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The Harper Government's New Right Neoliberal Agenda and the Dismantling of Status of Women Canada and the Family Violence Initiative
In: International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 50-64
ISSN: 2202-8005
This paper situates the Harper government's 2006 restructuring and effective dismantling of Status of Women Canada and its 2011 take down of the approximate 12,000 volume online library of the federal Family Violence Initiative in relation to two developments. These are the ascendant influence of men's rights and other antifeminist activism in Canada and globally; and the concurrent rise of a Hayekian-animated New Right neoliberal agenda intent on subordinating civil society and democratic rule to the forces of twenty-first century global capitalism. The paper contends that anti-feminism is among a host of neoconservative forces that the New Right instrumentalizes to augment and advance and its neoliberal agenda. For the New Right, however, the enemy is not gender equality or feminism per se but rather the market inhibiting commitment to social justice that feminism participates in and advances.
The Harper Government's New Right Neoliberal Agenda and the Dismantling of Status of Women Canada and the Family Violence Initiative
This paper situates the Harper government's 2006 restructuring and effective dismantling of Status of Women Canada and its 2011 take down of the approximate 12,000 volume online library of the federal Family Violence Initiative in relation to two developments. These are the ascendant influence of men's rights and other antifeminist activism in Canada and globally; and the concurrent rise of a Hayekian-animated New Right neoliberal agenda intent on subordinating civil society and democratic rule to the forces of twenty-first century global capitalism. The paper contends that anti-feminism is among a host of neoconservative forces that the New Right instrumentalizes to augment and advance and its neoliberal agenda. For the New Right, however, the enemy is not gender equality or feminism per se but rather the market inhibiting commitment to social justice that feminism participates in and advances.
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Amending theYouth Criminal Justice Act, 2007–2012: dynamics and contingencies of a 'transforming Canada' agenda
In: Commonwealth and comparative politics, Band 52, Heft 3, S. 402-422
ISSN: 1743-9094
Amending the Youth Criminal Justice Act, 20072012: dynamics and contingencies of a transforming Canada agenda
In: Commonwealth & comparative politics, Band 52, Heft 3, S. 402-422
Fathers' Rights, Feminism and Canadian Divorce Law Reform: 1998-2003
In: Studies in law, politics, and society, Band 35, Heft 1, S. 29-63
This chapter addresses a five-year phase of protest activity set in motion by fathers' rights & shared parenting groups' resistance to the Federal Child Support Guidelines, which were incorporated into Canada's Divorce Act in 1997. Drawing upon Department of Justice discourses, parliamentary hearings & debates, & advocacy websites it examines the dynamics & outcomes of the protest cycle. It argues that the government's legislative response signals a failure of fathers' rights activism in Canada. This failure is a consequence of the collective identity that advocates & their supporters enact & celebrate in various public arenas, the effectiveness of feminist counteraction, & the contingencies of governance in Canada's left-of-centre advanced liberal democracy. 3 Appendixes, 83 References. [Copyright 2005 Elsevier Ltd.]
FATHERS’ RIGHTS, FEMINISM AND CANADIAN DIVORCE LAW REFORM: 1998–2003
In: Studies in Law, Politics and Society, S. 29-63
Special Edition: Fighting Feminism – Organised Opposition to Women's Rights; Guest Editors' Introduction
In: International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, Band 5, Heft 2, S. 1-5
ISSN: 2202-8005
This special issue presents a series of papers by scholars who participated in a workshop entitled 'Men's Groups: Challenging Feminism', which was held at the University of British Columbia (UBC), Canada, 26-27 May 2014. The workshop was organised by Susan B Boyd, Professor of Law and Chair in Feminist Legal Studies at the UBC Faculty of Law, and was sponsored by the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies at UBC, the Peter A Allard School of Law, the Centre for Feminist Legal Studies at UBC, and the Canadian Journal of Women and the Law. The aim of the workshop was to bring together feminist scholars from multiple disciplines and multiple national contexts to explore a source of resistance to feminism that has been largely overlooked in scholarly research: the growing number of nationally situated and globally linked organisations acting in the name of men's rights and interests which contend that men are discriminated against in law, education and government funding, and that feminism is to blame for this. This special edition presents eight papers inspired by the workshop, authored by scholars from Canada, New Zealand, Poland, Sweden and the United States. A second special issue comprised of eight other papers inspired by the workshop was published in the Canadian Journal of Women and the Law as volume 28(1) in 2016.To find out more about this special edition, download the PDF file from this page.
Special Edition: Fighting Feminism – Organised Opposition to Women's Rights; Guest Editors' Introduction
This special issue presents a series of papers by scholars who participated in a workshop entitled 'Men's Groups: Challenging Feminism', which was held at the University of British Columbia (UBC), Canada, 26-27 May 2014. The workshop was organised by Susan B Boyd, Professor of Law and Chair in Feminist Legal Studies at the UBC Faculty of Law, and was sponsored by the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies at UBC, the Peter A Allard School of Law, the Centre for Feminist Legal Studies at UBC, and the Canadian Journal of Women and the Law. The aim of the workshop was to bring together feminist scholars from multiple disciplines and multiple national contexts to explore a source of resistance to feminism that has been largely overlooked in scholarly research: the growing number of nationally situated and globally linked organisations acting in the name of men's rights and interests which contend that men are discriminated against in law, education and government funding, and that feminism is to blame for this. This special edition presents eight papers inspired by the workshop, authored by scholars from Canada, New Zealand, Poland, Sweden and the United States. A second special issue comprised of eight other papers inspired by the workshop was published in the Canadian Journal of Women and the Law as volume 28(1) in 2016.To find out more about this special edition, download the PDF file from this page.
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