This fonds consists of interviews performed by Barbara M. Freeman with people from the Royal Commission on the Status of Women and with editors of feminist periodicals in Canada. -- Ce fonds est constitué d'entretiens réalisés par Barbara M. Freeman avec des membres de la Commission royale d'enquête sur le statut de la femme et avec des rédactrices en chef de périodiques féministes au Canada.
The series consists of interviews conducted by Barbara M. Freeman with individuals who served on the Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada.
This file consists of a recorded interview with Monique Bégin, the former executive secretary of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women. A transcript is available
Interview with Monique Bégin, former executive secretary of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, in Ottawa, June 21, 1995. Interview by Barbara M. Freeman. Monique Bégin was an academic, former politician and the first woman in Québec to be elected to the House of Commons in 1972. She also worked on passing the 1984 Canada Health Act.
Transcript for interview with Monique Bégin, former Executive Secretary of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, in Ottawa, June 21, 1995. Interview by Barbara M. Freeman. Monique Bégin was an academic, former politician and the first woman in Québec to be elected to the House of Commons in 1972. She also worked on passing the 1984 Canada Health Act.
The file consists of a recorded interview with Angela Burke Kerrigan, Public Relations Officer for the Royal Commission on the Status of Women and a transcript of the interview.
Interview with Angela Burke Kerrigan, Public Relations Officer for the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, in Knowlton, Eastern Townships, QC, August 27, 1995. Interview by Barbara M. Freeman
Transcript for interview with Angela Burke Kerrigan, Public Relations Officer for the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, in Knowlton, Eastern Townships, QC, August 27, 1995. Interview by Barbara M. Freeman
Interview with Doris Ogilvie, commissioner on the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, November 26, 1995, by phone. Interviewed by Barbara M. Freeman. Doris Ogilvie was a judge and activist who advocated for the rights of women and children, Deputy Judge of the Juvenile Court, Deputy Judge of the Provincial Court in New Brunswick, and chair of the Canadian Commission of the International Year of the Child in 1979.