Journal ArticleFamily and security are both contested ground in Canada in the 1990s. The family and family values are lauded sentimentally on both sides of the 49th parallel. Yet, more and more families, Canadian and American - families with children, aging couples and the working poor - are lining up at food banks. Security is also hotly debated. Politicians and accountants become passionate about debt, responsibility and competitiveness, particularly global competitiveness. At times, the contradictions between these views emerge vividly, as when politicians, every now and again, actually meet the poor and chant mantras about the goodness of life in Canada (according to the United Nations) and poverty as an unfortunate cost of global comp...
Book ChapterPolicy discussions regarding single parents often move to income maintenance issues. Whi...
This essay explores the paradox of family law reform in common law Canada, focusing particularly on ...
Canadians and Americans have very similar notions of what constitutes the “good life”: largely econo...
This article uses oral history interviews to explore the ways in which different attitudes towards f...
This paper starts with a synthesis of changes in families, work (paid and unpaid), reproduction, and...
The Second Demographic Transition, including flexibility in types of unions and in entry and exit fr...
In 2008, the collapse of the market for securitized subprime mortgages in the United States trigge...
Journal ArticleThe social roles of women have always been affected by their reproductive roles. Rece...
Throughout the twentieth century, women in the United States have endured a constant struggle for wh...
In both Canada and the United States, middle-income families feel neglected by policymakers but stru...
In recent years there has been in Canada, as in other industrial societies, a substantial increase i...
The primary purpose of this dissertation is to explain why the United States and Canada, two very si...
Food insecurity affected over 2.3 million Canadians in 2004. To date, the food security literature h...
Abstract: This article brings together findings from two studies that focus on child care in Canada....
One major objection to neoclassical economic theory raised by feminist economists is that traditiona...
Book ChapterPolicy discussions regarding single parents often move to income maintenance issues. Whi...
This essay explores the paradox of family law reform in common law Canada, focusing particularly on ...
Canadians and Americans have very similar notions of what constitutes the “good life”: largely econo...
This article uses oral history interviews to explore the ways in which different attitudes towards f...
This paper starts with a synthesis of changes in families, work (paid and unpaid), reproduction, and...
The Second Demographic Transition, including flexibility in types of unions and in entry and exit fr...
In 2008, the collapse of the market for securitized subprime mortgages in the United States trigge...
Journal ArticleThe social roles of women have always been affected by their reproductive roles. Rece...
Throughout the twentieth century, women in the United States have endured a constant struggle for wh...
In both Canada and the United States, middle-income families feel neglected by policymakers but stru...
In recent years there has been in Canada, as in other industrial societies, a substantial increase i...
The primary purpose of this dissertation is to explain why the United States and Canada, two very si...
Food insecurity affected over 2.3 million Canadians in 2004. To date, the food security literature h...
Abstract: This article brings together findings from two studies that focus on child care in Canada....
One major objection to neoclassical economic theory raised by feminist economists is that traditiona...
Book ChapterPolicy discussions regarding single parents often move to income maintenance issues. Whi...
This essay explores the paradox of family law reform in common law Canada, focusing particularly on ...
Canadians and Americans have very similar notions of what constitutes the “good life”: largely econo...