A Follow-up Study of Participants in the People of Tomorrow Programme, WAND, Barbados
- CA ON0034 10-193-S1-F57
- File
- 1994
Part of Ann B. Denis fonds
A Follow-up Study of Participants in the People of Tomorrow Programme, WAND, Barbados
Part of Ann B. Denis fonds
A. Denis [papers on minority issues]
Part of Ann B. Denis fonds
The file contains 6 papers authored exclusively by Ann Denis on minority issues (Caribbean and Franco-Ontarian). The papers are entitled as follows: “A Gendered Analysis of the Impact on Women’s Work of Changing State Policies in Barbados,” “Les femmes face à la mondalisation: les cas de la Barbade et du Canada,” “Multiple Identities… Multiple Marginalities: Franco-Ontarian Feminism,” presented to the SWS panel on Canadian Feminism at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association in Toronto in August 1997, “Presidential Address: Diversity, Downsizing… and Globalization,” “Theorizing the Gendered Analysis of Work in the Commonwealth Caribbean,” and “Globalization, Women and (In)equity in the South: Constraint and Resistance in Barbados.”
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Le dossier comprend 6 papiers reédigés exclusivement par Ann Denis sur les questions relatives aux minorités (caraïbais et franco-ontarien). Les papiers sont intitulés comme suit: “A Gendered Analysis of the Impact on Women’s Work of Changing State Policies in Barbados,” “Les femmes face à la mondalisation: les cas de la Barbade et du Canada,” “Multiple Identities… Multiple Marginalities: Franco-Ontarian Feminism,” presented to the SWS panel on Canadian Feminism at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association in Toronto in August 1997, “Presidential Address: Diversity, Downsizing… and Globalization,” “Theorizing the Gendered Analysis of Work in the Commonwealth Caribbean” et “Globalization, Women and (In)equity in the South: Constraint and Resistance in Barbados.”
Final Report [People of Tomorrow Programme]
Part of Ann B. Denis fonds
Part of Ann B. Denis fonds
Part of Ann B. Denis fonds
Part of Ann B. Denis fonds
Ethnicity and Internet Use of Barbadian and Franco-Ontarian minority young people
Part of Ann B. Denis fonds
Part of Ann B. Denis fonds