Support independent journalism centring Black, Indigenous and people of colour.
The Resolve is a BIPOC-led community-powered national platform for Black, Indigenous and people of colour voices and stories.
Why now?
A new kind of journalism
Efforts to diversify both legacy and independent newsrooms have largely failed, and Canadian media remains predominantly white, especially at the leadership level. This leaves Black, Indigenous and racialized communities vastly underrepresented and their stories frequently misrepresented in the news.
The Resolve will change this by creating a platform for Black, Indigenous and people of colour journalists to tell their own stories directly to racialized audiences — not filtered through a white lens.
The Resolve will reflect the real-life experiences of Black, Indigenous and people of colour communities — the highs and the lows, the challenges and the successes, the sorrows and the joys. The Resolve will dive deeper, explain complex issues and look to solutions.
Black Lives Matter, the reckoning of Canada’s residential schools and so many other events are finally surfacing tough conversations about race in our society. Canadians are ready for a platform like The Resolve.
Elevating Black, Indigenous and racialized voices
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Nova Scotia’s legacy of environmental racism
‘Environmental racism has been here for a long time — it’s built in the system.’
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The impact of the oilsands in northern Alberta
About 23,000 Indigenous people live in the oilsands region.
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Confronting the realities of environmental racism in Canada
When racism and the environment intersect, it’s our communities that suffer.
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Racial violence in our schools rings alarms we cannot ignore
Educators are failing to protect racialized students.
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Calgary shelter tackles domestic violence in African immigrant communities
Ruth’s House is working to break the generational cycle of domestic abuse through education, prevention, intervention, counselling and emergency shelter services.
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Healing together — families honour loved ones killed by police
Chantel Moore’s mother hosts a healing walk for families who have lost children at the hands of law enforcement, and to honour their names.

Our name
The Resolve’s name is loosely inspired by a quote from Mary Ann Shadd Cary, the first Black woman publisher in North America, and the first woman newspaper publisher in Canada, where she wrote about the need for less rhetoric and more action: “we have made but a little progress considering our resolves … We should do more and talk less.”
Make a contribution to The Resolve
Help us centre Black, Indigenous and people of colour voices and stories. Become a founding member of The Resolve today. Together, we can reimagine Canadian journalism.
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Who is behind The Resolve?
Matthew DiMera is an award-winning editor and journalist currently living in Toronto, and is the founder of The Resolve.
Most recently they were the managing editor at Xtra where they drove new and innovative digital-only editorial and engagement strategies, and the acting editor-in-chief at rabble.ca where they led strategy for an editorial refocusing and relaunch.
The Resolve is also supported by advisors including Melinda Kachina Bige, advocate and academic, and JP Larocque, filmmaker and journalist. The Canadian Association of Black Journalists, Indiegraf and C4C Canada are also supporting The Resolve as partners.

What the community is saying
Much of my life has existed without seeing anyone like myself represented within the media. Representation is powerful in shaping public and personal opinions, but it also structures our very sense of self. And so that omission is a form of erasure.
— JP
The mainstream media has not failed Indigenous people. Oftentimes it does what is intended: to infantilize, demonize, and demonstrate a false narrative. I would like to see more even representations of issues that centre the diversity of experiences and Indigenous intelligences.
— Kachina