“I Was the Only Woman”

Women and Planning in Canada

By Sue Hendler
With Julia Markovich
Categories: Social Sciences, Sociology, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Women’s Studies, History, Canadian History, Geography, Geography, Urban Studies, Planning & Architecture
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774825870, 284 pages, March 2017
Paperback : 9780774825887, 284 pages, October 2017
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774825894, 284 pages, March 2017

Table of contents

Foreword / Julia Markovich

Preface

1 Introduction: An Argument about History, Planning, and Women

2 Women, Professions, and Planning

3 Creating and Advocating for a Profession: A Tale of Two Planning Organizations

4 Recovering the Women of the CPAC and TPIC/CIP

5 Women in Planning: Making a Difference

6 Conclusion: Imagine ...

Appendices

Notes; References; Index

This compelling new perspective on Canada’s planning history provides an important counter-narrative to the “official” story of the profession. It challenges us to re-evaluate not only the profession’s past, but also its role in creating a more inclusive and equitable future.

Description

“I was the only woman.” These words appear again and again in the stories of women planners working in Canada from the 1940s to the 1970s. Despite their small numbers, women were active in the Community Planning Association of Canada and the Town Planning Institute of Canada (later called the Canadian Institute of Planners) during those years. This book tells their stories, expanding our understanding of what constitutes “planning” and who counts as “planners.” It challenges us to re-evaluate not only the profession’s past, but also its role in creating a more inclusive and equitable future.