Toronto For All is a public education initiative to generate dialogue among Toronto residents. The campaign helps create a city that says “no” to all forms of discrimination and racism, including systemic racism.

View the campaigns below to get the knowledge and skills you need to identify, question and challenge systemic barriers through a multi-staged conversational approach.

Allyship

Allyship involves supporting marginalized communities and building relationships based on trust and accountability.

Anti-East Asian Racism

Speak out against and shut down Anti-East Asian hate

Islamophobia

Learn about Islamophobia and how you can be an ally

Confronting Antisemitism

Take action to confront and eliminate antisemitism in Toronto.

Black Mental Health Week

Learn about anti-Black racism, its effect on mental health and how you can become an ally.

Past Campaigns

Learn about and download materials related to the City’s public education campaigns supporting civic resiliency. See past campaign overviews and posters that are not featured above select from the list below:

About Toronto For All

Public Education to Support Civic Resiliency

The initiative is a municipal tool that supports the civic resiliency for all Toronto residents. Civic resiliency is the capacity of a group of residents or community to adapt to the evolving complexity and diversity of their social environment by building good relationships and viewing these changes as a strength. Civic resiliency can be measured in residents’ awareness of – and engagement with – the systemic barriers that exist for people in their environment due to group membership. Implicit biases, negative attitudes, stereotypes and prejudices negatively impact our civic resiliency.

The City, as the government closest to residents, must lead public dialogue that can support the civic resiliency of Torontonians for the benefit of all Toronto residents. The initiative is also designed to support customer service improvement efforts across all City divisions by equipping staff to better understand their own biases or stereotypes that may prevent them from providing the best service to Torontonians from equity-seeking groups.