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Area of Expertise

Cities, the opioids crisis

Journalism is a kind of family business for Marcus. His grandfather and uncle were both well-known journalists. He started out at the University of British Columbia, where he wrote for the student newspaper, the Ubyssey, and occasionally studied, too. After working for The Province, Vancouver's morning newspaper, he spent four years in Asia, the first three in Hong Kong as an editor, writer and correspondent for Asiaweek magazine, and the last as a reporter for United Press International in Manila and Sydney.

He joined The Globe in 1991 as an editorial writer. He went on to roles as foreign affairs columnist, Asian business reporter, cities columnist and features writer. Among the issues and events he has covered are the war in Kosovo, the upheaval in East Timor and the Rob Ford scandal in Toronto. Marcus has won seven National Newspaper Awards for his writing, four of them for his sustained coverage of Canada’s ongoing opioids crisis.

Why did you become a journalist?

I thought it would be an interesting life. I was not wrong.

50

Years in Journalism

33

Years at The Globe and Mail

Education

Bachelor of Arts in History, University of British Columbia

Honours & Awards

National Newspaper Award, Explanatory Work, 2023

National Newspaper Award, Sustained News Coverage, 2021

National Newspaper Award, Short Feature, 2021

National Newspaper Award, Short Feature, 2019

National Newspaper Award, Short Feature, 2017

Amnesty International John Humphrey Award, 2002

National Newspaper Award, Editorials, 2001

National Newspaper Award, Columns, 1998

Languages spoken

English

Podcasts

Marcus Gee abides by The Globe and Mail Editorial Code of Conduct

Latest articles

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