Where the contradictions meet: women and family security in Canada in the 1990s

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Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Social & Behavioral Science
Department Family & Consumer Studies
Creator McDaniel, Susan
Title Where the contradictions meet: women and family security in Canada in the 1990s
Date 1993
Description Family 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 competitiveness, while the faces of hungry babies and children reveal hopelessness.
Type Text
Publisher Canadian Council on Social Development
First Page 163
Last Page 180
Subject Values; Responsibilities; Opportunities
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation McDaniel, S. A. (1993). Where the contradictions meet: women and family security in Canada in the 1990s. Chapter 7 in Family security in insecure times, 1, 163-80.
Rights Management (c)Canadian Council on Social Development
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 2,576,064 bytes
Identifier ir-main,3971
ARK ark:/87278/s67m0s80
Setname ir_uspace
ID 704722
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s67m0s80
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