The Shadowy Business of International Education
Nicholas Hune-Brown
Theย Walrus

Nicholas Hune-Brown headshot

Hune-Brownโ€™s cover story for the September 2021 issue of The Walrus was an investigation into the world of international students, whose numbers in Canada have tripled in the last decade, bringing $21ย billion into the economyโ€”more than auto parts or lumber. The system is quietly transforming post-secondary institutions, which have become dependent on theirย tuition.

Many of us are aware of the stereotype of the well-off young international student, usually from mainland China, paying their way into top educational institutions. But this stereotype is now entirely divorced from reality. In 2019, 34 percent of the more than 642,000 international students in Canada were from India, well ahead of Chinaโ€™s 22ย percent.

Cover art illustration of students on ladders

In India, families with small farms are betting everything on the possibility of permanent residency in Canada for their children, relying on largely unregulated education agents who make big promises about life here. The story documents their journey to Canada, the way these students are vulnerable to labour exploitation once they arrive, and the serious mental health risks they too often encounter, alone in a strange country with their entire familyโ€™s future dependent on their success.ย In some cases, the intense pressure, isolation and lack of support mean students are unable to complete their studies. Some never make it home, succumbing to drug overdoses and evenย suicide.

The growing body of international students has also created a massive labour force ripe for exploitation. Sarom Rho, an organizer with Migrant Students United, an offshoot of the advocacy group Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, says โ€œWe call them migrant students, not international students.โ€ By law, students can work only twenty hours off campus a week. But, in reality, students are desperate to pay rent and often end up working under the table which puts them at the total mercy of their employers, working below minimum wage or not being paid atย all.

Hune-Brownโ€™s article was one of the most-read stories of the year from The Walrus. It sparked conversations in college classrooms and amongst post-secondary administrators, invitations to speak at campuses across the country and at conferences for university executives and international student groups. It inspired follow-up pieces in both in mainstream newspapers and in media outlets catering to newcomers,ย which continue to follow theย story.

Hune-Brown brings this many-layered story to life by taking us along on the journey of one such student, Kushandeep Singh. The reader follows Singhโ€™s path from a tiny village in northern India to studying at KPU in British Columbia to Winnipeg, Manitoba adding a deeply personal layer to a sharply focused investigativeย piece.ย 

The power of Hune-Brownโ€™s hard-hitting yet compassionate storytelling, and the breadth and depth of this original investigation truly embodies the spirit of the Hillmanย prize.

Nicholas Hune-Brown is a Toronto-based journalist and the senior editor at The Local Magazine. Heโ€™s a multiple-time National Magazine Award winner who has written features for The Walrus, Toronto Life, The Guardian, Hazlitt, and many others. He writes on all kinds of subjectsโ€”from features about homelessness and assisted suicide, to deep dives into a dissident Chinese dance troupe or the lives of captiveย elephants.

Honourableย Mention

Friends with Benefits series: Hwy 413/MZOs/Bradford Bypass
Noor Javed, Steve Buist, Emma McIntosh, Sheila Wang
Torstar/Toronto Star and Canadaโ€™s Nationalย Observer

Headshots of Noor Javed, Steve Buist, Emma McIntosh, and Sheila Wang

Toronto Star/Torstar and the National Observer pulled back the curtain on the money and power pushing Ontario Premier Doug Fordโ€™s governmentโ€™s breakneck move to build more highways and increase urbanย sprawl.

The province wants to drastically reshape and develop the outer suburbs of the Greater Toronto Area. Yet, despite costs to the environment and communities along the route, the government has offered little transparency into how key decisions are being made, or who influencesย them.

Their first investigation looked into the governmentโ€™s push to build the contentious Highway 413 and delved into the Ford governmentโ€™s ties to eight powerful developers with vast holdings along the planned route of the project. The team, with the help of Star investigations deputy editor Jesse McLean, pored through more than 1,500 property records of lots along the 413โ€™s 60-kilometre route, identifying roughly 3,300 acres of valuable land owned by powerful developers. Cross-referencing the land holdings with incorporation records and a custom-made database of political donations, the reporters uncovered the close ties some of the landholders had to Fordโ€™s PC party. The reporting prompted a complaint to Ontarioโ€™s ethics commissioner over ties between a lobbyist representing some of the developers and Transportation Minister Carolineย Mulroney.

