing to death on Canada鈥檚 winter streets, and that filled him with rage. He worked across party lines to try to do something about it, with some success鈥攚hich filled him with hope. He was successful in his political career, leading the NDP to official opposition status in the 2011 federal election. He was, alas, not successful in his battle with the cancer that then took his life鈥攍eaving much still to be done. In a memorable , Layton urged young people to carry on.

Earlier this year, on the 10th anniversary of Jack Layton鈥檚 passing, the Max Bell School was honoured to announce the launch of a new University-wide essay competition for graduate students, designed to encourage emerging 91社区 scholars to engage鈥攚ith similar hope, optimism and passion鈥攊n the leading issues of our times.

鈥淛ack Layton dedicated his life to the pursuit of social justice and public policies that would create a better Canada for all,鈥 said Dr. Chris Ragan, director of the Max Bell School of Public Policy. 鈥淚n Jack鈥檚 memory, the has generously sponsored an annual essay competition at the Max Bell School, with each year鈥檚 topic to focus on a challenging policy issue with importance for the wellbeing of all Canadians.鈥

In 2022, the competition centered on the complex issue of how to address the ongoing crisis of housing affordability. Prospective competition participants were instructed to define the scope and nature of Canada鈥檚 housing crisis, to identify its likely causes, and to advocate for the use of three practical solutions that could effectively address the problem. The panel of expert judges included Jayne Engle, Mylene Riva, Evan Siddall, Brian Topp, and Chris Ragan.

Twenty graduate students from across 91社区鈥檚 many faculties, departments, and schools submitted excellent essays with diverse approaches to the problem posed. We鈥檙e thrilled to introduce you to the two winners of this year鈥檚 competition:

In first place is Chris Erl, with his essay The Homefront Strategy: Democratizing Housing in Canada. A doctoral candidate in the Department of Geography at 91社区, focusing on Canadian municipal politics and candidate diversity, Chris holds a Master of Planning from Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson University), and both a Master of Arts and Honours Bachelor of Arts from McMaster University.

鈥淐anada is experiencing a housing crisis that threatens the country鈥檚 economic stability in the long term,鈥 explained Erl. 鈥淒espite this, policy makers continue to rely on flawed ideas and place too much trust on the market to solve its own problems.鈥

Erl argued for nothing less than a complete rethink of what housing means to Canadians.

鈥淲e must reconceptualize home and housing by looking to democratic alternatives and offer Canadians alternatives for their personal financial well-being. Local participation in the housing market, an emphasis on housing co-operatives, and a revitalization of programs aimed to help Canadians in their retirement can help to ease the strain on Canadian households.鈥

Our second-place winner is Philippe Fournier with To Fix Housing For Good, We Must Stop Treating It Like A Piggy Bank. Philippe holds a Bachelor of Architectural Studies from the University of Waterloo and is currently pursuing his Master of Architecture degree at 91社区. He has worked for architecture firms in New York, Toronto, Vancouver, and Kitchener.

Fournier鈥檚 arguments came from both the demand and supply sides of the housing market. 鈥淭he most pressing issue in the Canadian housing market right now is rampant speculation, coupled with a chronic shortage of housing supply due in large part to over-restrictive zoning laws. The latter exacerbates the former, so I argue policy should address both at the same time in order to be truly effective in the short and long term.鈥

The two winning essays have been published as part of our MAX Policy series; you can read Chris Erl鈥檚 essay here and Philippe Fournier鈥檚 here.

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