Open access. Article licensed under a CC-BY-NO-ND 3.0 Unported LicenseBetween 1965 and 1985, the Sisters of Saint Martha of Prince Edward Island used the expanding social welfare state to their advantage, successfully negotiating space within new secular social services structures and influencing government policy on the delivery of key social and health care services.Ye
Studying the intersectionality of religion and social welfare in Richmond, Virginia requires going b...
Catholic women religious have had an indelible impact on American society, particularly during the e...
In recent decaaes, Catholic religious orders have largely withdrawn from an active presence in the d...
Permission to include this article granted by the editors of AcadiensisExamines the Sisters of St. M...
This article focuses on the Sulpicians’ role in the establishment of the Sisters of Charity and thei...
Nuns in the Newsroom: The Sisters of Marillac College and U.S. Sisters\u27 Involvement in Social Jus...
From a high of over 200,000 women religious in the early 1960s the number of Catholic nuns has dropp...
Adding to a growing body of research on women and religion in English Canada, this historical study ...
Judith Metz explores what motivated a small group of Sisters of Charity to become a diocesan communi...
The first part of this article gives the political, social, economic, and religious context of the w...
Le mouvement féministe québécois à la fin du dix-neuvième siècle s’est distingué par sa déterminatio...
Christianity has played a major role in shaping both Euro-Canadians and Amerindians in North America...
It is well known that Catholic nuns and sisters played an important role in modern society, and that...
During the 1940s and 1950s the classrooms at St. Martin's (Wabasca) and St. Bruno's (Joussard) res...
This thesis examines the experiences of a single French-Canadian congregation of women religious as ...
Studying the intersectionality of religion and social welfare in Richmond, Virginia requires going b...
Catholic women religious have had an indelible impact on American society, particularly during the e...
In recent decaaes, Catholic religious orders have largely withdrawn from an active presence in the d...
Permission to include this article granted by the editors of AcadiensisExamines the Sisters of St. M...
This article focuses on the Sulpicians’ role in the establishment of the Sisters of Charity and thei...
Nuns in the Newsroom: The Sisters of Marillac College and U.S. Sisters\u27 Involvement in Social Jus...
From a high of over 200,000 women religious in the early 1960s the number of Catholic nuns has dropp...
Adding to a growing body of research on women and religion in English Canada, this historical study ...
Judith Metz explores what motivated a small group of Sisters of Charity to become a diocesan communi...
The first part of this article gives the political, social, economic, and religious context of the w...
Le mouvement féministe québécois à la fin du dix-neuvième siècle s’est distingué par sa déterminatio...
Christianity has played a major role in shaping both Euro-Canadians and Amerindians in North America...
It is well known that Catholic nuns and sisters played an important role in modern society, and that...
During the 1940s and 1950s the classrooms at St. Martin's (Wabasca) and St. Bruno's (Joussard) res...
This thesis examines the experiences of a single French-Canadian congregation of women religious as ...
Studying the intersectionality of religion and social welfare in Richmond, Virginia requires going b...
Catholic women religious have had an indelible impact on American society, particularly during the e...
In recent decaaes, Catholic religious orders have largely withdrawn from an active presence in the d...