Their second story explored the governmentโ€™s prolific use of Ministerโ€™s Zoning Orders. The blunt and controversial planning tool allows the housing minister to fast-track development with limited public consultation, and often atop environmentally sensitive lands. Star reporter Javed and Torstar reporter Buist researched dozens of corporations and hundreds of properties across southern Ontario. Their work revealed the beneficiaries of the MZOs granted by the province. They also found the connections between those beneficiaries and municipal and provincial officials. The reporters investigated the executives of the connected corporations and painstakingly sifted through the expense records of mayors and councilors and found substantial political contributions and donations made before the MZOs were issued. Their reporting proved MZOs have โ€œcreated a system that appears to be less about procedure but more about who you know.โ€ Two days after the story was published, and feeling the heat of mounting criticism spurred by the story, the province pledged to add 6,000 acres of land to the Greenbelt. The announcement came with the next election less than a year away and a looming cabinetย shuffle.

Finally, a joint Torstar/National Observer investigation lifted the veil of secrecy shrouding the Progressive Conservativesโ€™ rush to resurrect the Bradford Bypass highway project despite opposition from environmental groups and local communities. This reporting relied on digging up and analyzing political donations, land holdings and lobbying records to prove, once again, that developers standing to gain from the construction have strong ties to Premier Doug Ford and his cabinet. But Sheila Wang and Emma McIntosh also unearthed another secret connection: The government sought to divert the Bypass around a golf course co-owned by the father of Ontarioโ€™s associate minister of transportation. Using documents obtained through freedom-of-information, the reporters also showed the government had secretly been building a business case to toll the highway and had ignored alternatives, bringing light to behind-the-scenes discussions that were never before made public. The story prompted a complaint to Ontarioโ€™s ethics commissioner from an NDP MPP who alleged the associate minister, Stan Cho, and his boss, Transportation Minister Mulroney, had a conflict of interest. It also rattled officials at Queenโ€™s Park, where the Premierโ€™s Office initially denied the story to other media outlets, thenย recanted.

These reporters went beyond simply reporting the news coming out of Queenโ€™s Park about these major infrastructure investments and campaign promises by the Ford government. Together, they reveal how the well-connected stood to benefit from political decisions made with little transparency but that impacted taxpayers, their communities and theirย environment.

Noor Javed is journalist with the Toronto Star who covers suburban municipal politics and stories reflective of the GTAโ€™s diverse communities. In 2011, Noor won a National Newspaper Award for her analysis and reporting on Torontoโ€™s booming condo market. Since then, Noor has focused her attention on municipal issues in the booming 905 Region,ย and has extensively covered education, the environment and political decisions that directly impact taxpayers.ย In 2018, her year-long investigation into the turmoil in the York Region District School Board was nominated for a National Newspaper Award in politics.ย When sheโ€™s not chasing stories, Noor can be found chasing after her three kids, ages 11, 8 andย 3.

Steve Buist is an investigative reporter and feature writer at the Hamilton Spectator. He is responsible for producing large investigative projects, such as the highly acclaimed Code Red project, which began in 2010 and has been examining the connections between health and poverty by mapping the health of Hamiltonians at the neighbourhood level. Buist has won four National Newspaper Awards and been nominated seven other times. Heโ€™s also been named the Canadian Association of Journalistsโ€™ Investigative Journalist of the Year three times and been named Ontarioโ€™s Journalist of the Year five times. In 2014, Buist was the winner of one of the worldโ€™s most prestigious cancer journalism awards as he earned the Best Cancer Reporter Award from the European School of Oncology. Buist was the first winner of the Canadian Hillman Prize inย 2011.

Emma McIntosh is a Toronto-based reporter who worked at National Observer before taking on her current role covering the environment in Ontario for The Narwhal. She started her career in newspapers, working for the Calgary Herald, the Toronto Star and StarMetro Calgary before finishing her journalism degree at X University in 2018. She was part of a team that won the 2019 Journalists for Human Rights/Canadian Association of Journalists Award for human rights reporting for a story about how a leak from the Alberta oilsands affected Fort McKay First Nation. Stories sheโ€™s worked on have also been shortlisted for the Canadian Journalism Foundationโ€™s Jackman Award for excellence in journalism, and she was part of a team that received a Canadian Hillman Prize honourable mention inย 2018.ย 

Sheila Wang is a reporter for Torstar Corporation, where she has worked for Metroland Media York Region and the Toronto Starโ€™s Investigations Team. Holding a masterโ€™s degree from the University of Missouri School of Journalism, she had worked in broadcast and print news with a special interest in data in the United States before immigrating to Canada. Sheila covered municipal politics and general news in York Region for more than two years. In addition to English, she speaksย Mandarin.

