Clothilde Goujard
Reporter | Montreal
About Clothilde Goujard
Clothilde Goujard is a bilingual journalist based in Montreal who reports on politics, immigration, and women's issues. She is a regular videojournalist and producer for news agency Agence France-Presse, and broadcaster Al Jazeera. Her articles have appeared in Le Devoir, iPolitics, Vice, and the International Center for Journalist's IJNet among others.
The party in the orchard
It's been several painful months since the Quebec City mosque attack, but an Eid-al-Adha party hosted by Imam Guillet fostered hope for peace based on understanding among all communities.
As storms topple cities, Montrealers urge investment giant to divest from fossil fuels
More than 300 people gathered in Montreal to urge a leading institutional investor in charge of most Quebec public pensions to divest from fossil fuels.
Too much mansplaining in climate conversations?
Climate experts are calling for more women to take part in research and policy-making in order to respond to climate change with a gender-specific approach.
Montrealers propose food insecurity solution
A Montreal-based startup wants to tackle food insecurity in the north with aquaponic farms that could produce food all year long.
Quebec City mosque in shock after president's car set on fire
The Quebec City Mosque is urging Quebecer and Canadian politicians to address the rise of extreme right after the car of its president was burned down and feces were thrown on the mosque's doors.
Quebec separatist leader complained asylum seekers are 'Justin Trudeau's guests'
The wave of asylum seekers from the U.S. is sparking political tensions in Quebec as the Parti Québécois leader accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of encouraging migrants.
Guy Caron wants you to imagine a green economy under the NDP
In the first of National Observer's interviews with NDP leadership hopefuls, Quebec MP Guy Caron discusses his policies on the environment, the economy, and oil pipelines.
Révolution contre le gaspillage
Chaque jour, 16 tonnes de fruits et légumes sont jetés à la poubelle dans un gros entrepôt de la banlieue d’Anjou à l’est de Montréal.
Trudeau confident Canada can handle asylum seekers
Despite growing criticism, Prime Minister Trudeau insisted his government has been up to the task and that new measures are yielding "positive results".
After Charlottesville, Canada's spy agency expresses 'concern' about far-right
CSIS says it's concerned about groups and individuals who see violence as a legitimate form of political expression, including those who support right-wing extremism.