Abstract: This article brings together findings from two studies that focus on child care in Canada. The first maps the coverage of child care over the first decade of the 21st century in four Canadian daily newspapers. It shows that the voices of children, mothers, and child care providers are virtually absent from policy discussions. The second study, which remedies the parental invisibility identified by the first study, relies on interviews with mothers of young children in two jurisdictions with distinctive approaches to child care – the Provinces of Ontario and Quebec. This article looks at the impact on gender roles, identities, and relations of the rise in women’s non-standard, service-sector employment and compares the complex task...
In 1997, the provincial government of Québec, the second most pop-ulous province in Canada, initiat...
Using data collected by the 1988 Canadian National Child Care Study, this study set out to describe ...
The growing labour force participation of women with small children in both the U.S. and Canada has ...
looks at the impact of the rise of women’s non-standard, service sector employment on gender roles, ...
This article examines the changing child care policy landscape in Canada, as indicative of the funda...
This article explores the connection between child care, active labour market policies, and women's ...
This report analyzes developments in Canadian child care policy in the 1990s at the federal, provinc...
Internationally, Canada has fallen behind in the development and funding of early childhood educatio...
School-age child care represents a social policy issue that has emerged in response to the dramatic ...
Today in Canada, child care is not perceived by the government, nor its citizenry, as a public good...
The increasing involvement of mothers in paid employment has brought attention to child care both as...
In view of the federal government’s 2021 budget announcement that it intends to establish a shared-c...
This research examines how childcare policy in Ontario, Canada assists and constrains low-income urb...
In Ontario, Canadaâ s licensed family child care system, there is a dissonance between expectations...
The research findings of the CEECD papers1-8 confirm that demand for child care continues to escalat...
In 1997, the provincial government of Québec, the second most pop-ulous province in Canada, initiat...
Using data collected by the 1988 Canadian National Child Care Study, this study set out to describe ...
The growing labour force participation of women with small children in both the U.S. and Canada has ...
looks at the impact of the rise of women’s non-standard, service sector employment on gender roles, ...
This article examines the changing child care policy landscape in Canada, as indicative of the funda...
This article explores the connection between child care, active labour market policies, and women's ...
This report analyzes developments in Canadian child care policy in the 1990s at the federal, provinc...
Internationally, Canada has fallen behind in the development and funding of early childhood educatio...
School-age child care represents a social policy issue that has emerged in response to the dramatic ...
Today in Canada, child care is not perceived by the government, nor its citizenry, as a public good...
The increasing involvement of mothers in paid employment has brought attention to child care both as...
In view of the federal government’s 2021 budget announcement that it intends to establish a shared-c...
This research examines how childcare policy in Ontario, Canada assists and constrains low-income urb...
In Ontario, Canadaâ s licensed family child care system, there is a dissonance between expectations...
The research findings of the CEECD papers1-8 confirm that demand for child care continues to escalat...
In 1997, the provincial government of Québec, the second most pop-ulous province in Canada, initiat...
Using data collected by the 1988 Canadian National Child Care Study, this study set out to describe ...
The growing labour force participation of women with small children in both the U.S. and Canada has ...