Honourableย Mention

They Stole My Fertility
Sylvie Fournier and Judith Plamondon
Sociรฉtรฉย Radio-Canada

Headshots for Sylvie Fournier and Judith Plamondon

In their 40-minute documentary investigation for Radio-Canadaโ€™s Enquรชte, Sylvie Fournier and Judith Plamondon demonstrated for the first time that forced sterilization, or sterilization without informed consent, was still occurring in Quebec.ย ย 

Consent to sterilization given during labour does not meet the Canadian Medical Protective Association criteria for this procedure, and is banned in many jurisdictions.ย But as the journalists reported, women were still being coerced to consent in Quebec, and in parts of Westernย Canada.

They identified and collected the personal stories of a dozen Indigenous and racialized women in Quebec who were subjected to the practice from the 1980s to as recently asย 2018.

Screenshot of subject speaking from They Stole My Fertility

As the womenโ€™s experiences showed, the practice reflects the conscious and unconscious biases of physicians who offer women under the stress of active labour a chance to โ€œtake advantageโ€ of an unplanned C-section in order to have their tubes tied.ย Often, the women feel intimidated, submit to the physicianโ€™s authority, and consent to a procedure they did notย request.

With strength and courage, survivors of this practice speak out, revealing some of the negative stereotypes with which they were viewed: they had too many children, they were unable to take care of their children, they were vulnerable because of their social or economic status, they were too old to haveย children.

The practice is rooted in medical colonialism which sought to halt the empowerment of Indigenous peoples across Canada. Researchers like Karen Stote have revealed the existence of explicit guidelines in health establishments frequented by Indigenous populations, requiring the sterilization of Inuit and First Nations women, and evenย men.

The program provoked outrage from the public and an immediate reaction at the National Assembly of Quebec. Premier Franรงois Legault qualified the practice as โ€œtotally unacceptableโ€ and โ€œbarbaric.โ€ He ordered his Deputy Minister for Health and Social Services to work with the provinceโ€™s College of physicians to ensure that health professionals were given the order to no longer propose tubal ligation to women duringย childbirth.

The story also helped raise awareness among the women affected by this profound injustice. Many experienced their forced sterilization as something to be ashamed of, a taboo. They were unaware that other women had also been coerced into giving up theirย fertility.

As a result of their report, two Atikamekw women from Manawan have filed a request with the Superior Court to initiate a class action lawsuit against the Lanaudiรจre regional health authority and two of its former doctors on behalf of all Atikamekw women who have undergone such procedures without providing their free and informed consent. Their report also made waves in Montrealโ€™s Black community. A prenatal coach, Ariane Mรฉtellus, is currently setting up a non-profit organization that will offer support to BIPOC women in Quebecโ€™s health careย system.

Sylvie Fournier is an award-winning investigative reporter for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporationโ€™s flagship current affairs program Enquรชte. She started in Ottawa as a news and current affairs reporter for French radio and television, before moving to the national network in Montreal and eventually joining Enquรชte when the program was launched. Since then, her driving force has been tackling social injustices through in-depth investigations on environmental, health and racial issues. She has also been recognized for her work on the controversial use of less-lethal weapons by the police, for revealing the regulatory failures that led to the Lac-Mรฉgantic accident, and for uncovering the shady practices of foreign law firms who pocketed millions of dollars from the victimsโ€™ compensation fund after Canadaโ€™s worst rail disaster. She was twice awarded the Judith-Jasmin Journalism Award, and has also received a Gemini Award, a Justicia Award, and the Beth Mclaughlin Environmental Journalismย Award.

Judith Plamondon is an investigative producer/journalist at Enquรชte, Radio-Canada. She began her career hunting down news for a Montreal daily. She turned to the documentary genre out of a desire to investigate subjects in more depth and tell stories through images. Over the past ten years, she has directed and produced a dozen documentaries and reports for cinema and television, for Canadian broadcasters (Radio-Canada, RDI) and international partners (France 2, Narratively). She is interested in social subjects ranging from the intimate to the political and touching on issues related to identity, minority rights and feminism. Among her notable projects, she directed a testimonial-driven documentary on the Montreal Massacre, Polytechnique: What Remains of December 6 (2019), 30 years on from Marc Lรฉpineโ€™s shootingย spree.

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